After being as low as a band could go, after the sacking of Ozzie, and being in the grip of chemical abuse, the band managed to resurrect their careers thanks to Ronnie James Dio. Now, when Dio left to pursue his solo career, everyone was wondering where the band would go from here. Well to some, the appointment of Ian Gillan was a bit of an odd choice as the style and vibe did not match. I thought it was a great choice and was eager to see how it would work.
Opening track, Trashed, was what I thought it would be, a cross between Deep Purple and Sabbath and a nod to the direction they were going in with Dio. After the weird instrumental piece, Stonehenge, Disturbing The Priest sounds dark and very Sabbath of old musically, but the vocals with all of Gillan’s trademark screams sounds anything but Sabbath. I think this is where Sabbath fans of old felt Gillan was not right for the band. After another weird bass instrumental piece, we have this line up’s finest moment in Zero The Hero. A very dark doomy intro, and that beast of a riff, make this one of Sabbath’s finest tracks.
Side 2 kicks off with Digital Bitch with a very NWOBHM style riff – it reminds me of a Gillan solo track complete with suspect lyrics. The title track, Born Again, is next and most bands would call this a power ballad, and that’s just what it is – even if the lyrics are dark and weird. What the hell does “the grey and plastic retards all floating in circles” mean? Never been a fan of Iommi’s solo style, but the solo at the end of this track is nice. Hot Line is next up and a very Blackmore style riff – basically a straight up rock song and it’s quite a commercial tune. Final track, Keep It Warm, has a slow plod riff and groove, and not the finest lyrics ever written, but it’s and ok tune.
Ultimately, we all know this did not work out, and quite a few years in the wilderness were to come before the inevitable reunion with Ozbert Of Oz. It’s an ok album that was lifted by Zero The Hero.
7.5/10 from The Grooveman.