Read
Joe Siegler`s from Black-Sabbath.com review of «Iron Man» by Tony
Iommi:
«I
sat down, and read it cover to cover in one go. Took me about six
hours or so, but there you are. As I've said, when you know the
subject matter, it makes the reading go faster. There's been many
books written about Tony Iommi & Black Sabbath over the years
(Steve Rosen, Mike Stark, Martin Popoff, Garry Sharpe-Young, heck,
Ozzy too just to name a few), but this was different. This was from
Tony himself. That alone elevated it above just about any other book
out there on the subject. The question is, how deeply would Tony get
into things? There's a LOT of things to talk about. Even if he talked
about nothing personal, all the bazillion lineup changes within the
band themselves would take up a substantial book. But this isn't just
about Sabbath, it's about Tony...
But what we did get was fairly comprehensive. He covers all kinds of subjects, and while some of them are shorter than I would have liked (the "Lita Ford" chapter is just two pages), he does cover just about every part of his life you'd probably want to know about. Even for someone like me who knows most of the stories, there were still a couple of Black Sabbath bits I didn't know about, so that was cool. But the bits about his personal life were very cool. If you know your Sabbath trivia, you have heard the story about him losing the tips of his fingers rather a lot. Might have heard of a few band names he was in before that (Rockin' Chevrolets, The Move, etc), but before his band days, not so much. That was the most interesting bits for me. It wasn't just his childhood, there were several personal bits scattered through the Sabbath time, too.»
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