Having been cleared earlier in the year in another lawsuit concerning the supposedly suicide-inducing subject matter of his music,
Ozzy Osbourne reinvigorated his sound and expanded his following with his sixth studio album,
No More Tears, in the fall of 1991. Finding more sympathetic producers in
Duane Baron and
John Purdell to replace
Roy Thomas Baker (who had helmed his last effort, 1988's
No Rest for the Wicked), collaborating with
Lemmy Kilmister of
Motörhead on four songs, and retaining the services of guitarist
Zakk Wylde,
Osbourne brought his music into the 1990s. Songs like "Desire" and "S.I.N." had an energetic, contemporary metal sound, and
Osbourne effectively changed gears to turn out gentle ballads like "Mama, I'm Coming Home," which gave him his first U.S. Top 40 hit on his own. Not cowed by his court cases, he wrote songs about child abuse ("Mr. Tinkertrain") and serial murder ("No More Tears") from the point of view of the criminals. But he also considered his own place in the general scheme of things in the tribute to the rock & roll lifestyle "Hellraiser" and the reflective "Road to Nowhere." It all made for an unusually broad range of material, and the album returned him to the Top Ten and multi-platinum status. The 2002 reissue adds two appropriate bonus tracks, "Don't Blame Me," which was the non-LP B-side to "Mama, I'm Coming Home," and "Party With the Animals," which appeared on the 1992 soundtrack to the movie Buffy the Vampire Slayer. Both are powerful rockers, and they make the album an even stronger collection. ~ William Ruhlmann