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Best known as the bassist and primary lyricist for
Black Sabbath,
Geezer Butler is one of the most influential bass players in heavy metal. His distinctive downtuned sound and melodic approach played an integral part in shaping the styles of lauded low-end specialists like
Billy Sheehan,
Iron Maiden's
Steve Harris, and
Metallica's
Cliff Burton, among many others. In addition to his four-decade-long career with
Black Sabbath,
Butler has recorded and performed with
Heaven & Hell,
Ozzy Osbourne, and Deadland Ritual, and has released three solo albums under the moniker
GZR.
Terence "Geezer" Butler was born July 17, 1949 in Birmingham, England. As a teen he formed his first band, Rare Reed, with schoolmate
John "Ozzy" Osbourne; in the fall of 1967, the two reunited in the blues quartet Polka Tulk, which also featured guitarist
Tony Iommi and drummer
Bill Ward. After briefly re-christening themselves Earth, the foursome adopted the
Black Sabbath moniker in early 1969, borrowing the name from a song written by
Butler, a disciple of occult novelist Dennis Wheatley. While
Black Sabbath's self-titled 1970 debut laid the foundations for their deafening, sludgy hard rock attack, the follow-up Paranoid was their creative and commercial breakthrough, selling four-million copies in the U.S. alone on the strength of fan favorites like "War Pigs," "Iron Man," and the title track; though
Osbourne was the band's focal point,
Butler wrote the songs' lyrics, drawing heavily upon his fascination with the black arts to explore recurring themes of death and destruction.
During the latter half of the 1970s,
Black Sabbath's popularity dwindled, and in 1979
Butler briefly left the band; his return to the lineup coincided with
Osbourne's departure, although the group soldiered on with new frontman
Ronnie James Dio.
Butler again exited in mid-1984, forming the Geezer Butler Band before reuniting with
Osbourne in 1990.
Butler re-joined
Sabbath for 1992's
Dehumanizer and 1994's Cross Purposes. After another fling with
Osbourne, he formed
GZR, issuing Plastic Planet in 1995, with Black Science arriving two years later. 1998 saw all four original members of
Black Sabbath reunite for the concert LP
Reunion, which earned the group their first Grammy Award.
In 2005,
Butler released Ohmwork, his third effort under the
GZR moniker, and in 2006 he teamed up with
Iommi and former
Black Sabbath and
Dio members
Ronnie James Dio and
Vinny Appice under the banner
Heaven & Hell. The band released the
Live from Radio City Music Hall in 2007, followed by the studio LP
The Devil You Know in 2009. The group disbanded in 2010 after the death of
Dio and released the concert LP Neon Nights: 30 Years of Heaven & Hell in his honor.
Osbourne,
Iommi, and
Butler re-formed
Black Sabbath in 2013 and issued the Grammy-winning,
Rick Rubin-produced
13. It would be the group's final studio album, and was augmented by the 2016 EP
The End, which featured previously unreleased cuts from
13, along with a handful of live recordings. Two years later,
Butler joined the hard rock supergroup Deadland Ritual alongside
Franky Perez (
Apocalyptica), guitarist
Steve Stevens (
Billy Idol,
Michael Jackson), and drummer
Matt Sorum (
the Cult,
Guns N' Roses). They issued their debut single, "Down in Flames," in 2018, followed by "Broken and Bruised" in 2019. Manipulations of the Mind: The Complete Collection, which featured all of
Butler's solo albums, as well as unreleased demos, studio outtakes, and live material, appeared in 2021. ~ Jason Ankeny & James Christopher Monger