• Wed. Jul 23rd, 2025

Not many people can say that they shared most of their life with millions of people. He gave us his all until he just couldn’t do it physically anymore. But the love and the drive is still the same. And thats just so sad. We talk about him like he is part of the family, a sibling .. for what seems like my whole life. This event is going to be larger than life for us old Rockers … i am so excited for this. And for Ozzy…

Bydivinesoccerinfo.com

Jul 3, 2025

Not many people can say they shared most of their life with millions of people.** Yet, for **Ozzy Osbourne**, that’s exactly what he did—and not just with music, but with raw honesty, humor, and a stubborn refusal to let anything silence him. He gave us his all until he physically couldn’t anymore. But the love, the fire, and the spirit? That part of Ozzy has never faded. And that’s what makes it so deeply moving, and yes, so sad.

We talk about him like he’s part of the family—a brother, a wild uncle, or even a misfit older sibling who always made us laugh, made us think, and sometimes made us worry. For many of us, Ozzy has been there for what feels like our entire lives, a familiar voice in moments of triumph and heartache, rebellion and reflection.

This upcoming event, this final bow, is going to be **larger than life** for us old rockers. It isn’t just another concert; it’s a farewell to a piece of our youth, a chapter of music history that shaped who we are. And it’s hard to describe the mix of excitement and melancholy that stirs in the heart thinking about what it means.

Because Ozzy wasn’t just the “Prince of Darkness.” He was—and is—proof that imperfection, struggle, and defiance can somehow blend into something transcendent. From the early days of **Black Sabbath**, where heavy riffs changed rock forever, to his unpredictable solo career that gave us songs like *“Crazy Train,”* *“Mr. Crowley,”* and *“Mama, I’m Coming Home,”* Ozzy always carried us somewhere different. Even when his life seemed to spiral into chaos, he kept showing up. And the honesty in that, the refusal to hide from demons, made so many of us feel less alone.

We laughed with him on reality TV, shook our heads at the chaos, but behind the humor was always a man who simply loved music, loved his fans, and gave everything to keep performing—even as age and illness made it so, so hard.

That’s what makes this farewell feel different from other tours or final shows. It’s not just a chance to see a legend play once more—it’s a chance to say *thank you*. Thank you for the decades of anthems that made us bang our heads and feel invincible. Thank you for reminding us that life doesn’t have to look perfect to be worth living loudly. Thank you for being brave enough to keep going, even when it hurt.

For many of us, this is personal. We remember teenage nights huddled around stereos, friends yelling out lyrics in unison, the first time that unmistakable voice cut through our speakers and made our hearts race. Ozzy’s music played in our cars on road trips, at parties that lasted until dawn, in headphones late at night when nothing else in the world made sense.

It’s bittersweet to think that even legends must stop someday. But it’s also comforting to know that the songs won’t. Long after the final bow, after the last amp is switched off, *“Iron Man,”* *“No More Tears,”* and so many more will still play. New generations will discover them and feel that same electric spark.

And that spark—that’s Ozzy. That’s what he’s leaving us. Not just anthems of darkness and rebellion, but a blueprint for resilience: fall down, stand up, keep going, keep laughing, and most of all, keep loving what you do.

So yes, this event will be larger than life. It has to be. Because it’s not just a show; it’s a farewell to a man who walked with us through decades, who dared to be vulnerable and outrageous all at once, and who, in his own way, became part of the family.

And for Ozzy… it’s one final chance to hear the roar of love that he’s given us for half a century—echoed back to him, louder than ever.

**And that’s something truly worth celebrating.**

I made this one sometime around 2012 during the “Golden ages” of Facebook pages. I been listening to Ozzy in Sabbath for over 40 years and on his own almost as long so he’s a big part of my life. RIP Heavy Metal MadMan. You’re with Randy and Lemmy again and that helps me smile…
“Mama, I’m coming home…” There were no flames. No deafening screams. On Ozzy Osbourne’s final night on stage, there stood only an old man beneath the dim lights, hands trembling as he held the microphone. As the first notes of “Mama, I’m Coming Home” began to play, the arena fell silent. The “Prince of Darkness” was gone. What remained was a husband, a father, a soul once lost in addiction and shadows—now singing what felt like a final apology to Sharon, the woman who had pulled him back from the edge. Each lyric caught in his throat like a sob. Every note was a memoir. When the music ended, he bowed his head. No one clapped. They wept. Because everyone knew… he had truly come home…..full video below 👇👇👇
Ozzy Osbourne Screamed Steven Tyler’s Name Under a Shower of Sparks—30 Seconds Later, the Aerosmith Legend Staggered Onstage With a Cigarette in His Mouth, and the Crowd Lost Its Mind. No one knew what to expect: a fight? a meltdown? But what followed was pure chaos and magic. They hugged. They howled. They dropped to their knees and roared “Dream On” like two old gods returning from the underworld. Fans cried. Phones shook. And backstage, someone overheard Ozzy whisper something that left Steven frozen in place. Was it a farewell? A secret? Or just two legends saying the loudest “I’m still here” the world has ever heard? What happened after the lights went down is even more shocking. FULL VIDEO BELOW

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