Billy Morrison has launched a video for his new single Gods of Rock N Roll – that includes Ozzy Osbourne on vocals.
The only is a reimagined model of the monitor Gods which initially appeared on Morrison’s 2015 solo album God Formed Gap. The brand new model options an orchestral association and is claimed to be how Morrison and Ozzy initially imagined the monitor ought to sound.
The video for Gods of Rock N Roll could be considered under.
It should seem on the deluxe digital version of Morrison’s 2024 album The Morrison Mission, launched later this month.
Morrison says: “Ozzy and I’ve breathed new life into what we at all times felt was an enormous music. Gods of Rock N Roll was written 10 years in the past in a South American lodge room, however with this re-recording we each really feel we have now lastly made the music what it was at all times meant to be – an enormous emotive ballad.”
Ozzy provides that he at all times hoped the music would get the total orchestral therapy. He tells Kerrang: “Billy and I wrote Gods of Rock N Roll collectively in a lodge room whereas I used to be touring in South America about 10 years in the past.
“This re-recorded model of the music lastly has all of the bells and whistles. I advised Billy then that it wanted an orchestra and a choir, however it took 10 fucking years for him to hearken to me.
“We filmed the music video with director, Ivo Raza, at NRG Studios in Los Angeles and included everybody concerned with the monitor. The top consequence combines what was filmed within the studio and the footage shot in the course of the orchestral session in Budapest. I really feel the orchestral rating has breathed new life into Gods Of Rock N Roll. I hope you all prefer it.”
Black Sabbath just lately introduced that the founding lineup will reunite for one final present this summer season, following their retirement again in 2017. The one-day Again To The Starting occasion will even characteristic the ultimate solo efficiency from frontman Ozzy Osbourne, plus a assist invoice that features a ‘who’s who’ of laborious rock royalty.