Cozy Powell
Cozy Powell |

Cozy Powell in Black Sabbath. |
Background information |
Birth name |
Colin Flooks |
Born |
December 29, 1947(1947-12-29)
Cirencester, Gloucestershire, England |
Died |
April 5, 1998(1998-04-05) (aged 50)
Bristol, England |
Genres |
Hard rock, blues-rock, progressive rock, instrumental rock, heavy metal, jazz fusion |
Occupations |
Musician, songwriter, producer |
Instruments |
Drums, percussion |
Years active |
1968–1998 |
Labels |
Polydor |
Associated acts |
Bedlam, Cozy Powell's Hammer, The Jeff Beck Group, Rainbow, MSG, Whitesnake, Emerson, Lake & Powell, Blue Murder, Gary Moore, Black Sabbath, The Brian May Band, Peter Green Splinter Group, various others |
Website |
Official website |
Colin Flooks (29 December 1947 - 5 April 1998), better known as Cozy Powell, was an English rock drummer who made his name with many major rock bands.[1]
Early history
Cozy Powell was born in Cirencester, Gloucestershire, England, and started playing drums at age 12 in the school orchestra, thereafter playing along in his spare time to popular singles of the day. The first band he was in, called the Corals, played each week at the Youth Club in Cirencester. At age 15 he had already worked out an impressive drum solo. The nickname 'Cozy' was borrowed from the jazz drummer Cozy Cole.
Semi-professional
The semi-professional circuit was next, with semi-pro outfit The Sorcerers, a vocal harmony pop band. The late nights and usual on-the-road exploits began to affect his education, and Powell left to take an office job in order to finance the purchase of his first set of Premier drums. The Sorcerers performed in the German club scene of the 1960s. By 1968 the band had returned to England, basing themselves around Birmingham. Powell struck up friendships with fellow musicians like Robert Plant and John Bonham (both at the time unknowns in Listen), future Slade vocalist Noddy Holder, bassist Dave Pegg and a young guitarist called Tony Iommi. The Sorcerers now became Youngblood, and a series of singles were released in late 1968-69. The group then linked up with the Move bassist/singer Ace Kefford to form The Ace Kefford Stand. Powell also began session work. Powell with fellow Sorcerers Dave and Dennis Ball formed Big Bertha.
Isle of Wight 1970 and Jeff Beck
Powell also played with swamp rocker Tony Joe White at the Isle of Wight Festival 1970. During this time the two became good friends, with White being best man at Powell's wedding. Powell then landed the then highly prestigious drumming job with Jeff Beck's group in April 1970. After the recording of two albums, Rough and Ready (October 1971) and Jeff Beck Group (July 1972), the band fell apart.
1972–1974
In 1972 Powell drummed for two tracks ("Hey Sandy" and "Martha") on Harvey Andrews' album Writer of Songs. By late 1972 he had joined up with the Ball brothers and singer Frank Aiello to form Bedlam, whose eponymous album was recorded for Chrysalis and released in August 1973.[2] Eventually Powell abandoned Bedlam to record singles such as Dance with the Devil which reached #3 in the UK singles chart during January 1974. Beck's studio producer was Mickie Most and Powell soon found himself drafted into sessions for artists signed to Most's RAK label, including Julie Felix, Hot Chocolate, Donovan and Suzi Quatro. To cash in on his chart success the drummer formed Cozy Powell's Hammer in April 1974.
Rainbow
In 1975 he joined Ritchie Blackmore's Rainbow. Powell, together with Blackmore, were the only constants in the band's line-up over the next five years, as Blackmore evolved the sound of the band from a neo-classical hard rock to a more commercial AOR sound. Rainbow's 1979 Down to Earth LP (from which singles "Since You Been Gone" and "All Night Long" are taken) proved to be the band's most successful album thus far, although Powell was concerned over the overtly commercial sound. Powell decided to leave Rainbow, although not before they headlined the first ever Monsters of Rock show at Castle Donington, England on August 16, 1980. The festival was Powell's last show with the band.
Post-Rainbow
1980–1989
After Powell left Rainbow he worked with ex-vocalist Graham Bonnet on Bonnet's new project called Graham Bonnet & The Hooligans, their most notable single being the UK top 10 single "Night Games" (1981), also on Bonnet's solo Line Up album. Powell then performed with a number of major bands - Michael Schenker Group from 1981 to 1982, and Whitesnake from 1982 to 1985. In 1985 he started recording with Phenomena for their first album, which was released in 1986 when he joined up with Keith Emerson and Greg Lake as a member of Emerson, Lake & Powell.
1989–1998
A stint with Gary Moore followed in 1989. His most well-known association was with Black Sabbath from 1988 to 1991, and again in 1994–1995. Between late 1992 and early 1993, Powell put together an occasional touring band using the old band name 'Cozy Powell's Hammer' featuring himself on drums, Neil Murray on bass, Mario Parga on guitar and Tony Martin on vocals and occasional rhythm guitar/synth module. The band performed throughout Europe and appeared on German television. Powell along with Neil Murray were members of Brian May's band, playing on the Back To The Light and Another World albums. Cozy played with May opening for Guns N' Roses on the second American leg of their Use Your Illusion tour in 1993. The duo also served a spell with blues guitarist Peter Green in the mid-nineties. Cozy's last recording session was for Colin Blunstone's The Light Inside, alongside Don Airey, which was released shortly after Cozy's death. Prior to his death in 1998, Cozy had pulled out of a tour with Yngwie Malmsteen due to an injury and was preparing to tour with Brian May. The final solo album by Cozy Powell Especially For You was released in 1998 after his death, and featured American vocalist John West, Neil Murray, Lonnie Park, Michael Casswell and others.
Motor racing and TV appearances
Powell had a fascination with fast cars and motorbikes, and raced for Hitachi on the UK saloon car circuit for a few months. He made headlines when he appeared on the BBC children's programme Record Breakers where he set a world record for the most drums played in under one minute, live on television.
Death
Cozy Powell died on 5 April 1998 following a car crash while driving his Saab 9000 at 104 mph in bad weather on the M4 motorway near Bristol. According to the BBC report, at the time of the crash, Powell's blood-alcohol reading was over the legal limit, he was not wearing a seatbelt, and he was talking to his girlfriend on his mobile phone.[3]
He was living at Lambourn in Berkshire at the time and had returned to the studio shortly before his death to record with Fleetwood Mac co-founder Peter Green. By that time, he had been the drummer on at least 66 albums with minor contributions on many other recordings. Many rock drummers have cited him as a major influence.[4][5]
Equipment information
Drum set ups through his career included;
1975-80 (with Rainbow)
According to the inside cover of the Rainbow CD "On Stage" (823 656-2 Y-1), Cozy's kit at the time was a Ludwig Red Sparkle that consisted of: 2x 26"x20" Bass Drums, 2x 14"x10" Rack Toms, 2x 16"x16" Floor Toms, 14"x6½" Metal Symphonic Snare. He also used all cymbals by Paiste which consisted of: 24" Ride (Formula 602), 20" Ride, 18" China-Type, 18" Crash-Ride, 18" Crash, 2x 16" Crash, 15" Crash, 6" splash and 15" Hi-Hats. His hardware consisted of: 6x Ludwig Heavyweight Cymbal Stands, Slingerland Hi-Hat Pedal, and 2x Premier 250 Pedals. All of this was played using Ludwig 3S sticks.
Circa 1983 (with Whitesnake)
Yamaha custom in natural wood finish: Two 26" bass drums, two 15" rack toms, and 18" and 20" floor toms. 14"x6" metal snare. Cymbals (Paiste 2002 series): 24" ride, 18" china, 20" crash-ride, 20" crash,18" crash, 6" splash and 15" hi-hats.
1989 (Black Sabbath)
Yamaha 9000 series custom in black and silver: Two 26" bass drums,6"x16", 8"x18", 13"x9", and 14"x10" rack toms, 18" and 20" floor toms. 14"x6" metal snare. Cymbals (Paiste 3000 series): 24" ride, 18" china, 20" crash-ride, 20" crash, 18" crash, 6" splash, 15" hi-hats and a 36" gong.
Posthumous releases
In October 2005 Powell made a "new" appearance on an album. Former Black Sabbath vocalist Tony Martin released a studio album (Scream), and on it is a track named "Raising Hell". This was a track that Powell had recorded the drum track for back when he and Tony were in Hammer in 1992, and gave to Tony for "future use". There are apparently as many as 19 additional drum tracks also recorded that could turn up in the future. Judas Priest guitarist Glenn Tipton has also released material recorded during the 1997 Baptizm Of Fire sessions; this 2006 collection, entitled Edge of the World, was released under the moniker of Tipton, Entwistle & Powell, in memory of John Entwistle and Powell.
New York Drummer Ken Serio played a tribute to Cozy Powell on his highly acclaimed Through The Gate CD covering several songs from Cozy's instrumental solo albums including the Bernie Marsden penned "El Sid" from Cozy's Over The Top album.
Band timeline (not including session work)
Text in bold indicates solo work
- The Sorcerers (1967–1968)
- Youngblood (1968–1969)
- The Ace Kefford Stand (1969)
- Big Bertha (1969–1970)
- The Jeff Beck Group (1970–1972)
- Bedlam (1972–1973)
- Cozy Powell (1973–1974)
- Cozy Powell's Hammer (1974)
- Rainbow (1975–1980)
- Cozy Powell (1979)
- Graham Bonnet & the Hooligans (1980–1981)
- Cozy Powell (1981)
- Michael Schenker Group (1981–1982)
- Cozy Powell (1982–1983)
- Whitesnake (1982–1985)
- Emerson, Lake & Powell (1985–1986)
- Pete York/Cozy Powell (1987)
- Black Sabbath (1988–1991)
- The Brian May Band (1991–1992)
- Cozy Powell (1992)
- Cozy Powell's Hammer (1992–1993)
- The Brian May Band (1993–1994)
- Black Sabbath (1994–1995)
- Peter Green Splinter Group (1997)
- Tipton, Entwistle and Powell (1997)
- Yngwie Malmsteen (1997)
- The Brian May Band (1998)
- Peter Green Splinter Group (1998)
- The Snakes (1998)
Discography
Solo
- Over the Top (1979)
- Tilt (1981)
- Octopuss (1983)
- The Drums Are Back (1992)
- The Best of Cozy Powell (1997)
- Especially for You (1999)
with The Jeff Beck Group
- Rough & Ready (1971)
- Jeff Beck Group (1972)
with Bedlam
with Rainbow
- Rising (1976)
- On Stage (1977)
- Long Live Rock 'n' Roll (1978)
- Down to Earth (1979)
- Finyl Vinyl (1986)
- Live in Germany (1990)
- Live in Munich 1977 (2006)
with The Michael Schenker Group
- MSG (1981)
- One Night at Budokan (1982)
with Whitesnake
with Emerson, Lake & Powell
- Emerson, Lake & Powell (1986)
- The Sprocket Sessions (2003)
- Live in Concert (2003)
with Forcefield
- Forcefield (1987)
- Forcefield II: The Talisman (1988)
- Forcefield III: To Oz and Back (1989)
- Forcefield IV: Let the Wild Run Free (1991)
- Forcefield: The Instrumentals (1992)
with Black Sabbath
- Headless Cross (1989)
- Tyr (1990)
- Forbidden (1995)
- The Sabbath Stones (1996)
with Brian May
- Back to the Light (1993)
- Live at the Brixton Academy (1994)
- Another World (1998)
- Red Special (1998)
Guest appearences and sessions
- Ed Welch - Clowns (1971)
- Harvey Andrews - A Writer of Songs (1972)
- Julie Felix - Clotho's Web (1972)
- Donovan - Cosmic Wheels (1973)
- Chick Churchill - You and Me (1973)
- Murray Head - Nigel Lived (1973)
- Tony Ashton and Jon Lord - First of the Big Bands (1974)
- Bob Sargeant - The First Starring Role (1974)
- Peter Sarstedt - Every Word You Say (1975)
- Various - Peter & The Wolf (1976)
- Hot Chocolate - Fourteen Greatest Hits (1976)
- Bernie Marsden - And About Time Too (1979)
- Bernie Marsden - Look at Me Now (1981)
- Graham Bonnet - Line-Up (1981)
- Jon Lord - Before I Forget (1982)
- Robert Plant - Pictures at Eleven (1982)
- Phenomena - Phenomena (1985)
- Roger Daltrey - Under a Raging Moon (1985)
- Boys Don't Cry - Who the Am Dam (1987)
- Sanne Salomonsen - Sanne Salomonsen (1987)
- Warlock - Triumph and Agony (1987)
- Pete York - Super Drumming (1987)
- Cinderella - Long Cold Winter (1988)
- James Darby - Southern Region Breakdown (1988)
- Don Airey - K2: Tales of Triumph and Tragedy (1988)
- Gary Moore - After the War (1989)
- Minute By Minute - Timewatch (1989)
- Ritchie Blackmore - The Connoisseur Collection Vol II (1991)
- Various - The Music of Jimi Hendrix (1995)
- Glenn Tipton - Baptizm of Fire (1997)
- Peter Green Splinter Group - Peter Green Splinter Group (1997)
- S.A.S. Band - SAS Band (1997)
- Yngwie Malmsteen - Facing the Animal (1997)
- Colin Blunstone - The Light Inside (1998)
- Tony Martin - Scream (2005)
- Tipton, Entwistle & Powell - Edge of the World (2006)
See also
References
- Record Collector magazine #203 (July 1996, Cozy Powell interview & discography)
- BBC obituary
External links
The Jeff Beck Group |
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Jeff Beck
Micky Waller • Rod Stewart • Ronnie Wood • Nicky Hopkins • Tony Newman • Aynsley Dunbar • Bobby Tench • Max Middleton • Cozy Powell • Clive Chaman •Tim Bogert • Carmine Appice • Kim Milford |
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Studio albums |
Truth • Beck-Ola (Cosa Nostra) • Rough and Ready • Jeff Beck Group
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Songs |
"You Shook Me" • "Shapes of Things" • "Barabajagal" (with Donovan)
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Related articles |
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Rainbow |
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Ritchie Blackmore Vocals: Ronnie James Dio · Graham Bonnet · Joe Lynn Turner · Doogie White
Bass: Craig Gruber · Jimmy Bain · Mark Clarke · Bob Daisley · Jack Green · Roger Glover · Greg Smith
Drums: Gary Driscoll · Cozy Powell · Bobby Rondinelli · Chuck Burgi · John O'Reilly · John Miceli
Keyboards: Micky Lee Soule · Tony Carey · David Stone · Don Airey · David Rosenthal · Paul Morris |
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Studio albums |
Ritchie Blackmore's Rainbow · Rising · Long Live Rock 'n' Roll · Down to Earth · Difficult to Cure · Straight Between the Eyes · Bent Out of Shape · Stranger in Us All
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EPs |
Jealous Lover
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Live albums |
On Stage · Finyl Vinyl · Live in Germany/Live in Europe · Live in Munich 1977 · Rainbow Live at Cologne SportsHalle · Rainbow Live at Dusseldorf Philipshalle · Rainbow Live at Nurnberg Messezentrum
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Compilation albums |
The Best of Rainbow · The Very Best of Rainbow · 20th Century Masters - The Millennium Collection: The Best of Rainbow · Classic Rainbow · Pot of Gold · All Night Long: An Introduction · Catch the Rainbow: The Anthology · Winning Combinations: Deep Purple and Rainbow
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Video albums |
Live Between the Eyes/The Final Cut · Live in Munich 1977
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Songs |
Stargazer · Since You Been Gone · Street of Dreams
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Related articles |
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Whitesnake |
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David Coverdale · Doug Aldrich · Reb Beach · Brian Tichy · Michael Devin
Micky Moody · Bernie Marsden · Mel Galley · John Sykes · Adrian Vandenberg · Vivian Campbell · Steve Vai · Warren DeMartini · Steve Farris · Neil Murray · Colin Hodgkinson · Rudy Sarzo · Tony Franklin · Marco Mendoza · Uriah Duffy · Dave Dowle · Ian Paice · Cozy Powell · Aynsley Dunbar · Tommy Aldridge · Denny Carmassi · Chris Frazier · Peter Solley · Jon Lord · Paul Mirkovich · Timothy Drury |
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Studio albums |
Trouble · Lovehunter · Ready an' Willing · Come an' Get It · Saints & Sinners · Slide It In · Whitesnake · Slip of the Tongue · Restless Heart · Good to Be Bad
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EPs |
Snakebite · Snakebite (double EP) · 1987 Versions
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Live albums |
Live at Hammersmith · Live...in the Heart of the City · Starkers in Tokyo · Live: In the Shadow of the Blues
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Compilations |
Whitesnake's Greatest Hits · The Silver Anniversary Collection · The Early Years · The Definitive Collection · 30th Anniversary Collection
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Singles |
"Long Way from Home" · "Fool for Your Loving" · "Ready an' Willing" · "Ain't No Love in the Heart of the City" · "Don't Break My Heart Again" · "Would I Lie to You" · "Here I Go Again" · "Bloody Luxury" · "Guilty of Love" · "Standing in the Shadow" · "Give Me More Time" · "Love Ain't No Stranger" · "Slow An' Easy" · "Here I Go Again '87" · "Is This Love" · "Still of the Night" · "Crying in the Rain '87" · "Give Me All Your Love" · "Fool For Your Loving '89" · "The Deeper the Love" · "Now You're Gone" · "Sweet Lady Luck" · "Too Many Tears" · "Don't Fade Away" · "All I Want Is You" · "All For Love" · "Summer Rain"
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Videos
and DVDs |
Whitesnake Commandos · Trilogy · Starkers in Tokyo · Live... In the Still of the Night
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Related articles |
Members · Discography · Deep Purple · Coverdale and Page · Paice, Ashton & Lord · Blue Murder · Manic Eden · The Snakes · Martin Birch · Don Airey
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Emerson, Lake & Palmer |
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Keith Emerson · Greg Lake · Carl Palmer
Cozy Powell · Robert Berry · Peter Sinfield
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Studio albums |
Emerson, Lake & Palmer · Tarkus · Trilogy · Brain Salad Surgery · Works Volume 1 · Works Volume 2 · Love Beach · Black Moon · In the Hot Seat
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Live albums |
Pictures at an Exhibition · Welcome Back My Friends to the Show That Never Ends... Ladies and Gentlemen, Emerson, Lake & Palmer · In Concert / Works Live · Live at the Royal Albert Hall · Live in Poland · Live at the Isle of Wight Festival 1970 · Then and Now · The Original Bootleg Series from the Manticore Vaults
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Compilation albums |
The Best of Emerson, Lake & Palmer · King Biscuit Flower Hour: Greatest Hits Live · The Very Best of Emerson, Lake & Palmer · The Ultimate Collection · The Essential Emerson, Lake & Palmer
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Box sets |
The Return of the Manticore · From the Beginning · A Time And A Place
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Songs |
"Lucky Man" · "Fanfare for the Common Man" · "From the Beginning" · "I Believe in Father Christmas" · "Karn Evil 9" · "Take a Pebble" · "Tank" · "Tarkus" · "Toccata"
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Related articles |
Discography · Emerson, Lake & Powell · Emerson, Lake & Powell (album) · Manticore Records · 3 · To the Power of Three · The Nice · King Crimson · Atomic Rooster · Asia
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Blue Murder |
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John Sykes
Carmine Appice • Tony Franklin • Ray Gillen • Nik Green • Kelly Keeling • Marco Mendoza • Tommy O'Steen • Cozy Powell |
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Studio albums |
Blue Murder • Nothin' but Trouble
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Live albums |
Screaming Blue Murder
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Related articles |
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Black Sabbath |
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Tony Iommi • Ozzy Osbourne • Geezer Butler • Bill Ward
Ronnie James Dio • Vinny Appice • Geoff Nicholls • Tony Martin • Ian Gillan • Glenn Hughes • Ray Gillen • Neil Murray • Cozy Powell • Bev Bevan • Jo Burt • Terry Chimes • Bob Daisley • Bobby Rondinelli • Eric Singer • Dave Spitz • Dave Walker |
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Studio albums |
Black Sabbath • Paranoid • Master of Reality • Black Sabbath Vol. 4 • Sabbath Bloody Sabbath • Sabotage • Technical Ecstasy • Never Say Die! • Heaven and Hell • Mob Rules • Born Again • Seventh Star • The Eternal Idol • Headless Cross • Tyr • Dehumanizer • Cross Purposes • Forbidden
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Live albums |
Live Evil • Cross Purposes Live • Reunion • Past Lives • Live at Hammersmith Odeon
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Compilations |
We Sold Our Soul for Rock 'n' Roll • The Collection • The Sabbath Stones • Symptom of the Universe: The Original Black Sabbath 1970–1978 • Black Box: The Complete Original Black Sabbath (1970–1978) • Greatest Hits 1970–1978 • The Dio Years • The Rules of Hell
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Unofficial albums |
Live at Last • The Sabbath Collection • The Ozzy Osbourne Years • Under Wheels of Confusion • The Best of Black Sabbath • Club Sonderauflage
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Singles
and other songs |
"Evil Woman" • "N.I.B." • "Paranoid" • "Iron Man" • "War Pigs" • "Fairies Wear Boots" • "Sweet Leaf" • "Children of the Grave" • "Changes" • "Sabbath Bloody Sabbath" • "Rock 'n' Roll Doctor" • "Dirty Women" • "Never Say Die!" • "Neon Knights" • "Heaven and Hell" • "Die Young" • "The Mob Rules" • "Turn Up the Night" • "Trashed" • "No Stranger to Love" • "TV Crimes" • "Psycho Man" • "The Devil Cried"
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Videos |
Never Say Die • Black and Blue • The Black Sabbath Story, Vol. 1 • The Black Sabbath Story, Vol. 2 • The Last Supper • Inside Black Sabbath - 1970–1992 • Black Sabbath's Paranoid • Rock Review • In Their Own Words • Hangin' with Heaven and Hell
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Related articles |
Discography • Members • Heaven & Hell (tour) • Mythology • In These Black Days • Nativity in Black • Martin Birch • Born Again Tour 1983
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Book:Black Sabbath · Category:Black Sabbath · Portal:Heavy metal |
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Brian May |
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Brian May · Jamie Moses · Neil Murray · Spike Edney · Susie Webb · Zoe Nicholas · Eric Singer
Mike Caswell · Maggie Ryder · Miriam Stockley · Chris Thompson · Cozy Powell · Catherine Porter · Shelley Preston · Steve Ferrone |
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Studio albums |
Star Fleet Project · Back to the Light · Another World · Furia
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Live albums |
Live at the Brixton Academy
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Compilations |
Resurrection · Red Special
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Singles |
"Star Fleet" · "Driven by You" · "Too Much Love Will Kill You" · "Back to the Light" · "Resurrection" · "Last Horizon" · "The Amazing Spider-Man" · "Business" · "On My Way Up" · "Another World" · "Why Don't We Try Again" " Purple Haze"
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Videos |
Star Licks Master Series · Live at the Brixton Academy
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Related articles |
Brian May discography · Queen · Queen + Paul Rodgers · Smile · Red Special · Deacy Amp
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Yngwie Malmsteen |
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Yngwie Malmsteen · Tim "Ripper" Owens · Nick Marino · Bjorn Englen · Patrick Johansson |
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Studio albums |
Rising Force · Marching Out · Trilogy · Odyssey · Eclipse · Fire and Ice · The Seventh Sign · Magnum Opus · Facing the Animal · Concerto Suite for Electric Guitar and Orchestra · Alchemy · War to End All Wars · The Genesis · Attack!! · Unleash the Fury · Perpetual Flame · Angels of Love · Relentless
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EPs |
I Can't Wait · Power and Glory
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Cover albums |
Inspiration
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Live albums |
Trial by Fire: Live in Leningrad · Double LIVE! · Concerto Suite LIVE With the New Japan Philharmonic · G3: Rockin' in the Free World
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Compilation albums |
The Yngwie Malmsteen Collection · The Best Of: 1990–1999 · Oujya Ressou – Instrumental Best Album · 20th Century Masters - The Millennium Collection: The Best of Yngwie Malmsteen · High Impact
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Singles |
"Black Star" · "Rising Force Studio/Live '85" · "You Don't Remember, I'll Never Forget" · "I Am a Viking" · "Fire" · "Heaven Tonight" · "Making Love" · "Bedroom Eyes" · "Dragonfly" · "Teaser" · "Carry on Wayward Son"
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Videos |
Rising Force Live '85 · Trial by Fire: Live in Leningrad · Leo Fender Benefit Live · Live at Italy 92 · Live at Budokan 94 · Yngwie Malmsteen LIVE 98!! · Far Beyond the Sun · Live in Korea 2001
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Former band members |
Vocalists
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Jeff Scott Soto · Mark Boals · Joe Lynn Turner · Göran Edman · Michael Vescera · Mats Levén · Jørn Lande · Doogie White
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Bassists
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Marcel Jacob · Wally Voss · Bob Daisley · Barry Dunaway · Svante Henrysson · Barry Sparks · Randy Coven · Rudy Sarzo · Dakota Bollinger · Mick Cervino
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Drummers
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Zepp Urgard · Barriemore Barlow · Anders Johansson · Michael Von Knorring · Pete Barnacle · Bo Werner · Mike Terrana · Shane Gaalaas · Tommy Aldridge · Cozy Powell · Jonas Ostman · John Macaluso
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Keyboardists
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Jens Johansson · Mats Olausson · David Rosenthal · Joakim Svalberg · Derek Sherinian
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Related articles |
List of Yngwie Malmsteen band members · Steeler · Alcatrazz · Hear 'n Aid · G3 · Yngwie Malmsteen Signature Stratocaster · Neo-classical metal
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Persondata |
Name |
Powell, Cozy |
Alternative names |
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Short description |
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Date of birth |
December 29, 1947 |
Place of birth |
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Date of death |
April 5, 1998 |
Place of death |
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