 Black Sabbath's Vol. 4 is just a cut below its two indisputably classic predecessors, as it  begins to run out of steam -- and memorable riffs -- toward the end.  However, it finds Sabbath  beginning to experiment successfully with their trademark sound on  tracks like the ambitious, psychedelic-tinged, multi-part "Wheels of  Confusion," the concise, textured "Tomorrow's Dream," and the  orchestrated piano ballad "Changes" (even if the latter's lyrics cross  the line into triteness). But the classic Sabbath sound is still very much in evidence; the crushing "Supernaut" is one of the heaviest tracks the band ever recorded.
  Black Sabbath's Vol. 4 is just a cut below its two indisputably classic predecessors, as it  begins to run out of steam -- and memorable riffs -- toward the end.  However, it finds Sabbath  beginning to experiment successfully with their trademark sound on  tracks like the ambitious, psychedelic-tinged, multi-part "Wheels of  Confusion," the concise, textured "Tomorrow's Dream," and the  orchestrated piano ballad "Changes" (even if the latter's lyrics cross  the line into triteness). But the classic Sabbath sound is still very much in evidence; the crushing "Supernaut" is one of the heaviest tracks the band ever recorded.Wednesday, October 26, 2011
Vol. 4
 Black Sabbath's Vol. 4 is just a cut below its two indisputably classic predecessors, as it  begins to run out of steam -- and memorable riffs -- toward the end.  However, it finds Sabbath  beginning to experiment successfully with their trademark sound on  tracks like the ambitious, psychedelic-tinged, multi-part "Wheels of  Confusion," the concise, textured "Tomorrow's Dream," and the  orchestrated piano ballad "Changes" (even if the latter's lyrics cross  the line into triteness). But the classic Sabbath sound is still very much in evidence; the crushing "Supernaut" is one of the heaviest tracks the band ever recorded.
  Black Sabbath's Vol. 4 is just a cut below its two indisputably classic predecessors, as it  begins to run out of steam -- and memorable riffs -- toward the end.  However, it finds Sabbath  beginning to experiment successfully with their trademark sound on  tracks like the ambitious, psychedelic-tinged, multi-part "Wheels of  Confusion," the concise, textured "Tomorrow's Dream," and the  orchestrated piano ballad "Changes" (even if the latter's lyrics cross  the line into triteness). But the classic Sabbath sound is still very much in evidence; the crushing "Supernaut" is one of the heaviest tracks the band ever recorded.
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