Guitar & Bass Tabs
Black Sabbath
About Black Sabbath
Black Sabbath emerged from Birmingham, England in 1968 when guitarist Tony Iommi, bassist Geezer Butler, drummer Bill Ward and vocalist Ozzy Osbourne joined forces. Initially called Earth, the group soon adopted the name Black Sabbath in 1969, inspired by a horror film and a mood they felt suited their sound. They hit the club circuits across the Midlands and released their self-titled debut in 1970, a record that quietly rewired rock itself. The album's weighty riffs, ominous atmosphere, and gospel-tinged dread set a blueprint other bands would chase for decades.
In the wake of Paranoid (1970) and Master of Reality (1971), Sabbath refined that blueprint into lean, crushing anthems. Tracks like Black Sabbath, War Pigs, and Paranoid paired Iommi’s down-tuned guitar with Geezer Butler’s thunderous bass and Bill Ward’s propulsive drumming to create a sound that felt both menacing and irresistible. The band’s influence radiated outward, spawning countless subgenres of metal and shaping what generations of players would strive to emulate. Inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2006 as pioneers of heavy metal, Sabbath's legacy remains a touchstone of rock history.
Over the years their lineup would evolve and Ozzy Osbourne's solo career would bloom, yet Black Sabbath's DNA—slow, monumental riffs, dark humor, and a fearless appetite for drama—keeps echoing through rock and metal. For guitarists, their catalog is a masterclass in rhythm, tone control, and dynamic contrast: how to make a single riff feel monumental, how to palm-mute with purpose, and how to ride a groove from the quiet verse to the thunderous chorus. Their music invites players to study timing, phrasing, and the art of building a world with a single, devastating chord progression.
🎸 Want to know what gear Black Sabbath used, their playing style, and fun facts? Scroll below the lessons!
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After Forever
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Paranoid
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Wheels Of Confusion
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Fairies Wear Boots
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Iron Man
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Sweet Leaf
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The Wizard
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Wicked World
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A Hard Road
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Planet Caravan
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War Pigs
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Electric Funeral
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Rat Salad
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Hand Of Doom
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Lord Of This World
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Into The Void
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Supernaut
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Cornucopia
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Snowblind
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Laguna Sunrise
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St. Vitus' Dance
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Under The Sun
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Sabbath Bloody Sabbath
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Fluff
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A National Acrobat
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Sabbra Cadabra
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Killing Yourself To Live
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Iron Man
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Looking For Today
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Spiral Architect
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Never Say Die
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Hole In The Sky
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The Writ
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Symptom Of The Universe
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Thrill Of It All
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You Won't Change Me
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Back Street Kids
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Rock 'N' Roll Doctor
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Dirty Woman
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Johnny Blade
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N.I.B.
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Junior's Eyes
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Over To You
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Neon Knights
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Children Of The Sea
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Lady Evil
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Heaven And Hell
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Wishing Well
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Walk Away
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Lonely Is The Word
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Turn Up The Night
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Voodoo
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Sign Of The Southern Cross
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Country Girl
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Mob Rules
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Falling Off The Edge Of The World
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Slipping Away
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Iron Man
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Die Young
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Megalomania
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NIB
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View Tab →Playing Style
Black Sabbath’s playing style is defined by heavy, down-tuned riffing and blues-influenced momentum that feels both primal and precise. Tony Iommi crafted riffs around power chords, minor scales, and tritone intervals to produce that signature ominous bite. The duo of Iommi’s guitar and Geezer Butler’s bass lock into pounding, hypnotic grooves, with the drums driving a relentless, stomping pulse. Palms mute, deliberate rest, and careful pacing give Sabbath riffs their weight, while their use of extended sustain and lower tunings creates a sense of doom without sacrificing musical swing. The sound is built for volume, picked clean or fuzzed into roaring sustain, and delivered with a vocal edge that keeps the music dynamic from intro to outro.
🎸 Gear & Equipment
Iommi’s tone became a blueprint for heavy guitar sound: a Gibson SG (notably the SG Special and later SG Standard) through a tight Marshall stack, with the guitar’s pickups and down-tuned strings contributing to that infamous, saturated crunch. The band’s early rig and approach—cranked tube amps, a straightforward pedal setup for distortion or fuzz, and room-filling stage volume—defined the era’s live tone. Butler’s bass anchored the low end with melodic lines that doubled the riff, while Ward’s steady, rock-solid drumming provided the clock that kept every riff in tight, terrifying time.
Why Learn Black Sabbath Songs?
Learning Black Sabbath tunes gives you a fast track to essential rock skills: solid rhythm, precise muting, dynamic contrasts, and the art of turning a simple riff into something unforgettable. From early 70s classics to extended, multi-part tracks, these songs train you to lock in with the groove, play with down-tuned aggression, and shape tone for maximum impact. With 75 lessons available, you can start with the iconic, approachable riffs and gradually tackle more complex arrangements, building confidence and foundational rock technique along the way.
Did You Know?
- 1Black Sabbath's 1970 debut is widely regarded as the birth of heavy metal.
- 2Tony Iommi famously retuned his guitar after injuring his fingertips, which helped shape their doom-laden sound.
- 3The band's name was inspired by the 1963 horror film Black Sabbath.
- 4They were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2006 as pioneers of heavy metal.
62 Black Sabbath lesson(s) available — Start learning today!
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