In October we took the whole Stonehenge thing to America. We had carpenters on it and a big crew to set it all up, but on most gigs it just wouldn't work. The columns at the back were too high and we ended up just using the ones that held my and Geezer's cabinets, but even those were massive. At the end of the tour we tried to give it all away to the people who had bought London Bridge and reassembled it in Arizona, but they didn't want it. We couldn't take it back to England, so the crew dumped it off at the docks somewhere and left it. Just ridiculous. We abandoned Stonehenge right there in America.
I didn't see the movie
Spinal Tap
until later. Don Arden said to me: âWe've got a front cover to do tomorrow.'
I said: âOkay. Me and Geezer?'
âWith Spinal Tap.'
âSpinal Tap? Who the bloody hell is Spinal Tap?'
I don't think even he knew at the time.
âI think it's some up-and-coming band and they have a movie coming out.'
âAnd we are doing a front cover with them? We've never heard of them!'
Me and Geezer did the shoot with them anyway, which was funny, but I still didn't have the faintest idea who they were. It was only later when I saw the movie that I realised what it was all about and where they got the idea for the scene with the tiny Stonehenge from.
And they had a midget as well.
Because the
Born Again
album cover had a picture of this red baby with claws and little devil's horns, Don Arden's idea was to recreate this baby on stage. So one night at a gig he said: âI want to show you something.'
âOkay.'
He made Ian and me wait outside this room and finally said: âOkay, you can come in now.'
We went in, it was dark and we just saw these red eyes, peering at us.
âBlimey!'
We put the light on and there was this midget in a rubber outfit who looked like the baby on the cover. We thought, fucking hell, Don's gone over the top! He said: âIt's going to be a great addition to the show!'
The idea was that the midget would climb up the 13-foot-high columns, run across them, and then jump off them on to the drum riser, which was about halfway down the stage. And then he'd jump off the riser to the front of the stage, look at the audience, cry, and his eyes would light up and the show would start.
The midget was a bit of a pop star, because he'd been one of the little bears in
Star Wars
. Ozzy at the time also took a midget out on the road; I think he called him Ronnie. I don't know who had the first one, really. It became a thing. Midgets were in demand. But we had the most famous midget because ours was in
Star Wars
.
âWho's got the most famous midget?'
âWe have!'
He kept ribbing the crew with it: âI've been in the movies!'
They really didn't care about that at all, so they did all manner of things to this poor guy. One night they locked him in a flight case.
âWhat's happened to the midget?'
Nobody could find him. The little guy nearly suffocated.
Then another day I went down for a sound check and I could hear: âHelp! Help!'
I looked up and they had him hanging over the stage on a chain, upside down. The poor bugger, he really took some stick. It was becoming a real thing for the crew: âWhat can we do to him next?'
We finally decided it was best for all parties concerned if he left, especially after the crew decided to put the lights out on him at the very moment that he jumped from the columns on to the drum riser. He went: âAaaaaah!'
Splat!
He caught the edge of the drum riser and nearly broke his neck. Meanwhile, we were backstage waiting to come on and it just blew the show. We said: âThat's it, he's gone!'
They would have killed him if we hadn't fired him.
Up until that point I had always worked with people who were completely committed. Looking back at it now, it doesn't look as if Ian was. I think he had a ball and did his best, but he knew all along that he was going to get out. And we never thought, oh, he's going to be here for ten years. With this line-up we just set out to see where it was going. We did one album, toured for a year and that was it. We didn't know until the very end that Ian was going back to Deep Purple, but it had run its course by that point. Being with Purple, that was his gig. We didn't really think about doing another album together, we never had fights, we got on great and
we still do. We had a fantastic time and more laughs than ever. We just took it day by day. And the last of those days came in March 1984, when we had our final gig together in Massachusetts.
That was the end for Ian, and for Bev as well.
58
Last man standing
Right after Ian Gillan left, we met up with Ozzy to talk about getting the old band back together again. We've had one or two times like that, where we discussed him coming back. If it had been up to us, it would have happened. But Don wouldn't have anything to do with Sharon and Sharon wouldn't have anything to do with Don. It was always these stupid managements beefing on about something that stopped us from doing what we wanted to do.
We still needed a new singer, so out in LA me and Geezer listened to tapes again, boxes and boxes of them, sent to us by all these young guys who were dreaming about joining Black Sabbath. This one guy called Ron Keel sent a tape in and I said to Geezer: âThis lad's pretty good. Have a listen to him.'
He played it and said: âOh, yeah!'
We went out for dinner and drinks with him. In the course of the evening I said to Ron: âI really like the stuff you sent.'
âOh, thanks.'
I said: âI like that third track, so-and-so . . .'
And he went: âThat's not me.'
âWhat do you mean it's not you? It's on your tape!'
He said: âI'm on the other side.'
He'd sent the tape with him on one side and another, different singer on the other. So we made a right boo-boo there. Ron actually did have a career later, because he's a good singer as well. He just wasn't what we were looking for at the time. We never figured out who the other guy was, but after this happened we'd had enough, so we got a producer to try out the singers who had sent in good tapes. It's like doing
The X Factor
: you go through all these kids who sing in the bathroom and think they are great. Most of them were rubbish.
We wanted somebody who looked right, had a good voice and could sing the old songs, because that's what people wanted to hear as well. When Ronnie James Dio came into it, he was so different from Ozzy, but he could still sing those old songs in his way and it sounded right. Most of the people we tried just didn't sound right. A lot of them couldn't reach the high notes. Come to think of it, that was one of the things Michael Bolton actually could do.
We gave the most promising ones we auditioned a little extra time. Like David Donato, who we allowed a couple of weeks to settle in. We also recorded a couple of tracks with him. One of the songs was âNo Way Out', which, after many changes, turned into âThe Shining' off the
Eternal Idol
album. Different vocals, different lyrics, different arrangement, but still the initial riff. Dave looked right and he was a nice enough lad, but he had a bit of a strange, high voice. Before we knew it, Don Arden already had
Kerrang!
magazine doing photos, even though we were going: âWe don't want to release these yet, he's not a definite yet!'
And, sure enough, bang, he was out. After millions of tapes and countless auditions, we still hadn't found ourselves a singer. But our drummer problem had been sorted, because Bill had come back. Or so we thought. In the summer of 1984 he left again. In and out like a yo-yo he was. Bill is one of those people who is difficult to understand sometimes. Even after all the years I've known
him, I still never know what it is that makes him tick. And right after Bill, Geezer went as well.
But I didn't leave. The only person left standing was me.
Mug!
59
The mysterious case of the lofty lodgers
After finishing the Born Again tour I rented a house in Bel Air. It was a wonderful place, but I heard these noises all the time, people talking and bumps in the night. I'd look around the house but nobody would be there.
âBlimey, where does that come from?'
Weird things happened. I came back one night from rehearsal, walked into the kitchen and found a plait of hair on the kitchen table, a couple of feet long. Like a ponytail.
âHow did that get there?'
Another night I came home and found the same sort of thing wrapped around the handle of the front door. I couldn't explain it.
I could never figure out the sound of people talking in the house. I called the Bel Air police every time I heard it. At first they'd go around the house: nothing. But they never checked the loft. And after a while they'd come around and go: âOh, it's him again.'
I got so concerned about it that I even stayed down at my friend's house a couple of times. He had a bloody armoury there.
He had revolvers and pump-action shotguns and, just like in the movies, a little gun in a book. He said: âI'll come up with you and we'll have a look. I'll bring my gun.'
And so he did. He sat there in the lounge all night. Nothing happened. I thought, he thinks I am loony now. He left and the next day it started again.
I then hired a security guard. The sauna overlooked the swimming pool, so I put him in there. I said: âIf you see anything, let me know.'
After a while he got fed up and said: âHey, man, I can't stay here all night!'
I whispered: âShhhh, we're trying to catch somebody!'
I was going to extremes to find out who these people were. After the security guy left, I had one of the crew stay with me, but he would be snoring away so loudly that he couldn't hear anything. Finally, Mark gave me a Magnum. I slept with this huge gun in my hand. One night I heard this horrendous noise. I grabbed Mark's gun and I dashed to the car with no shirt on and as I drove out I looked back and I saw all these faces in the kitchen window, looking out at me. It freaked me out. I drove straight down to the police, they came up and: nothing. Gone!
Then I found out that the wires of the burglar alarm had been cut inside the house. I should have moved out really, but then I had Geoff Nicholls to stay with me. I just wanted somebody to see something, if only to prove that I was not crazy. I really thought I was going loopy and so did everybody else.
One night Geoff and me were in the lounge at two o'clock in the morning and we saw this bloke running across the lawn.
Fucking hell, finally!
I got my gun and we opened the door slowly. We slipped out and crawled across the grass. The house was built on a hill and we could hear talking down below. I whispered to Geoff: âAll right, we've got a gun and when they come up . . .'
We must have been lying there for about an hour waiting for these people to appear, and then the sprinklers came on. It was like a Laurel and Hardy skit, both of us going: âWaah!'
We were soaked and, of course, after that we never found them. But at least Geoff had seen somebody as well. It wasn't just me any more.
One night a guy from the crew built this trap in the garden. He made all these zigzags of wire all across the yard and it took him all day to do it. The idea was that if somebody came across he'd get stuck in it and I would be able to see him.
I heard a noise. I called the police. They came over. And then they got stuck in it.
I went out with my gun and the police were going: âDrop the gun, drop the gun!'
âNo, no, I live here!'
âDrop the gun!'
They could have shot me. I could have shot them as well, come to think of it.
This thing went on for months. Eventually we found a trapdoor. Upstairs there was a cinema room with a big screen. In the wall there was a cutout, and because it was all papered you couldn't really see it. We opened this thing, stepped through it, and we could walk all around the house. It was quite a big area; you could virtually stand up there. We found all these piles of cigarette butts and beer cans outside the vents, through which you could look into the rooms. They had obviously been sitting there, seeing everything I did. Fucking hell, they could probably tell a few stories.
I was relieved that we found that somebody had been there and that the police could finally see that as well. They never found out who it was. They said afterwards that the easiest thing for me would have been to get a dog. With a dog I'd have found them in no time. Now why the hell didn't I think of that?
It made me so paranoid that I eventually moved into a hotel. The first thing I did there was tape all the vents up. I just had a terrible fear of it, so there I was, roasting at the hotel. Even now I've got cameras around my house everywhere; I've got the gates and the dogs. And it's all down to that experience.
60
Lovely Lita
Lita Ford opened for us on the Born Again tour. We got together after a show to have a chat, and we hit it off. It developed into a relationship and when I lived in Bel Air, in the house with the people in the loft, she came to visit me there. After I moved out of there and got a penthouse at Crescent Heights and Sunset in LA, she moved in with me. I was still married to Melinda at the time. We had split up, but it took me a long time to get a divorce, so I suppose technically I was committing adultery. Lita and I even got engaged, but we couldn't do any more than that until I got divorced.