God Is Dead

“Ozzy is dead,” someone whispered—barely audible, yet somehow cutting through the thunder of guitars and drums.

Then someone else repeated it. And someone after that.
The whispers spread like wildfire across the crowd.

Is it true?
Is he really gone?
Are you sure?

And before we knew it, the murmurs turned into a chant:
“Ozzy! Ozzy! Ozzy!”

Under ordinary circumstances, chanting one artist’s name during another artist’s set would be unthinkably disrespectful.
It’s the kind of thing rowdy crowds do to warm-up bands when they’re impatient for the headliner. Even then, I’ve always found it distasteful.

But not this time.

Gojira finished their song as usual, and frontman Joe Duplantier stepped up to the mic.
“Ozzy is dead,” he said. “I can’t believe it.”

Last night, while Gojira was delivering a breathtaking performance in Istanbul, the godfather of heavy metal passed away at the age of 76.

For those less familiar with the genre: Ozzy Osbourne was the legendary frontman of Black Sabbath—the band that, after a tragic industrial accident, channeled their frustration and grief into sound and invented heavy metal as we know it.

By extension, they created an entire subculture.

Other singers would come and go throughout Black Sabbath’s long history, but Ozzy was always something else.
He didn’t just sing metal. He was metal.
Wild, magnetic, unpredictable, and iconic—he defined what it meant to be larger than life.
For better or worse, he helped shape the image of heavy metal in the public eye.

Just two weeks ago, Black Sabbath had headlined their final concert in Birmingham. It was a triumphant goodbye. Maybe after that, he felt his story was complete.

It’s hard to explain the gravity of this moment to someone outside the scene. So let me try in mythic terms:

A thousand years ago, in a different kind of tribe, Ozzy Osbourne would’ve been one of the patron gods in our pantheon.

And last night,
the god died.
We’re in mourning.

The crowd kept chanting:
“Ozzy! Ozzy! Ozzy!”

Duplantier wasn’t annoyed. He was moved.
He tried to say something more, but couldn’t.
Because sometimes—
there are no words.

Life will continue without Ozzy Osbourne. But his legacy will outlive us all.
Death can’t contain him.

He was, after all, larger than life.

After a moment of awkward, reverent silence, Gojira launched into the next song.
And the show went on.

As it must.

I’m sure that’s exactly how Ozzy would’ve wanted it.


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