The rock world is shattered.
Ozzy Osbourne, the legendary frontman of Black Sabbath and the eternal Prince of Darkness, has passed away at the age of 76, after years of battling health issues that had slowly pulled him away from the stage — but never from the hearts of fans.
While tributes have poured in from across the globe, it was Metallica’s raw, emotional farewell — led by frontman James Hetfield, who broke down in tears while sharing their final duet — that left the entire music world stunned and grieving.
“My Brother in Noise”: Hetfield’s Tearful Goodbye
In a video posted to Metallica’s official channels, James Hetfield appears visibly shaken, voice cracking as he speaks directly to fans and to Ozzy’s family:
“We knew this day would come. But it still rips a hole in your chest. Ozzy wasn’t just a legend. He was our legend. He made it okay to be weird, to be loud, to be dark, to be real.”
Hetfield then introduced the clip that would bring millions of fans to tears:
a raw, previously unreleased backstage video of Metallica and Ozzy performing “Iron Man” and “Paranoid” together — live, loud, and for the last time.
The footage, shot during a surprise collaboration in 2019 at the Power Trip festival, shows Ozzy — then already struggling with mobility — walking slowly onto the stage, leaning on a cane but beaming as the crowd erupted.
“He told me backstage, ‘I might not remember the lyrics, but I’ll never forget the noise,’” Hetfield recalled, his voice breaking. “He was hurting. But he screamed anyway.”
The Final Performance: Loud, Defiant, Legendary
The duet — a thunderous medley of “Iron Man” and “Paranoid” — saw Hetfield and Ozzy trading vocals, grinning like teenage rebels, and feeding off a crowd that roared like it knew it was witnessing history.
It would turn out to be Ozzy’s last time sharing a stage with Metallica — and one of his last major public performances before Parkinson’s and spinal injuries forced him to retire from touring.
“We Owe Him Everything”: A Band in Mourning
Metallica has never shied away from naming Black Sabbath as their foundation — the blueprint for heavy metal itself. And Ozzy, with his unmistakable voice and chaotic energy, was always the torchbearer for darkness in rock.
“Without Ozzy, there is no Metallica,” drummer Lars Ulrich wrote in a separate post. “He showed us how to turn pain into power. Chaos into church.”
Bassist Robert Trujillo, who once played for Ozzy before joining Metallica, posted a black-and-white photo of the two backstage with the caption:
“Rest in power, Madman. You were my first boss, and the best one I ever had.”
Fans React: “Ozzy Screamed So We Could Live Loud”
Across social media, fans, fellow musicians, and celebrities have shared an outpouring of love and grief — calling Ozzy’s death the “end of an era” and a “gut punch to metal’s heart.”
One viral comment captured the feeling best:
“Ozzy Osbourne didn’t just sing about darkness — he made it beautiful. He made it human. And now the world feels a little quieter.”
A Lasting Legacy — And a Final Roar
James Hetfield ended his tribute video with a long pause, eyes wet, voice low:
“We lost the voice in the dark. But the echoes… they’ll never stop. Thank you, Ozzy. From every broken kid you made feel seen. From every stage you burned down. From all of us who scream because you screamed first.”
Then came one last clip — Ozzy, hunched but smiling, looking over his shoulder at the crowd as he said into the mic:
“Don’t miss me too much, yeah? I’m not done haunting you.”
Rest in power, Ozzy Osbourne. The Prince of Darkness never dies — he just turns the volume up somewhere else.