The Beatles song that once made Ozzy Osbourne whisper, “How the hell am I going to get out of here?” wasn’t dark, loud or rebellious — it was something far more unexpected. Long before Black Sabbath, before the Prince of Darkness legend, a single bright hit crackling through a small radio in Aston made him believe escape was actually possible. Ozzy would later say it felt like going to bed in one world and waking up in another — and the truth about which Beatles track did that still surprises fans to this day.

Ozzy

The vocalist rose to fame in the 1970s as the fang-toothed frontman of the legendary heavy metal outfit Black Sabbath. During his time with the group, the self-proclaimed Prince of Darkness developed a reputation for – to put it bluntly – lunacy.

Eventually, his anarchic persona and penchant for cocaine began interfering with his musical obligations, leading to his dismissal from Black Sabbath in April 1979. Considering Osbourne and company spent an estimated $75,000 on cocaine during the production of Vol. 4, it comes as a surprise that Osbourne’s musical upbringing was so quaint. Indeed, he once cited one of The Beatles’ teenybopper hits as the song that made him want to be a rockstar.

The Beatles song that launched Ozzy Osbourne's career - 'I knew I would be  a rock star' | Music | Entertainment | Express.co.uk

It is a delicious irony that the man who would come to embody heavy metal excess found his calling in a slice of Merseybeat exuberance. Before the bats, the headlines and the chaos, there was simply a working-class kid hearing possibility crackle through a transistor radio. In that moment, the distance between Aston and superstardom no longer felt insurmountable.

The Beatles were always far more than their music. Despite their notoriety, the ‘Fab Four’ maintained a sense of relatability. They weren’t strangely tanned or obnoxiously coiffeured; they looked and sounded (depending on where you lived) a lot like their fans, and their fans responded to that. Instead of symbolising an unachievable dream, The Beatles implied that even the most ordinary people living in the most ordinary of places could make a better, more thrilling life for themselves. For youngsters growing up in drab industrial centres, the sheer existence of a band like The Beatles was a reason for optimism.

Opening up about The Beatles’ impact in a 2016 interview, Osbourne explained that the group’s 1964 hit ‘She Loves You’ completely changed the game: “I come from the backstreets of Aston in Birmingham and it wasn’t a very cool place when I was growing up,” the singer began. “I used to sit on my doorstep and think, ‘How the hell am I going to get out of here?’ And then one day ‘She Loves You’ came on the radio.”

Ozzy Osbourne 'Couldn't' Collaborate with Paul McCartney Despite Wanting to

Unless you were actually there, it’s hard to imagine just how explosive the Beatles’ sound was in the early ’60s. The group’s blend of radio-friendly rock ‘n’ roll had been bubbling under the surface for a while. With traces of music hall, skiffle, and blues, tracks like ‘She Loves You’ heralded the arrival of a new era. “That song turned my head around,” Osbourne continued. “My son always says to me, ‘What was it like when The Beatles happened?’ All I can really say to him to is: ‘Imagine going to bed in one world, and then waking up in another that’s so different and exciting that it makes you feel glad to be alive.”

With their shimmering pop, Lennon, McCartney, Harrison and Starr severed the nation from the post-war years, replacing a monochrome world with one soaked in technicolour. Their sound was, in a sense, a reflection of the burgeoning sense that things could only get better, and for Osbourne, it was the beginning of everything.

Ozzy Osbourne aborda el impacto de The Beatles: "Le dieron libertad al  mundo" — Futuro Chile

Long before he became the Prince of Darkness, Osbourne was just another wide-eyed listener swept up in that cultural shift. The seed planted by The Beatles would eventually grow into something far louder and heavier, but its roots were undeniably pop. For all the madness that followed, it began with three chords, a hook, and the belief that escape was possible.

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