War Pigs
Encyclopedia : W : WA : WAR : War Pigs
- For the Hungarian rock band, see Warpigs (band).
It is the opening track on Paranoid, Black Sabbath's best selling album. It can also be found on every live and compilation album by the band along with Paranoid itself and "Iron Man". The instrumental part in the end of the song is called "Luke's Wall".
Originally intended to be the title-track, the name of the album was changed to Paranoid, as Black Sabbath's record company feared a backlash by supporters of the Vietnam War. It is one of Black Sabbath's most popular songs, and is still played on Classic Rock stations regularly. The riff, as with most Sabbath songs, is powerful and memorable, as are the eerie verses, which feature Osbourne singing alone (using a melody cribbed from their earlier "Behind The Wall Of Sleep") and punctuated at every line by a guitar lick.
The song has been covered by the band Faith No More and was featured on their 1989 album The Real Thing. It has also been performed live by The Dresden Dolls and by The Flaming Lips in 2004 to 2006, at times with female vocalists such as Cat Power and Peaches. Govt Mule covered 'War Pigs' on their 1999 album, Live With A Little Help From Our Friends.
"It's about the sad shape that our world is in." (Ronnie James Dio, 1992).
Recently it was announced that War Pigs will be featured in the PS2 game Guitar Hero II.
British born rapper Kano sampled the guitar parts for his song 'I Don't Know Why' from his album Home Sweet Home.
Walpurgis
The song was originally called "Walpurgis" (Witches' Mass) and contained lyrics about Satanists. The band decided to change the lyrics shortly before Paranoid was recorded to reflect an anti-war mentality. The "Walpurgis" version can be heard on Ozzy Osbourne's "Ozzman Cometh" greatest-hits album."Originally, War Pigs was called 'Walpurgis', about Satan's Christmas thing, but we had to change the lyrics, because all the Satan stuff was going on." - Geezer
Compare with
External links
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
