Back to the Beginning was a benefit concert by the English heavy metal band Black Sabbath, with a number of supporting artists. It took place on 5 July 2025 at Villa Park in Aston, Birmingham, England, very near to where the band was formed in 1968.
The event concluded with the final live performances of both Black Sabbath and lead singer Ozzy Osbourne; it also marked the first time since 2005 that the original line-up of the band (Osbourne, Tony Iommi, Geezer Butler, and Bill Ward) had performed together live. Osbourne, no longer able to walk due to advanced Parkinson's disease, sang while seated on a throne. Seventeen days after the show, Osbourne died at the age of 76.[1]
Black Sabbath were formed in Aston, Birmingham, England, in 1968 by Geezer Butler, Tony Iommi, Ozzy Osbourne and Bill Ward, who grew up within a short distance of each other, and of Villa Park, in the district.[2] The band developed a style that came to be known as heavy metal and achieved worldwide success, selling over 75 million albums.[3] Osbourne was fired from the band in 1979 for substance abuse and pursued a fruitful solo career, but occasionally reunited with the group.[4] The original line-up last performed together at Ozzfest 2005.[5] The band's previous last concert was at Genting Arena in 2017 as part of The End Tour, but with Tommy Clufetos replacing Bill Ward as drummer.[6][7]
Osbourne was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease in February 2019, and suffered spinal damage from a fall that same year.[8][9] He rarely performed in the years after, but in August 2022 made a surprise appearance with Iommi to close the Commonwealth Games at Birmingham's Alexander Stadium.[2] By early 2025, he had lost his ability to walk due to Parkinson's.[10] Black Sabbath and Osbourne's farewell charity concert was announced by Osbourne's wife Sharon Osbourne on 5 February 2025.[5] The name "Back to the Beginning" refers to the band's formation in Aston, as Osbourne insisted on staging one final performance to "give back to the place where I was born".[11]
One week before the concert, the four original band members were made Freemen of the City of Birmingham.[3] To coincide with the event, Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery launched its "Ozzy Osbourne: Working Class Hero" exhibition, displaying his awards, memorabilia and photographs.[12] A mural depicting the band was painted by artist Mr Murals outside Birmingham New Street railway station on Navigation Street, and completed in the days before the show.[13] It was visited and signed by the four band members on 29 June 2025.[14]Jack Osbourne hosted the premiere cinema screening of The Nine Lives of Ozzy Osbourne at Millennium Point on the eve of the concert.[15]
The stadium event was produced by Live Nation, with the accompanying broadcast co-produced by Kiswe and Mercury Studios.[19] A revolving stage was utilized to quickly transition between musical acts, borrowing a concept famously used for the London portion of Live Aid.[20][21] Promoter Andy Copping of Live Nation spent two years working to put the show together.[22] He had wanted to present the concert in 2024, but it was delayed after Ozzy Osbourne experienced health setbacks.[23]
Black Sabbath began rehearsing their set a month prior to the event at a studio in Oxfordshire.[24] The first rehearsal for opening acts was on 3 July 2025 at Villa Park, and included a group photoshoot by Ross Halfin.[25] Final rehearsals and soundchecks were held for all participating bands inside Villa Park on the eve of the concert.[26]
Ozzy Osbourne: No Escape From Now, an upcoming Paramount+ documentary that followed Osbourne between 2022 and 2025, will showcase the event's development.[27] Osbourne also wrote about preparing for the show in his upcoming memoir, Last Rites.[28]
The concert lasted ten hours, beginning at 13:00 BST (12:00 UTC) and running until the local curfew of 23:00 BST.[29]Sid Wilson of Slipknot performed a preshow DJ set while fans entered the stadium.[30]Jason Momoa, who starred in an unreleased music video for Ozzy Osbourne's "Scary Little Green Men", hosted the event.[31]
The concert featured fourteen supporting acts, including two supergroups with various musicians and guest vocalists.[32] The supporting acts played sets that mixed covers of Black Sabbath and Ozzy Osbourne songs with those from their own catalogues.[32] A drum-off was held between multiple drummers at the mid-point of the show.[32] Video tributes were aired between sets from artists who could not make the event, including AC/DC, Def Leppard, Billy Idol, Elton John, Cyndi Lauper, Marilyn Manson, and Dolly Parton.[32] Prerecorded performances were also streamed, including "Mr. Crowley" by Jack Black and "Changes" by Fred Durst.[33][34] Ozzy Osbourne played the penultimate set with his solo band, and then joined Black Sabbath to close the show.[32]
Following the event, Kelly Osbourne, Ozzy and Sharon's daughter, accepted Sid Wilson's backstage marriage proposal.[35] Ozzy Osbourne died seventeen days after the concert on 22 July 2025.[1]
Notable absences
Judas Priest, who could not attend but released a cover of "War Pigs" in tribute
Judas Priest were invited to participate, but were unavailable as they were scheduled to be opening for Scorpions' 60th anniversary concert in Hanover, Germany, the same night.[36] They released a cover of Black Sabbath's "War Pigs" the week of the show to honour the band.[37]Alex Lifeson and Geddy Lee of Rush were originally supposed to perform, but had to back out after "other things came up".[38]Wolfgang Van Halen was originally advertised for the event, but pulled out as his band Mammoth were opening for Creed in the United States, and the travel would not have been logistically possible.[39] The surviving members of Soundgarden (Matt Cameron, Ben Shepherd, and Kim Thayil) were advertised for the concert, but did not appear due to scheduling conflicts.[40][41]Jonathan Davis was also advertised as a performer, but only appeared in a prerecorded video tribute.[32][42]Mötley Crüe could not perform due to "health issues within the band."[43][44]Megadeth was not invited to the event despite expressing interest.[45]Sharon Osbourne removed an unnamed band from the show after they demanded payment for appearing, and vowed to reveal their identity after the event concluded.[46][needs update]
Mark Beaumont of The Independent rated the show five stars out of five, giving special praise to Yungblud's cover of "Changes".[47] Rhys Buchanan of Rolling Stone also gave the show a perfect rating; Buchanan said Yungblud's performance, which he dedicated to Diogo Jota who died two days prior, "stopped the stadium in its tracks".[48] Michael Hann of The Guardian rated the event four out of five, singling out the performances of Black Sabbath, Gojira, Guns N' Roses, Metallica, and Yungblud as highlights of the show.[49]
David Draiman's appearance was met by boos from some in the crowd, which was attributed to his political views in support of the Israel Defense Forces.[52] He had also leaked the show's run sheet online the day before the event.[53] The decision to air a video tribute by Marilyn Manson was criticized, as the artist had recently cancelled a gig at Brighton Centre after local backlash to his sexual assault allegations.[54]
All 45,000 tickets for the concert sold out in 16 minutes, with 150,000 people having waited in a virtual queue for the opportunity to attend.[55] Around 20% of tickets were purchased by international fans.[23] None of the acts on the bill were paid, only receiving reimbursement for their travel expenses.[56]
The entire event was streamed online via pay per view, with a two-hour broadcast delay,[57] and peaked at 5.8 million concurrent streams.[49] Some pubs advertising watch parties were forced to cancel after producer Kiswe threatened legal action if they did not purchase an expensive commercial licence.[58] Others did show the event, and reported capacity crowds and shortages of beer.[59]
A 100-minute concert film of the event titled Back to the Beginning: Ozzy's Final Bow will receive a theatrical release in early 2026.[63] It will be released to DVD and Blu-ray later that same year.[63]