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Former BLACK SABBATH singer Tony Martin has revealed that he just had a productive meeting with the band’s founding guitarist Tony Iommi.

Earlier today (Tuesday, October 17),Martin took to his Facebook page to share a photo of him with Iommi, and he included the following message: “Visited Tony Iommi today… Great meet. He is such a busy bloke at the moment but got to listen to some stuff and also show him some stuff before he had to rush off but …. very cool.”

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Last December, Iommi said that the albums BLACK SABBATH recorded with Martin would be reissued in 2023.

The legendary SABBATH guitarist touched upon the group’s re-release plans while celebrating what would have been drummer Cozy Powell’s 75th birthday. At the time, Iommi took to his social media to share a photo of Powell and he included the following message: “Cozy Powell would have been 75 today. Looking forward to the release of the IRS albums in 2023, a tribute to his great playing.”

Martin most recently spoke about previously announced plans to reissue the albums he recorded with SABBATH in a November 2022 interview with Canada’s The Metal Voice. At the time he said: “Honestly, I have no idea what’s happening with it. I know it’s gonna be next year, but that’s all I know.”

This past summer, Martin told “The Rock And Metal Profs: The History And Philosophy Of Rock And Metal” podcast that “two record labels” were going to re-release the albums he recorded with SABBATH. “I don’t know when, and I don’t know what it’s gonna look like,” he said. “There was some suggestion a while back that we might be able to put extra tracks and stuff on it. I did offer, and I went to see Tony Iommi and offered some things. And then he said we can’t use anything new ’cause nothing new can be released under the BLACK SABBATH name. It can only be stuff that’s got the original four members on it.

“I’m expecting it to be a remixed version of whatever the original was; that’s what I’m expecting,” Tony added. “So I await as you do to find out. Let me know if you hear it first.”

When the interviewer expressed hope that the box set will include some live recordings from the Martin era of SABBATH, either in audio or video format, Tony said: “I recorded the writing session with… Eddie Van Halen came over and helped us write one of the tracks [for 1994’s ‘Cross Purposes’ album]. And I had an eight-track recorder at the time in the 1980s, and I used to take it everywhere, this thing. I’ve got all of the writing sessions and rehearsals recorded. So I sent [Iommi] this, and he went, ‘Wow! That’s fucking great.’ And I said, ‘Well, you’re welcome to use it, if you wanna put that on.’ So, I don’t know… Maybe you’ll get that on there.”

BLACK SABBATH released six albums with Martin on vocals: “The Eternal Idol” (1987),”Headless Cross” (1989),”Tyr” (1990),”Cross Purposes” (1994),”Cross Purposes Live” (1995) and “Forbidden” (1995). Eventually, Martin and his “Forbidden”-era bandmates were ousted when Iommi reunited with SABBATH’s fellow original members.

In January 2022, Martin reflected on his time with SABBATH during an appearance on “The Ron Keel Podcast”, saying: “It doesn’t haunt me. It’s not a bad thing. I’ve got a lot to be grateful for. SABBATH is the reason why you, and the world, knows about my voice. So there are things to be grateful for. It was hard work for me. I’m 12 years younger than the rest of the guys, so even just circle of friends was different — they’re hanging out with Ian Gillan and Brian May, and my best friend is Dave down the road. So that was a gap. And also the experience — they were way ahead of me in experience, at least 12 years further up the road from me, and I never could quite catch them up; they will always have that much more experience than me. So that was hard work.”

He continued: “When I first got the gig, it was actually 1986 that I was put on standby when they were with Glenn Hughes on the ‘Seventh Star’ album. And I don’t know what the issues were, but something went wrong with Glenn and they put me on standby. That scared me to death, ’cause it’s Glenn Hughes. I can’t sing like Glenn Hughes; nobody can sing like Glenn Hughes. Only Glenn Hughes can sing like Glenn Hughes. So that was really scary. Then they got Ray Gillen in. Then he left — he left to join BLUE MURDER with John Sykes, so they called me again and said, ‘You’d better come down to the studio and try this out.’ And they gave me one song, which was ‘The Shining’ off ‘Eternal Idol’, and then two days later said, ‘Okay. You’ve got the job. You’ve got a week to finish the album.’ So right from the start it was scary — it was huge; suddenly being the frontman of BLACK SABBATH was just ridiculous. And yeah, the whole association with me and my voice lasted 11 years.”

Seven years ago, Iommi told I Heart Guitar that “it’s a shame” that “it took a lot for people to accept” Martin as SABBATH’s vocalist. “It’s taken all these years later for people to say, ‘Oh blimey, that was a good band with good singing.’ So it took a long time to get people to really realize how good it was.”

In 2018, Iommi spent time in the studio remixing “Forbidden” for a future release. The LP, which features Martin, drummer Cozy Powell and bassist Neil Murray, is often regarded as SABBATH’s worst studio recording.

In a 2012 interview with Über Röck, Martin said that he was “surprised” to see Iommi criticizing him in the guitarist’s “Iron Man: My Journey Through Heaven And Hell With Black Sabbath” book (referring to the Martin period, especially the touring phase following the release of “Cross Purposes” in 1994, Iommi lambasted his former singer as “unprofessional” and having “no stage presence”). Martin said: “I mean, they never said anything to me. Surely, if you’ve got a problem, the first person you should say something to is the person that’s in the band with you… It sounds like a really stupid thing to say, as they didn’t say anything to my face — and, if that’s the case, then more fool them for not saying anything, because, you know, we could have fixed it. I said to them, endlessly, that if there was anything they wanted changed, done differently, just to say and we could fix it, but clearly, they didn’t, they hadn’t got the guts to, obviously, and to write about it in a book afterwards seems a bit daft to me. I’m not bitter about it, but it is surprising… It seems a bit stupid to say that after the event.”

 

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