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Ward started writing with the band but soon left, a development Osbourne found sad. Then Iommi's diagnosis came in December 2011. "You know the thing (that) is the easiest part of getting the reformation of Black Sabbath is just saying, 'Yeah, we'll do it,'" the 64-year-old Osbourne said. "The hard part is getting us in one place all on the same day playing our stuff. If Tony Iommi can be treated for ... cancer and turn up to rehearsal and come up with great riffs, it's not fair that any one of us don't come up to the bench, you know?" Iommi, who's now in remission, traveled back and forth from Los Angeles to London for treatment. Both Osbourne and Butler expressed admiration for the guitarist. "Tony, he's my hero because I don't know how he did it," Osbourne said. Osbourne also had his struggles during the recording. He was fired from the band for substance abuse problems and has worked on changing his lifestyle after meeting and marrying his wife and manager Sharon Osbourne. She expressed anger earlier this year when Osbourne began drinking while making the album. He says it's been four months since he's had a drink and things are well with his family. "It's just one of them things -- I'm an alcoholic," Osbourne said. "And the most unnatural thing for an alcoholic is not to drink. So every now and again I'll just go and have a few drinks. But it catches up with you and bites you in the butt, you know? I mean Sharon has been living with me for 33 years, and it just (messed) the family up again. My son has got 10 years of sobriety. So I'm trying one day at a time, you know?"
Rubin said he saw none of these outside struggles in the studio, beyond the strengthened resolve to finish. When the band finally plugged in, Rubin was delighted to find they still had that Sabbath groove. But Osbourne wasn't immediately taken with Rubin's plan to revisit the band's distant past. "I kept saying to him, really and truly the first Black Sabbath album was a live album without the audience," Osbourne said. "And he kept going on about these bluesy undertones, and I'm like what the ... is he on about? Because when you're in a band you do things that you like. The first person I want to impress with my work is me. If I don't like it, I don't like it, you know? It took me a long time to get my head around where Rick was going. But he proved me wrong, I tell you, in the end." ___ Online:
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