The original lineup of
Black Sabbath possesses such a mythic quality that
it's easy to overlook how far they slid by the time Ozzy Osbourne up and left the band...or how far they rebounded after they hired Rainbow singer Ronnie James Dio as his replacement. Countless compilations over the years have preserved the
initial part of the story line - celebrating the
innovations of the first four albums with a near fetishistic quality - but there has never been a good retrospective concerning
the Dio years until Rhino released the aptly titled
The Dio Years in early 2007. True,
the Dio years didn't last all that long - the singer joined
in 1980 for Heaven & Hell, then lasted through one more studio album, the following year's Mob Rules, before departing under a shroud of controversy after 1982's botched live album Live Evil - but Dio had a powerful
impact upon the band and
its legacy; these were the last years that Sabbath exerted pull as an active band, and after his departure they stumbled through various singers over the next decade before
intermittently reuniting with Ozzy
in the '90s.
The Dio Years proves that during his brief time with the band, Dio did help Sabbath make music that could hold
its own with some of the classic lineup's finest moments. With Dio as a frontman, the band was harder, nastier, and a little faster than the slow sludge of the early Sabbath records, but
it fit
in nicely with the New Wave of British Heavy Metal at the beginning of the '80s and
it's aged very well. Some of
it can sound silly - Dio's lyrical obsessions always do - but this
is harder, heavier, better music than either Technical Ecstasy or Never Say Die! Anybody who's refused to give this latter-day
incarnation of the band the time of day might find this compilation revelatory.
The Dio Years review by allmusic.com