Gill writes:
If I’m really honest, metal is not my favourite genre of music but it is for plenty of my friends, which just goes to show how amazingly diverse music is in touching our hearts. It was one of said friends who introduced this song to me back in the 80’s – a classic break-up song from Ozzy which starts rather pertinently with the words ‘time has come to say goodbye’ – words that take on a new meaning this week when we heard about Ozzy’s death.
Ozzy Osbourne’s life was always a paradox — the so-called “Prince of Darkness” whose music and antics once scandalised polite society, yet who, underneath the wild exterior, revealed moments of startling vulnerability and longing. This song from 1983, So Tired, is a striking example of this softer side to him. Behind the grand, almost theatrical arrangement, Ozzy sings not about devils or bats, but about weariness, loneliness, and the ache of giving so much of himself away.
“So tired, so tired / And I can’t wait for tomorrow…” he laments — a simple line that could also be a quiet confession from a man whose public persona often hid a desperate, human need for rest and peace. Ozzy’s life was a relentless ride of excess and survival: the poverty of his youth in Birmingham, the dizzy heights with Black Sabbath, addiction, scandal, reality TV fame, and countless near misses with death. Through it all though, I can’t help thinking that there’s a spiritual search for him — not in a pious way, but in the deep human desire for something more than the chaos our lives can seem to have.
Many of us might not know that Ozzy was raised Anglican, and despite his stage persona, faith and questions of the soul run through his work. Songs like So Tired show us a man who knows that even fame and fortune can’t quiet a restless heart. “I’m so tired of waiting for you” is a lament for lost love, but maybe it’s also a cry about something bigger — a hope that beyond weariness there might be a welcome, a home, a forgiveness not found in fame or intoxication, but in something transcendent.
In many ways, I think that Ozzy’s life embodied the messy truth that spirituality doesn’t always look neat. It can be loud and broken and contradictory. And yet, in the quiet corners of his music — such as the weary sigh of So Tired — we hear a glimpse of the same longing that our faith traditions try to answer: the hope that, one day, the tired will find rest, the lost will be found, and even a self-proclaimed madman can be embraced by grace.
Rest In Peace Ozzy. You were a legend in my lifetime.
Find out more about the late Ozzy Osbourne at https://www.ozzy.com/.