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A National Acrobat Black Sabbath
Written by: William Ward, Terence Butler, Frank Iommi, John Osborne
Album: Sabbath Bloody Sabbath
Released: 1973
Black Sabbath lyrics are often filled with fantastical sci-fi images or dark matter like paranoia or addiction. In "A National Acrobat," though, we hear about conception, with references to embryonic cells and unborn children. Their lyricist at this time was their bass player, Geezer Butler. He explained:
"It's about sperm and all the lives that could have been," he said. "It's like, billions to one. But that sperm becomes you, and all the other sperms that could have been and never were, what their lives could have been."
The title "A National Acrobat" never shows up in the lyric. Butler said: "Sperm swimming towards the egg and being pushed away from the egg... I don't know what drugs I was on at the time! In my mind, it was like an acrobat swimming away from the egg."
"A National Acrobat" is one of the weightier songs on Black Sabbath's fifth album, Sabbath Bloody Sabbath, from 1973. By this time they had gelled musically but were starting to feel the ravages of their addictions; lead singer Ozzy Osbourne was the most volatile. Their popularity started to decline with the release of their next album, Sabotage, in 1975. In 1979, Ozzy got the boot, replaced by Ronnie James Dio. Ozzy emerged as a formidable solo artist, and Sabbath prospered - for a while, at least - with Dio at the helm. Ozzy reunited with Sabbath from time to time but didn't put out another studio album with the band until 2013, when they released 13.
Black Sabbath drummer Bill Ward didn't just pound away on this one - he brought a reggae and jazz feel to the track. That wasn't unusual for the band.
"We came from a city that had reggae," he told The Quietus in 2015. "That's often forgotten and especially for drumming because in reggae the one [beat], or the actual bass drum sound in reggae, sounds a little bit kind of off; it passes the rhythm."
"A lot of the drumming with Black Sabbath is behind the beat," he added. "It's nice, especially when we played really slow because when you're playing slow and the guitars are tuned down it gives this huge, erroneous, demonic sound and we f--king loved that! It was like apple pie and custard to us. At the same time, when you're playing behind the beat, it holds it all down. I think I learned all those things listening to jazz and music that was that little bit different."
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