Tony Iommi posted five words on Instagram today, and rock fans across the world felt every one of them.
The Black Sabbath guitarist posted one thing on his account: “Best friends since the ’70s 🎸.” No photo, no announcement – a sentence and an emoji that carry the weight of five decades.
Iommi co-founded Black Sabbath in Birmingham in 1968 alongside Ozzy Osbourne, Geezer Butler, and Bill Ward. The four spent the following decade building something the music world didn’t have a name for yet. They came in heavy and dark and different, and audiences connected with it in ways critics didn’t always anticipate.
By the late 1970s, the band had helped define the sound that would become heavy metal. Albums like Paranoid and Master of Reality weren’t just popular – they rewired what rock music could sound like. The influence spread far and wide, and it’s still spreading.
That kind of friendship doesn’t form under easy circumstances. It forms in rehearsal rooms, cramped tour buses, and on stages that were probably too small for what they eventually became. The music industry is a tough place to maintain anything long-term. Fifty-plus years on, those bonds are clearly still part of Iommi’s life.
The Black Sabbath story isn’t a clean ride from beginning to end. There were lineup changes, personal struggles, and some very public friction along the way. Iommi was the consistent presence through all of it – never the frontman, never the one making tabloid headlines, but the guitarist who kept turning up and kept playing.
A message like that carries real weight. It comes from someone with more than 50 years of history to back it up – and that makes it mean something.
The post drew over 10,000 likes, a strong result for a text-only caption with no promotional hook attached. Iommi posts selectively and doesn’t chase trends. His account is quiet more often than not, and what does appear tends to get noticed.
His guitar work with Black Sabbath remains some of the most studied in rock history. The heavy riffing and slower tempos the band developed in the 1970s gave generations of musicians a foundation to build on.
Entire subgenres of rock and metal trace a line back to those Birmingham rehearsals. Iommi himself rarely talks about legacy. But the legacy talks about itself.
The bandmates behind today’s message – Osbourne, Butler, and Ward – were there at the very start. They were young men in the same city, figuring out a sound no one had quite heard before.
They built something that lasted. The band went through plenty over the years. Those four names stayed connected to the story.
Iommi’s post comes without a tour announcement or a new record attached. It’s a moment of reflection from someone grateful for the people he started with.
For the fans who’ve been along for the ride, it’s a pretty good thing to wake up and read.
