A Song That Sounds Like Heaven and Hell Colliding

The song opens with Adele’s ethereal voice, accompanied by a lone piano and church choir:

“From the streets of Birmingham / To the fires of fame / You carried the madness / But we loved you the same…”

Ozzy Osbourne Is Gone – A Legend's Final Curtain Call - YouTube

Then, a thunderous beat drops, ushering in Eminem’s fierce verse:

“Came from factories and fog, lit the world with your sound / Screamed at devils in riffs, made the angels get loud / You were broken, outspoken, metal’s ghost and its crown / Now the sky’s got a stage and you’re headlining now…”

The track builds into a massive cinematic chorus, Adele’s soaring vocals layered with strings and electric guitar — a soundscape that feels like Black Sabbath meeting a royal requiem.

Music Video: A Journey Through Ozzy’s Legacy

The official video takes fans on a visual pilgrimage through Ozzy’s life:

Childhood streets of Birmingham, smoky and grey

Early days with Black Sabbath in packed pubs

The chaos of 80s tours, bats and all

Quiet moments of family love with Sharon and his children

A final shot of Ozzy walking barefoot onto a glowing celestial stage, smiling, as the lights fade

What Eminem and Adele Said

Ozzy Osbourne – From Birmingham to Immortal | Eminem ft. Adele - YouTube

Eminem: “Ozzy showed me that music could be ugly, loud, and still beautiful. This was my way of saying thanks.”

Adele: “He was a poet wrapped in leather and madness. This song is for his heart, not just his legend.”

Fan Reactions: “An Anthem for Eternity”

@MetalSoulUK: “Never thought rap and soul could honor metal like this. Ozzy would be proud.”

@DarknessForever: “From Birmingham to Immortal… chills. Absolute chills.”

@SharonFanClub: “I cried like a baby. Thank you Em and Adele.”

A Farewell Fit for the Prince of Darkness

In remembrance of Ozzy Osbourne 1948 - 2025 - Book of condolence for Ozzy Osbourne (1948-2025)

Ozzy Osbourne’s life was a storm — a maelstrom of madness, brilliance, and survival.
But “From Birmingham to Immortal” captures something even greater:
the idea that legends don’t die.

They simply change stages.
And Ozzy?
He’s just moved on to the loudest, wildest, most eternal stage of all.