Bill Ward performs It's Alright in 1976
Two singles were released from Technical Ecstasy. First came Gypsy, where Bill Ward shines on an extended drum solo. There’s no doom, no references to the occult, just a song that plods along like an ELO/Queen hybrid. She’s Gone – a tearjerker which features on the B-side – was an ambitious ballad which featured acoustic guitars and an orchestra.
It’s Alright followed, a Bill Ward composition inspired by The Beatles, and features the drummer on lead vocals.
"I never dreamed for one second that it would end up on a Black Sabbath record,” Ward told Joel Gausten. “I felt really uncomfortable with the idea of me singing on a Sabbath album; it didn’t feel right. But eventually, I stepped up to the post and did the best I could in singing the song. In hindsight, the whole thing felt a little bit awkward for me. I liked the outcome.”
Ozzy was happy, too, praising his former bandmate in his book, I Am Ozzy: “"He's got a great voice, Bill, and I was more than happy for him to do the honours.”
The B-side features Rock’N’Roll Doctor, an uptempo rocker which comes off as a poor man’s KISS: ‘If you wanna feel groovy, give the doctor a call, doctor rock will help you anytime at all.’ Back then, GP waiting times weren’t scandalously long.
Ozzy, feeling the effects of years of booze and drugs, says he lost the plot during the album recording.
“My boozing was so bad during the Technical Ecstasy sessions in Florida, I checked myself into a loony bin called St George’s when I got back home,” he wrote in I Am Ozzy. “Its real name was the Stafford County Asylum, but they changed it to make people feel better about being insane. The first thing the doctor said to me when I went there was, ‘Do you masturbate, Mr. Osbourne?’ I told him, ‘I’m in here for my head, not my dick.’”