The Devil You Know isn’t perfect, but it is a record with moments of absolute perfection. The enormous epic doom of Bible Black is equal to anything at the top end of all involved’s catalogue, showing just what magic could come from Iommi and Dio in full flight. The point where it shifts from the intro to full-roar riff, or when the chorus comes in and the singer demands that 'I must have The Bible Black', are still the sort of things you fell in you pulling at your heart when metal is at its very best.
Rock And Roll Angel remains an awkward dud despite leading with a satisfying Smashing Pumpkins-ish riff, but album starter Atom And Evil, Fear and Double The Pain are all knockouts of riffy brawn and Dio’s vocals that switch between soft silk and creaking leather on a sixpence.
The live stuff demonstrates this to an even higher degree. The gig at Radio City showed that, years after they wrote them and last played them, absolute bangers like Neon Knights, Mob Rules and The Sign Of The Southern Cross sounded box-fresh, electrified. Dio’s gentle singing at the start of the mysterious Children Of The Sea, or the way he captures the vastness of the band’s signature song, is simply one of the greatest rock singers to ever live at the top of his game. Lesser-known tunes, meanwhile, like I, Computer God and the ultra-doom of After All (The Dead) – which they opened with – sound incredible.
It's a similar story for the Wacken recordings, also featuring Bible Black and Fear from The Devil You Know. Not that you’d ever need reminding, but the wonder of what Dio could do could still bring grown men to tears.
For Sabb-heads, this is all obviously completely essential. But if you’re unfamiliar with this era of The Greatest Band That Ever Lived, it collects a load of their best songs together, and presents them brilliantly, performed with all the life, excitement and romance they deserve.
Verdict: 4/5
For fans of: Iron Maiden, Candlemass, Judas Priest
Breaking Out Of Heaven 2007 – 2009 is out now via BMG