Ozzy Osbourne February 3, 2011 HP Pavilion - San Jose, CA Section 107, Row 4, Seat 3 Taped by: TheAmazingFan Source: Zoom H1 24bit/48kHz WAV > Adove Audition > +8db gain > 16bit/44kHz > FLAC 1. Bark at the Moon 2. Scream 3. Mr. Crowley 4. I Don't Know 5. Fairies Wear Boots 6. Suicide Solution 7. Road to Nowhere 8. War Pigs 9. Shot in the Dark 10. Gus G Guitar SOlo 11. Tommy Clufetos Drum Solo 12. Iron MAn 13. I Don't Want to Change the World 14. Crazy Train 15. Mama I'm coming Home 16. Paranoid Another great show from Ozzy. Band sounded great and Ozzy...well sounded like Ozzy. P.A. was overly loud and Ozzy's mic was badly overdriven - a poor, muddy mix as usual at the HP Pavilion. I would give overall quality a B+ rating. I have not authored for CD so split however you like when burning. Enjoy! Here is a review taken from the San Jose Mercury News: Ozzy Osbourne's preshow videos, which place the frisky, foul-mouthed Rock and Roll Hall of Famer in all kinds of ludicrous situations, are always brilliant. On Thursday night, the video shown on the overhead screens before Ozzy took the stage at HP Pavilion in San Jose spliced the star into the cast of TV's "Jersey Shore," where he traded barbs with "Snooki" and got to model the latest in trashy chic. It also had Ozzy in the blockbuster comedy "The Hangover" and, most appropriately, under the mask in "Iron Man 2." The best line of the night came when the rocker appeared as one of James Cameron's giant "Avatar" creatures, and he was asked in the video how he was feeling. "I'm feeling a little blue, actually," he responded. The video also transported Osbourne into "Twilight," where he played Edward and had a great comeback to Bella's charge that he was a vampire: "Vampires are (expletive)," he snapped. "I'm the Prince of (expletive) Darkness!" Indeed. Yet, for someone with such a menacing nickname, the 62-year-old vocalist sure knows how to put on a fun show. His nearly two-hour concert in San Jose -- which drew roughly 7,500 to a venue that can hold 12,500 for a production such as this -- was filled with good humor, class-clown antics and light theatrics. In that sense, Ozzy was far more like a clown prince than the Prince of Darkness — but that's no insult. Osbourne was in fine spirits and exhibited a goodly amount of energy, more than locals have seen from him during recent outings, as he ran through a set list that stretched from his days in Black Sabbath to his latest CD, "Scream," a Grammy-nominated offering that topped the rock charts after being released in June. He also seemed more coherent, more "with it," than what fans have come to expect. Oh, sure, he still sounded like he was singing with a mouthful of soup as he belted out the shout-along classics "Bark at the Moon," "Mr. Crowley" and "I Don't Know" at the start of the show. But, overall, his stage presence was very strong as he continued through such fan favorites as "Road to Nowhere" and "War Pigs." He performed on a fairly stripped down set, with the only real prop being a firehouse that Ozzy uses to shoot soapy water. That's an Osbourne staple, one that leaves the first few rows of the crowd absolutely soaked. The guys that get the most intense showers, however, are the security guards at the front of the stage -- Osbourne doused one so badly with the foamy substance that he ended up looking like a snowman. It's truly a marvel of waterproofing that somebody in Ozzy's band doesn't get electrocuted onstage. Read Jim Harrington's Concert Blog at http://blogs.mercurynews.com/aei/category/concerts. Follow him at http://twitter.com/jimthecritic.