The Forbidden Ozzy Osbourne Album That Was Buried Alive nh

Sometimes, magic happens by accident. That’s how The Traveling Wilburys came to life—George Harrison casually floated the idea of a supergroup to Jeff Lynne, and boom, music history changed. A similar, lesser-known “accident” happened in the 1990s, when Ozzy Osbourne and  guitar virtuoso Steve Vai unexpectedly created an entire album together. But unlike the Wilburys, their work vanished into the vaults, unheard by the world.

It all started with a simple plan: Vai was brought in to write just one song for Osbourne’s Ozzmosis album. At the time, Vai was busy with his solo record Fire Garden, but the chemistry between the two artists was instant. One session led to another. Then another. Before long, they weren’t just writing—they were building an entire new record from scratch.

In true Ozzy fashion, things spiraled.

“Everything just started flowing naturally,” Vai recalled in an interview with Eonmusic. “We were having fun. There were no rules, no pressure. Then we got a bit carried away and said, ‘Hey, let’s just make a new record!’”

That’s when the brakes slammed on.

According to Vai, Osbourne’s management intervened hard. They reminded Ozzy that they were already deep into production on Ozzmosis, and that Vai—being a top-tier player—was not exactly cheap to keep around. In the end, only one track from the sessions made the final cut: “My Little Man.”

The rest? Shelved.

“I’m sitting on a whole Ozzy record,” Vai admitted. “It’s like the Gash record—it’s just sitting on the shelf. I don’t have the rights to it. But we recorded some pretty good stuff.”

Vai explained that while the album would need re-recording to be officially released, the songs they created didn’t sound like anything else. They weren’t typical Ozzy tracks, nor were they cut-and-paste Vai material. They were something new—unexpected, raw, and unique.

Sadly, that might be exactly why they’ll never see the light of day.

Between management decisions, budget constraints, and industry red tape, the mystery record has quietly slipped into rock’s shadowy archive of lost masterpieces. And for fans who’ve always wondered what Osbourne might have sounded like at his most experimental in the ’90s, that missing album might just be the closest we’ll ever get to finding out.

Still, knowing it exists adds a new layer to Ozzy’s legend—and leaves the door open for hope, even if it’s only a crack.