Black Sabbath drummer Bill Ward gave his opinion in an interview with Eddie Trunk about the band's classic album "Heaven & Hell" (1980), the first one with Ronnie James Dio on vocals, after Ozzy Osbourne left the group. Drummer Bill Ward gives his opinion on Sabbath's "Heaven & Hell" album: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CJgHn7MeAwc "I like the dynamics, I think it's great, I think we did some really great stuff. There's some songs which I... I don't really want to go down in this interview and kind of push out each individual's excitement or how everybody else felt, say things that will be negative. If I haven't already said enough. Because I don't feel negative towards it at all." "Ronnie, I think did a fantastic job. But musically it wasn't my favorite album. I'll just say that. But I do like the dynamics that we did, especially on 'Die Young.' I think that dynamically, the band was excellent. I think Ronnie was absolutely incredible. One of the songs that I like the most is 'Lonely is the Word,' and I like it because it's a neutral song. "It's a place that is based in more or less a blues thing, and the commonality of that makes it more appealing for me - because it's neither coming from a Ronnie place or a Tony place, it's coming from a blues place, and that's the commonality, and it sounds so good. He continued, saying: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pLw8ESpLBOI "Ronnie did an incredible job on that, and so did Tony - the playing is just really, really good. I put that on, occasionally, and listen to it just for the nostalgia of it. So I like that a lot, I thought 'Heaven and Hell' was kind of like a Sabbath thing, the way I understood the Sabbath to be. "I think Ronnie very carefully and lovingly made that what would be a Sabbath song. In my opinion, I think it was very honorable on that record and on that song. He had his own Ronnie lyrics and he had his own Ronnie way. "But that song worked really, really well, from three guys from Black Sabbath. Then Ronnie coming from Rainbow and other bands he was coming from, and putting it onto 'Heaven and Hell,' I thought it was extremely well made. I think it was very well done."