King Charles’ Guards Honor Ozzy Osbourne with a Rendition of Black Sabbath’s ‘Paranoid’ Like You’ve Never Heard
A TikTok user said the tribute played outside Buckingham Palace was “Britishness at its best”
(Right) King Charles on June 13, 2025; (Right) Ozzy Osbourne on Dec. 11, 2024.Credit :Ā
King Charles’ soldiers honoredĀ Ozzy OsbourneĀ with a musical tribute following the Prince of Darkness’ death.
On July 30, fan footage shared toĀ TikTokĀ showed the Band of the Coldstream Guards performing the Black Sabbath song “Paranoid” during the Changing of the Guard ceremony at Buckingham Palace.
“This is awesome. Proudest I’ve felt of this country for about 15 years,” one commenter wrote below the video.
“This is Britishness at its best,” another said. “RIP Ozzy.”
The Changing of the Guard takes places of the King’s Guard comprised of the Coldstream Guards, Band of the Coldstream Guards and Scots Guards on July 9, 2023.
The Changing of the Guard is a royal ceremony in which active-duty soldiers who have been on patrol exchange places with the next rotation, with the “Old Guard” and “New Guard” swapping spots to the tune of music by a military band.
The guards honored the late Black Sabbath rocker on the day of hisĀ funeral procession in Birmingham, England, where crowds lined the streets in a reaction reminiscent of the public mourning of a royal death.
OsbourneĀ died on Tuesday, July 22, at age 76, over five years after he announced that he wasĀ diagnosed with Parkinson’s diseaseĀ in 2003.
Mourners line the streets as the funeral cortege of Ozzy Osbourne processes through Birmingham, England on July 30, 2025.
The heavy metal legendĀ performed from a throne at the Black Sabbath farewell concertĀ on July 5 in his hometown of Birmingham.
“That show meant everything,” a source previously told PEOPLE. “It brought his career full circle.”
The rocker-turned-reality star crossed paths with the British royals several times through the years. He performed at the “Party at the Palace” concert celebratingĀ Queen Elizabeth’s Golden Jubilee at Buckingham Palace in 2002 and mingled with the futureĀ King CharlesĀ at a reception for his charity, then called The Prince’s Trust, at Clarence House in 2006.
Ozzy Osbourne and then-Prince Charles share a laugh at a Clarence house reception on May 18, 2006.Cathal McNaughton-Pool/Anwar Hussein Collection/Getty
Following King Charles’ accession to the throne upon Queen Elizabeth’s death in September 2022, the “Crazy Train” singer shared a supportive word for the new sovereign.
“Heās a very, very nice man. Heās always treated me with the utmost respect,ā Osbourne toldĀ The New York Post. “In fact, when I had my bike accident [in 2003], he sent me a bottle of scotch⦠I wish him all the best.”