
Randall William Rhoads was born on December 6, 1956 at St. Johns Hospital in Santa
Monica, California. With one brother (Doug)
and one sister (Kathy), Randy was the youngest of three. When Randy was 17 months old his
father, William Arthur Rhoads, a
public school music teacher, left and all three children were raised by their mother,
Delores Rhoads. William Rhoads would later
remarry, producing Dan and Paul... "half" brothers to Randy.
Randy started taking guitar lessons around the age of 6 or 7 at a music school in North
Hollywood called Musonia, which was
owned by his mother. His first guitar was a Gibson (acoustic) that belonged to Delores
Rhoads father. Randy and his sister (Kathy)
both began folk guitar lessons at the same time with Randy later taking piano lessons (at
his mothers request) so that he could
learn to read music. Randys piano lessons did not last very long. At the age of 12,
Randy became interested in rock guitar. His
mother, Delores, had an old semi-acoustic Harmony Rocket, that at that time was
"almost larger than he was". For almost a year
Randy took lessons from Scott Shelly, a guitar teacher at his mothers school. Scott
Shelly eventually went to Randys mother
explaining that he could not teach him anymore as Randy knew everything that he (Scott
Shelly) knew. When Randy was about 14,
he was in his first band,Violet Fox, named after his mothers middle name, Violet. With
Randy playing rhythm
guitar and his brother Doug playing drums, Violet Fox were together about 4 to 5 months.
Randy was in various
other bands, such as "The Katzenjammer Kids" and "Mildred Pierce",
playing parties in the Burbank area before
he formed Quiet Riot in 1976 with longtime friend and bassist Kelly Garni. Randy Rhoads
and Kelly Garni (whom Randy taught to play bass guitar) met Kevin DuBrow through a mutual friend from Hollywood.
How they actually
got together is a different story with many variations:
A.) The two contacted Kevin DuBrow, went to his house to "audition" him but
originally werent interested in having
him as a vocalist. Kevin kept calling Randy and Kelly until they eventually decided to try
him out as a vocalist.
B.) Randy and Kelly Garni auditioned Kevin DuBrow in Delores Rhoads kitchen. Kevin
sang for them, then said something to the
point of, "well if you dont like me just say so and Ill leave."
Randy and Kelly decided to work with him though they would have to
"work some things out".
C.) Randy Rhoads called Kevin DuBrow, they decided to get together to see about putting
together a band. Randy went to Kevins
house with his guitar and an amp. As Randy began to play, Kevin began to hear the best
guitarist hed ever heard.
Around that same time Randy began teaching guitar in his mothers school during the
day and playing with Quiet Riot at night.
Originally called "Little Women", Quiet Riot got their "new" name from
one of Kevins friends from the band Status Quo. Quiet Riot
were quickly becoming one of the biggest acts in the Los Angeles area and eventually
obtained a recording contract with CBS/Sony
records, releasing two full length l.p.s and one e.p. in Japan. Quiet Riots two
records, Quiet Riot 1 (1978), which was originally
recorded for an American record label, and Quiet Riot 2 (1979), received rave reviews in
the Japanese press, claiming them to be the
"next big thing". Unfortunately these recordings were never released in the
United States. While there were plans for Quiet Riot to
tour Japan, their management turned down the offer and Quiet Riot stayed in the United
States continuing to sell out college and
high school auditoriums as well as clubs in the Los Angeles area. About 5 months before
Randy left Quiet Riot, he went to Karl
Sandoval to have a custom guitar made. Several meetings and drawings later they would
ultimately create a black and white polka
dot flying "V", a guitar that would become synonymous with the name Randy
Rhoads. The guitar would cost Randy $738.00 and
was picked up by Randy on September 22, 1979. (September 22, 1979 saw Quiet Riot playing
at the "Whiskey a go-go" in Los
Angeles, California,... so chances are, that was probably the first place he ever played
that guitar in front of an audience.)
In the latter part of 1979, at the request of a friend (Dana Strum), Randy went to
audition for a band being put
together by former Black Sabbath lead singer, Ozzy Osbourne. As the story goes: Ozzy had
auditioned just about
every guitarist in Los Angeles and was about to go home to England, the hopes of a new
band washed away.Randy wasnt completely interested in auditioning, he was happy with
his current band and thought
that this "audition" wouldnt amount to much. As with Kevin DuBrow, Randy's
first meeting/audition with Ozzy
Osbourne has a few variations:
A.) Randy walked into Ozzys hotel room late one evening with a guitar and a small
Fender practice amp, plugged in and started<
tuning his guitar. He did a few warm up exercises and got the job as Ozzy Osbournes
lead guitarist at age 22.
B.) Randy walked into a Ozzy's studio/rehearsal place late one evening with a guitar and a
small Fender practice amp, plugged in and started tuning his guitar. He did a few warm up exercises and got the job as Ozzy
Osbournes lead guitarist at age 22.
C.) Ozzy was first introduced to Randy in a bar where someone introduced him to Ozzy as
his (Ozzy's) "next guitarist".
With Randy Rhoads, Ozzy began to assemble a band that would (ultimately) record his first
solo album. How the band was formed
is a story with (yet) more variations:
A.) With Ozzy Osbourne, Randy Rhoads, bassist Dana Strum (Slaughter), and drummer Frankie
Bannalli (Quiet Riot, W.A.S.P.),
the band began to rehearse in Los Angeles, California. However, when it came time to go to
England, where Ozzy's albums would
be recorded, the record company could only obtain a work permit for one non-English band
member,... Randy Rhoads.
B.) Drummer Lee Kerslake (who played on both of Ozzy's solo albums) auditioned and got the
position. A few weeks later while in
England, Ozzy happened across Bob Daisley. Boasting about this guitar played he'd found,
Ozzy convinced Bob to join his band. A
few weeks later they began to rehearse for the first album in Los Angeles, California.Randy was whisked off to England shortly before Thanksgiving of 1979 where, at Ozzy's home
in Wales, the two began to write the
"Blizzard of Ozz" album and audition musicians to fill out the band. While the
band rehearsed at "John Henrys", a
rehearsal hall in London, the earliest public performances of Randy Rhoads and Ozzy
Osbourne came after theyd
complete a song then go to a local pub to play the song for whoever was there. One such
song, Crazy Train,
appeared to get the audience moving, leading them to believe that they "had
something". With ex-Uriah Heap
members: Lee Kerslake (drums) and Bob Daisley (bass), the Ozzy Osbourne Band entered Ridge
Farm Studios in
Surrey, England on March 22 of 1980 and began recording for almost a month.
"Blizzard of Ozz" was originally to be mixed by Chris Tsangarides who was fired
after one week because Ozzy felt that it "was not
happening" with him. Max Norman, Ridge Farm Studios resident engineer, was then
hired to pick up where Chris left off and would
play an integral part of both Ozzy Osbourne studio albums and the live e.p., as well as
later down the road with "Tribute". After the
finishing touches had been put on "Blizzard of Ozz", Randy Rhoads returned home
to California in May of 1980, where he teamed up
one last time with the members of Quiet Riot at the Starwood club in Hollywood for their
final show. However, this would not be the
last time he played with Quiet Riot bassist Rudy Sarzo, who would later join Ozzy
Osbournes band just before the start of the
United States Blizzard of Ozz tour. Once back in England, the Ozzy Osbourne Band surfaced
for their first "official" show on
September 12, 1980 when 4,000 fans broke the box office record at the Apollo Theatre in
Glasgow, Scotland. "Blizzard of Ozz" went
straight into the U.K. charts at number 7 as they toured around the United Kingdom for
close to three months playing 34 shows.
Sales of Blizzard of Ozz more than doubled with each U.K. town they played.
December of 1980 brought Randy Rhoads back home to California for Christmas. Once again
Randy wanted a custom guitar built,
this time he went to Grover Jackson of Charvel guitars, about a week before Christmas.
With a drawing scribbled on a piece of
paper, Randy Rhoads and Grover Jackson created the very first "Jackson" guitar
to ever be made. Randys white "flying V" type
guitar was yet another guitar that would become synonymous with the Randy Rhoads name. The
finished guitar was sent to Randy
in England about two months later.
During the months of February and March of 1981, the Ozzy Osbourne band once again entered
Ridge Farm Studios to record theirsecond album titled: "Diary of a Madman". With an impending United States tour
to follow soon after the recording of "Diary of a
Madman", the actual recording of the album became rushed. (Randys solo on
"Little Dolls" was actually a "scratch" solo and was
not intended to be the solo for the finished song.) None of the band members could be
present for the mixing of "Diary of a
Madman", which only furthered their already mixed feelings of the album.
With "Diary of a Madman" already recorded but not yet released, the Ozzy
Osbourne Band began its North American tour in<
support of "Blizzard of Ozz", beginning in Towson, Maryland on April 22, 1981,
one year and one month after the
"Blizzard of Ozz" sessions began. Though they did not play on either studio
efforts, Tommy Aldrige (drums) and
Rudy Sarzo (bass) joined Ozzys band in time for the North American tour. They toured
across North America from
May through September of 1981 playing songs from "Blizzard of Ozz" as well as
"Diary of a Madman", with a few
Black Sabbath songs thrown in to close their shows. Choosing to headline their tour
instead of going on a bigger
tour as a support act paid off as "Blizzard of Ozz" went gold in 100 days,
though in some of the smaller cities in the
United States, their shows were threatened to be cancelled due to poor ticket sales. In
one such city, Providence,
Rhode Island, the Ozzy Osbourne Band (along with opening act Def Leppard) was informed by
the concerts promoter that (due to
poor ticket sales) he did not have enough money to pay either band.
Towards the end of the United States "Blizzard of Ozz" tour, Randy once again
went to Grover Jackson to have another custom
guitar made. He complained that too many people thought his white "Jackson" was
a flying-V. He wanted something more
distinctive. A few weeks later, Randy and Kevin DuBrow went to look at the unfinished
guitar that Grover Jackson had begun work
on. Once in the wood shop, Randy and Grover Jackson began drawing on this unfinished
guitar for close to an hour before a final
design was decided upon. There are two stories as to how the guitar was actually cut:
A.) As Grover Jackson cut the body to their design specifications, Randy waited in
Grovers office, not wanting to watch it being cut.
B.) Grover Jackson put the unfinished guitar body on a bandsaw and cut a "chunk"
out of it. Randy, watching, said, "yeah, yeah.
Thats it!"
Ultimately they came up with a variation of his white "Jackson" only with a more
defined look to the upper wing of the guitar. Randy
would receive this guitar, the 2nd Jackson ever made, just before the start of the
"Diary of a Madman" tour. At the time, there were
three guitars being made for Randy. He received the first one, the black custom, as they
continued to finish the other two.
(Unfortunately, one of the "two" guitars, that were being built for Randy at the
time of his death, was accidentally
sold at a NAMM show by Grover Jackson. The "third" guitar, which Jackson stopped
working on at the time of
Randy's death, is currently owned by Rob Lane of Jacksoncharvelworld.com.)
Ironically, as with Quiet Riot, Randy Rhoads guitar playing would be heard on two
full length albums and one e.p.
while in Ozzy Osbournes band. The "Mr. Crowley" e.p. featured live
performances of three songs (including: "You
said it all", previously unreleased) recorded in October of 1980 in South Hampton,
England, during the United
Kingdom "Blizzard of Ozz" tour. ('You said it all' was actually recorded during
the bands sound check, with the crowd noise added at
the time of mixing.) It was said that at that time the "Mr. Crowley" picture
disk became the biggest selling picture disk of all time and
even earned a spot in the Guinness Book of World Records.
With the release of the Ozzy Osbourne Band's second album, "Diary of a Madman",
Ozzy Osbourne and Randy Rhoads (the only
original member of Ozzys band) along with Rudy Sarzo and Tommy Aldrige traveled to
Europe in November of 1981 for a tour that
would end after only three shows. The tour had to be cancelled after Ozzy collapsed from
both mental and physical exhaustion. The
entire band went back to the United States so that Ozzy could rest. They would come back a
little over a month later with a four
month United States tour to start December 30, 1981 at the Cow Palace in San Francisco and
a single (Flying High Again) that was
making it's way up the charts.
Traveling with a crew of approximately 25 Las Vegas and Broadway technicians, Randy Rhoads
went from selling out Los Angeles
area clubs with Quiet Riot to selling out the biggest arenas in the United States on one
of the most elaborate stage sets with Ozzy
Osbourne. When the "Diary of a Madman" tour began, their first album,
"Blizzard of Ozz", was selling at the rate of 6,000 records
each week. Backstage opening night in San Francisco, Randy was awarded with Guitar Player
Magazines Best New Talent Award.
(He also won best new guitarist in Englands "Sounds" magazine.) With that,
the band began an exhausting yet memorable tour that
seemed to be plagued with problems. Their concerts were boycotted by many cities while
others were attended by local S.P.C.A.
officials due to claims of animal abuse. Meanwhile "Diary of a Madman" was well
on its way to platinum status.
With all of this going on around him, Randy Rhoads interest for classical guitar was
consuming him more each day. Often times
Randy would have a classical guitar tutor in each city the band played. It became common
knowledge that Randy wanted to quit
rock and roll temporarily so that he could attend school to get his masters in classical
guitar. Randy also wanted to take advantage
of some of the studio session offers he was recieving.
March 18, 1982, the Ozzy Osbourne band played what would be their last show with Randy
Rhoads at the Civic Coliseum in
Knoxville, Tennessee. From Knoxville, the band was headed to Orlando, Florida for
Saturdays "Rock Super Bowl XIV" with
Foreigner, Bryan Adams and UFO. On the way to Orlando they were to pass by the home of bus
driver Andrew C. Aycock, who lived
in Leesburg, Florida, at Flying Baron Estates. Flying Baron Estates consisted of 3 houses
with an aircraft hanger and a landing
strip, owned by Jerry Calhoun, who along with being a country & western musician in
his earlier days, leased tour buses and kept
them at the Estate. They needed some spare parts for the bus and Andrew Aycock, who had
picked up his ex-wife at one of the
bands shows, was going to drop her off in Florida.
The bus arrived at Flying Baron Estates in Leesburg at about 8:00 a.m. on the 19th and
parked approximately 90
yards away from the landing strip and approximately 15 yards in front of the house that
would later serve as the
accident site. On the bus were: Ozzy Osbourne, Sharon Arden, Rudy Sarzo, Tommy Aldrige,
Don Airey, Wanda
Aycock, Andrew Aycock, Rachel Youngblood, Randy Rhoads and the bands tour manager. Andrew
Aycock and his
ex-wife, Wanda, went into Jerry Calhouns house to make some coffee while some
members of Ozzy Osbournes
band slept in the bus and others got out and "stretched". Being stored inside of
the aircraft hanger at Flying Baron
Estates, was a red and white 1955 Beechcraft Bonanza F-35 (registration #: N567LT) that
belonged to Mike Partin of Kissimmee,
Florida. Andrew Aycock, who had driven the groups bus all night from Knoxville and who had
a pilots license, apparently took the
plane without permission and took keyboardist Don Airey and the bands tour manager up in
the plane for a few minutes, at times
flying low to the ground. Unbeknownst to anyone at the time, Andrew Aycocks medical
certificate (3rd class) had expired, thus
making his pilots license not valid.
Approximately 9:00 a.m. on the morning of March 19th, Andrew Aycock took Rachel Youngblood
and Randy Rhoads up for a few
minutes. During this trip the plane began to fly low to the ground, at times below tree
level, and "buzzed" the bands tour bus threetimes. On the fourth pass (banking to the left in a south-west direction) the planes left
wing struck the left side of the bands tour bus
(parked facing east) puncturing it in two places approximately half way down on the right
side of the bus. The plane, with the
exception of the left wing, was thrown over the bus, hit a nearby pine tree, severing it
approximately 10 feet up from the bottom,
before it crashed into the garage on the west side of the home owned by Jerry Calhoun. The
plane was an estimated 10 feet off the
ground traveling at approximately 120 - 150 knots during impact. The house was almost
immediately engulfed in flames and
destroyed by the crash and ensuing fire, as was the garage and the two vehicles inside, an
Oldsmobile and a Ford Granada. Jesse
Herndon, who was inside the house during the impact, escaped with no injuries. The largest
piece of the plane that was left was a
wing section about 6 to 7 feet long. The very wing that caught the side of the tour bus,
was deposited just to the north of the bus.
The severed pine tree stood between the bus and the house.
Ozzy Osbourne, Tommy Aldrige, Rudy Sarzo and Sharon Arden, who were all asleep on the bus,
were awoken by the planes impact
and (at first) thought they had been involved in a traffic accident. Wanda Aycock had
returned to the bus while keyboardist Don Airey
stood outside and witnesses the accident, as did Marylee Morrison, who was riding her
horse within sight of the estate. Two men, at
the west end of the runway, witnessed the plane "buzzing" the area when the
plane suddenly "went out of sight" as it crashed.
Once outside of the bus the band members learned of the catastrophic event that had just
taken place. The bus was moved
approximately 300 feet to the east of the house that was engulfed in flames. The band
checked into the Hilco Inn in Leesburg where
they mourned the death of Randy and Rachel and would wait for family members to arrive.
While Orlandos "Rock Super Bowl XIV
scheduled for later that day, was not canceled, the Ozzy Osbourne band would not play and
the promoters offered refunds to all ticket holders.
Randy Rhoads was put to rest in San Bernadino, California.
Randy Rhoads guitar playing, however, could not be silenced as "Tribute"
was released in 1987. "Tribute", recorded live, much of it
in Cleveland, OH on May 11, 1981 and Randys solo in Montreal in July of 1981,
continued to earn him recognition as a guitar
virtuoso.
Ozzy Osbourne's first two solo albums featuring Randy Rhoads have sold over 6 million
copies combined.
[Taken From Randy Perry's Randy Rhoads Biography]