Tony Iommi and Nick Mason have recorded a song together

Black Sabbath and Pink Floyd unite

Black Sabbath's Tony Iommi and Pink Floyd's Nick Mason
Author: Scott ColothanPublished 14th Oct 2020
Last updated 14th Oct 2020

Black Sabbath guitarist Tony Iommi and Pink Floyd drummer Nick Mason have recorded a song together for a cancer charity.

Heavy metal pioneer Tony Iommi recently spoke to Spanish rock magazine La Heavy and he revealed that the song may potentially also feature a contribution from The Rolling Stones’ Ronnie Wood.

Asked by La Heavy if his long gestating collaboration with Queen’s Brian May has made any progress, Tony said: "We haven't really gone any further with it.

"At the moment Brian has been going through a lot of medical things (he suffered a heart attack and a torn gluteal muscle this year), but who knows? It'd be nice at some point to do something."

Revealing his other project, Tony continued (via Blabbermouth): "At the moment I've started putting some ideas down myself now and I played on a track with Nick Mason a few weeks ago.

"We're doing a charity record for cancer. I was asked if I'd play and come up with some riffs for it. There's a lot of other celebrities doing something for this album, so I said, 'Yeah, it'd be nice to do that.' I think there's Nick Mason, myself and I think Ronnie Wood is going to play a bit on this track as well. I'm not sure."

Tony Iommi and Nick Mason are the sole constant members of their respective legendary bands Black Sabbath and Pink Floyd.

This coming Sunday (18th October) at 8pm, Planet Rock will be airing a special My Sabbath Rocks show featuring Black Sabbath band members playing their favourite Sabbath tracks, including a brand-new interview with Bill Ward.

We have also launched a new Black Sabbath-themed Planet Rock logo this week as part of our 50th anniversary celebrations for Sabbath’s second studio album ‘Paranoid.’

The 12 worst original band names:

Naked Toddler (Creed)

The jaw-droppingly atrocious band name was suggested by Mark Tremonti in the mid-nineties after he read a story in the press about an abducted child. Naively adopting it for their first gig at a club called Yanni's, Scott Stapp revealed in his 2012 autobiography that it quickly bombed: "The name didn't go over well. Girls hated it and said it made them think of paedophilia. They had a point." Quite.

Pen Cap Chew (Nirvana)

Having already been a member of Fecal Matter – aka Brown Towel – Kurt Cobain already had a history of hilariously bad band names before starting his new outfit with Krist Novoselic. After trialling a few dodgy names including Skid Row, Ted Ed Fred and, most notably, Pen Cap Chew, they had a eureka moment and settled on Nirvana. Kurt told Rolling Stone in 1992: "I wanted a name that was kind of beautiful or nice and pretty instead of a mean, raunchy punk name like the Angry Samoans." Good choice!

Mookie Blaylock (Pearl Jam)

Huge fans of the New York Jets basketball player Mookie Blaylock, the rockers decided to name their band in his honour. After playing a series of shows as Mookie Blaylock, they renamed themselves Pearl Jam in October '90 after signing to Epic Records. The origins of the name are somewhat cloudy, related either to Eddie Vedder's great grandmother Pearl / seeing Neil Young "jam" live / a naughty euphemism, depending on who you talk to... Mookie himself is said to be a big fan of Pearl Jam's music.

Feedback/The Hype (U2)

After the titular drummer posted a notice looking for band members at Mount Temple Comprehensive School, the resulting group were called The Larry Mullen Band "for about ten minutes" before Bono swept aside the idea. They opted for Feedback, after the screeching sound that came out of their amps, only to switch it for the decidedly pop band-esque The Hype in 1977. Eventually they settled on U2 for its "ambiguity and open-ended interpretations."

Rat Salad (Van Halen)

Originally called Genesis until they found out a certain British progressive rock band was using it, the band redubbed themselves Mammoth – only to discover that was being used too. Still predominately a covers band, the Van Halen brothers toyed with Rat Salad (after the Black Sabbath song) but Dave Lee Roth countered with their surname. Originally worried about it sounding self-absorbed, they were eventually persuaded to adopt it.

Polka Tulk Blues Band (Black Sabbath)

Imagine hearing Tony Iommi's opening riffs on Black Sabbath's debut album and finding out it was by the Polka Tulk Blues Band. Fortunately they abandoned the name in the late 60s with a scathing Iommi telling Ozzy: "Every time I hear it, all I can picture is you, with your trousers around your ankles, taking a f***ing dump. It's crap." Black Sabbath was partially inspired by the Boris Karloff film of the same name, a vision Geezer Butler had, and the work of occult novelist Dennis Wheatley.

Tony Flow and the Miraculously Majestic Masters of Mayhem (Red Hot Chili Peppers)

Formed at Fairfax High School in 1983, Anthony Kiedis, Hillel Slovak, Flea and Jack Irons gave themselves the gloriously ridiculous name Tony Flow and the Miraculously Majestic Masters of Mayhem. According to Kiedis, the name was intended to reflect the "majestic and chaotic" nature of the band. After two shows as Tony Flow… in November of '83 the group opted for the comparatively normal moniker Red Hot Chili Peppers.

Village Idiots (Nickelback)

Then a covers band that pilfered from Metallica and Megadeth's back catalogue, in the mid-1990s Chad Kroeger, Ryan Peake, Mike Kroeger and Brandon Kroeger called themselves the Village Idiots. Realising it would make them cannon fodder on the bigger stage; they later changed it to Nickelback in reference to the nickel in change Mike often gave his customers while working at Starbucks – "Here's your nickel back."

The Golliwogs (Creedence Clearwater Revival)

Originally named The Blue Velvets, when the band recorded some tracks for Fantasy Records in 1964, label co-owner Max Reiss decided to change it to The Golliwogs after the controversial minstrel doll of the same name. Late rhythm guitarist Tom Fogarty said: "I think, at least to Max anyway, 'Golliwogs' sounded sort of British. We always hated the name but Max owned the label and we were new and wanted very much to make records, so we went along with things." Three years later the name was thankfully dropped.

Screaming Abdabs (Pink Floyd)

The music legends are formed from the ashes of a band that had a series of bizarre transitory names. First called Sigma 6 (there were six members including Roger Waters, Richard Wright and Nick Mason), in 1964 they adopted a series of short-lived but gloriously ridiculous names including Leonard's Lodgers, the Meggadeaths and the Screaming Abdabs. A year later Syd Barratt coined Pink Floyd after finding inspiration from the Piedmont blues musicians Pink Anderson and Floyd Council.

Wicked Lester (KISS)

Ditching their Rainbow moniker when they discovered there was already another band with the name, in 1971 the group renamed themselves Wicked Lester. During their brief existence the folk/pop/rock group played in public just twice before Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley decided to delve into rock and roll and recruit new members. With Ace Frehley on board by Christmas '72 they changed their name to KISS and played their first live show a month later. Find out more about Wicked Lester in our A-Z of KISS.

Rocket Baby Dolls (Muse)

When Matt Bellamy and Dominic Howard's former band Gothic Plague (surprisingly not a death metal group) split following a series of rifts, they enlisted new bassist Chris Wolstenholme and changed their name to Rocket Baby Dolls. Soon realising it was turgid, after just one gig – their triumphant battle of bands performance at Broadmeadow Sports Centre in Teignmouth in 1994 – they switched it for Muse.

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