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He Sang Ozzy Osbourne’s Song Every Day for 43 Years — Then the Man Who Wrote It Showed Up

October 14th, 2018, Los Angeles. A man was standing on the sidewalk singing an Aussie Osborne song. On its own, that wasn’t particularly interesting. Thousands of people around the world sang Aussie songs every day. What was interesting was this. The man was blind. He had no idea who wrote the song. And the man who did write it was sitting in the back seat of a black Mercedes 15 meters away, hearing his own song.

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truly hearing it for the first time. What was even more interesting was this. In a few minutes, Aussie was going to get out of that car, sit down next to that man, and experience something he had never experienced in any stadium, any arena, any festival in his life. That morning, Sharon had stood at the door and said, “Just go to the doctor, pick up your medication, and come home.

Don’t go getting into any adventures.” Oussie had nodded like he always did. Yes, love. I promise, he’d said. But it had been 40 minutes since he’d left the doctor’s office, and Ozie still had no intention of going home. He didn’t even know where he was going. He just wanted to move. He didn’t want to sit in silence thinking about what Parkinson’s was doing to him.

He was 69 years old. His legs didn’t carry him the way they used to. His hands betrayed him sometimes. But inside his head, inside his head, he was still that 25-year-old kid from Birmingham, fading on the outside, burning on the inside. A voice cut through the silence in the car.

Faint at first, distant, a melody filtering through the traffic noise. Aussie frowned. He rolled down the window, and as the warm California air hit his face, the voice became clearer. A man’s voice. old, tired, slightly horsearse, but incredibly emotional. And the song he was singing, Aussiey’s entire body tensed. He recognized that melody.

Of course he did. He’d written it himself. Dreamer. The song he’d written in 2001, dreaming of a better world, wishing the wars would end. But this man was singing it as though he’d written it himself, as though every word had been ripped from his own life. Ozie leaned forward. Tony,” he said, his voice still carried that familiar Birmingham heaviness, but there was an urgency in it.

“Stop the car.” Tony glanced in the rear view mirror. “Now, sir, this is a no parking zone.” Aussie was already reaching for the door handle. “Tony, stop the car.” The Mercedes pulled up to the curb. On the corner where Fairfax Avenue crossed Third Street, across from the farmers market, a man was standing in the afternoon sun, about 72 years old, tall but slightly hunched forward.

He wore a faded blue shirt and worn brown trousers. In his right hand, a white cane, in his left, a cheap microphone. The microphone cable ran down to a scratched up amplifier at his feet and on his face large dark sunglasses, not to block the sun, but to hide the darkness behind them. In front of his feet sat an old fedora hat.

Inside it a few crumpled bills and some loose change, maybe 12, $13. People walked past him, women jogging, teenagers staring at their phones, couples strolling with coffee cups in their hands. Nobody stopped. Nobody listened. The man could have been as invisible as the brick wall he was leaning against if it weren’t for that voice.

Aussie got out of the car. Tony moved to follow, but Oussie waved him off. When his feet hit the sidewalk, his legs greeted him with that familiar stiffness, Parkinson’s daily hello. But he didn’t care. His eyes were fixed on the blind man. The old musician had moved into the second verse. His voice sat in a fragile place, each note seeping through a crack like light slipping through a broken door. It wasn’t technically perfect.

A professional vocal coach would have found dozens of things to fix. But there, on that street corner, technique meant nothing because that voice was coming from somewhere raw, somewhere where pain lived and loneliness and still somehow hope. Oussie took two more steps and stopped. He stood motionless until the song was finished.

And right then, Oussie Osborne, a man who had played tens of thousands of concerts, standing on a sidewalk, listening to a blind stranger sing his own song back to him, felt his eyes filling with tears. The song ended. The old man lowered the microphone and tapped his cane on the ground, feeling out his surroundings.

Out of habit, he bent toward the hat and counted the coins inside with his fingers. Then he straightened up and raised his head. Even though his eyes couldn’t see, he could sense someone standing close. “Good afternoon,” the old man said. His speaking voice was lower than his singing voice. “Got any requests? If I know it, I’ll play it.

” Ozie couldn’t find the words for a moment. They formed on his lips, then scattered. Finally, he spoke. That song you just sang,” he said, his Birmingham accent carrying a strange warmth in the Los Angeles sun. Dreamer, where’d you learn that? The old man smiled gently. “Ah, that song.

I heard it on the radio years ago. First time I heard it, I cried right there in my car, middle of the road. A song written by a stranger grabbed me somewhere so deep, it was like he knew my story.” Aussie swallowed. “Your story?” he said. The old man nodded. Everyone’s got a story, sir. Whoever wrote that song. I think he’s someone who’s lost a great deal.

Because only someone who’s lost a great deal can dream that honestly. Ozie pulled a $100 bill from his pocket and bent down to drop it in the hat. But then he paused. He put the bill back in his pocket and instead asked, “Mind if I sit with you for a bit?” The old man raised his eyebrows. “Sit?” he said. “Here?” There was a low concrete wall at the edge of the sidewalk in the shade, wide enough to sit on.

“That spot looks good,” Aussie said. The old man hesitated for a moment. “Sir, nobody’s wanted to sit with me in a long time. Usually, people either toss some money and keep walking, or they don’t look at all. Nobody’s wanted to sit.” Ozie lowered himself onto the concrete wall and gently touched the old man’s arm. “Come on,” he said softly.

“I’m right here.” The old man felt his way over with his cane and sat down next to Oussie. A silence fell between them, but strangely it was comfortable. The awkwardness of two strangers sitting side by side for the first time lasted a few seconds. Then it loosened, melted, disappeared. The old man’s name was Earl Holloway. He was 72 years old.

Born in Memphis, started singing in the church choir when he was six. moved to Los Angeles at 18. Toured with a few soul groups as a backup guitarist in the early 70s. We used to play Sam Cook songs in little clubs, Earl said, his voice drifting somewhere far away. We weren’t big names, but we were making music. Real music.

Then the diabetes came. Started in his 30s. Took his sight completely by 55. Doctor told me, “Get ready for the dark.” But nobody tells you the real darkness isn’t in your eyes. Earl paused. The real darkness is nobody seeing you. When people see a blind man, they either pity him or ignore him. Both are the same thing.

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