Watch Black Sabbath’s Geezer Butler join Foo Fighters for ‘Paranoid’ in Birmingham

Watch Black Sabbath’s Geezer Butler join Foo Fighters for ‘Paranoid’ in Birmingham

Foo Fighters have performed the 1970 Black Sabbath classic ‘Paranoid’ with Geezer Butler – watch footage of the performance below.

READ MORE: Foo Fighters live in Manchester: invincible and still untouchable

Last night (June 27), the Foos played the last show of their UK tour in Birmingham. To end their run with a bang, Dave Grohl and co. invited Birmingham legend and Black Sabbath bassist Geezer Butler to perform the 1970 metal classic ‘Paranoid’.

For the performance, Butler led the band on bass duties, while Grohl ditched the guitar to mimic Ozzy Osbourne’s onstage movements while singing. Watch fan-shot footage of the performance below.

imagine going to see foo fighters and geezer fucking butler shows up and they start performing paranoid i would go absolutely insane pic.twitter.com/UW3AJKUMos

— lisa (@smwhrintime) June 27, 2024

Geezer Butler joins Foo Fighters at Villa Park for Black Sabbath’s Paranoid #foofighters pic.twitter.com/ffAgeQnsak

— zenXV (@zenxv) June 28, 2024

This isn’t the first time Butler has joined the Foo Fighters for a performance. In 2022, he teamed up with Sebastian Bach, Lars Ulrich and the Foos to perform ‘Supernaut’ and ‘Paranoid’ for the Taylor Hawkins tribute concert.

READ MORE: Inside the Taylor Hawkins Tribute Concert: “A gigantic fucking night for a gigantic fucking person”

Later on in the night, the Foos invited Shane Hawkins – son of late drummer Taylor Hawkins – to perform ‘This Is A Call’ during the band’s encore. Earlier in the tour, Shane joined the band for ‘I’ll Stick Around’ at London Stadium on June 20.

Foo Fighters’ recent Manchester concert scored then a four-star rating, with Rishi Shah writing for NME: “Approaching thirty years as a band, Foo Fighters have adapted in the face of any adversity, ensuring their stadium show remains cohesive, exemplary and simply untouchable. While others from their time might begin to creep towards legacy act territory, Foo Fighters remain as relevant and imperious as ever – they’re only going to need even more stadiums to fill.”

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