Hand of Doom


"Hand of Doom" is a song by the English heavy metal band Black Sabbath, originally appearing on their second album Paranoid, released in 1970.

Background

The song was conceived after the band had observed a growing number of US soldiers arriving in England from the Vietnam War in the late 1960s with severe drug addictions. The song paints an unflattering picture of hard drug use for the purpose of self-medication. The lyrics were written by Geezer Butler while the music is credited to the entire band.

Personnel

;Black Sabbath

Cover versions

Danzig version

The band Danzig covered "Hand of Doom" for their album Danzig 5: Blackacidevil, with new lyrics and musical arrangements by Glenn Danzig. Danzig explained his changes to the original version: "I didn't want people to think it's just a cover...I started improvising and twisted the words. The melody is still the same, with an industrial kind of groove to the beginning and then the chorus comes in and it's full on crazy, with the screaming vocals." The idea for recording a cover version of the song came during a soundcheck by then-Danzig guitarist John Christ.

Orange Goblin version

The band Orange Goblin covered "Hand of Doom" for their EP Nuclear Guru.

Slayer version

The band Slayer covered "Hand of Doom" for the Black Sabbath tribute album Nativity in Black II.

TOOL Version

The progressive rock band Tool often covers the song during their live performances.

In popular culture