
The lights will rise again — not for chaos, but for love. In the summer of 2026, the Sound of Forever Tour will sweep across London, Los Angeles, and Tokyo, bringing together the titans of rock and the next generation of dreamers to celebrate the life, music, and indomitable spirit of Ozzy Osbourne.
For decades, Ozzy defined what it meant to live loud — to turn pain into power, darkness into anthem. Now, the world will return that gift in the only language he ever truly spoke: music.
The lineup reads like a love letter to rock history. Leading the charge, Steven Tyler and Joe Perry of Aerosmith will take the stage in London’s Wembley Stadium, roaring through “Crazy Train” as pyrotechnics paint the night sky in gold and crimson. Tyler’s voice — still feral, still untamed — will rise over the crowd like a hymn for the broken, while Perry’s guitar rips through the air like a memory refusing to fade.
Then comes YUNGBLUD, the fiery young rocker Ozzy once called “a mirror of my own chaos.” With his signature blend of raw energy and rebellion, he will bring a new edge to “Iron Man.” Fans can expect something between a scream and a prayer — the sound of a generation rediscovering the fire that Ozzy lit long before they were born.

And then, under softer lights, Nuno Bettencourt will step forward for the most haunting moment of the night: a guitar tribute to “Mama, I’m Coming Home.” No vocals, no spectacle — just the sound of strings bending into sorrow and gratitude. Each note will hang in the air like a farewell, drifting through arenas filled with tears, applause, and memory.
💬 “This isn’t just for Ozzy,” Steven Tyler said quietly during a press interview announcing the tour. “It’s for every soul his voice ever saved.”
That sentiment echoes the heart of the Sound of Forever Tour. Every performance, every collaboration, every flame that lights the stage will carry Ozzy’s legacy — not as a monument to the past, but as a living reminder of the courage it takes to keep singing through pain.
Beyond the music, the tour will serve a higher purpose. All proceeds from ticket sales will go to Parkinson’s researchand mental health foundations, causes that defined the final years of Ozzy’s life. Sharon Osbourne, serving as executive producer, called it “the tribute Ozzy would have wanted — not mourning, but movement.”

Across the three cities, fans can expect surprises: guest appearances from artists who once toured with Ozzy, rare archival footage, and even a holographic recreation of one of his most iconic moments — his 1982 Us Festival performance, reborn in vivid digital light.
As the final show closes under a sky lit with thousands of cell phones held high, a single line will appear on the massive LED screen:
“Legends never die. They just learn to echo forever.”
And in that moment, as the crowd roars one last time, the message will be clear. The Sound of Forever is not just a concert. It is a resurrection — a promise that the spirit of Ozzy Osbourne will keep thundering through hearts, speakers, and generations still to come.
Because some voices don’t fade. They just keep finding new ways to be heard.