This is a very good biography that covers Randy’s early years through insights directly from friends and family, including many friends I’d never heard from before. Almost a third of the book spends time with Randy’s mother, brother and sister, school friends, early bands, and his students at Musonia. We see how Quiet Riot came to be and their struggle to find a recording deal, their two Japanese records and their eventual breakup. It covers the period where Randy auditioned for Ozzy — tales most fans will have heard — and the ensuing recording of Blizzard of Ozz and Diary of a Madman, with stories from Max Norman, Bob Daisley, and Lee Kerslake that are less well known. It also does a very good job of tracking Randy’s professional rise and subsequent impact on generations of guitarists.
There’s practically nothing on Randy’s longtime girlfriend and eventual fiancé Jodi — in fact very little of Randy’s love life at all — which in a biography seems like a gaping hole. While there’s plenty of evidence that he loved guitar more than anything, it’s sad that this isn’t balanced with better insight into his interpersonal relationships. There’s also no mention of the fling with Sharon Osbourne that she alleged in her 2003 book, Ordinary People: Our Story, nor do we see the encounter with Jackie Fox of the Runaways. McIver may well have left these things out as they couldn’t be easily independently verified, but it’s the job of a journalist to track such things down.
Lastly, it’s nice to have a capsule of evidence of Randy’s influence on decades of subsequent musicians, McIver spending an entire chapter on Randy’s legacy, including quotes from Slayer’s Kerry King and Cannibal Corpse’s Pat O’Brien, to Bill Ward of Black Sabbath.
There are precious few photos in the book, but a few of them are from Randy’s youth and haven’t been seen widely before — if at all. The book is well designed and professionally edited; quality work.