Four days after the release of Ordinary Man, Osbourne announced that he had started working on its follow-up, with Andrew Watt returning as producer.[1][5] On 24 June 2022, the lead single and title track, "Patient Number 9" featuring
Jeff Beck, was released along with an accompanying music video. The music video was directed by
Todd McFarlane and
M. Wartella.[6][7] The clip is the first-ever video to incorporate Osbourne's hand-drawn artwork. "My demons were animated and can be seen during the Jeff Beck guitar solo in the song," wrote Osbourne on
Twitter.[8] The track subsequently debuted at No. 1 on Billboard's Hot Hard Rock Songs chart, while concurrently achieving debuts of Nos. 17 and 22 on Billboard's Hot Rock Songs and Hot Rock & Alternative Songs, respectively.[9] At the same time, Osbourne announced the album, cover, track listing and release date.[10][11]
The second single "Degradation Rules", featuring Osbourne's former
Black Sabbath bandmate
Tony Iommi, was unveiled on 22 July.[12][13] Four days before the album release, on 5 September, the third single "Nothing Feels Right" featuring
Zakk Wylde was published.[14][15] Osbourne performed during the halftime show at the
Los Angeles Rams' NFL season opener against the
Buffalo Bills on 8 September in support of the album.[16]
Patient Number 9 received generally positive reviews from contemporary music critics. At
Metacritic, which assigns a
normalised rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, the album received an
average score of 75, based on 10 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[17]
AllMusic critic Fred Thomas gave the album a mostly positive review. He wrote: "Even with that fatalistic perspective sometimes peeking through, Ozzy sounds hypercharged throughout Patient Number 9, continuing the unlikely late-in-the-game comeback he began on Ordinary Man, and besting that album by taking more chances."[18]
Furthermore, writing for The Guardian, Alexis Petridis gave the album an overall positive review, implying that "By way of contrast, Patient Number 9 draws to a close with God Only Knows, a beautiful stadium rock ballad that features Osbourne contemplating his own mortality in terms that are alternately starkly affecting."[19]
Kerrang! gave the album 4 out of 5 and stated: "If nothing else, it's pleasing to see Ozzy still carrying on and still being the Prince of Darkness. But Patient Number 9 is also, like its predecessor, a massive celebration of life and friendship and the magic power of music. 'I'll never die, because I'm immortal!' he announces on Immortal. He sounds it."[21]
Metal Hammer gave the album a positive review and stated: "Despite everything you may have heard about Ozzy being on his last legs, Patient Number 9 unequivocally does not sound like the work of a man living on borrowed time. Instead, it sounds like the Prince of fucking Darkness having an absolutely smashing time, with a bunch of his mates and, weirdly, a newfound sense of artistic ambition."[22]
NME writer Rhian Daly gave Patient Number 9 almost perfect score and stated: "At 73 years old and battling with his health, you might not expect Osbourne to keep that bar particularly high. But, for the most part, Patient Number 9 does just that – it's a fizzing piece of hard-rock magic. The superstitious metal frontman might have revealed in a recent Independent interview that he tries to "avoid looking at" the number 13, but we're lucky to have his magnificent 13th solo album."[23]
Gareth Williams of Wall of Sound gave the album a positive review, saying that "There's no disguising one of rock's more unique voices and the singer sounds as good as he has in years. Although this album doesn't break any new ground it is streaks ahead of the likes of 2007's Black Rain or Scream from 2010. With Ordinary Man having blasted up the mainstream charts in 2020, Patient Number 9 won't be far behind."[24]
At the
65th Annual Grammy Awards, Patient Number 9 received a total of four nominations, including
Best Rock Album. The title track "Patient Number 9" received nominations for
Best Rock Song and
Best Rock Performance, and "Degradation Rules" was nominated for
Best Metal Performance. The album would go on to win two Grammys, including Best Rock Album and Best Metal Performance for "Degradation Rules".[25] This win makes it the third Grammy Award that Ozzy Osbourne and Tony Iommi won together, after previously winning two as members of
Black Sabbath.[26]
^"Czech Albums – Top 100".
ČNS IFPI. Note: On the chart page, select 37.Týden 2022 on the field besides the words "CZ – ALBUMS – TOP 100" to retrieve the correct chart. Retrieved 19 September 2022.