An Ozzy Osbourne fan is going to court over the "remastered" versions of Osbourne's first two solo albums. More on Ozzy lawsuit An Ozzy Osbourne fan in the Midwest is going to court over the "remastered" versions of Osbourne's first two solo albums. According to the Chicago Sun-Times, Illinois resident Anthony Wester filed suit in Cook County Circuit Court last week over the 2002 reissues of Osbourne's Blizzard Of Ozz and Diary Of A Madman. The CDs were labeled as being "remastered," but what wasn't noted was that original bassist Bob Daisley and drummer Lee Kerslake had their parts replaced due to a battle over royalties. In the suit, Wester described "a noticeable difference" between the original albums and the new versions, which feature current Metallica bassist Robert Trujillo and Faith No More drummer Mike Bordin. Wester added that the update "forever alter(ed) and stain(ed) the legacy" of Blizzard and Diary, and that the reissues "bear little relation to the original(s)." Wester is seeking class-action status for his suit against Sony Music and Epic Records, and he hopes to collect damages for anyone who felt cheated after buying the new versions of the albums. Osbourne isn't named as a plaintiff in the suit. Daisley, of course, has never been a fan of what happened to the albums. He told us the "remastered" versions are a travesty: "It's not the original product, and that is unfair to the record-buying public, and a slander to the memory of, of Randy Rhoads. Right after his, the 20th anniversary of his death, they put out these bogus copies of the albums, but without Kerslake and myself, and so they put Randy's playing with two guys that he didn't even have a say. And the whole shine and sparkle has gone out of those albums, and they just don't sound anything like the originals."