
Dolly Parton Shares Heartfelt Farewell to Ozzy Osbourne Saying “We Will See You Somewhere Down the Road”
When Dolly speaks, the world listens. And when she says goodbye, even the heaviest hearts in metal feel it.
Just before Ozzy Osbourne’s final bow at Villa Park in Birmingham, England, a massive crowd was treated to more than just blistering guitars and thunderous drums. On the big screen between sets, the Queen of Country herself appeared in a pre-recorded message. It wasn’t flashy or dramatic. It was Dolly being Dolly, offering up a message that felt more like a warm hug than a send-off. Her words landed with the kind of weight only she could deliver.
“Are we supposed to be saying farewell to you? Well, I don’t think that’s gonna happen,” she said with that signature spark in her voice. “How about we just say good luck, God bless you and we will see you somewhere down the road.”
If that doesn’t hit you straight in the soul, it might be time to check your pulse.
The moment was pure Dolly. Comforting, kind, and deeply human. She didn’t need to name-drop songs or flex her musical street cred. It was one legend speaking to another, not as a performer but as a friend. And let’s be honest, if anyone can calm the thunderstorm of Ozzy Osbourne’s final act, it’s the woman who turned “I Will Always Love You” into an anthem for the ages.
Sure, it may seem odd to see the rhinestone cowgirl sharing screen time with the Prince of Darkness, but anyone paying attention over the past few years knows this moment was coming. Dolly didn’t just dip her toes into rock and roll. She dove straight in. Her Rockstar album featured the likes of Mötley Crüe and Paul McCartney. She even covered “Stairway to Heaven” like she was born to do it. This isn’t some crossover stunt. It’s Dolly being fearless like she always has.
Her message to Ozzy felt real because it was. She knows what it means to rise from nothing, to pour yourself into every note, and to carry the weight of millions who expect you to show up and give them something that matters. So when she told Ozzy that he’d be missed but not forgotten, it hit differently. It came from someone who understands.
Ozzy’s death at 76 came just weeks after that massive farewell show, where he reunited with his original Black Sabbath bandmates for one final thunderous send-off. That stage in Birmingham saw everything come full circle. Metallica, Guns N’ Roses, and Elton John all paid their respects. But it was Dolly who gave the moment its soul.
They might’ve walked different musical paths, but Dolly and Ozzy shared the same beating heart. A love for the fans. A refusal to be tamed. A grit that doesn’t quit. That’s what legends are made of.
So if you believe in something bigger, whether it’s heaven, reincarnation, or just the wild mystery of music, maybe Dolly was right all along.
We will see you somewhere down the road.