Heavy Metal Night at Legacy Hall: Ozzy Tribute Show Brings Sabbath Classics and a Charitable Twist to Plano
A tribute to Ozzy Osbourne and Black Sabbath hits Legacy Hall on July 18, with a Metallica tribute opener and Parkinson's charity tie-in.
A tribute to Ozzy Osbourne and Black Sabbath hits Legacy Hall on July 18, with a Metallica tribute opener and Parkinson's charity tie-in.

Plano’s Legacy Hall is hosting one of the louder entries on this month’s entertainment calendar: the premiere tribute to Ozzy Osbourne and Black Sabbath takes the stage on Saturday, July 18, running from 7 to 10 p.m. at 7800 Windrose Ave. The show is also a fundraiser — $1 from every ticket sold benefits the Dallas Area Parkinson Society.
That charitable component gives the night a layer beyond the music, and it connects the event to one of the more prominent causes associated with Osbourne himself, who disclosed his Parkinson’s diagnosis publicly years ago.
Legacy Hall is a food hall and live-music venue inside the Legacy West development on the north side of Plano, which means the usual setup applies: standing room on the main floor, food and drink vendors operating throughout, and an interior space that handles large-format shows without requiring an arena-scale crowd. For residents who have not been to a show there, the address is 7800 Windrose Ave., and parking within the Legacy West district is structured — plan a few extra minutes.
The 7 p.m. start is firm on the calendar, so arriving closer to 6:30 gives time to get situated, order from one of the hall’s vendors, and be in position when the opener kicks off.
Before the headline tribute act takes the stage, the evening opens with Kill ‘Em All, a Metallica tribute band. The pairing makes practical sense: both Metallica and Black Sabbath occupy adjacent corners of heavy metal’s foundational era, and Ozzy’s post-Sabbath solo catalog runs parallel to much of what Metallica built in the 1980s. An audience comfortable with one is likely to know the other’s catalog well.
Tribute shows in this genre live or die on the accuracy of the guitar tones and the willingness of a vocalist to commit fully to material that was defined by distinctive, irreplaceable voices. Readers who have seen the Ozzy/Sabbath tribute previously at this venue will have their own baseline; for those attending for the first time, the 7–10 p.m. window leaves time to assess both acts across a full evening.
The Dallas Area Parkinson Society is the designated beneficiary, with $1 per ticket directed their way. It is a modest per-ticket figure, but depending on the size of the crowd at Legacy Hall that night, it aggregates into a real contribution. The society supports Plano-area and broader DFW residents living with Parkinson’s disease, providing education, support groups, and referral services.
For anyone looking to go beyond the ticket contribution, the Dallas Area Parkinson Society’s own channels are the place to find direct donation options — the concert functions as awareness and baseline fundraising, not a comprehensive benefit gala.
A few practical points for anyone circling July 18 on the calendar:
This is not the only major show at Legacy Hall this month. Giovannie and the Hired Guns, the Stephenville-based band known for blending alt-metal, Red Dirt country, and Americana, plays the same venue on Friday, July 24 at 6 p.m. And Weiner Fest, a hot-dog-themed food festival, takes over Legacy Hall on Monday, July 27 at noon. The three events together reflect how the hall has positioned itself as a venue flexible enough to host tribute concerts, touring original acts, and food-centered events within the same calendar month.
For Plano residents who default to driving up to Dallas for live music, the Legacy West footprint has steadily built a case that the trip is optional. July 18 is a reasonable night to test that proposition.
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