From the Eagles to Fleetwood Mac to the Beatles and so many more, it’s no secret that the members of rock bands often disagree. Sometimes bands end up breaking up over these differences; other times, they’re able to come to a compromise. A perfect example? The story behind one of Uriah Heep’s most beloved songs ever, “Lady in Black.”

The fourth track on Uriah Heep’s 1971 album Salisbury, “Lady in Black” was never released as a single in the U.S., but fans fell in love with the ballad just the same, and it ended up becoming one of their most popular live tunes. As guitar player Ken Hensley explained in a 2018 interview with Songfacts, it all started with a supernatural encounter.

“All my songs start with the lyric which, when completed, begin to ‘speak’ to me in terms of melody and rhythm,” Hensley said, adding, “This is partly because I started writing poetry when I was very young and had not yet learned to play an instrument and, much later, because Heep used to tour so much I had to write ‘on the run’ and finish a song whenever I could get to an instrument!”

In the case of “The Lady in Black,” Hensley was inspired by a ghostly vision of an actual woman in black.

“t’s true, I did see this young lady and she was dressed in black and her hair was blowing around in the ‘mid-winter wind,’ but she wasn’t ‘coming to me,’ she was just walking up the street outside of my hotel in northwest England during a tour,” he said.

“I just picked up my guitar and let my over-active imagination run with this vision and, as is often the case, let the lyric go wherever it wanted to go.”

Usually, Uriah Heep’s songs were sung by David Byron. But according to Hensley, Byron disliked the song so much that he refused to sing on it. So, at the suggestion of producer Gerry Bron, Hensley sang it himself, to great theatrical effect:

She came to me one morning, one lonely Sunday morning
Her long hair flowing in the mid-winter wind
I know not how she found me, for in darkness I was walking
And destruction lay around me, from a fight I could not win

She asked me, ‘Name my foe then’
I said, ‘The need within some men
To fight and kill their brothers
Without thought of love or God’
And I begged, ‘Give me horses to trample down my enemies’
So eager was my passion to devour this waste of life

All these years later, fans are still connecting with this musical tale of a soldier in search of redemption, as the comments on the above YouTube video prove (for example: “Ken Hensley is the best!!! Uriah Heep forever!!!” “Timeless song, and lifts me when I’m down!”).

In the same Songfacts interview, Hensley addressed the inspiration behind another seemingly supernatural Uriah Heep song, “The Wizard.” Fans wondered for years about whether the sorcerer of the title was Gandalf, or Merlin, or perhaps someone else entirely, but as it turns out, none of those guesses were true.

“Actually, this song came from a dream that I had persistently over a week and, when I decided to write it, I just followed what I had seen in the dream, along with a little amateur philosophy,” Hensley explained.

One thing’s for sure: Byron must have liked “The Wizard” better than “Lady in Black,” because he agreed to sing lead on the former.

Related: ’70s Rock Icon to Miss First Shows in 57 Years on 2026 Farewell Tour Amid Health Struggles

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