This is how it’s done kids. Real people playing real instruments in real time. No autotune, no pre-recorded tracks, no heavy processing on the vocal to hide deficiencies.
For those of us who lived this, it makes it easy to understand why we find the music of today lacking. There's no formula here, it's just talent and passion at work. You know...real music.
Yes, gave up on music being churned out in the West, when Cowell and his like, dictated little boy and girl music was what we'd get. He couldn't handle the Alpha males who make up Rock Bands, so Rock music didn't see the light of day on mainstream TV. I looked East and found a guy (Hua Chenyu) brought up on Muse, Radiohead, Linkin Park, who writes everything from Rock/Metal to Rap, Reggae 😂, Pop, SynthPop, Broadway, Traditional Chinese and on and on. Like a mix of Bowie and Freddie Mercury (and equally chameleon like in look). Waiting for the West to rediscover music like this. 😔
It's not a product, it's expressive,, it has a narrative that is sympathetic, it's uncompromising, rebelling against cruel reality, evocative of repressed emotions and bringing them out. I always scream inside with him and slap the table at 8:10. This music controls me.
Ian Gillan was one of the very best singers of all-time. "Child in Time" gave me goose bumps when Gillan hit the high notes back in the 70's ...and it still does today. Deep Purple were truly one of the very best Rock bands in history. ......R.I.P. Jon Lord
One of the most technically talented rock bands in history, with Gillan, Blackmore, and Lord all classically trained and virtuosic (Lord even plays a bit of Flight of the Bumblebee in here). I am not a huge hard rock fan (more blues and Southern rock for me), but this is an absolutely stunning song. Gillan also delivers a masterpiece as Jesus in Jesus Christ Superstar - "Gethsemane" may be the most amazingly emotional and powerful vocal performance Ive ever heard.
Welcome to world 🌎 of Deep Purple no auto tuners no pro tools no auto choris nothing but clean beauty rock master musicians. All 5 aces. Top 3 rock bands in the world of all time. This is 1970 live on TV 📺 they just do this evernight all over the world.
This is real live music played by people who not only can play but could feel the music and produce a performance because they lived the music. Not calculated programmed pap!
Can you imagine what it was like when we first heard this track for the first time on Made in Rock, the collective sound of jaws dropping! Having said that, we were blessed to have tracks like this coming out every few weeks in the 70s - feel so lucky that I was a teenager during that time. Brilliant musicians making brilliant music. Plus, Ian Paice on drums, the reason that I took up drumming over 50 years ago!
Welcome!!! :) We had the same reactions 52 years ago! Unrelenting! The difference between studio and live is so huge on most of their material - so if "Lazy" is on the hit-list would suggest you go for the "Made In Japan" version - recorded live as an experiment, but released completely unedited!
I was about to suggest it toO . My.. his version always gives me goose pimples. Other singers are great but none can convey the raw emotions, sadness, anger, fear, resignation the way he does it. In term of expressivity, he remains unattaignable, at least in my point of view.
You cannot picture how much I miss Jon Lord ( and Keith Emerson). This guy was a mindblowing pianist, and keybordist and to me , he is the core of the distinctive Deep Purple sound.
We were constantly in a state of being utterly blown away by soo many bands of the era. Like at every turn. So fresh, so much talent and raw energy. It was an incredible time to be alive.
Growing up in the 60's and 70's we were blessed with such amazing music. All organic, no autotune, real instruments, didn't have to fit in a genre box. It was the best!
I like your 'genre' comment. I've noticed many reactors to the music from the past that I grew up with are overly obsessed with genres and have a need to compartmentalise everything they hear. Back then there seemed to be so much varied music coming through that it was just accepted that new talent always brought it's own originality into the equation. If it sounded good, regardless of any past influences or crossovers (jazz, folk, classical etc, etc) that was all that mattered.
@@Llydrwydd Exactly! You would get different influences on one album with a lot of bands or they changed their sound through the years like Rush. Music then was inventive and creative and had so many influences. These days it all had to be perfect pitch in a tiny little box with a label on it. That's why most music these days is really boring and uninspiring.
@@carolehankinson4969Thanks for the endorsement. I do think we were lucky in a way when music wasn't as accesible as it is now. Something new I'd usually taped (reel to reel, yes I'm that old) off the radio would spark an interest and, in my case anyway, a decision would need to be made whether to buy the album or alternatively something I'd heard previously by a different artiste. I couldn't afford both! Good in a way though because I think it honed my appreciation of the talent that existed. The downside was I'd miss that deeper delve into some artistes work at the time. Though aware of the influences (or genres) in the sounds I was hearing it was never something that overly concerned me.
I am also a man that was blessed to have this and other music like it ad my musical soundscape as a ,first,pretty teen,then on into my teens! Fantastic!!
The five men in this lineup of Deep Purple are all legends with their respective instruments - guitar, bass, drums, organ, and voice. Other hard rock and metal bands would try in vain to sound like Blackmore, Glover, Paice, Lord, and Gillain.
Zeppelin is blues based hard rock. This is the birth of metal. Along with Black Sabbath, first lp. Sorry bro Zeppelin never been metal. But a great band@tektoniks_architects
*I've seen ppl react to this and say "why does he keep putting his finger in his ear when he sings?" Back then, that was auto tune. You had to have real talent without technology helping you out.* 🔥🤘
My dad was a Opera Singer. He covered his right ear to hear his voice and stay in key. He sang from his Diaphragm and covering his ear also helps you use your breath correctly. I sing at Church and sometimes I cover my ear by pushing the front skin over my ear canal. Most of the Contemporary Praise and Worship are for women and men that can't sing Bass/ Baritone. That's why you don't a lot of men sing during Worship because they can't sing like women.
Actually it was the only way singer can hear himself in the mid of all those noise arround. Closing ear from outside sound, you can hear yourself trough the inside canals like eustachian tube.
This was so funny watching your reaction 😂, I think because the song was about Vietnam, the words wait for the ricksha, bullets flying thats……that my interpretation 😊
The great Ritchie Blackmore, for all of his weird quirks and unlikeable traits, he is a master guitarist, in the company of Eric Clapton, Jimmy Page, (strange relationship there) and others. This Band started out in 1966, and really hit their stride in the late 60s, and into the early 70s. A truly great Band. They are British. You are a lot younger than me, so I mention that in case you didn't know. No disrespect intended. Great channel friend
You are now officially a rock fan, having experienced this masterpiece, musicians right at the very top ofntheir game. Glad you noticed how good Ian Paice is on drums much underrated very much a drummers drummer, he is so good I bet you never noticed he drops a stick during the performance but recovers so quickly you are hard pushed to notice it, take a look it's around 7:18 to 7:20 ish on the original video.
I saw this live in 1972 in Detroit , I went to see Black Sabbath once I heard Ian sing I had to see them again in the Ford Theatre and was no longer wanting to hear Sabbath. I also saw Led Zeppelin I liked them but not as much as Deep Purple. I know most people prefer Zeppelin but no one has the octaves that Ian sings, I also know that people prefer Bonham on drums but I prefer Ian Paice he's a left handed drummer and he is still drumming. Needless to say they were and still my favorite group by far.
Totally agree. Seen DP with Sabbath at Cal Jam, no comparison. Saw Led Zeppelin in the mid 70's, no comparison. Most of the time, I just tolerate Robert Plants singing because the music was so great. DP were musicians at the top of the game, none better.
They have the intention to outdo each other and that's what drives them. I believe they are the best live band that I personally saw and that is quite a few but again I must say Ian Gillan has a voice that is beyond belief. @@sillysod33
Great introductions to Jon Lord (Organ) & Ritchie Blackmore (guitarist) and their genius mastery of their instruments. Glover and Paice are great as well, plus the exceptional vocals from Ian Gillan. This is their Mark2 line-up, so good. For me, you don't get any better than Lord and Blackmore, simply the best. Follow Blackmore to his next band Rainbow, they will blow you away as well. Check out the song "Stargazer".
Listen to the Made in Japan. It is a jewel. But that is no suprise with all these talented musicians. I used to listen to this every day after school and just before mum had the lunch ready. Like 15-20 minutes and it always made me happy.
Deep Purple was my introduction to hard rock and it grabbed me, shook me out, and changed my life. Ian Gillan had one of the greatest voices in rock. His control and range were unmatched. "Made in Japan" is one of the great live albums of that era. The song Strange Kind of Woman from that album highlights his control in a brilliant call and response with guitarist Richie Blackmore. While their creativity couldn't match Led Zeppelin's, Deep Purple ran a strong second in my book for several years. It is also worthwhile to check out Gillan's performance on the rock opera "Jesus Christ Superstar".
I think they're easily par with Zeppelin. I seen them Sabbath Purple Zeppelin. Purple clearly better than those two live. Purple another color of the spectrum very different and all aces on there instruments. 5 all 🌟
@@kurtsherrick2066 agreed my favorite live lp of all time it's a masterpiece. Love Sabbath Zeppelin too. I was lucky enough to see them all in concerts in there big day in the 70s. Just my opinion. Seen Zeppelin at Madison Square Garden so disappointing to see Jimmy Page struggle live. Now Plant Bonham Jones especially Jones was spot on everyone could see he's the quiet one but a master musician. Jones and Bonzo perfect. Sabbath was awesome to Geezer Ward Tony even Ozzy were great and loved seeing them. Not complaints at all. Just not par with Purple mk 2 and even mk 3. I seen Coverdale and was shocked how good he was with Hughes. They were refreshing the band hate to say but brought energy and confidence. It's not easy to try and fill Gillan vocals but both as team really came close. I was shocked and so were we all. But Burn was huge. 1973 Deep Purple was the biggest band in the world thru gate receipts and record sales. We had Purple mania as kids and even got to see them in the happy years in the 80s. The meadow lands in NJ with guns and roses awesome and Aerosmith not so good at the time still dealing with drugs and trying to be clean. I think these kids today don't realize how good most bands in the 70s were. Almost all of them grand funk 10 years after the sweet all of them hold there own. I don't see it as a complaint to musicians today. I see it as one of the lucky ones. I got to see some of these bands and very lucky indeed.
@@barryrammer7906 Yes my friend that was a great comment and well said. I have thanked the Lord for letting me be a teenager in the Seventies. I have seen just about all of them. I have a photo Album full ticket stubs. I have been to over 100 concerts in the Seventies and early eighties. Many of the young people know they missed out. God bless and rock on. I grew up in Memphis the home of Rock and Roll. I saw Shawn Lane when he was 13 years old. He was already a top guitarist. I saw Mick Jagger play guitar hos first time on the Some Girls Tour in 78. He wanted Furry Lewis to watch him play on stage the first time. Furry was maybe the greatest Authentic Delta Blues Guitarist. You can Google some of his videos. I had to travel to Birmingham Alabama to see Zeppelin in 77. It was exactly how you described them live. I saw Rainbow's First American Concert. They warmed up Foghat whilch during their Concert people where yelling Ritchie, Ritchie, Rainbow, Rainbow. Those were the days my friend, I thought they would never end but it did. God bless you Barry! You brought back some great memories. Saw Sabbath 3 times. Twice with Ozzy and once with Dio. I can't remember if Sabbath came on the Born Again Tour with Gillian. If so I missed that one.
@@kurtsherrick2066 Kurt I'm with you all or most bands in 70s were true musicians and masters of there craft. Some were trial and error like the Moody Blues who the record executives thought did not have a chance. Wrong just one example of cognitive dissonance on there part. I'm like you went to many concerts loved it. One had a tragic event that bothers be to this day. Kiss Bob Seger Jake Geils band and Thin lizzy. A kid was stabbed to death in the stands. I was front row all Day event. During Kiss destroyer tour I think in Jersey City Roosevelt stadium. But other than that awesome experience people were so cool and none violent for the most part. Getting back to Purple seen them in mark 2 3 4 and the reunion tours. 2 and 3 really were the best ever it was hard at first no Gillan or Glover. But Coverdale and Hugh's pulled it off in combination singing. How many bands have 2 legitimate lead singers back then. We could probably names bands these folks never heard of to bad there all gone but our memories of our youth and openness to new things never dies. I got to see one of my heros in OR of all places. At a casino in Newport. BB king when he hit the first note on a lead an electric volt went thru my body lol. Never felt that from any guitarist in my lifetime. Lol even Ritchie Blackmore. 🤣 My point is I got to see the big 3 of so called metal pioneers. Black Sabbath awesome Led Zeppelin Jimmy Page has a hard time pulling off textures of overdubs live and was struggling live due to drugs also. Deep Purple back then we pretty much agreed live there were untouchable. There better live than on lps. They just were I can't explain it we came away dumbfounded. One of my buddies a hard core Zeppelin fan admitted to us all Deep Purple better and grudgingly admitted Ritchie Blackmore was better live. He stressed only live lol. Who cares really it's all opinions anyway. The point is we are so lucky indeed my brother rock on 🤘 💯
This band is in my top 5 favorite bands ever! 💜🎸🔥🎤💜 This is the best line up of this band IMO 💜 You have the multitalented Jon Lord on 🎹 The amazing skills of Ritchie Blackmore on Lead Guitar 🎸 Roger Glover on Bass & the 2 Ian’s, Gillan on vocals 🎤 & Paice on Drums 🥁🎼🥁 I think this is my favorite reaction from you so far 💜💜💜💜
This is what you get when you have some of the best musicians in the world in one band
Agree, everyone in the band at this time were great at what they did.
This is how it’s done kids. Real people playing real instruments in real time. No autotune, no pre-recorded tracks, no heavy processing on the vocal to hide deficiencies.
Yeah but normal people can't play like that
My bro sencks
...........sory!!!!°°°°°°°!!!
Bro sryvy not whor
Some of us had the pleasure of growing up during the greatest Era of music. The 70s.
🍄🍄🟫💯💯💯
And that's absolutely true... We lived with it in our youth!!! 😂
We were so lucky!
And I had the pleas to see them live just one week ago.
At least Gillan, Paice and Glover. They're almost 80 years old and rocked the hall...
I am so incredibly sad that I missed this time. I was born in 1992 and can only watch all this fantastic music and the live performances on video.
I can't even listen to the junk on the radio now. We had the best music and I'm glad it's still available.
Amen brother!
They are even still on tour. Still Gillan, Paice and Glover almost 80 years old. I watched them live just one week ago and they rocked the hall...
For those of us who lived this, it makes it easy to understand why we find the music of today lacking. There's no formula here, it's just talent and passion at work. You know...real music.
Yes, gave up on music being churned out in the West, when Cowell and his like, dictated little boy and girl music was what we'd get. He couldn't handle the Alpha males who make up Rock Bands, so Rock music didn't see the light of day on mainstream TV. I looked East and found a guy (Hua Chenyu) brought up on Muse, Radiohead, Linkin Park, who writes everything from Rock/Metal to Rap, Reggae 😂, Pop, SynthPop, Broadway, Traditional Chinese and on and on. Like a mix of Bowie and Freddie Mercury (and equally chameleon like in look). Waiting for the West to rediscover music like this. 😔
You speak the truth
That is the best explanation I’ve heard. Im just now appreciating their music.
I was there... Thank God I did some "medical research " it blew my mind.... Recorded sucked... Live? Holy shit
It's not a product, it's expressive,, it has a narrative that is sympathetic, it's uncompromising, rebelling against cruel reality, evocative of repressed emotions and bringing them out. I always scream inside with him and slap the table at 8:10. This music controls me.
When you made the comment about Ian's "dynamics" I literally LOL'd.... because you 'd stopped it right before he cut loose.
Richie on Guitar. One of the best.
Everyone in the band were the best at what they did.
How I miss the days of just talent being appreciated and not being judged by how beautiful you look
Ian Gillan was one of the very best singers of all-time. "Child in Time" gave me goose bumps when Gillan hit the high notes back in the 70's ...and it still does today.
Deep Purple were truly one of the very best Rock bands in history. ......R.I.P. Jon Lord
You my friend have just witnessed one if the most iconic live performances ever.
tobacco road by Edgar Winter Band
I agree, this is up there, but Queen at Live Aid still takes it 😱
One of the most technically talented rock bands in history, with Gillan, Blackmore, and Lord all classically trained and virtuosic (Lord even plays a bit of Flight of the Bumblebee in here). I am not a huge hard rock fan (more blues and Southern rock for me), but this is an absolutely stunning song. Gillan also delivers a masterpiece as Jesus in Jesus Christ Superstar - "Gethsemane" may be the most amazingly emotional and powerful vocal performance Ive ever heard.
"...bow your head, wait for the ricochet..." What a lyric............
Purple is best served live.
The best hard rock band of all time
The Best Band Ever!!
5 musicians, all at the top of their game.
All in one place.
That’s Deep Purple.
That represents the bullets flying when it went into the instrumental
I still get a reaction to this all these years later.
For every great Deep Purple song, there’s a better live version they done of it.
Made in Japan and Made in Europe!
musicgasm
" I blew my mind all against the wall"
Welcome to world 🌎 of Deep Purple no auto tuners no pro tools no auto choris nothing but clean beauty rock master musicians. All 5 aces. Top 3 rock bands in the world of all time. This is 1970 live on TV 📺 they just do this evernight all over the world.
DEEP PURPLE That's what just happened
This is real live music played by people who not only can play but could feel the music and produce a performance because they lived the music. Not calculated programmed pap!
One of the best songs ever by the best line-up for Deep Purple. Yes, they really were that good. Always a fave of mine and always live.
Great band. Everyone in the band was great at what they did.
That is the AHA! Moment! Deep Purple Rocks! Thanks 😊
OMG! In 1970! And Live! One of the greatest one of the time & now.
Can you imagine what it was like when we first heard this track for the first time on Made in Rock, the collective sound of jaws dropping! Having said that, we were blessed to have tracks like this coming out every few weeks in the 70s - feel so lucky that I was a teenager during that time. Brilliant musicians making brilliant music. Plus, Ian Paice on drums, the reason that I took up drumming over 50 years ago!
This song was about Vietnam, one of a kind ❤
I love watching peoples reaction after reaction to this! Been my favourite since I was a kid!😂
Talking about how good of a singer he was right BEFORE he nails that A5 note cracked me up 😂
Have you listened to their best live album yet? Made in Japan "live" ! You will never forget Deep Purple.
Welcome!!! :) We had the same reactions 52 years ago! Unrelenting! The difference between studio and live is so huge on most of their material - so if "Lazy" is on the hit-list would suggest you go for the "Made In Japan" version - recorded live as an experiment, but released completely unedited!
Made in Japan has the best versions.
Definitely do the studio first..then Mij version.
@@ponytrekker8996 yes I suppose the studio stuff would be a good place to start but Purple were primarily a performance band.
@@Hartlor_Tayley agreed.. but studio lazy is a must listen..
@@ponytrekker8996 yes, their are exceptions of course, Lazy being one.
I was in high school in the late 70's. It was fast. It was loud. It was good.
Ian Gillans performance of "Gethsemane" 1970 from Jesus Christ Superstar is off the charts good.
I was about to suggest it toO . My.. his version always gives me goose pimples. Other singers are great but none can convey the raw emotions, sadness, anger, fear, resignation the way he does it. In term of expressivity, he remains unattaignable, at least in my point of view.
Yes! Ian Gillan, nobody else comes close!
DEEP PURPLE GREAT GROUP HARD ROCK IAN GILLIAN VOICE INCREDIBLE AMAZING RITCH BLACKMOR MONSTRE THE GUITAR......
My favorite band of all time!!
I call it shocked and stunned 😂😂😂😂
EXPLOSIVE BAND, ONE Of THE GREATEST of ALL TIME
Most honest recation so far
One of the greatest songs of ALL TIME !!!!
You are watching greatness.
Instrumental and vocal masterpiece. Epic.
You cannot picture how much I miss Jon Lord ( and Keith Emerson). This guy was a mindblowing pianist, and keybordist and to me , he is the core of the distinctive Deep Purple sound.
,... Please, don't do a sacrilege! ~ D O N O T FORGET INCREDIBLE KEN HENSLEY OF A M A Z I N G URIAH HEEP (RIP❤)!!! 🎉 BERNIE GERMANY 😊
We were constantly in a state of being utterly blown away by soo many bands of the era. Like at every turn. So fresh, so much talent and raw energy. It was an incredible time to be alive.
Ooooooooooooooooh Y E S S S, bro ~ IT REALLY WAS 🎉❤😊!!! BERNIE GERMANY (67 of age) 😊
Ladies and Gentlemen, Ian Gillan.
Growing up in the 60's and 70's we were blessed with such amazing music. All organic, no autotune, real instruments, didn't have to fit in a genre box.
It was the best!
I like your 'genre' comment. I've noticed many reactors to the music from the past that I grew up with are overly obsessed with genres and have a need to compartmentalise everything they hear. Back then there seemed to be so much varied music coming through that it was just accepted that new talent always brought it's own originality into the equation. If it sounded good, regardless of any past influences or crossovers (jazz, folk, classical etc, etc) that was all that mattered.
@@Llydrwydd Exactly! You would get different influences on one album with a lot of bands or they changed their sound through the years like Rush. Music then was inventive and creative and had so many influences. These days it all had to be perfect pitch in a tiny little box with a label on it. That's why most music these days is really boring and uninspiring.
I like your term "Organic! yeah agree with you because all natural, the guitar effect just a treble booster.
@@Llydrwydd You said it all, Genres didn't exist in my world. Live music just reeked talent. Great comment!!!!! 🇬🇧
@@carolehankinson4969Thanks for the endorsement. I do think we were lucky in a way when music wasn't as accesible as it is now. Something new I'd usually taped (reel to reel, yes I'm that old) off the radio would spark an interest and, in my case anyway, a decision would need to be made whether to buy the album or alternatively something I'd heard previously by a different artiste. I couldn't afford both!
Good in a way though because I think it honed my appreciation of the talent that existed. The downside was I'd miss that deeper delve into some artistes work at the time.
Though aware of the influences (or genres) in the sounds I was hearing it was never something that overly concerned me.
i think the best version of this song is on the made in japan album
LIVE PERFORMANCE!!!!!!
I'M 61yrs old and i still rock out to. Another all time GREAT. That's when music was music. 🎸🎸🎹🎹🎤🎤🎤🥁
I am also a man that was blessed to have this and other music like it ad my musical soundscape as a ,first,pretty teen,then on into my teens! Fantastic!!
The five men in this lineup of Deep Purple are all legends with their respective instruments - guitar, bass, drums, organ, and voice. Other hard rock and metal bands would try in vain to sound like Blackmore, Glover, Paice, Lord, and Gillain.
First band I saw live, Feb 1972
The birth of metal. Thankyou deep purple 💜 my favorite band . I wish I still had their 8 track. But I still play their almums
Released a full six months after Led Zeppelin 2. Nope.
Zeppelin is blues based hard rock. This is the birth of metal. Along with Black Sabbath, first lp. Sorry bro Zeppelin never been metal. But a great band@tektoniks_architects
You just watched Insane Talent!
I’m soooo glad I grew up late 60’s and 70’s..
Amen 🙏
*I've seen ppl react to this and say "why does he keep putting his finger in his ear when he sings?" Back then, that was auto tune. You had to have real talent without technology helping you out.* 🔥🤘
My dad was a Opera Singer. He covered his right ear to hear his voice and stay in key. He sang from his Diaphragm and covering his ear also helps you use your breath correctly. I sing at Church and sometimes I cover my ear by pushing the front skin over my ear canal. Most of the Contemporary Praise and Worship are for women and men that can't sing Bass/ Baritone. That's why you don't a lot of men sing during Worship because they can't sing like women.
Actually it was the only way singer can hear himself in the mid of all those noise arround. Closing ear from outside sound, you can hear yourself trough the inside canals like eustachian tube.
VERY WELL DONE,THOUGHTFUL
U SHOUL DHAVE SEEN THEM LIVE!!
INCEDIBLE!!!
Awesome react!!
One of my favourites of all time!!!
This was so funny watching your reaction 😂, I think because the song was about Vietnam, the words wait for the ricksha, bullets flying thats……that my interpretation 😊
Legendary live performance.
was my jam in the 70's
This was referred to as "underground back in the day. Deep purple, fantastic!
After he stops it for the first time. ............Wait for it................
One of the best songs of all time. Brilliant analysis
Best Piece in Rock Music of all time. No discussion.
Nice reaction, thx man
I love watching you young people reacting. It's fun watching the faces when Ian belts out that amazing scream.
I used to drive my parents absolutely crazy playing this very loud!
The great Ritchie Blackmore, for all of his weird quirks and unlikeable traits, he is a master guitarist, in the company of Eric Clapton, Jimmy Page, (strange relationship there) and others. This Band started out in 1966, and really hit their stride in the late 60s, and into the early 70s. A truly great Band. They are British. You are a lot younger than me, so I mention that in case you didn't know. No disrespect intended. Great channel friend
He was top 3 in the world 🌎 in his day.
I love Deep Purple 💜
1970. They are pioneers of heavy metal. One of the best bands ever! And the song is among the top 100 best rock songs ever!
Absolument génial...unique terrifiant ...chef d oeuvre
Vocal : Ian gillan
Keibords: Jon lord
Guitar: Ritchie Blackmore
Bass: Roger Glover
Drums: Ian paice
You are now officially a rock fan, having experienced this masterpiece, musicians right at the very top ofntheir game. Glad you noticed how good Ian Paice is on drums much underrated very much a drummers drummer, he is so good I bet you never noticed he drops a stick during the performance but recovers so quickly you are hard pushed to notice it, take a look it's around 7:18 to 7:20 ish on the original video.
I saw this live in 1972 in Detroit , I went to see Black Sabbath once I heard Ian sing I had to see them again in the Ford Theatre and was no longer wanting to hear Sabbath. I also saw Led Zeppelin I liked them but not as much as Deep Purple. I know most people prefer Zeppelin but no one has the octaves that Ian sings, I also know that people prefer Bonham on drums but I prefer Ian Paice he's a left handed drummer and he is still drumming. Needless to say they were and still my favorite group by far.
Totally agree. Seen DP with Sabbath at Cal Jam, no comparison. Saw Led Zeppelin in the mid 70's, no comparison. Most of the time, I just tolerate Robert Plants singing because the music was so great. DP were musicians at the top of the game, none better.
@@greggguenthard It's always nice to see someone who appreciated Deep Purple as much as me. Hope there are many more of us who do.
Much as I love LZ, DP just have that extra edge, some even darker spells that other bands can’t imagine.
They have the intention to outdo each other and that's what drives them. I believe they are the best live band that I personally saw and that is quite a few but again I must say Ian Gillan has a voice that is beyond belief.
@@sillysod33
Dude, I experienced this even back in the '80s, live. Chicago shook that night!!! All of these guys are MASTERS!!!
This 66 yrold reimbursement seeing these guys up close 3 different tes this iteration and next yes eat your hearts out 😆
Just love this guys reactions
Great introductions to Jon Lord (Organ) & Ritchie Blackmore (guitarist) and their genius mastery of their instruments. Glover and Paice are great as well, plus the exceptional vocals from Ian Gillan. This is their Mark2 line-up, so good. For me, you don't get any better than Lord and Blackmore, simply the best. Follow Blackmore to his next band Rainbow, they will blow you away as well. Check out the song "Stargazer".
Ritchie Blackmore is a God on the guitar
I was born in the seventies and this Masterpiece is my favourite Song
5 Magicians united as ONE ❤
Ladies and Gentleman that’s pure Talent !!!
Onef my fave played music vid. Xx
Multi-stage rocket into the stratosphere.
keep spirit
10:55 - worth it for the look on your face. ;)
Despite the one mishap, I feel the camera work for this performance was excellent and highlighted each band member's talents.
Cant be better than this
The Mark 2 version of Deep Purple was imo the best 5 rock musicians ever assembled.
3 of the 5 are still together with a new album May 2024.
'knocking at your backdoor'. one of my fav Deep Purple songs.
Listen to the Made in Japan. It is a jewel. But that is no suprise with all these talented musicians. I used to listen to this every day after school and just before mum had the lunch ready. Like 15-20 minutes and it always made me happy.
Deep Purple was my introduction to hard rock and it grabbed me, shook me out, and changed my life. Ian Gillan had one of the greatest voices in rock. His control and range were unmatched. "Made in Japan" is one of the great live albums of that era. The song Strange Kind of Woman from that album highlights his control in a brilliant call and response with guitarist Richie Blackmore. While their creativity couldn't match Led Zeppelin's, Deep Purple ran a strong second in my book for several years. It is also worthwhile to check out Gillan's performance on the rock opera "Jesus Christ Superstar".
I think they're easily par with Zeppelin. I seen them Sabbath Purple Zeppelin. Purple clearly better than those two live. Purple another color of the spectrum very different and all aces on there instruments. 5 all 🌟
@@barryrammer7906 Most definitely a better consistent live band than Zeppelin. Made in Japan is the measure of what a live Album should be.
@@kurtsherrick2066 agreed my favorite live lp of all time it's a masterpiece. Love Sabbath Zeppelin too. I was lucky enough to see them all in concerts in there big day in the 70s. Just my opinion. Seen Zeppelin at Madison Square Garden so disappointing to see Jimmy Page struggle live. Now Plant Bonham Jones especially Jones was spot on everyone could see he's the quiet one but a master musician. Jones and Bonzo perfect. Sabbath was awesome to Geezer Ward Tony even Ozzy were great and loved seeing them. Not complaints at all. Just not par with Purple mk 2 and even mk 3. I seen Coverdale and was shocked how good he was with Hughes. They were refreshing the band hate to say but brought energy and confidence. It's not easy to try and fill Gillan vocals but both as team really came close. I was shocked and so were we all. But Burn was huge. 1973 Deep Purple was the biggest band in the world thru gate receipts and record sales. We had Purple mania as kids and even got to see them in the happy years in the 80s. The meadow lands in NJ with guns and roses awesome and Aerosmith not so good at the time still dealing with drugs and trying to be clean. I think these kids today don't realize how good most bands in the 70s were. Almost all of them grand funk 10 years after the sweet all of them hold there own. I don't see it as a complaint to musicians today. I see it as one of the lucky ones. I got to see some of these bands and very lucky indeed.
@@barryrammer7906 Yes my friend that was a great comment and well said. I have thanked the Lord for letting me be a teenager in the Seventies. I have seen just about all of them. I have a photo Album full ticket stubs. I have been to over 100 concerts in the Seventies and early eighties. Many of the young people know they missed out. God bless and rock on. I grew up in Memphis the home of Rock and Roll. I saw Shawn Lane when he was 13 years old. He was already a top guitarist. I saw Mick Jagger play guitar hos first time on the Some Girls Tour in 78. He wanted Furry Lewis to watch him play on stage the first time. Furry was maybe the greatest Authentic Delta Blues Guitarist. You can Google some of his videos. I had to travel to Birmingham Alabama to see Zeppelin in 77. It was exactly how you described them live. I saw Rainbow's First American Concert. They warmed up Foghat whilch during their Concert people where yelling Ritchie, Ritchie, Rainbow, Rainbow. Those were the days my friend, I thought they would never end but it did. God bless you Barry! You brought back some great memories. Saw Sabbath 3 times. Twice with Ozzy and once with Dio. I can't remember if Sabbath came on the Born Again Tour with Gillian. If so I missed that one.
@@kurtsherrick2066 Kurt I'm with you all or most bands in 70s were true musicians and masters of there craft. Some were trial and error like the Moody Blues who the record executives thought did not have a chance. Wrong just one example of cognitive dissonance on there part. I'm like you went to many concerts loved it. One had a tragic event that bothers be to this day. Kiss Bob Seger Jake Geils band and Thin lizzy. A kid was stabbed to death in the stands. I was front row all Day event. During Kiss destroyer tour I think in Jersey City Roosevelt stadium. But other than that awesome experience people were so cool and none violent for the most part. Getting back to Purple seen them in mark 2 3 4 and the reunion tours. 2 and 3 really were the best ever it was hard at first no Gillan or Glover. But Coverdale and Hugh's pulled it off in combination singing. How many bands have 2 legitimate lead singers back then. We could probably names bands these folks never heard of to bad there all gone but our memories of our youth and openness to new things never dies. I got to see one of my heros in OR of all places. At a casino in Newport. BB king when he hit the first note on a lead an electric volt went thru my body lol. Never felt that from any guitarist in my lifetime. Lol even Ritchie Blackmore. 🤣 My point is I got to see the big 3 of so called metal pioneers. Black Sabbath awesome Led Zeppelin Jimmy Page has a hard time pulling off textures of overdubs live and was struggling live due to drugs also. Deep Purple back then we pretty much agreed live there were untouchable. There better live than on lps. They just were I can't explain it we came away dumbfounded. One of my buddies a hard core Zeppelin fan admitted to us all Deep Purple better and grudgingly admitted Ritchie Blackmore was better live. He stressed only live lol. Who cares really it's all opinions anyway. The point is we are so lucky indeed my brother rock on 🤘 💯
This band is in my top 5 favorite bands ever! 💜🎸🔥🎤💜 This is the best line up of this band IMO 💜 You have the multitalented Jon Lord on 🎹 The amazing skills of Ritchie Blackmore on Lead Guitar 🎸 Roger Glover on Bass & the 2 Ian’s, Gillan on vocals 🎤 & Paice on Drums 🥁🎼🥁 I think this is my favorite reaction from you so far 💜💜💜💜
Bought my first Deep Purple album in 1975, they are the GOAT
The performance of this song on the Made in Japan album is seared in my mind and soul.
One of the few times you'll see Ritchie playing a Gibson semi-hollow. He became a strictly Fender Strat player.
Love you man...
If you didn't have Deep Purple in your album collection 50 yrs ago well let's just say no soup for you!
My children asked me about those "large black cd's". How can you expect them to have albums from 50 yrs ago? Lol.
These five guys are the greatest on the stage, ever
I've seen so many variations of Deep Purple live in the past 50 years. And I will be seeing the latest new guitarist next month.
❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️! 😍
Unbelievable Masterpiece!¡¡! 🤘💜
Just love reactions to this song. Pure classic played by legends. I am not even a Deep purple fan😅😅