If anyone's interested in what the guitar and keyboard were doing at 4:00 and 5:53, it's called "Descending Fifth Progression" or "Circle of Fifths Progression" A common progression used in Baroque era (Bach, Handel, Vivaldi, etc.)
Ian Paice is one of the greatest drummer in history. Actually his influence was major on grunge and changed the way of backing a band with drumming. He pushed everyone and provided an incredible dynamics to their music.
Treat dad to "Lazy" from the album Machine Head. Their most fun track. Burn has a different lead singer, David Coverdale. Ian Gillan left after '73. He sang lead on their greatest stuff and Lazy is their greatest stuff. (If you haven't already done it.)
Actually, Rod Evans was the original lead singer, he was on the first 3 albums along with Nic Simper on bass. They were replaced with Ian Gillan (vocals) and Roger Glover (bass). They are referred to as Mark I and Mark II respectively. This lineup is the Mark III version of the band. David Coverdale went on to form Whitesnake. A great Whitesnake song to check out is Still Of The Night.
DS8 is in the house! "Burn" is very nasty. I like it. Whenever Deep Purple played live, btw, people in several states heard them at the same time. "Child in Time" is yet another DP classic.
I was working for a radio trade publication called The Friday Morning Quarterback from 1983-1985. My job was to take calls from radio stations across North America to get the weekly reports from the Music Director or the Programming Director (sometimes one person held both positions). We'd track certain songs and get quotes from the MD/PD to put in ads the record companies placed in our publication. IMO, this is around the time AM started to fall by the wayside. For years, AM was the predominant driver of hit records, but the format was usually the same on each TOP 40 radio station -- DJ intro's the song, plays the song, outros the song, then 2 minutes of commercials. When FM came along in the late 60s, the format for AOR was freer...they'd play several songs in a row with fewer commercials. AM took forever to adapt to that. By then it was too late. Many FM stations started programming TOP 40, along with New Wave/Punk formats, Teen Oriented Rock, etc. while AM drifted into Talk, Oldies, foreign language and religion. FM stations around the country adopted an AM Morning Drive format (6 AM to 10 AM) called "The Morning Zoo" which originated with DJ Scott Shannon, first out of Tampa before he took it to WHTZ (Z-100) in NYC....music, humor and some borderline antics that had the censors on their toes. AM couldn't compete with that (Eventually, the Morning Zoo format could not compete with Howard Stern). Besides, AM was now your parents (and grandparents') radio band. While FM had a shorter broadcasting range (often limited by the terrain in the region), it has a crisper sound. The DJ and the music sounded like the station was right in the room with you. AM had that tinny, far off, echoing sound with DJ's who had that booming radio voice. But the benefit of AM was the stronger signal. Even the lowest rated radio stations in any given market had a broader reach than FM, especially at night when stations without a license to broadcast 24 hours would end their broadcasting day. Then the airwaves opened up. At night I could fiddle with the dial and pick up KDKA in Pittsburgh, recognized as the first radio station in the US --- and that was in my dad's car (AM only factory radio); KMOX and listen to a St. Louis Cardinals or Blues game; The Red Wings off their station in Detroit; WSB-AM in Atlanta, etc. I once went to the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, NY and on the drive home that night and started to pick up the signal for a Phillies game somewhere near Binghamton. The Phillies had a network of radio stations in the Northeastern PA area, but I was picking up the broadcast off the Philly station, WCAU-AM --- 185 miles away! Even AM stations with a smaller signal like WSSJ 1310 in Camden, N.J. --- where the founder of FMQB was a DJ in the '60s, and a friend of mine was a weekend DJ at the time --- could be picked up as far away as the Poconos. But Rock Music as it evolved just didn't sound good on AM. In 1984-85, they experimented with a new sound for AM called AM STEREO...but it still did not compare to FM. Everyone started to leave AM --- even the oldies stations. In Philly, one of the top rated FM Top 40 stations in the market, switched it's call letter to WOGL, shunned the format and became Oldies, still holding that format 38 years later. I rarely listen to the radio in my car. I either use CDs or plug a flash drive into the USB. I don't even have AM stations preset to anything. I'm not interested in hearing about the word of The Lord in Portugese.
'Ole Audiophile here, Here we are at the beginning of the end for Deep Purple commercially. After this, Richie Blackmore quit while Deep Purple was touring the entire planet, driving their glorious 'Highway Star' straight into the ditch. Rumors swirled about vocalist Ian Gillian's rapid departure after he collapsed inside an airport lounge while on a huge world tour. Reportedly, his eyes had turned yellow just before his collapse from jaundice during a conversation with a bandmate while awaiting their plane. They did return fairly close to form years later when Richie rejoined the band with Ian Gillian. Richie keeps leaving...
You two are great together and your introspective view points blend well together. I really enjoyed it. I went to high school in the late 60's and AM stations that played "rock" was top 40 crap with alot of commercials. The DJ was usually a fast talking guy who used jargon he thought was cool. The FM guy was usually a guy who sounded like he was laid back and maybe stoned. The songs came directly off the album it seemed like. I would love to see you two do 1. Child in Time, live, 2. Lazy on Machine Head and 3. Pictures of Home also on Machine Head (hell, the whole album is awesome). You guys make a great reaction team!
This is my favorite deep purple song so I am happy to see a reaction. One thing is Ian Gillan is NOT the original singer the original singer is Rod Evans and Ian Gillan joined the band in 1969 (along with roger glover the bassist) when next year they released their breakthrough album "In Rock" and later due to conflicts Gillan and Glover were fired from the band. They then brought in Coverdale and Hughes. and after the next album "Sotrmbringer Rithcie Blackmore didn't like the direction the band were going in so he left and formed "Ritchie Blackmore's Rainbow" and Deep Purple made one more album with Tommy Bolin on guitar. Hence why there is Mk I, Mk II, MkIII and MkIIII. Anyway I would love to see you react to either "Fools" from the fireball album (one of the most underrated DP songs IMO) or Speed King (The opening track to "In Rock") Thanks again for the reaction.
I grew up in Wheeling, WV and I used to be able to pick up WDVE in Pittsburgh in the evening in the early 70's. First hearing great rock songs in their original versions and songs not played by the normal local stations. Changed everything for me, opening up so many facets of rock that was there in those days.
Great #8 & #9! “Hush” and “Lazy” should be considered! Please consider for the future, “Roller” (She’s a Roller) by April Wine, which is great rock n’ roll and excellent lead guitar play! Can’t go wrong!
Gillan wasn't the band's original singer, Rod Evans was and Nick Simper was the bass player. They were replaced by Ian Gillan and Roger Glover. The two things that really make this song excellent are Lord's keyboard playing and Paice's astonishing drumming. This was the first track from the new MK III Purple that most of us ever heard back in 1974.
Gillan never sang any songs that were sung by any other Deep Purple singers except "HUSH" which was a cover of a Joe South song on their first album. Some of that is due to "range". Record companies in the late 60s early 70s always looked for a single from albums - but Deep Purple (like most of the "progressive" bands from the UK were more focussed on albums. If you want to try another track by Deep Purple either "Child in Time" or "Lazy".
I've been hassling him to do Rainbow for a while. I hope he gets to them soon. I recommended Since You've Been Gone, but the Joe Lynn Turner area is pretty hot too. Stone Cold is a good one from then too.
14:26 When Ian Gillan rejoined the band he said he didn't want to sing the songs they recorded without him and the rest of the band agreed because these songs were written for David Coverdale and don't really fit Gillan's different style of singing. So Deep Purple hasn't performed this song since the 70s however Glenn Hughes performs it on almost every live show he does with his own band even nowadays. ruclips.net/video/QlIcTgaH-hM/видео.html
My favorite DP song!!!!! It's what introduced me to Whitesnake (which would be David Coverdale's future band) and Trapeze (Glenn Hughes' iconically under-rated past band). Both men would go on to huuuuge things thanks to their time in DP. David still performs but has sadly lost a step due to numerous surgeries (the latest was a double-hernia surgery just this past year but it was a vocal surgery at his peak that started affecting his voice back in the 80s or 90s). Glenn got clean back in the 80s or 90s and his voice has gotten better by the day. He's now lead vocalist/bassist for Dead Daisies. Some also give credit to David for introducing the mainstream world to vocalist/guitarist John Sykes (I'm one of them), who just returned to the industry following what appeared a label dispute in 2017-2018. John like Glenn is a double-threat on vocals/guitar. Each of the three former rookies now have about 50 years in the business.
AM radio was the standard, and they played "singles" which were on easy to handle 45rpm discs, which were about the size of a CD. You could only fit around 3 min. on a "45", so if you wanted to get your song on the radio, it had to be short enough to fit on one. When FM radio became popular, the DJ's could play album cuts in stereo, because the FM format can transmit a stronger and more complex signal. FM gained popularity as more people owned FM radio receivers. When I was a kid it was all AM radios with songs mixed in mono, and it wasn't until later that recording artists became interested in using stereo panning effects as a part of the creative process. On some early Beatles recordings, you find the drums only on one side and the vocals on the other when played in stereo. (AM = Amplitude Modulation, FM = Frequency Modulation).
My first deep purple record i bought was made in Japan way back then and then I got burn and its like my memory is an old black and white movie of what a young rocker I used to be
The greatest HARD ROCK band. Blackmore (genius on guitar) Gillian( vocal). Ian Paice (Best drummer after Bonzo) Glove (bass) Jon Lord (the king of keyboards)💔 Forever Purple💜💜💜
As you love the drumming, see Ian Paice's loving reaction to an 11-yeal-old Japanese girl tearing his drums up: ruclips.net/video/0RyJKiollcA/видео.html
If you want to hear the birth of Thrash/speed metal check out Symptom of the Universe by Black Sabbath . Make sure listen all the way to the end of the song. But you will hear the foundations for Speed/Thrash.
Man, if you haven't done so already, you have to listen to (and hopefully react to) Made in Japan. It's a classic live album and probably the best rock album that ever has been done live. I think you already have reacted to several songs from there (Highway Star, Smoke on the Water) but they deserve to be heard in their live versions. Specifically Lazy, Child in Time, Strange Kind of Woman and Space Truckin' are experiences that should not be missed. And to emphasize, it's the live versions, the studio versions is not at all the same. Besides, there are some similar Rainbow tracks that are exceptional in issued live recordings, if I recall right (long since I listened to it) Greensleves and Catch the Rainbow.
Still only half way through the video, but I noticed that you picked up on the play between keyboards and guitar. There are som "dueling" between voice and guitar, and other similar plays between instruments on some of the tracks on Made in Japan, that's one (but on the only) reason for me advocating Made in Japan. Besides, I wonder, how old is your dad? Purple was late 60s, early 70s. Made in Japan, if I recall right, was 1972, and everybody in my generation (I was 12 when Made in Japan came out) know and am familiar with that album. But I'm swedish, it maybe didn't make the same impact in the U.S. And yes, Purple was definitely a British band, and their rock was influenced a lot by classical music. That can also be noted in the Rainbow that the guitarist Blackmore started after having split up with Purple. And Blackmore later on also got into more folk music stuff with a medevial character together with his wife Candice Night, which is released as Blackmore's night. I also recommend to check that out. Also, Jon Lord on the organ was a hall mark of Purple. Similar to Uriah Heep that also was a group with heavy rock where the keyboards were instrumental (pun not intended) to the groups musical sound.
@dolf ericsson Yeah that intro is really good, the only thing in my opinion which could have made Highway Star from MIJ is if before Gillan started singing is if he let out a long scream like the studio. Other than that, like the rest of the album it's just so raw and potent, which is how I want DP to sound (In saying this I still like the newer stuff that I have heard too)
George Gershwin's "Fascinating Rhytm" with some added speed. Guitarist Ritchie Blackmore self admittedly lifted the main riff from it. :) Please react to "Soldier Of Fortune" from the next album "Stormbringer". It presents the band in the then new, different atmosphere.
ROD EVANS; The original singer of Deep Purple, Which they had a hit with "Hush" and "Kentucky Woman" You should check out a great record Rod was the singer in after Deep Purple....The first album and self titled is....CAPTAIN BEYOND....This record is a cult classic, with odd time signatures going into normal 4/4 and or 3/4....Also another great young drummer named Bobby Caldwell, who was 21 years old at the time of the recording. Ian Paice, also recommended Bobby Caldwell To a new band that had 3 English musicians, he knew very well. Ian told them to look up Caldwell since they were in L.A. having gotten a record deal from A&M. That record in 1974 was ARMAGEDDON. Another cult classic!! They only did one album
AM radio vs FM - Daniel has it right. AM was the home of the two-minute single, while longer, less commercial fare went to FM. A lot of different factors led to the separation between "AM music" and "FM music." AM was always the home for popular music. Popular song length had been set at about three minutes since radio began, as a 78 rpm record couldn't be much longer than that. When FM was invented, it was largely reserved for classical music, as the sound quality was much better (and soon began broadcasting in stereo). In the mid-60's, a new FCC regulation prohibited any company owning both AM and FM stations in the same market from broadcasting the same programming on both stations. Pop radio remained unaffected, because it was just pumping out the hits one after the other. But suddenly, there were lots of previously unprofitable FM stations for sale, cheap. These stations weren't frantically competing for airtime as on AM, so they could essentially play whatever they wanted. FM DJs didn't have to work as hard as their AM counterparts, and playing longer songs made their jobs even easier. When record sales of this new music became significant, AM radio was compelled to adapt the music to the AM format. Any popular song clocking in at five or six minutes couldn't be played on AM radio in its original form, but by cutting out all the "unnecessary" parts they could be played on AM. Recognizing this, and a potential untapped market, record companies began editing these songs down to a length which worked for both AM radio, and the 45 rpm single that was AM's purview.
I agree with a lot of the commenters you should check out “Lazy” but it’s hard to go wrong with any Machine Head track... Space Truckin, Never Before, and Maybe I’m a Leo are awesome
Beaker Street started the "long form underground" type starting around 1967 and played Hendrix and Pink Floyd and Zappa and other very 'cutting edge' longer form stuff on a "Clear Channel" AM station our of Little Rock KAAY which was a 50000 watt AM station that was able to have a large coverage area. Back when AM was not crowded and if one used a decent radio or receiver and the home market still was mostly geared to it, it had so much less interference and sounded really good. Of course this station was not the norm besides as DethStroke8 mentions, some lower band pirate AM. FM, invented in 1933, it made it's way to the American airwaves starting in the late 1930s. The fact that the *strength* (Amplitude) of the signal was not involved with how it was "demodulated", lightning strikes and atmospheric noise was nearly non existent as these thing crackle the radio spectrum in the AMPLITUDE manner (more power into the receiver and demodulated as sound). Music and speech was instead encoded to vary the frequency at the very same signal strength instead of the strength and frequency as in AM so it was capable of high fidelity (so was AM but susceptible to all the noise factor). It was realized that "high fidelity" (fairly faithful reproduction of sound) could be transmitted without being hardly affected by other signals in the amplitude realm, thus unwanted signals were not pickup up (like the natural static of the universe, and lightning strikes sending electro-magnetic energy through the air.) Then even as early as 1934, multiplex subcarriers were experimented with and versions of stereo could be transmitted. The ultimate "sound stage" much more realistic as it's sound with a spatial component. All that figured out BUT it was only less than 10 years prior that AM became king of the air and huge AM stations were built and the industry was already invested in building and bringing AM receivers to the American home (and soon the automobile), So FM hit the air....with very little fanfare..... FROM WIKI On June 17, 1936, FM radio was demonstrated to the FCC for the first time.[1] On January 5, 1940, Edwin H. Armstrong demonstrated FM broadcasting in a long-distance relay network, via five stations in five States.[2][3] FM radio was assigned the 42 to 50 MHz band of the spectrum in 1940. There was interest in the new FM band by station owners. On March 1, 1941 W47NV began operations in Nashville, Tennessee, becoming the first modern commercial FM radio station. construction restrictions that went into place during World War II limited the growth of the new service. It wasn't until real hifi became much more affordable and desirable not only from radio stations but from vinyl for the home consumer that the manufactures started including the FM band on more and more receivers and radios. It took quite a while before it was the "Defacto". AM had plenty of music through the 70s and even today although the 80s saw a shift of it largely to talk radio because by that time the number of stations were so vast it was often (and still is) an cacophony of many stations at night fading in and out of the same frequency. But yes, by the late 60s, most home "stereo" systems had FM and many more FM stations started popping up and in the 70s, they competed highly. The fidelity of FM and the affordability and slow support of the industry to adopt it as a more viable market option definitely won most over to it by the late 70s. That said before it became very very commercial up until the mid 70s it had a lot more underground experimental music (as opposed to the AM and their motown and country hits). I still like to listen to AM.. late late at night or before dawn, amazing at the states one can hear. React to "I Heard it on the X" by ZZ TOP. The "X" stations were licensed in Mexico (often by rich Americans to skirt the FCC limitations) are what they called the "Border Blaster" stations of a half a billion watts over the southern border in Mexico that directed their signal to blanket the USA to the north. They were AM and rock and rock and roll. Interesting history there with the likes of "Wolfman Jack (hosted the Midnight Special)" doing spots on those radio stations. It would be another rabbit hole.
Okay, I love moments like these! Great job once again... I was strolling through your stuff and noticed that there's no Dio or Dokken. You have to put an end to that tragedy! Dio don't talk to strangers... And then lock up the wolves! But really pick anything from Dio LOL I chose those two for contrast. I always love hearing your thoughts on lyrics and the music playing. So I am really curious for your dissection on those two especially! I should be able to send my collection to you by mid-February at the latest, it has a variety, but mostly Rock. A lot of repeats of your vinyls, but the CDs will be good for every day abuse LOL keep Rockin!
If we want him to get into Dio, he should first listen to Rainbow with Dio first. He already heard Sabbath-Dio Heaven and Hell. I would suggest Kill the King or Man on the Silver Mountain live. Or Stargazer, of course.
@@mustangdebbie56 I get it... but I'm really interested on those 2 cause they stray from the norm... I get that he enjoys the "norm" of rock, but getting his input on certain songs helps me understand the depths of his pleasure in music... in turn, I can point out other "sounds" that he may enjoy lol keep in mind, I love music... period. R&B, techno, a Capello, soul, Celtic, renaissance, big band, classical, etc... so if I understand what tweaks his ear and mind, I can send a listing with my collection to him! He won't have to do videos on what I send, but at least he'll know where to start lol it's about 200 CDs, after all!
The main difference between AM and FM was first, quality. AM had a ton of commercials and was identified by its poor broadcast quality and the fact that it was mostly talk radio or it played top 40 hit countdowns. It also had a lot of radio noise along with the talk and music. It played only mono music. When FM first came out it had only a few commercials and was broadcast by a lot of colleges. They would play the music that you could not find on AM. like the Iron Butterflies full version of In A Godda Da Vida. FM had a much shorter range than AM so one only tended to listen to the local FM stations. You could sometimes hear AM in Chicago listening to Southern AM stations, out of places like Louisiana usually at night. FM finally came out in stereo and that blew away AM music.
At last, someone got the lyrics' meaning. So many people think this is about witches' getting burned, but it's the complete opposite! It's almost as though David Coverdale is an alternative feminist - maybe he is. To me, Burn is the most boldly exciting rock song so far written and performed - and most of the competition comes from Deep Purple and family anyway. Led Zeppelin's Bring It On Home is also pure excitement, and The Sex Pistols' God Save the Queen. Couple of Nirvana songs. UFO's Rock Bottom and Thin Lizzy's Are You Ready?
If you like Deep Purple you should check out guitarist Tommy Bolin's solo work. Tommy replaced Richie Blackmore when he went solo. (Come Taste The Band) Tommy also ended up replacing Joe Walsh when Joe left the James Gang. Joe said that Tommy "could pretty much play circles round me". He also released two solo albums, all before age 25. He died in '76. Try "Post Toastee" or" People, People" His solo stuff is much more jazz/rock fusion; much more sophisticated, sax, female background vocals. . . please give it a reaction!
So, Coverdale went on to form Whitesnake (did you get into them yet?) . Hughes did loadsa stuff. Started with a bangin' little power trio called Trapeze (recommend 'You Are The Music We're Just The Band) it's high time that album got air.
Burn was Deep Purple's 8th studio album. They had three albums with the original line-up. Four albums with the second line-up. Two albums with the third line-up. One album with the fourth line-up. Two more albums with the second line-up. One album with the fifth line-up. One more album with the second line-up. Two albums with the sixth line-up. Five albums with the seventh and current line-up. I'm talking about studio recordings not total albums.
Ah, this one is from the album "Stormbringer", a highly underrated LP if you ask me. The title song is great too, and I think you and your dad might enjoy "Black Knight" a lot!
Jon God, just named Lord. And yes, as always drums pull the train, and with Ian Paice at the controls there my be certain things not possible without he's 'aboveskills'. So you just got asskicked, no sit down for 2 days. Honestly, that complete album is just as crazy, except Burn Lay Down Stay Down You Fool No One Whats Goin On Here Just Might Take Your Life Coronaries Redig (Great song on some remade albums)
Heh, the coked-out disco metal of Deep Purple MKIII. I might like Come Taste the Band the most out of the three Coverdale-Hughes albums. Coverdale always sounds like he got marbles in his mouth. Ian Paice as always, on fire.
If you want to check out a related record that is all killer/no filler, check out Captain Beyond's debut. It has Rod Evans on vocals from Deep Purple Mk I.
I always wondered if this song inspired Stephen King to write "Carrie". Gotta try something off of Fireball. The title track for one, Fools and No One Came are a couple more.
The song was first released 15 February 1974 and Carrie was first published 5 April 1974. So unless Stephen King wrote the book in less than 2 month, this song didn't inspire him. I think that King wrote the book long before it's publication and was not confident about it so it sat on his desk for a while.
David Coverdale and Glenn "the voice of rock" Hughes made three of the best albums of DP. The chemistry between them is amazing. Two of the best rock singers. Great choice. "Sail Away" from this album is a masterpiece
deep purple lazy strange kind of woman live space trucking speedking deep purple is a live band so all songs of deep purple are live much better than the album versions
If anyone's interested in what the guitar and keyboard were doing at 4:00 and 5:53, it's called "Descending Fifth Progression" or "Circle of Fifths Progression" A common progression used in Baroque era (Bach, Handel, Vivaldi, etc.)
Deep Purple: Child In Time..live version. Ian Gillans vocals will blow your mind.
Yes
Yes,yes...
Yep, Made in Japan version ... iconic!
Made in Japan version is there best.
Yes I just watched Father and son reactions do that today. It was great
Ian Paice is one of the greatest drummer in history. Actually his influence was major on grunge and changed the way of backing a band with drumming. He pushed everyone and provided an incredible dynamics to their music.
Glenn Hughes played Burn and was so good it received a standing ovation!
Wait for it, wait for it, here comes Jon Lord on the Hammond! Ties the whole song together. Absolute classic. Great job, 8&9.
Purple always has great drumming... only 1 drummer in their 52 year career, the incomparible Ian Paice
Do a search for SINA DRUMS BURN This young German girl kicks ass on this song. Ian Paice watched it and thought she was great.
Treat dad to "Lazy" from the album Machine Head. Their most fun track. Burn has a different lead singer, David Coverdale. Ian Gillan left after '73. He sang lead on their greatest stuff and Lazy is their greatest stuff. (If you haven't already done it.)
Also has Glenn Hughes - the voice of rock on bass and vocals on this song as well!
Lazy!
Child in Time live 1970 🔥🔥🔥 with Dad 🤘🤘
Space Truckin and Child in Time are classic rock staples
Daniel is such a nice young man
Actually, Rod Evans was the original lead singer, he was on the first 3 albums along with Nic Simper on bass. They were replaced with Ian Gillan (vocals) and Roger Glover (bass). They are referred to as Mark I and Mark II respectively. This lineup is the Mark III version of the band. David Coverdale went on to form Whitesnake. A great Whitesnake song to check out is Still Of The Night.
DS8 is in the house! "Burn" is very nasty. I like it. Whenever Deep Purple played live, btw, people in several states heard them at the same time. "Child in Time" is yet another DP classic.
I was working for a radio trade publication called The Friday Morning Quarterback from 1983-1985. My job was to take calls from radio stations across North America to get the weekly reports from the Music Director or the Programming Director (sometimes one person held both positions). We'd track certain songs and get quotes from the MD/PD to put in ads the record companies placed in our publication. IMO, this is around the time AM started to fall by the wayside. For years, AM was the predominant driver of hit records, but the format was usually the same on each TOP 40 radio station -- DJ intro's the song, plays the song, outros the song, then 2 minutes of commercials. When FM came along in the late 60s, the format for AOR was freer...they'd play several songs in a row with fewer commercials. AM took forever to adapt to that. By then it was too late. Many FM stations started programming TOP 40, along with New Wave/Punk formats, Teen Oriented Rock, etc. while AM drifted into Talk, Oldies, foreign language and religion. FM stations around the country adopted an AM Morning Drive format (6 AM to 10 AM) called "The Morning Zoo" which originated with DJ Scott Shannon, first out of Tampa before he took it to WHTZ (Z-100) in NYC....music, humor and some borderline antics that had the censors on their toes. AM couldn't compete with that (Eventually, the Morning Zoo format could not compete with Howard Stern). Besides, AM was now your parents (and grandparents') radio band.
While FM had a shorter broadcasting range (often limited by the terrain in the region), it has a crisper sound. The DJ and the music sounded like the station was right in the room with you. AM had that tinny, far off, echoing sound with DJ's who had that booming radio voice. But the benefit of AM was the stronger signal. Even the lowest rated radio stations in any given market had a broader reach than FM, especially at night when stations without a license to broadcast 24 hours would end their broadcasting day. Then the airwaves opened up. At night I could fiddle with the dial and pick up KDKA in Pittsburgh, recognized as the first radio station in the US --- and that was in my dad's car (AM only factory radio); KMOX and listen to a St. Louis Cardinals or Blues game; The Red Wings off their station in Detroit; WSB-AM in Atlanta, etc. I once went to the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, NY and on the drive home that night and started to pick up the signal for a Phillies game somewhere near Binghamton. The Phillies had a network of radio stations in the Northeastern PA area, but I was picking up the broadcast off the Philly station, WCAU-AM --- 185 miles away! Even AM stations with a smaller signal like WSSJ 1310 in Camden, N.J. --- where the founder of FMQB was a DJ in the '60s, and a friend of mine was a weekend DJ at the time --- could be picked up as far away as the Poconos. But Rock Music as it evolved just didn't sound good on AM.
In 1984-85, they experimented with a new sound for AM called AM STEREO...but it still did not compare to FM. Everyone started to leave AM --- even the oldies stations. In Philly, one of the top rated FM Top 40 stations in the market, switched it's call letter to WOGL, shunned the format and became Oldies, still holding that format 38 years later.
I rarely listen to the radio in my car. I either use CDs or plug a flash drive into the USB. I don't even have AM stations preset to anything. I'm not interested in hearing about the word of The Lord in Portugese.
John Lord, master of the Hammond B3. Incredible solo. Enjoyed you guy's reacting to this one.
Deep Purple songs 1- Bad Attitude 2- Knocking at your back door 3- Perfect Stranger
Has to be Child in Time and Lazy as your next 2 Deep Purple tunes
'Ole Audiophile here, Here we are at the beginning of the end for Deep Purple commercially. After this, Richie Blackmore quit while Deep Purple was touring the entire planet, driving their glorious 'Highway Star' straight into the ditch. Rumors swirled about vocalist Ian Gillian's rapid departure after he collapsed inside an airport lounge while on a huge world tour. Reportedly, his eyes had turned yellow just before his collapse from jaundice during a conversation with a bandmate while awaiting their plane. They did return fairly close to form years later when Richie rejoined the band with Ian Gillian. Richie keeps leaving...
"Child in Time" from In Rock
The best Purple song ever!!!
Glenn Hughes comes from the Trapeze Medusa album crew.
You two are great together and your introspective view points blend well together. I really enjoyed it. I went to high school in the late 60's and AM stations that played "rock" was top 40 crap with alot of commercials. The DJ was usually a fast talking guy who used jargon he thought was cool. The FM guy was usually a guy who sounded like he was laid back and maybe stoned. The songs came directly off the album it seemed like. I would love to see you two do 1. Child in Time, live, 2. Lazy on Machine Head and 3. Pictures of Home also on Machine Head (hell, the whole album is awesome). You guys make a great reaction team!
Richie, killer guitar, Blackmore! Power vocals WOW!
The guitar work, the headlong rush of the song, and the attitude in the vocals are what I like about this song.
Storm Bringer.
This is my favorite deep purple song so I am happy to see a reaction. One thing is Ian Gillan is NOT the original singer the original singer is Rod Evans and Ian Gillan joined the band in 1969 (along with roger glover the bassist) when next year they released their breakthrough album "In Rock" and later due to conflicts Gillan and Glover were fired from the band. They then brought in Coverdale and Hughes. and after the next album "Sotrmbringer Rithcie Blackmore didn't like the direction the band were going in so he left and formed "Ritchie Blackmore's Rainbow" and Deep Purple made one more album with Tommy Bolin on guitar. Hence why there is Mk I, Mk II, MkIII and MkIIII. Anyway I would love to see you react to either "Fools" from the fireball album (one of the most underrated DP songs IMO) or Speed King (The opening track to "In Rock") Thanks again for the reaction.
And Covedale took his Geordie voice to Whitesnake👍🏼
BEAUTIFULLLL, NIIIIICCCEEEE!!! :) HEY DAD
I grew up in Wheeling, WV and I used to be able to pick up WDVE in Pittsburgh in the evening in the early 70's. First hearing great rock songs in their original versions and songs not played by the normal local stations. Changed everything for me, opening up so many facets of rock that was there in those days.
Hush. I’m not one often for the big hits of musicians. But in this case, yes.
Hush!!
If you liked this you would like this when they performed Burn at the California Jam in 1974.
Great #8 & #9! “Hush” and “Lazy” should be considered!
Please consider for the future, “Roller” (She’s a Roller) by April Wine, which is great rock n’ roll and excellent lead guitar play! Can’t go wrong!
I saw Glenn Hughes in concert on Long Island, NY. He was still great and could still sing and scream!👍🏻❤️☮️✌🏻😀
Gillan wasn't the band's original singer, Rod Evans was and Nick Simper was the bass player. They were replaced by Ian Gillan and Roger Glover. The two things that really make this song excellent are Lord's keyboard playing and Paice's astonishing drumming. This was the first track from the new MK III Purple that most of us ever heard back in 1974.
Burn baby burn! 🔥 One of my favorite Deep Purple songs! Nice to see dad was along for this ride!
Gillan never sang any songs that were sung by any other Deep Purple singers except "HUSH" which was a cover of a Joe South song on their first album. Some of that is due to "range". Record companies in the late 60s early 70s always looked for a single from albums - but Deep Purple (like most of the "progressive" bands from the UK were more focussed on albums. If you want to try another track by Deep Purple either "Child in Time" or "Lazy".
*HOW DID I MISS THIS?!?!*
YAASSS!!! LET'S GO!
HI D8!!! 💜💫✌🏼🎵
*We are Legion*
*He is adorable. ❤️
You mentioned Rainbow. They have a lot of great stuff. Check out "Street of Dreams."
I've been hassling him to do Rainbow for a while. I hope he gets to them soon. I recommended Since You've Been Gone, but the Joe Lynn Turner area is pretty hot too. Stone Cold is a good one from then too.
@@catserver8577 I was just driving back home and "The Man on Silver Mountain" came on the radio. Last night, I listened to "I Surrender" on RUclips.
It’s not just an organ it’s an Hammond B3 plugged into a Marshall Stack keyboardist Jon lord called it the beast.
14:26 When Ian Gillan rejoined the band he said he didn't want to sing the songs they recorded without him and the rest of the band agreed because these songs were written for David Coverdale and don't really fit Gillan's different style of singing. So Deep Purple hasn't performed this song since the 70s however Glenn Hughes performs it on almost every live show he does with his own band even nowadays. ruclips.net/video/QlIcTgaH-hM/видео.html
My favorite DP song!!!!! It's what introduced me to Whitesnake (which would be David Coverdale's future band) and Trapeze (Glenn Hughes' iconically under-rated past band). Both men would go on to huuuuge things thanks to their time in DP. David still performs but has sadly lost a step due to numerous surgeries (the latest was a double-hernia surgery just this past year but it was a vocal surgery at his peak that started affecting his voice back in the 80s or 90s). Glenn got clean back in the 80s or 90s and his voice has gotten better by the day. He's now lead vocalist/bassist for Dead Daisies. Some also give credit to David for introducing the mainstream world to vocalist/guitarist John Sykes (I'm one of them), who just returned to the industry following what appeared a label dispute in 2017-2018. John like Glenn is a double-threat on vocals/guitar. Each of the three former rookies now have about 50 years in the business.
got to listen to IN ROCK
A landmark album and
imo easily Thier best album?
Vocalist Ian Gillian played Jesus on the original album of "Jesus Christ Superstar". He was great.
@Francisco Rivera No, but he worked with them for a while, and sang in the same style.
"Child in time" from live-album, "Made in Japan"
Please listen to "Child in time"!!
AM radio was the standard, and they played "singles" which were on easy to handle 45rpm discs, which were about the size of a CD. You could only fit around 3 min. on a "45", so if you wanted to get your song on the radio, it had to be short enough to fit on one. When FM radio became popular, the DJ's could play album cuts in stereo, because the FM format can transmit a stronger and more complex signal. FM gained popularity as more people owned FM radio receivers. When I was a kid it was all AM radios with songs mixed in mono, and it wasn't until later that recording artists became interested in using stereo panning effects as a part of the creative process. On some early Beatles recordings, you find the drums only on one side and the vocals on the other when played in stereo. (AM = Amplitude Modulation, FM = Frequency Modulation).
Blackmore is the GOAT he is so underrated that's incredible
To bad on a personal level, he's a bit of a dick.
You are a Dick! You are already listening to him to say that
My first deep purple record i bought was made in Japan way back then and then I got burn and its like my memory is an old black and white movie of what a young rocker I used to be
Good one and the live in Tokyo version of Child In Time is a favorite of Purple fans!👍🏻❤️☮️✌🏻🎸🎤🎼
Deep purple mk III Glen hughes and dave coverdale still brings the power and force of Deep purple past! Great album !
The foundation of “heavy metal”
The greatest HARD ROCK band.
Blackmore (genius on guitar)
Gillian( vocal).
Ian Paice (Best drummer after Bonzo)
Glove (bass)
Jon Lord (the king of keyboards)💔
Forever Purple💜💜💜
YES . . . and don't be afraid to delve into this entire album. . . 'A'200 . . . Sail Away . . . Mistreated . . . etc.
...and you get extra points for demanding "Bring back the ORGAN!" ... LOL
As you love the drumming, see Ian Paice's loving reaction to an 11-yeal-old Japanese girl tearing his drums up: ruclips.net/video/0RyJKiollcA/видео.html
Bands have built their entire repertoire around this song.
that's a Leslie speaker for the keys It has a horn inside that spins as fast or as slow as you want it too
I'm old school like your dad I love it deep purple always deliveres I was 14 when this came out I seen them 2 in my lifetime Rock on brother alter
Deep Purple Mistreated live, and Deep Purple Strange Kind of Woman live, different vocalists, different styles, great songs 👍🏼
Every time I’ve heard this song on the radio nothing was edited it was the full song.
Purple with Gillan sometimes performed a short instrumental version.
One of my favorite DP songs and as you point out the drumming is awesome from Ian Paice, give Stormbringer off the follow up album a listen .
If you want to hear the birth of Thrash/speed metal check out Symptom of the Universe by Black Sabbath . Make sure listen all the way to the end of the song. But you will hear the foundations for Speed/Thrash.
Man, if you haven't done so already, you have to listen to (and hopefully react to) Made in Japan. It's a classic live album and probably the best rock album that ever has been done live.
I think you already have reacted to several songs from there (Highway Star, Smoke on the Water) but they deserve to be heard in their live versions. Specifically Lazy, Child in Time, Strange Kind of Woman and Space Truckin' are experiences that should not be missed.
And to emphasize, it's the live versions, the studio versions is not at all the same.
Besides, there are some similar Rainbow tracks that are exceptional in issued live recordings, if I recall right (long since I listened to it) Greensleves and Catch the Rainbow.
Still only half way through the video, but I noticed that you picked up on the play between keyboards and guitar. There are som "dueling" between voice and guitar, and other similar plays between instruments on some of the tracks on Made in Japan, that's one (but on the only) reason for me advocating Made in Japan.
Besides, I wonder, how old is your dad? Purple was late 60s, early 70s. Made in Japan, if I recall right, was 1972, and everybody in my generation (I was 12 when Made in Japan came out) know and am familiar with that album. But I'm swedish, it maybe didn't make the same impact in the U.S.
And yes, Purple was definitely a British band, and their rock was influenced a lot by classical music. That can also be noted in the Rainbow that the guitarist Blackmore started after having split up with Purple. And Blackmore later on also got into more folk music stuff with a medevial character together with his wife Candice Night, which is released as Blackmore's night. I also recommend to check that out.
Also, Jon Lord on the organ was a hall mark of Purple. Similar to Uriah Heep that also was a group with heavy rock where the keyboards were instrumental (pun not intended) to the groups musical sound.
The version of highway star on MIJ is a lot better than the studio in my opinion.
@@oliverpicken8246 Exactly my opinion as well. Just the opening seconds when the guitar get's keyed in gives me shivers.
Man highway star made in Japan Gillian screams yaaaa makes me crazy and space trucking is total anarchy
@dolf ericsson Yeah that intro is really good, the only thing in my opinion which could have made Highway Star from MIJ is if before Gillan started singing is if he let out a long scream like the studio. Other than that, like the rest of the album it's just so raw and potent, which is how I want DP to sound (In saying this I still like the newer stuff that I have heard too)
George Gershwin's "Fascinating Rhytm" with some added speed. Guitarist Ritchie Blackmore self admittedly lifted the main riff from it. :)
Please react to "Soldier Of Fortune" from the next album "Stormbringer". It presents the band in the then new, different atmosphere.
ROD EVANS; The original singer of Deep Purple, Which they had a hit with "Hush" and "Kentucky Woman" You should check out a great record Rod was the singer in after Deep Purple....The first album and self titled is....CAPTAIN BEYOND....This record is a cult classic, with odd time signatures going into normal 4/4 and or 3/4....Also another great young drummer named Bobby Caldwell, who was 21 years old at the time of the recording. Ian Paice, also recommended Bobby Caldwell To a new band that had 3 English musicians, he knew very well. Ian told them to look up Caldwell since they were in L.A. having gotten a record deal from A&M. That record in 1974 was ARMAGEDDON. Another cult classic!! They only did one album
THE 3 PIONEERS OF HEAVY METAL IN ORDER DANIEL: DEEP PURPLE, LED ZEPPELIN, BLACK SABBATH :)
Heavy Matal ??? No , This is heavy ROCK !!
AM radio vs FM - Daniel has it right. AM was the home of the two-minute single, while longer, less commercial fare went to FM. A lot of different factors led to the separation between "AM music" and "FM music."
AM was always the home for popular music. Popular song length had been set at about three minutes since radio began, as a 78 rpm record couldn't be much longer than that. When FM was invented, it was largely reserved for classical music, as the sound quality was much better (and soon began broadcasting in stereo).
In the mid-60's, a new FCC regulation prohibited any company owning both AM and FM stations in the same market from broadcasting the same programming on both stations. Pop radio remained unaffected, because it was just pumping out the hits one after the other. But suddenly, there were lots of previously unprofitable FM stations for sale, cheap. These stations weren't frantically competing for airtime as on AM, so they could essentially play whatever they wanted. FM DJs didn't have to work as hard as their AM counterparts, and playing longer songs made their jobs even easier.
When record sales of this new music became significant, AM radio was compelled to adapt the music to the AM format. Any popular song clocking in at five or six minutes couldn't be played on AM radio in its original form, but by cutting out all the "unnecessary" parts they could be played on AM. Recognizing this, and a potential untapped market, record companies began editing these songs down to a length which worked for both AM radio, and the 45 rpm single that was AM's purview.
I agree with a lot of the commenters you should check out “Lazy” but it’s hard to go wrong with any Machine Head track... Space Truckin, Never Before, and Maybe I’m a Leo are awesome
Beaker Street started the "long form underground" type starting around 1967 and played Hendrix and Pink Floyd and Zappa and other very 'cutting edge' longer form stuff on a "Clear Channel" AM station our of Little Rock KAAY which was a 50000 watt AM station that was able to have a large coverage area. Back when AM was not crowded and if one used a decent radio or receiver and the home market still was mostly geared to it, it had so much less interference and sounded really good. Of course this station was not the norm besides as DethStroke8 mentions, some lower band pirate AM. FM, invented in 1933, it made it's way to the American airwaves starting in the late 1930s.
The fact that the *strength* (Amplitude) of the signal was not involved with how it was "demodulated", lightning strikes and atmospheric noise was nearly non existent as these thing crackle the radio spectrum in the AMPLITUDE manner (more power into the receiver and demodulated as sound). Music and speech was instead encoded to vary the frequency at the very same signal strength instead of the strength and frequency as in AM so it was capable of high fidelity (so was AM but susceptible to all the noise factor). It was realized that "high fidelity" (fairly faithful reproduction of sound) could be transmitted without being hardly affected by other signals in the amplitude realm, thus unwanted signals were not pickup up (like the natural static of the universe, and lightning strikes sending electro-magnetic energy through the air.) Then even as early as 1934, multiplex subcarriers were experimented with and versions of stereo could be transmitted. The ultimate "sound stage" much more realistic as it's sound with a spatial component.
All that figured out BUT it was only less than 10 years prior that AM became king of the air and huge AM stations were built and the industry was already invested in building and bringing AM receivers to the American home (and soon the automobile), So FM hit the air....with very little fanfare.....
FROM WIKI
On June 17, 1936, FM radio was demonstrated to the FCC for the first time.[1] On January 5, 1940, Edwin H. Armstrong demonstrated FM broadcasting in a long-distance relay network, via five stations in five States.[2][3] FM radio was assigned the 42 to 50 MHz band of the spectrum in 1940. There was interest in the new FM band by station owners. On March 1, 1941 W47NV began operations in Nashville, Tennessee, becoming the first modern commercial FM radio station. construction restrictions that went into place during World War II limited the growth of the new service.
It wasn't until real hifi became much more affordable and desirable not only from radio stations but from vinyl for the home consumer that the manufactures started including the FM band on more and more receivers and radios. It took quite a while before it was the "Defacto". AM had plenty of music through the 70s and even today although the 80s saw a shift of it largely to talk radio because by that time the number of stations were so vast it was often (and still is) an cacophony of many stations at night fading in and out of the same frequency.
But yes, by the late 60s, most home "stereo" systems had FM and many more FM stations started popping up and in the 70s, they competed highly. The fidelity of FM and the affordability and slow support of the industry to adopt it as a more viable market option definitely won most over to it by the late 70s.
That said before it became very very commercial up until the mid 70s it had a lot more underground experimental music (as opposed to the AM and their motown and country hits).
I still like to listen to AM.. late late at night or before dawn, amazing at the states one can hear.
React to "I Heard it on the X" by ZZ TOP. The "X" stations were licensed in Mexico (often by rich Americans to skirt the FCC limitations) are what they called the "Border Blaster" stations of a half a billion watts over the southern border in Mexico that directed their signal to blanket the USA to the north. They were AM and rock and rock and roll. Interesting history there with the likes of "Wolfman Jack (hosted the Midnight Special)" doing spots on those radio stations.
It would be another rabbit hole.
Get " LAZY " guys!
Must be listened to LOUD.
I had some serious codependent issues since; this was like every other chick that I went out with, in the 70s.
THAT'S IAN PAICE DANIEL, SAME DRUMMER AS ON ( MACHINE HEAD ) :) AND OF COURSE RITCHIE BLACKMORE WAILINGGG WITH JON LORD, AS ALWAYS! LOL :)
Not metal, not prog, but HEAVY ROCK.
Hard rock. 🤘🏼
David Coverdale has made it very clear this is a heavy metal song.
@@BrianSherman-TheTVGod
I almost wrote, "Hard Rock / Heavy Metal."
That does not necessarily make it a truth that Coverdale says it is a heavy metal song.
@@ebbenielsen7 And that was Coverdales point; 'who are you (in this case the interviewer) to tell me what my song is?'
Okay, I love moments like these! Great job once again... I was strolling through your stuff and noticed that there's no Dio or Dokken. You have to put an end to that tragedy! Dio don't talk to strangers... And then lock up the wolves! But really pick anything from Dio LOL I chose those two for contrast. I always love hearing your thoughts on lyrics and the music playing. So I am really curious for your dissection on those two especially! I should be able to send my collection to you by mid-February at the latest, it has a variety, but mostly Rock. A lot of repeats of your vinyls, but the CDs will be good for every day abuse LOL keep Rockin!
If we want him to get into Dio, he should first listen to Rainbow with Dio first. He already heard Sabbath-Dio Heaven and Hell. I would suggest Kill the King or Man on the Silver Mountain live. Or Stargazer, of course.
@@mustangdebbie56 I get it... but I'm really interested on those 2 cause they stray from the norm... I get that he enjoys the "norm" of rock, but getting his input on certain songs helps me understand the depths of his pleasure in music... in turn, I can point out other "sounds" that he may enjoy lol keep in mind, I love music... period. R&B, techno, a Capello, soul, Celtic, renaissance, big band, classical, etc... so if I understand what tweaks his ear and mind, I can send a listing with my collection to him! He won't have to do videos on what I send, but at least he'll know where to start lol it's about 200 CDs, after all!
The main difference between AM and FM was first, quality. AM had a ton of commercials and was identified by its poor broadcast quality and the fact that it was mostly talk radio or it played top 40 hit countdowns. It also had a lot of radio noise along with the talk and music. It played only mono music. When FM first came out it had only a few commercials and was broadcast by a lot of colleges. They would play the music that you could not find on AM. like the Iron Butterflies full version of In A Godda Da Vida. FM had a much shorter range than AM so one only tended to listen to the local FM stations. You could sometimes hear AM in Chicago listening to Southern AM stations, out of places like Louisiana usually at night. FM finally came out in stereo and that blew away AM music.
You've gotta check out the back of the album cover. The candles are put out, and the heads are melting.
And bring Back the cowbell
Just listening to Ian Paice's drumming on this makes my arms sore.
And, he did it left-handed ;)
At last, someone got the lyrics' meaning. So many people think this is about witches' getting burned, but it's the complete opposite! It's almost as though David Coverdale is an alternative feminist - maybe he is. To me, Burn is the most boldly exciting rock song so far written and performed - and most of the competition comes from Deep Purple and family anyway. Led Zeppelin's Bring It On Home is also pure excitement, and The Sex Pistols' God Save the Queen. Couple of Nirvana songs. UFO's Rock Bottom and Thin Lizzy's Are You Ready?
If you like Deep Purple you should check out guitarist Tommy Bolin's solo work. Tommy replaced Richie Blackmore when he went solo. (Come Taste The Band) Tommy also ended up replacing Joe Walsh when Joe left the James Gang. Joe said that Tommy "could pretty much play circles round me". He also released two solo albums, all before age 25. He died in '76. Try "Post Toastee" or" People, People" His solo stuff is much more jazz/rock fusion; much more sophisticated, sax, female background vocals. . . please give it a reaction!
Deep Purple was Hard Rock .
Not one my favourite Deep Purple songs but they still bring magnificence to it the bass, lead, keys, drums so fab, love them.
Straight Rock!
Check out Child In Time!!!!
What everyone else said but also the song Stormbringer. 👍
You'll never want to hear this song, again. Let's face it . . .
Why, what happened? Did I miss something?
So, Coverdale went on to form Whitesnake (did you get into them yet?) . Hughes did loadsa stuff. Started with a bangin' little power trio called Trapeze (recommend 'You Are The Music We're Just The Band) it's high time that album got air.
Burn was Deep Purple's 8th studio album.
They had three albums with the original line-up.
Four albums with the second line-up.
Two albums with the third line-up.
One album with the fourth line-up.
Two more albums with the second line-up.
One album with the fifth line-up.
One more album with the second line-up.
Two albums with the sixth line-up.
Five albums with the seventh and current line-up.
I'm talking about studio recordings not total albums.
Good thing there won't be a test... thanks tho, I always wondered the whole deal
Ah, this one is from the album "Stormbringer", a highly underrated LP if you ask me. The title song is great too, and I think you and your dad might enjoy "Black Knight" a lot!
Deep Purple isn't even a rabbit hole, it's a whole rabbit warren. You could probably spend half your life lost in the web of bands it's connected to.
Jon God, just named Lord. And yes, as always drums pull the train, and with
Ian Paice at the controls there my be certain things not possible without he's 'aboveskills'.
So you just got asskicked, no sit down for 2 days.
Honestly, that complete album is just as crazy, except
Burn
Lay Down Stay Down
You Fool No One
Whats Goin On Here
Just Might Take Your Life
Coronaries Redig (Great song on some remade albums)
Ian Paice- so underrated. Maybe that’s not the word. Overlooked? Great drummer nevertheless.
Heh, the coked-out disco metal of Deep Purple MKIII. I might like Come Taste the Band the most out of the three Coverdale-Hughes albums. Coverdale always sounds like he got marbles in his mouth. Ian Paice as always, on fire.
If you want to check out a related record that is all killer/no filler, check out Captain Beyond's debut. It has Rod Evans on vocals from Deep Purple Mk I.
Here is a live version to see the two vocalists, and Hughes going nuts
ruclips.net/video/t4fDCwDiWJQ/видео.html
I always wondered if this song inspired Stephen King to write "Carrie". Gotta try something off of Fireball. The title track for one, Fools and No One Came are a couple more.
Are you thinking of Firestarter? That's seems to fit better.
@@mustangdebbie56 Carrie burned the highschool to the ground.
@@mustangdebbie56 I got a cherry red '65 Mustang myself.✌
The song was first released 15 February 1974 and Carrie was first published 5 April 1974. So unless Stephen King wrote the book in less than 2 month, this song didn't inspire him. I think that King wrote the book long before it's publication and was not confident about it so it sat on his desk for a while.
David Coverdale and Glenn "the voice of rock" Hughes made three of the best albums of DP. The chemistry between them is amazing. Two of the best rock singers. Great choice.
"Sail Away" from this album is a masterpiece
11 year old yoyoko just covered this, Ian Paice says she hits harder than him
Would love a reaction to this. Yoyoka is amazing.
deep purple lazy strange kind of woman live space trucking speedking deep purple is a live band so all songs of deep purple are live much better than the album versions
AM always cut long songs down. By the mid 70s AM was losing favor with listeners mostly do to the quality of the audio on FM.
Same year Sweet released Sweet Fanny Adams, also complete from start til finish!
ruclips.net/video/FXcRsAj26qU/видео.html
This is 11 year old Yoyoka She covers BURN I repeat she is 11
Please watch 11 year old drumming prodigy, Yoyoka, cover this.