I’m 70 years old and I just love seeing your generation reacting to my fave hard rock/heavy metal music from late 60s to early/mid 70s. Saw DP in concert in 1974. The keyboard player is Jon Lord (RIP) and he is playing a cut down Hammond P3 organ. He was classically trained. Lead guitarist Ritchie Blackmore formed Rainbow with Ronnie James Dio in 1975 after DP broke up. If you loved Child in Time I am certain you will love Stargazer by Rainbow and it’s follow up/sequel A Light in the Black. Other DP songs worth listening to are Space Truckin, Strange Kind of Woman, Perfect Strangers, My Woman from Tokyo, Black Night and Burn.
@@tonysummerfelt6521 firstly, I was careful in my choice of phrase, I said nobody did it better, which does not preclude anybody from being just as good. Secondly, Rick Wakeman was indeed very talented, very much his equal technically, but somehow Wakeman's music was never as good, at least for me. A bit like Roger Waters' material post Floyd, I always felt Wakeman's music was lacking something.
@@tonyb9735Rick Wakeman and Jon Lord have worked together. Different styles for sure. If I were to introduce RW to someone it would be his "Six Wives..." album.
It baffles me that so many people know Led Zeppelin, Black Sabbath, The Who and Pink Floyd, but don't really know of Deep Purple, and yet they sold as many records as the others but somehow have been forgotten, maybe they should have had a more iconic logo, but in terms of musicianship they were as good as anyone in their mark II line up.
@@simply_psi In their MK. 2 days of 1970- 74 Deep Purple sold more records, more concert tickets and more merchandise than any other act on the planet, and that includes Zeppelin, Floyd, The Beatles, Elvis Presley or Bing Crosby. And you're right, they have never gotten the recognition other have gotten.
not only was it live, that sick guitar solo was improvised on the spot there and then. That's what you get when bunch of extremely talented people get together
Yes it is no auto tune no studio intervention or splice just lords/god's of music.... Deep Purple we are not worthy... The bass and drums holding it all together.
You have not heared Child in Time before? Now you know it! One of the most important Songs in Rock History. Without any doubt. Be thankful. Peace & Rock on. Good Job 👍
Millie, thanks for sharing your reaction. My own favorite Deep Purple song? This one - _Child In Time._ And _this_ version. My first Deep Purple experience? 20th april 1968, British band _"Roundabouts"_ played at the local "Parkskolen" school close to our home in Taastrup, Denmark. Entering stage they announced that they'd chosen a new name for the band: _"Deep Purple"._ This was the very first Deep Purple concert ever. It was shortly before I was born. They played very loud so I would have heard it.
I bought In Rock back in 1970 and it's still one of my favourite albums of all time. I'm so envious of people like you hearing this for the first time. Pure genius.
I also bought this in 71 with paper route money along with Black Sabbath BS first two albums at 11 still have both but also have this on purple heavy vinyl
Keyboard/Hammond Organ B3 is Jon Lord and Ritchie Blackmore plays the guitar, Ian Gillanis the voice! All of them are genious musicians. I love their live-performances with space for solos! You should definetly listen to them more often!
Hi coming from England I was listening to Deep Purple in my Teens also I have seen These live they played all the classic rock songs THEY were Awesome I am now retired still listening to this Awesome music All the best🎹🎸🎼🎼🎼🎼🎼👍
I'm born 1971, so its a bitof my 'before' time, but dang, i met this song now 10 years ago, and it is become my favourit of all times, along with some ozzy songs. I absolutely LOVE your reaction on this 1, it feels good the 'youth' appreciates the classics like I do
Damn... how glad I am to have some older brothers. And one of them really liked this kind of music and especially Deep Purple. He had a bunch of LPs of that too. When he was working I used to sneak into his room to put on a record of this or other hard rock bands from the late sixties and seventies. I think I was about 10-15 years old at the time. I always thought he never knew I sneaked into his room and played his records. Many, many years later he told me he did knew, even bought some records he thought I would like... and that I did not knew. 😊😊🙂
The best is to look at the audience, either they were stunned or didnt realize what happened. Their faces are worth gold, thx for watching this real great piece of music. the master at the keyboard is John Lord, really great musician.
I love the look on your face as you are taking it all in and the sudden stop and return to the quiet interlude. Now imagine 50,000 people in one stadium in 1971 with exactly the same reaction as you have just shown us. Marvelous.
love your energy brings me back im 61 and love young people discovering this,i saw them finally 4ish years ago hardrock fl. the singer about seventy learned a new way to scream amazing and the keyboard player played some classic baroque still awesome
This was a live studio performance. The crowd was invited in to the studio, but were not allowed to make noise during the performance. Yes, this was a thing. I'm diggin' those blue locks and fan girl mode. Rock on Millie.
I heard that album made in Japan first time when I was 15 , back in 1978 . I didn’t even have to put the disc on the player , it was in my mind, I could play it by dreaming
As a school kid in the early 70s, I once had to watch the tape recorder of an older boy in the neighborhood. He had Deep Purple on the tape. It was a revelation. I knew immediately that the band would be something significant for me for a long time.
my generation, my music, our parents thought we were crazy and screamed when we played these songs, our music was exceptional and these bands not only had messages to convey but their music and the musicians were at a level of perfection that few bands after them have matched, an era blessed by the gods, we are pleased that your generation appreciates our musical era 60s/70s, an italo-french fan
Hey Millie, great performance this podcast of yours, and one could notice you liked one of the greatest Rock songs of all times... Child in time coming from one the biggest rock bands of all times "Deep Purple" ❤😅🎉😂
I remember the guys telling on an interview that when Child in Time was recorded and mixed they listened to the master tape together and then sat in silence, realizing they had surpassed themselves and created something extraordinary. The organ sounds the same because it's not a keyboard (which is input device for general purpose synthesizers) but full instrument with sound fixed like a piano would.
It's a Hammond B3 organ thru a Marshall stack. Jon Lord rip invented that sound. Listen to Hush that what made him top 3 in the world and famous. Jon Lord Emerson or Wakman. You can flip the 3 in any order. Top 3 in the world easily.
A live performance of one of the very greatest songs that the "rock and roll years " has ever produced. Sheer coruscating brilliance. Your reactions and comments said it all !
Firstly, you are beautiful and I really enjoyed your reaction video. Ian Gillan (the singer of DP) is one of my all time favourite singers… his voice is so powerful! One of my all time favourite albums is Gillian’s Mr Universe… I highly recommend checking the title track and also Fighting Man from that album! Also, DPs Perfect Strangers is amazing but pretty much everything they’ve done is amazing! ❤️
Still have the album from when I bought it in 1971 , 13 years old , still play it from time to time , and when I do my neighbors do, and sometimes the police come and listen but don’t think they are fans of deep purple
Leaving out 'Smoke on the water' and 'Child in time'... here is a list of (very diverse) my fave Deep Purple songs: 1) Highway star... 2) Black night... 3) Burn... 4) Strange kind of woman... 5) Perfect strangers... 6) Soldier of fortune... 7) The battle rages on ... 8) The cut runs deep... 9) Woman from Tokyo... 10) Pictures of home... 11) Fireball... 12) Space truckin'... 13) Knocking on your back door... 14) Sometimes I feel like screaming... 15) Rapture of the deep ... 16) Stormbringer... 17) Bad attitude... 18) King of dreams... 19) Vincent Price... 20) Anya
😁 9’30 : "I,m... good? gut?..." 😮 OK : hooked! 😂 Love see you discover a song made me ceazy some 50 years ago!!! Love your reactions😁 Peace! And enjoy🥰😍
Oh, there are so many. But they made a few line up Changes. What you saw and heard now as well as Smoke on the water is MK Ii, my favourite line up. Here just a few of their greats: MK I: Hush, Hey Joe, Help MK Ii: Lazy, Speed King, Highway Star, Space Truckin' MK III: Burn
Great band first saw them in '72 Machine Head. So many great albums, Book of Taliesyn, Fireball, Burn, just to name a few. You should hear Child in Time on the Made in Japan live album.
This is one of the wildest vocal performances ever recorded. Another reactor rightly called this "controlled chaos". The crowd was made to be quiet because they were recording this. The keyboard being played is a Hammond B3 / C3 organ that is full of electronic tubes and run into Leslie speaker cabinets. This particular lineup of band members is commonly called the Mark II version of Deep Purple and is responsible for most of their hit records. I love to watch your reactions! Keep them coming!
Even after 53 Years it's still mindblowing how good the Musicians were back in that time....When Deep Purple / Led Zeppelin / Black Sabbath INVENTED Rock/Hard Rock and even Heavy Metal......it IS a Live Recording,thats why the Audience in the Studio are FORBIDDEN to react during the Performance.....
One of my favourite songs of all time. The best male singer in the world I have heard. The king of the C3 and one of my favourite bands. BTW, Ian is back with DP. Yes, the group still rocks after all these years.
I went to a concert by the Ian Gillan Band in Madrid back in 1982, at the Palacio de los Deportes in Madrid, a venue that burned down a few years later and was eventually rebuilt with less fire-friendly materials. It is now known as the WiZink Center. At the time I knew Ian Gillan from his role as Jesus in Jesus Christ Superstar, the muscial by Andrew Lloyd Webber with lyrics by Tim Rice. I knew he was (at times) the singer for Deep Purple, but I really wasn't into that group at the time. I would have enjoyed it more had I been better prepared for that concert. I saw Joe Cocker at around the same time, and there too I wasn't really ready for it. i have this performance on a double CD with Deep Purple's BBC sessions. Of all their songs, Child in Time is my favourite. It is also the title of a novel by Ian McEwan. Actually, The Child in Time. And there is an oratorio by Michael Tippett, A Child of Our Time, which I saw performed live in Madrid in 1991. I coincided with the composer, who was born in 1905, at a performance of his opera The Knot Garden, in London, late 1980s or maybe 1990.
The absolutely incredible singer, his name is Ian Gillan, luckyly for music is still alive and performing. The drummer, Mr Ian Paice, guitar player Mr Richie Blackmore, bass player Roger Glover. This line is known as Mark 2
I think that the crowd did not realize -at the time that they were taking part in a very high water mark in Rock and metal Genre. We know it now in hindsight - given the state of modern pop music.
Exactly the same here. And it stuck forever. Just as all the real music since ’67 or so. Later on I realized that even the second and third rate at the time was way better, than the hits of the following decades, but hey, I’ve been there, when it really happened!
@@alexlifeson6917 And in what lists is he in the top 3? In Rolling Stone's latest list, he didn't even make the top 200. This is just the height of ignorance.
There are a few truly Live performances that for all time.... we are lucky to have had it recorded. This is one and also a few come to mind single performances and who concerts: Grand Funk Railroad, 1969 Inside Looking Out, Chicago @ Tanglewood 1969, Joe Cocker @ Woodstock, 1969 With a Little Help from my Friends. Led Zepplin @ Madison Square Garden in 1973. Eagles @ Capitol Center, MD in 1977 with Hotel California, Journey @ Houston in 1981, Queen @ Montreal in 1981, Metallica @ Seattle in 1989.
I'm traveling to Stuttgart in September to see them (probably for the last time), then on to Romania to see Ian Paice (drummer) with his tribute band, Purpendicular. They've always been a fabulous live performance group and I'm excited about this European tour.
I remember when this came out, yep, that makes me old HAHA. But this means I grew up in the era of the best music ever recorded. I got to see them live and it was an amazing show. Thanks for this!
Las nuevas generaciones están descubriendo la mágica música que escuchábamos los chicos de los 70, más vale tarde que nunca, saludos desde Mar del Plata Argentina !!!! Viva Deep Purple por siempre For ever !!!!!!!!
Had the pleasure of seeing Deep Purple (with this line up) and early White Snake featuring Jon Lord on Keyboards and they NEVER disappointed live. Gillan was amazing during his short stint with Sabbath too.
Awesome my dear, they did this very live with a dead audience told to keep quiet for TV. When I first saw them a few years later we were anything but quiet! AND They were anything but quiet, in those days they held the Guiness World Record for loudest band for awhile, we saw them indoors in New Haven then later that tour, outside in Hartford, huge PAs, the outdoor show you could have heard miles away as they set up in the flat, open field of Colt Park and just turned it up and let rip. Tremendous performers who knew how to handle that sound system. The cost? $5.50, LOL! Try Space Trucking live sometime from the 1970s, it will blow your mind! Enjoy. 🎵🎸🎤🎹🎶
This was my favourite tune by Deep Purple, glad you enjoyed it 👍 There is a song that normally I don't have time for, but DP does the best version of it "Hallelujah" It''ll change your perspective on that song.
Jon Lord was a legend on the organ no one was and is better than he was. Ian Gillan was one of my favorite rock singers Ritchie Blackmoore was a pain in the butt to work with according to many musicians, Ian Paice was a magnificent drummer and Roger Glover was insane on the bass. Deep Purple and Led Zepellin ruled rock in the late 60s through the 70s
Ian Gillan's voice even caught the attention of Luciano Pavarotti, who called Ian's voice "A force of nature." If you're going to talk about Deep Purple and Led Zeppelin, you have to bring Black Sabbath into the mix. The three of them started heavy metal in the late 60's and early 70's.
@@b1blancer1 I would but not with ozzy he was a crappy singer, when Ronnie James Dio joined Black Sabbath in 1980 then I would add Black Sabbath to my comment
I was driving recently with my brother-in-law in Switzerland and Smoke on the Water came on his car radio. I said "I guess this is famous in Switzerland?" He replied "It is famous all over the World" This is one of those DP tracks that nver gets boring. The vocals are so amazing, but also the musicianship of the rest of the band is truely admirable. They were young and so full of energy, just like you Millie!
Crowd were under strict instructions from the TV Studio mansgers to remain quiet during yhis TV petformance but most if not all other Purple concerts the crowd gets well into it and there in losds of head banging and mosh pit fun . Purple are a band i have followed for many years and was introduced to their music when i was just 12 yrs old in 1976 , so subsequently to personally get to know John Lord, Ian Gillian and Ian Paice was a real joy for myself and a hugh privlidge. All 3 guys were really approachable down to earth and easy to talk to
Deep Purple 💜 is best of the best !!!
LIVE!! No technical assistance, no autotune LIVE!! That's all I have to say 🙂
Nuff said.
yes just how it should be
pure talent and yellow teeth,when noone actually cared if someone was ugly pretty rich poor,we are all more like "together" brilliant band!
Y prohibido el playback !!! 👌🇦🇷🇦🇷🇦🇷
Not entirely true. There was technical assistance - it's called Ian Gillian's "finger in the ear" technique for hearing the notes he was singing.
I’m 70 years old and I just love seeing your generation reacting to my fave hard rock/heavy metal music from late 60s to early/mid 70s. Saw DP in concert in 1974. The keyboard player is Jon Lord (RIP) and he is playing a cut down Hammond P3 organ. He was classically trained. Lead guitarist Ritchie Blackmore formed Rainbow with Ronnie James Dio in 1975 after DP broke up. If you loved Child in Time I am certain you will love Stargazer by Rainbow and it’s follow up/sequel A Light in the Black. Other DP songs worth listening to are Space Truckin, Strange Kind of Woman, Perfect Strangers, My Woman from Tokyo, Black Night and Burn.
For those who like their bluesier stuff, "Maybe I'm a Leo".
And not to forget Jon Lord's solo album "Sarabande". Very, very good, and very, very overlooked.
@@sneakyfox4651 And "Before I forget" a superb Jon Lord solo album.
@@philjones6054 Oh, I didn't know that album. Thanks, I'll check it out.
Soy ARGENTINO ... Y si te gusto Child in Time, tu próximo tema a escuchar es Highway Star ...
ESA ES LA ESENCIA DE DEEP PURPLE 👌👌👍👍🇦🇷🇦🇷🇦🇷
It is not LIKE shredding on a keyboard, it IS shredding on a keyboard ... and nobody ever did it better than Jon Lord
uhhh, gonna say Rick Wakeman was his equal...
@@tonysummerfelt6521 firstly, I was careful in my choice of phrase, I said nobody did it better, which does not preclude anybody from being just as good.
Secondly, Rick Wakeman was indeed very talented, very much his equal technically, but somehow Wakeman's music was never as good, at least for me. A bit like Roger Waters' material post Floyd, I always felt Wakeman's music was lacking something.
@@tonyb9735Rick Wakeman and Jon Lord have worked together. Different styles for sure. If I were to introduce RW to someone it would be his "Six Wives..." album.
@@tonysummerfelt6521 Thanks, I will give it a go.
His solo album that I am most familiar with is Myths and Legends of King Arthur.
@@tonyb9735 ah, didn't like that album myself. Try "Six Wives.." totally different beast
"Is this live? its perfection." yes, yes it is.
No matter how many times i've listened to this gem, everytime I get mesmerized by everything: melody, voice, vibes overall...
It baffles me that so many people know Led Zeppelin, Black Sabbath, The Who and Pink Floyd, but don't really know of Deep Purple, and yet they sold as many records as the others but somehow have been forgotten, maybe they should have had a more iconic logo, but in terms of musicianship they were as good as anyone in their mark II line up.
@@simply_psi In their MK. 2 days of 1970- 74 Deep Purple sold more records, more concert tickets and more merchandise than any other act on the planet, and that includes Zeppelin, Floyd, The Beatles, Elvis Presley or Bing Crosby.
And you're right, they have never gotten the recognition other have gotten.
@@simply_psi Forgotten? Maybe they don't get the recognition they deserve, but they certainly aren't forgotten.
@@BunnEFartz Continúan siendo escuchados, estimado Buen ... 👌👌🇦🇷🇦🇷🇦🇷
Those 5 musicians were some of the very best. That was Deep Purple at their very best.
Great musicianship! No computers, no autotune...Pure Talent!
This live performance is legendary - insanely talented group...
ruclips.net/video/z56av8Yg46o/видео.html fucking legendary performace best live version!
Nice ! 1970 i was 3 years old , my start as Metalhead was 1980 , i love this Song
not only was it live, that sick guitar solo was improvised on the spot there and then. That's what you get when bunch of extremely talented people get together
“Is this live? It’s perfection.”
Millie gets it.
and just a second after Ian Paice lost his drumstick ahaha ;-) Seems Millie thrown a jinx !
Por supuesto que es EN VIVO ... Para la BBC 👍👍😎🇦🇷🇦🇷🇦🇷
Yes it is no auto tune no studio intervention or splice just lords/god's of music....
Deep Purple we are not worthy...
The bass and drums holding it all together.
its live tv and they were stuned .
They are all gods, one of the top line-ups in rock history ever
You have not heared Child in Time before? Now you know it! One of the most important Songs in Rock History. Without any doubt. Be thankful. Peace & Rock on. Good Job 👍
No tech gadgets, no auto tunes.... genuine musicians !!!
The audience: -What just happened?
Deep Purple: -History!
Producers told them to keep quiet.
@@coolgabe64 Really? Any references?
THANK YOU SO MUCH MILLIE!!!!!
in those days the thrill of buying a record was beautiful
This was live I'm in my late sixties now one good thing though I got to see Deep Purple three times live
Great reaction thanks.....deep reaction PURPPLE...
This is my favorite Deep Purple song by far
Millie, thanks for sharing your reaction. My own favorite Deep Purple song? This one - _Child In Time._ And _this_ version. My first Deep Purple experience? 20th april 1968, British band _"Roundabouts"_ played at the local "Parkskolen" school close to our home in Taastrup, Denmark. Entering stage they announced that they'd chosen a new name for the band: _"Deep Purple"._ This was the very first Deep Purple concert ever. It was shortly before I was born. They played very loud so I would have heard it.
Favourite Deep Purple tune is a tough one, so many genious to choose from... Perfect Stranger maybe
Another great Deep Purple song to check out is lazy one of my personal favorites and a great jam sessions
A few of my favorite DP tunes are Perfect Strangers, Rat Bat Blue, and Speed King. Check them out.
I bought In Rock back in 1970 and it's still one of my favourite albums of all time. I'm so envious of people like you hearing this for the first time. Pure genius.
Still my favorite DP album.
I also bought this in 71 with paper route money along with Black Sabbath BS first two albums at 11 still have both but also have this on purple heavy vinyl
Me to its epic.
Keyboard/Hammond Organ B3 is Jon Lord and Ritchie Blackmore plays the guitar, Ian Gillanis the voice! All of them are genious musicians. I love their live-performances with space for solos! You should definetly listen to them more often!
I love this song and this live version. And i truly enjoy watching people find out how great Deep Purple is!
Hi coming from England I was listening to Deep Purple in my Teens also I have seen These live they played all the classic rock songs THEY were Awesome I am now retired still listening to this Awesome music All the best🎹🎸🎼🎼🎼🎼🎼👍
I'm born 1971, so its a bitof my 'before' time, but dang, i met this song now 10 years ago, and it is become my favourit of all times, along with some ozzy songs. I absolutely LOVE your reaction on this 1, it feels good the 'youth' appreciates the classics like I do
"You all right,mate?" 😁🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🙊❤️❤️literally on the floor ,making monkey sounds......
Damn... how glad I am to have some older brothers. And one of them really liked this kind of music and especially Deep Purple. He had a bunch of LPs of that too. When he was working I used to sneak into his room to put on a record of this or other hard rock bands from the late sixties and seventies. I think I was about 10-15 years old at the time.
I always thought he never knew I sneaked into his room and played his records. Many, many years later he told me he did knew, even bought some records he thought I would like... and that I did not knew. 😊😊🙂
The best is to look at the audience, either they were stunned or didnt realize what happened. Their faces are worth gold, thx for watching this real great piece of music. the master at the keyboard is John Lord, really great musician.
This one......Can't find The Words...!!!! 4-ever The Kings!!
I love the look on your face as you are taking it all in and the sudden stop and return to the quiet interlude. Now imagine 50,000 people in one stadium in 1971 with exactly the same reaction as you have just shown us. Marvelous.
love your energy brings me back im 61 and love young people discovering this,i saw them finally 4ish years ago hardrock fl. the singer about seventy
learned a new way to scream amazing and the keyboard player played some classic baroque still awesome
Loved your reaction! Saw these guys in 1985 in Albuquerque NM. One of the best live bands I've ever seen.
This was a live studio performance. The crowd was invited in to the studio, but were not allowed to make noise during the performance. Yes, this was a thing. I'm diggin' those blue locks and fan girl mode. Rock on Millie.
With legendary soccer player George Best visible in the audience.
I heard that album made in Japan first time when I was 15 , back in 1978 . I didn’t even have to put the disc on the player , it was in my mind, I could play it by dreaming
As a school kid in the early 70s, I once had to watch the tape recorder of an older boy in the neighborhood. He had Deep Purple on the tape. It was a revelation. I knew immediately that the band would be something significant for me for a long time.
My first LP was Deep Purple in Rock.It`s been 50 years now..First Contact wth the heavier side of music.
One of the greatest live performances ever.Sheer perfection from everyone
Deep purple MK2 line up were just awesome! Every member was a massive talent!
my generation, my music, our parents thought we were crazy and screamed when we played these songs, our music was exceptional and these bands not only had messages to convey but their music and the musicians were at a level of perfection that few bands after them have matched, an era blessed by the gods, we are pleased that your generation appreciates our musical era 60s/70s, an italo-french fan
Gran melodía de uno de las mejores bandas dek rock Deep purple leyenda viviente
DP is the BEST of the BEST👏👏👏Thanks for sharing,Millie💙💖💙
Great reaction Millie, the full footage of this Granada TV performance is on YT, about 23 minutes long, well worth watching.
Blackmoore and Lord have been playing seance 1956 as teens in 1970 as young men they are skilled.
Hey Millie, great performance this podcast of yours, and one could notice you liked one of the greatest Rock songs of all times... Child in time coming from one the biggest rock bands of all times "Deep Purple" ❤😅🎉😂
I remember the guys telling on an interview that when Child in Time was recorded and mixed they listened to the master tape together and then sat in silence, realizing they had surpassed themselves and created something extraordinary.
The organ sounds the same because it's not a keyboard (which is input device for general purpose synthesizers) but full instrument with sound fixed like a piano would.
It's a Hammond B3 organ thru a Marshall stack. Jon Lord rip invented that sound. Listen to Hush that what made him top 3 in the world and famous. Jon Lord Emerson or Wakman. You can flip the 3 in any order. Top 3 in the world easily.
I highly recommend Deep Purple's live album titled Made in Japan for an album review !
A live performance of one of the very greatest songs that the "rock and roll years " has ever produced.
Sheer coruscating brilliance.
Your reactions and comments said it all !
The late sixties and early seventies is the music I grew up with, glad to see another generation finding it.
Live 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
Firstly, you are beautiful and I really enjoyed your reaction video. Ian Gillan (the singer of DP) is one of my all time favourite singers… his voice is so powerful! One of my all time favourite albums is Gillian’s Mr Universe… I highly recommend checking the title track and also Fighting Man from that album! Also, DPs Perfect Strangers is amazing but pretty much everything they’ve done is amazing! ❤️
Ian....simply the best ,love his tone and phrasing, my favorite drummer IP plays incredible
Still have the album from when I bought it in 1971 , 13 years old , still play it from time to time , and when I do my neighbors do, and sometimes the police come and listen but don’t think they are fans of deep purple
Timeless. That performance of the classic was amazing.
Leaving out 'Smoke on the water' and 'Child in time'... here is a list of (very diverse) my fave Deep Purple songs:
1) Highway star... 2) Black night... 3) Burn... 4) Strange kind of woman... 5) Perfect strangers... 6) Soldier of fortune... 7) The battle rages on ... 8) The cut runs deep... 9) Woman from Tokyo... 10) Pictures of home... 11) Fireball... 12) Space truckin'... 13) Knocking on your back door... 14) Sometimes I feel like screaming... 15) Rapture of the deep ... 16) Stormbringer... 17) Bad attitude... 18) King of dreams... 19) Vincent Price... 20) Anya
April?
😁 9’30 : "I,m... good? gut?..." 😮 OK : hooked! 😂 Love see you discover a song made me ceazy some 50 years ago!!! Love your reactions😁 Peace! And enjoy🥰😍
Oh, there are so many.
But they made a few line up Changes. What you saw and heard now as well as Smoke on the water is MK Ii, my favourite line up.
Here just a few of their greats:
MK I: Hush, Hey Joe, Help
MK Ii: Lazy, Speed King, Highway Star, Space Truckin'
MK III: Burn
Great band first saw them in '72 Machine Head. So many great albums, Book of Taliesyn, Fireball, Burn, just to name a few. You should hear Child in Time on the Made in Japan live album.
I loved your reaction to real legends of rock...
This is one of the wildest vocal performances ever recorded. Another reactor rightly called this "controlled chaos". The crowd was made to be quiet because they were recording this. The keyboard being played is a Hammond B3 / C3 organ that is full of electronic tubes and run into Leslie speaker cabinets. This particular lineup of band members is commonly called the Mark II version of Deep Purple and is responsible for most of their hit records.
I love to watch your reactions! Keep them coming!
Even after 53 Years it's still mindblowing how good the Musicians were back in that time....When Deep Purple / Led Zeppelin / Black Sabbath INVENTED Rock/Hard Rock and even Heavy Metal......it IS a Live Recording,thats why the Audience in the Studio are FORBIDDEN to react during the Performance.....
One of my favourite songs of all time. The best male singer in the world I have heard. The king of the C3 and one of my favourite bands. BTW, Ian is back with DP. Yes, the group still rocks after all these years.
I went to a concert by the Ian Gillan Band in Madrid back in 1982, at the Palacio de los Deportes in Madrid, a venue that burned down a few years later and was eventually rebuilt with less fire-friendly materials. It is now known as the WiZink Center. At the time I knew Ian Gillan from his role as Jesus in Jesus Christ Superstar, the muscial by Andrew Lloyd Webber with lyrics by Tim Rice. I knew he was (at times) the singer for Deep Purple, but I really wasn't into that group at the time. I would have enjoyed it more had I been better prepared for that concert. I saw Joe Cocker at around the same time, and there too I wasn't really ready for it.
i have this performance on a double CD with Deep Purple's BBC sessions. Of all their songs, Child in Time is my favourite. It is also the title of a novel by Ian McEwan. Actually, The Child in Time. And there is an oratorio by Michael Tippett, A Child of Our Time, which I saw performed live in Madrid in 1991. I coincided with the composer, who was born in 1905, at a performance of his opera The Knot Garden, in London, late 1980s or maybe 1990.
Listen to Made in Japan 2 LP...im 65 years....good musik.. its my young age musik..Zappa to...❤❤😅
The absolutely incredible singer, his name is Ian Gillan, luckyly for music is still alive and performing. The drummer, Mr Ian Paice, guitar player Mr Richie Blackmore, bass player Roger Glover. This line is known as Mark 2
I think that the crowd did not realize -at the time that they were taking part in a very high water mark in Rock and metal Genre. We know it now in hindsight - given the state of modern pop music.
I was 19 and was in my first year of a 20 year Air Force career in 1970 and we would party down in the barracks to tunes like this.
Exactly the same here.
And it stuck forever. Just as all the real music since ’67 or so.
Later on I realized that even the second and third rate at the time was way better, than the hits of the following decades, but hey, I’ve been there, when it really happened!
Ian Gillan - one of the most underrated rock vocalists of all time. Serious pipes!
I wouldn't say underrated - more like acclaimed vocalist.
Definitely not underrated haha
Definitely not underrated, Gillan top 3 greatest ever for sure.
@@alexlifeson6917 And in what lists is he in the top 3? In Rolling Stone's latest list, he didn't even make the top 200. This is just the height of ignorance.
@@ninoorjon absolutely one of the best and also criminally underrated by American corrupt music industry
There are a few truly Live performances that for all time.... we are lucky to have had it recorded. This is one and also a few come to mind single performances and who concerts:
Grand Funk Railroad, 1969 Inside Looking Out,
Chicago @ Tanglewood 1969,
Joe Cocker @ Woodstock, 1969 With a Little Help from my Friends.
Led Zepplin @ Madison Square Garden in 1973.
Eagles @ Capitol Center, MD in 1977 with Hotel California,
Journey @ Houston in 1981,
Queen @ Montreal in 1981,
Metallica @ Seattle in 1989.
I'm traveling to Stuttgart in September to see them (probably for the last time), then on to Romania to see Ian Paice (drummer) with his tribute band, Purpendicular. They've always been a fabulous live performance group and I'm excited about this European tour.
I remember when this came out, yep, that makes me old HAHA. But this means I grew up in the era of the best music ever recorded. I got to see them live and it was an amazing show. Thanks for this!
I grew up with listening to deep purple thank you Millie for the memories 🇬🇧
🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸 what a great sound.
Great reaction to a fantastic band😀 this performance is epic.
And what you call a Keyboard is an Hammond Organ if I am not misstaken.
Highway Star live version from Made In Japan (the definitive version) should be next on your Deep Purple journey. Your enthusiasm is infectious!
One of their best performances
Las nuevas generaciones están descubriendo la mágica música que escuchábamos los chicos de los 70, más vale tarde que nunca, saludos desde Mar del Plata Argentina !!!! Viva Deep Purple por siempre For ever !!!!!!!!
Had the pleasure of seeing Deep Purple (with this line up) and early White Snake featuring Jon Lord on Keyboards and they NEVER disappointed live. Gillan was amazing during his short stint with Sabbath too.
Best Concert Ever,
Great reaction! Deep Purple 1 of my favorite band and the album live Made in Japan is the best album live ever 🤘🏼👏🏼👏🏼
Awesome my dear, they did this very live with a dead audience told to keep quiet for TV. When I first saw them a few years later we were anything but quiet! AND They were anything but quiet, in those days they held the Guiness World Record for loudest band for awhile, we saw them indoors in New Haven then later that tour, outside in Hartford, huge PAs, the outdoor show you could have heard miles away as they set up in the flat, open field of Colt Park and just turned it up and let rip. Tremendous performers who knew how to handle that sound system. The cost? $5.50, LOL! Try Space Trucking live sometime from the 1970s, it will blow your mind! Enjoy. 🎵🎸🎤🎹🎶
This was my favourite tune by Deep Purple, glad you enjoyed it 👍 There is a song that normally I don't have time for, but DP does the best version of it "Hallelujah" It''ll change your perspective on that song.
It’s always funny to watch reactors react to Jon Lord’s skill On the keyboards. There is no one quite like him.
Jon Lord was a legend on the organ no one was and is better than he was. Ian Gillan was one of my favorite rock singers Ritchie Blackmoore was a pain in the butt to work with according to many musicians, Ian Paice was a magnificent drummer and Roger Glover was insane on the bass. Deep Purple and Led Zepellin ruled rock in the late 60s through the 70s
Ian Gillan's voice even caught the attention of Luciano Pavarotti, who called Ian's voice "A force of nature." If you're going to talk about Deep Purple and Led Zeppelin, you have to bring Black Sabbath into the mix. The three of them started heavy metal in the late 60's and early 70's.
@@b1blancer1 I would but not with ozzy he was a crappy singer, when Ronnie James Dio joined Black Sabbath in 1980 then I would add Black Sabbath to my comment
Head banging is something that came years later after this recording. As for the keyboard god, his name is Jon Lord.😅😊😁
Love your reaction girl, this was real music. Love it forever.
I love your hair Millie, rock on princess
I was driving recently with my brother-in-law in Switzerland and Smoke on the Water came on his car radio. I said "I guess this is famous in Switzerland?" He replied "It is famous all over the World"
This is one of those DP tracks that nver gets boring. The vocals are so amazing, but also the musicianship of the rest of the band is truely admirable. They were young and so full of energy, just like you Millie!
They didn't even needed any digital help to sound this perfect, because they were ROCK LEGENDS
Masterpiece
Crowd were under strict instructions from the TV Studio mansgers to remain quiet during yhis TV petformance but most if not all other Purple concerts the crowd gets well into it and there in losds of head banging and mosh pit fun .
Purple are a band i have followed for many years and was introduced to their music when i was just 12 yrs old in 1976 , so subsequently to personally get to know John Lord, Ian Gillian and Ian Paice was a real joy for myself and a hugh privlidge. All 3 guys were really approachable down to earth and easy to talk to
Deep purple "In Rock" is their best studio album.
I saw them live. They are unforgettable.
Since you enjoyed that, try WHEN A BLIND MAN CRIES by Ian Gillan . Ian is much older but still AMAZING!
listened to them and saw them nuff said!!