I remember meeting you in Sheffield after the Gary Moore gig on the Victims tour in 1984 , as a 17yr old drummer meeting one of his major influences and drum idol , you took the time to chat and for that I thank you
I never thought in my whole years of being a teenager and a young man I'll ever get a chance to communicate with one of the people in my father's small record collection LP. Specially not my favorite drummer. Made in Europe and the way my dad's record always had the needle stuck as Coverdale improvised "Rock me all night long" and made weird noises on the exact same spot in the interlude for Mistreated at th1 17:28 mark of the Album is one of my most fond memories as I imitated his weird vocal contortions and lifted the LP player's arm in order to listen to the rest of the song. The kind of things we had to do to amuse ourselves when there was power to do something like play a record. And just playing the intro to You Fool No One was a dream that many years after came true. The way you crashed and just flew over the drums like a machine gun ready to take down an entire army was incrusted in my mind. The record player might not have always been loud, but the record was loud. The extra cool effect of my dad's stories about Rock N' Roll running through my mind as I listened. About how it was being forbidden by the Communist Government just a few decades earlier and how he and his buddies had to sneak in records from "the north" to listen to in secret way back when made it all more interesting. He always thought that live Deep Purple was leaps and bounds above Led Zeppelin. Being almost impossible to buy anything, much less music, Made in Europe was the only proper Deep Purple album I listened for about 12 years. Vinyl skips and scratches and all, I will never forget it.
Wonderful. Thank you Mr. Paice. You have extraordinary skills as a drummer and, (in my opinion only) don't get mentioned often enough in the "great drummers" discussion. Your work on live performances of Space Truckin' when Jon was jamming is a master class of holding the groove. And your outro playing on Pictures of Home beginning right after Rogers Bass solo, beginning at about 4:07 just out of the lull, is amazing. You never wavered in your performances. You would have had to start from scratch if you had lost the moment during those analog recording days. I was glad that POH was finally added to the set during the Mark Joe era. Also, I recently stumbled across your work with MAZE and listened to two songs. Telephone, and Harlem Shuffle. Even at 18 you sounded like the Ian Paice we respect today. Take care.
Around 1990,ten years old,i discovered, from my olders brother LP collection,hard rock with Deep Purple.around 15 years old i started playing drums and never stoped.not as a pro,but i love drumming.you sir are one of my drum heros.a living legend in the history of rock
Following from part 1, this is a wonderful insight of how it *should be done*. Awesome playing on this old Yardbird’s number. You are such a fantastic inspiration. Thank you so much for sharing this. 🥁🎄🥁
I just wanted to reach out and to say thanks. Should have done this along time ago. Fifty one years ago, I began taking lessons, learning how to play drums and it was your drumming in Deep Purple which became my first and primary influence. That influence has lasted my entire life. Deep Purple was my introduction to music and the standard by which I listened to all others. Burn still remains one of my favorite albums and I have listened to thousands. In fact, Deep Purple led me to Frank Zappa, one of my favorite composers because of the song Smoke on the Water. Thank you Ian for working so hard to be so inspiring. You helped establish a life long love of the instrument and music. With great respect!
A thought occurred to me Ian. You did a stint playing with Gary Moore back in the mid eighties, would you have played Shapes Of Things with him? PS, Glasgow show was mega!
Great tribute to this amazing song. In some parts better imo than the original song "Shapes of Things" (1966) by The Yardbirds (esp the DRUMS 😜). Thanks for sharing with us Ian.
Saw you at Leeds in November Ian, enjoyed the show so very much. Thank you all once again. Take care of yourselves.
I remember meeting you in Sheffield after the Gary Moore gig on the Victims tour in 1984 , as a 17yr old drummer meeting one of his major influences and drum idol , you took the time to chat and for that I thank you
Love the version Gary Moore did back in the day! I can even hear the guitar solo in my head right now. Great stuff!
Mr. Ian Paice.
A true living legend!
Rock on, Sir!! 💪
Thanks for allowing everyone to see the process!
Could sit there all day and watch ya, great, 👍🏼
Nice. The greatest of all time! Much love from Detroit Rock City!
I never thought in my whole years of being a teenager and a young man I'll ever get a chance to communicate with one of the people in my father's small record collection LP. Specially not my favorite drummer. Made in Europe and the way my dad's record always had the needle stuck as Coverdale improvised "Rock me all night long" and made weird noises on the exact same spot in the interlude for Mistreated at th1 17:28 mark of the Album is one of my most fond memories as I imitated his weird vocal contortions and lifted the LP player's arm in order to listen to the rest of the song. The kind of things we had to do to amuse ourselves when there was power to do something like play a record.
And just playing the intro to You Fool No One was a dream that many years after came true. The way you crashed and just flew over the drums like a machine gun ready to take down an entire army was incrusted in my mind. The record player might not have always been loud, but the record was loud.
The extra cool effect of my dad's stories about Rock N' Roll running through my mind as I listened. About how it was being forbidden by the Communist Government just a few decades earlier and how he and his buddies had to sneak in records from "the north" to listen to in secret way back when made it all more interesting. He always thought that live Deep Purple was leaps and bounds above Led Zeppelin.
Being almost impossible to buy anything, much less music, Made in Europe was the only proper Deep Purple album I listened for about 12 years. Vinyl skips and scratches and all, I will never forget it.
Awesome! You've always had a crisp and groovy style of playing. Clear as well as moving the song along. So masterful!
Wonderful.
Thank you Mr. Paice.
You have extraordinary skills as a drummer and, (in my opinion only) don't get mentioned often enough in the "great drummers" discussion. Your work on live performances of Space Truckin' when Jon was jamming is a master class of holding the groove. And your outro playing on Pictures of Home beginning right after Rogers Bass solo, beginning at about 4:07 just out of the lull, is amazing. You never wavered in your performances. You would have had to start from scratch if you had lost the moment during those analog recording days. I was glad that POH was finally added to the set during the Mark Joe era.
Also, I recently stumbled across your work with MAZE and listened to two songs.
Telephone, and Harlem Shuffle. Even at 18 you sounded like the Ian Paice we respect today.
Take care.
Thank you Master Ian for sharing this with all of us❤ Also the version you played with Gary Moore back in the 80's was a bomb 💣
IAN PAICE ‼️
That sounded great Ian !
Around 1990,ten years old,i discovered, from my olders brother LP collection,hard rock with Deep Purple.around 15 years old i started playing drums and never stoped.not as a pro,but i love drumming.you sir are one of my drum heros.a living legend in the history of rock
Still the all time greatest, thank you Ian.
Superb!!!!!
Great as always, thank you...I hope the drums session of Hey Cisco will surface one day...
you guys have never sounded tighter or better. Fantastic cover of a timeless classic. Bravo!!
Following from part 1, this is a wonderful insight of how it *should be done*. Awesome playing on this old Yardbird’s number.
You are such a fantastic inspiration.
Thank you so much for sharing this.
🥁🎄🥁
Excellent👍👍
I just wanted to reach out and to say thanks. Should have done this along time ago. Fifty one years ago, I began taking lessons, learning how to play drums and it was your drumming in Deep Purple which became my first and primary influence. That influence has lasted my entire life. Deep Purple was my introduction to music and the standard by which I listened to all others. Burn still remains one of my favorite albums and I have listened to thousands. In fact, Deep Purple led me to Frank Zappa, one of my favorite composers because of the song Smoke on the Water.
Thank you Ian for working so hard to be so inspiring.
You helped establish a life long love of the instrument and music.
With great respect!
Wow, love it!! Paice rules!!
Excellence!!
Awesome!!! Sounds great! Beautiful drum sound!!! Enjoyed this one!
bloody great musician
Mr. Paice, thank you!
The Best!!
I love this stuff. Be great to see anything from =1
Legend 🙌
Sweet!!! Yardbirds with a kicker.
Loved the Gary Moore version from Victims of The Future, also featuring Mr Paice on drums!
Great to hear
Fabulous, thanks!
Legend
Nobody dances on a snare as good and tasty as Ian
A thought occurred to me Ian. You did a stint playing with Gary Moore back in the mid eighties, would you have played Shapes Of Things with him? PS, Glasgow show was mega!
no he didn't play on that track he played on tracks 1. 3.4 and 8
@@ajjy1110 You mean the Glasgow version of Shapes Of Things was not used for the We Want Moore live album. Yes, was the answer.
Great tribute to this amazing song. In some parts better imo than the original song "Shapes of Things" (1966) by The Yardbirds (esp the DRUMS 😜). Thanks for sharing with us Ian.
In the pocket, Ian!
J'aimais beaucoup Gary Moore... Plein de feeling et de sens mélodique. Merci Ian 😄
"On the drums.... IAAANNN PAAAAICE" (as Gillan used to say after a solo)
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
I miss Steve Morse so much. But Simon McBride is a fantastic Player and a humble guy too.
I miss Jon..........
I think you played this song with Gary Moore some forty years ago. That must have been a very different recording experience.
love Dixie Dregs version.
It's rare to not hit the china.
How come the Springboard LP with Jeff Beck on the cover is still so cheap? I'm sure Jimmy's on it. It's like their best record.