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	<title>Best of Classic Rock &#187; Deep Purple</title>
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	<description>The Best of Classic Rock news, interviews, concert tours, birthdays and more. Huge directory of Classic Rock websites. Make the Best of Classic Rock your news source.</description>
	<pubDate>Fri, 24 Apr 2009 18:13:21 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>Deep Purple- A Brief History</title>
		<link>http://bestofclassicrock.com/deep-purple-a-brief-history/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 02 Apr 2009 17:41:13 +0000</pubDate>
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		<category><![CDATA[Deep Purple]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[I hit my thumb with a hammer on Tuesday. Now it's a Deep Purple color. So I was motivated to give you a brief history on the band 'Deep Purple'. Enjoy...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I hit my thumb with a hammer on Tuesday. I completely and thoroughly smashed the &#038;%#@ out of it while building a stone wall in my backyard. If you have a strong stomach you can see a picture of it <a href="http://bestofclassicrock.com/wp-content/uploads/smashed-thumb.jpg">here</a>. So today, Thursday, I&#8217;m pretty sure the small bone at the end is broken. I drilled a hole in the nail to relieve the pressure but the entire top half is really badly bruised. It&#8217;s a really DEEP PURPLE color which is my inspiration for today article, I a brief history on the band Deep&nbsp;Purple!</p>
<p>This is an excellent article written by Jeff Miers from the <a href="http://www.deeppurple.com">official Deep Purple&nbsp;website</a></p>
<blockquote><p>The first time I heard Deep Purple – or perhaps felt Deep Purple is a better way to describe the experience – it was the mid-70s. I was 8, and Ritchie Blackmore’s sinewy, sinister riffing on the “Made In Japan” version of “Child In Time,” coupled with Ian Gillan’s dramatic, gorgeous howling, Jon Lord’s ominous neo-classical Hammond organ, and the dynamic interplay of the Roger Glover-Ian Paice rhythm section, tore the top of my head&nbsp;off.</p>
<p><img src="http://bestofclassicrock.com/wp-content/uploads/deep_purple_76-296x300.jpg" alt="Deep Purple 1976" title="Deep Purple 1976" width="296" height="300" class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-664" />It was unlike anything else I’d ever heard. And it quite literally changed my&nbsp;life.</p>
<p>30 years later, I’m still hearing Deep Purple for the first&nbsp;time.</p>
<p>“Rapture of the Deep” is the spot-on moniker for the disc you hold in your hands, and I’ll stand on any classic rock radio programmer’s desk in my cowboy boots and scream it loud, proud and Gillan-esque; “This is the best Deep Purple album there is, dammit! Forget ‘Machine Head’ – that was then; this is most decidedly&nbsp;now!”</p>
<p>This is the fourth record created by the revamped and rejuvenated Purple following the umpteenth departure of the mercurial Mr. Blackmore. The guitarist – one of the most significant in British rock history - had ceased to be a contributing force and was in fact draining Purple of its collective spirit when his ship finally set sail for good, a bit over a decade&nbsp;back.</p>
<p>Blackmore&#8217;s exit is, in a sense, where our story begins, for the surviving band members left to pick up the pieces in his violent wake – Gillan, Glover, Lord, Paice – agreed unanimously on only one six-stringer, the soon to be knighted Steve Morse. Hardly scraping the dregs from the bottom of the barrel with that choice,&nbsp;boys.</p>
<p><img src="http://bestofclassicrock.com/wp-content/uploads/deep_purple_-_made_in_japan-front-300x296.jpg" alt="deep_purple_-_made_in_japan-front" title="deep_purple_-_made_in_japan-front" width="300" height="296" class="alignright size-medium wp-image-665" />Morse accepted, writing commenced for what would become “Purpendicular,” on-stage work-outs were seized upon with relish, and the band breathed the heady air of rebirth. When “Purpendicular” was delivered, it astonished. Rather than going softly into the long goodnight of “classic rock” middle-age, Deep Purple had reinvented itself. It took no more than a cursory listen to the likes of “Ted the Mechanic,” &#8220;Loosen My Strings” and “Sometimes I Feel Like Screaming” to drive this point straight into the&nbsp;skull.</p>
<p>Morse brought a funkiness, a depth as guitarist and writer, an unparalleled fluidity as a soloist, a startling aptitude as foil to Lord, and an arsenal of influences – country, folk, jazz, what they’ve sadly labeled “fusion,” and an inherent understanding of blues-based riffs – that meshed effortlessly with the immaculate Glover-Paice sense of swing and Gillan’s seeming capacity to go anywhere at any time, full-throated and eyes&nbsp;ablaze.</p>
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”Purpendicular” was a celebration of both remembrance and reinvention. It at once acknowledged Purple’s estimable history and tradition, and a musical wanderlust not content to repeat the past. As such, it laid the template for a new Purple. And it all, it seems, was paving the way for the mighty metamorphosis that is “Rapture of the&nbsp;Deep.”</p>
<p>With Morse, Purple toured the world to accolades from the cognoscente. “Abandon” cemented the band’s on-stage prowess on record, and reminded us that Purple was, yes indeed, the heaviest of heavy rock bands. “Bananas,” the first record following Lord’s retirement from touring and his replacement by exquisite ivory-tinkler Don Airey, brought elements of pop to the table, grafted on some of “Purpendicular’s” ambition, and encapsulated the ensemble-riff power of “Abandon.” Tours behind both of these albums revealed this still-young band’s continued growth as a performing unit. By the end of the &#8220;Bananas&#8221; marathon, Airey had marked his apotheosis, from &#8220;replacement&#8221; to fully-integrated&nbsp;band-member.</p>
<p><img src="http://bestofclassicrock.com/wp-content/uploads/group2.jpg" alt="group2" title="group2" width="200" height="183" class="alignleft size-full wp-image-666" />”Rapture of the Deep” marks yet another new beginning, however. And it, more than any other record this side of “Perfect Strangers” and “Purpendicular,” offers a snapshot of the band transitioning into bold, uncharted territory. It’s as if all the pieces fit, not for the first time, of course, but in a manner that reveals a more pure portrait of just what this band is capable of. The whole transcends the sum of its parts, which is fitting for a record that seems to be, in a very real sense, about&nbsp;transcendence.</p>
<p>”As we all know, it’s hard to breathe/When something spiritual has taken place/We don’t know how, we don’t know why/We’ve been transported to a state of grace,” sings Gillan during the album’s title track, and this verse can be seen as indicative of the over-arching ethos behind “Rapture of the Deep.” Lyrically, it speaks of a spirit not content with the status quo in terms of interpersonal, social and political relationships, and this irreverent yearning is matched by the searching nature of the music itself, which also refuses to be&nbsp;ordinary.</p>
<p>The album opens with “Money Talks,” a hook-heavy rocker with several twists in its tale, most notably Gillan’s harmony vocals during the chorus, his uber-hip sing-speak during the verses – recalling both “Fireball’s” “No One Came” and his own “No Laughing In Heaven” – and the manner in which the tune flirts with an Eastern modality before erupting into a searing Morse solo. “Wrong Man” slaps the listener in the face straight out of the gate with a strutting riff that can’t miss, as Glover and Paice exploit the pocket for all it’s worth, and Gillan kicks against the pricks in the voice of a character whose greatest crime seems to be having been in the wrong place at the wrong time. Both of these – like their siblings on “Rapture,” elegant and refined rockers steeped in blues and chomping at the bit, with names like “Back To Back,” “Girls Like That” and the hit single in waiting “Don’t Let Go” – are brilliant Purple tunes, estuaries from a river that never seems to run too dry. Ah, but the surprises… they’re many and varied here, and they elevate “Rapture” toward the rapturous upper echelons of the Purple&nbsp;canon.</p>
<p>“Before Time Began” takes the form of a threatening march, an abscess dying to burst. Paice offers a dark subterranean shuffle, as the band lays down a series of melancholic chords, and Gillan, in a voice drenched in pathos, bemoans a world in which “Every day of my life I discover/Someone murdering my sisters and brothers/In the name of some god or another.” No mere political polemic, this, however; Gillan’s touch is too light, and he’s a master of “leaving things out,” so that his lyric is suggestive, rather than mere vitriol. “All of those bad ideas became the law/And we’ve forgotten what we’re looking for.”&nbsp;Indeed.</p>
<p>And again, the Purple engine room is in full overdrive mode here, as an expansive call-and-response between Morse and Airey - who has made replacing Lord look easy, when we all know it is in fact far from it; Airey has made his mark on Purple, to be sure, by respecting what came before him and having the fortitude and chops to take it all somewhere new and exciting - leaves one feeling breathless and vulnerable. This is “progressive rock” in the most positive sense of that much-maligned&nbsp;term.</p>
<p>The centerpiece of “Rapture” also happens to be one of the finest tunes in the band’s history – no small claim, that. “Clearly Quite Absurd” is clearly quite sublime; a piece with a melody that simply hurts to listen to, in the way that first love is painful because it’s ephemeral and fleeting. Thankfully, your disc player has a “repeat” button, so this is a love that will never abandon&nbsp;you.</p>
<p>Gillan sings of escaping the snares of the mundane and commonplace, the accepted reality which deadens us to the potential one above and beyond it. Again, harmony vocals – Beatle-esque ones, in this instance – help set the mood, and an ascending chord progression led by Morse spreads its arms heavenward, eventually settling into a circular pattern that becomes one of the more moving codas not just in Purple history, but, yep, in the history of heavy rock&nbsp;itself.</p>
<p>This is Deep Purple, 2005 version. Intense, fearless, full of fire, and wit, and passion. Marked by serious virtuosity, but never a slave to it. Still finding new meaning in a medium they all but single-handedly created. Grab ahold of this, and don’t let&nbsp;go.</p>
<p>- August, 2005<br />
Buffalo,&nbsp;NY</p></blockquote>
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		<title>Deep Purple Vocalist Ian Gillan Preps First Solo Album In 12 Years</title>
		<link>http://bestofclassicrock.com/deep-purple-vocalist-ian-gillan-preps-first-solo-album-in-12-years/</link>
		<comments>http://bestofclassicrock.com/deep-purple-vocalist-ian-gillan-preps-first-solo-album-in-12-years/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 19 Mar 2009 03:21:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[random news]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[`One Eye To Morocco` will be legendary Deep Purple vocalist Ian Gillan’s first solo album of new material in over a decade.    Gillan’s last album was 'Dreamcatcher' from 1997, but in 2006 he released a re-recorded collection of songs from each of his musical eras called ‘Gillan’s Inn’.'One Eye To Morocco' was written during gaps in the most recent Deep Purple world tour.The title is a reference]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_9qGE3OfMNkQ/SbiAge5ugAI/AAAAAAAABII/rwAiZRUzXUo/s1600-h/Ian+gillan.jpg"><img  src="http://bestofclassicrock.com/wp-content/uploads/2.bp.blogspot.com/_9qGE3OfMNkQ/SbiAge5ugAI/AAAAAAAABII/rwAiZRUzXUo/s200/Ian+gillan.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5312137056022855682" border="0" /></a>`One Eye To Morocco` will be legendary Deep Purple vocalist Ian Gillan’s first solo album of new material in over a decade.
<p>Gillan’s last album was &#8216;Dreamcatcher&#8217; from 1997, but in 2006 he released a re-recorded collection of songs from each of his musical eras called ‘Gillan’s&nbsp;Inn’.</p>
<p>&#8216;One Eye To Morocco&#8217; was written during gaps in the most recent Deep Purple world&nbsp;tour.</p>
<p>The title is a reference to being cross-eyed. The full expression is “to have one eye to Morocco and another to&nbsp;Caucasus”.</p>
<p>The album will be released on March&nbsp;23rd.</p>
<p>Deep Purple will return to active duty in November.
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		<title>Deep Purple Made In Japan Film Unearthed</title>
		<link>http://bestofclassicrock.com/deep-purple-made-in-japan-film-unearthed/</link>
		<comments>http://bestofclassicrock.com/deep-purple-made-in-japan-film-unearthed/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 14 Mar 2009 00:08:00 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[According to Deep Purple fan-site The Highway Star, Deep Purple's Made In Japan concerts were filmed. At least in part. Seven reels of silent 8mm footage filmed at Deep Purple’s famous August 1972 Japanese concerts have been found. Rumors of such film have persisted for years, and now their existence has been verified.Audio recordings of these three concerts formed the basis of the legendary Made In Japan album released in]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_9qGE3OfMNkQ/Sbr4fuUhpZI/AAAAAAAABIw/rYkdq2fBqCk/s1600-h/mij.jpg"><img  src="http://bestofclassicrock.com/wp-content/uploads/res1.blogblog.com/_9qGE3OfMNkQ/Sbr4fuUhpZI/AAAAAAAABIw/rYkdq2fBqCk/s200/mij.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5312831934330676626" border="0" /></a></p>
<p>According to Deep Purple fan-site The Highway Star, Deep Purple&#8217;s Made In Japan concerts were filmed. At least in part. Seven reels of silent 8mm footage filmed at Deep Purple’s famous August 1972 Japanese concerts have been found. Rumors of such film have persisted for years, and now their existence has been&nbsp;verified.</p>
<p>Audio recordings of these three concerts formed the basis of the legendary Made In Japan album released in 1973 and the Live In Japan 3CD released in&nbsp;1993.</p>
<p>Read more of the The Highway Star report&nbsp;<a href="http://www.thehighwaystar.com/news/2009/03/13/made-in-japan-video-unearthed/">here</a>.</p>
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