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View Full Version : A Band Sound that Typified the Late 60's and Early 70's



Hal-9000
05-19-2014, 05:46 PM
Deep Purple

This band had a few incarnations. The only line up for me was Ian Gillian singing and Ritchie Blackmore on guitar. Sometimes overlooked because of big names like Hendrix and Zeppelin, these guys had the ability to fill the room with sound, at a time when the 5 guys used simple instruments/amps and recording equipment.


Check out this live version of Child In Time. People talk about Plant and Daltrey's wailing voices, Gillian could throw it out there too.


If you don't want to hear the whole song go to 1:55 and listen to about 3:15 ( audience reaction is great at 2:55 :lol:....:| )


They go into a fast improv section and talk about timing...check out 5:37...zombie audience still sitting there :|




http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OorZcOzNcgE

Hal-9000
05-19-2014, 05:47 PM
Deep Purple had a number of well known hits...Smoke on the Water, Space Truckin, Highway Star...

and this boppy lil ditty (this is the classic howlin wolf version released on 45's)



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W1PNvopXjbg

Hal-9000
05-19-2014, 05:59 PM
and of course my favorite song by the group, Lazy..


People talk about The Doors and Ray Manzarek's keyboard playing...Jon Lord used a Hammond and IMO, he was one of the greats too




http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=STFWapwyqMo

Muddy
05-19-2014, 06:03 PM
You were like 15 years old in the 60's weren't you?

Hal-9000
05-19-2014, 06:08 PM
in 1969 I was 3 or 4 depending on what time of year it was...



I had only dropped acid twice up until that point you bastid, I wasn't THAT old :lol:

Hal-9000
05-19-2014, 06:21 PM
(author's note)

I like a lot of contemporary music, I'm not stuck in the past constantly. I do hate the manufactured music of today where 'artists' compile a bunch of pre-existing sounds on a computer and call it a song. Manufactured music features auto vocal tuning, drum tracks from a program, licks and riffs and melodies stolen from other musicians. That's not a song, that's a computer dissection and reassembly of music created by someone else or a mixing board.

I miss the days where 4 or 5 guys stood there creating music on the spot. No backing tracks or lip syncing the difficult parts, just hard playing each and every night.


That, to me...is music.

Muddy
05-19-2014, 06:48 PM
(author's note)

I like a lot of contemporary music,


http://i.imgur.com/U5xZRnA.jpg

FBD
05-19-2014, 06:57 PM
deep purple fucking rules. one of my favorite bands.

redred
05-19-2014, 07:11 PM
man i can't even remember the 60's:bong:

Noilly Pratt
05-20-2014, 05:13 AM
Well, look at my signature - I have to agree with you Hal.

And Deep Purple really paved the way for the heavier bands that followed in the 70s.

I often would think I was born too late, being born in the mid 60s. Now, I actually think it was just right. Lots of good stuff then, and lots now - you just have to go out of your way to find it. And what most Classic Rock stations play...Ok, the tunes are good, but they seem to play the same 200 or so tunes over and over.

Hal-9000
05-20-2014, 05:49 AM
The audience in that first video still kills me...night of the living Stepford kids :lol:




By way of contrast check out the first minutes of this performance. They have those white-assed 70's stoners up and dancing in the audience :pewpew:



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KZ-lSTlUnfA

Goofy
05-20-2014, 05:39 PM
Not a huge DP fan but they were certainly a quality band........ Smoke On The Water is possibly the most recognizable guitar riff of all time :thumbsup: Oh, and you never even mentioned Black Knight :nono: :slap:

Goofy
05-20-2014, 05:42 PM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fE3ra4RZBtU

Gillan and Richie :tup:

Goofy
05-20-2014, 05:47 PM
Great time period for UK music tbh, lot of cracking bands started up in the late 60s/early 70s, Led Zep, Thin Lizzy, The Stones, The Who........ then you had the likes of Pink Floyd and ELO popping up too!

Hal-9000
05-20-2014, 06:24 PM
Not a huge DP fan but they were certainly a quality band........ Smoke On The Water is possibly the most recognizable guitar riff of all time :thumbsup: Oh, and you never even mentioned Black Knight :nono: :slap:


boys at the bath house say different :lol:

redred
05-20-2014, 10:21 PM
my dad loved a bit of deep purple and the Quo , was often parked under a jukebox in a pub as a baby in the early 80's and they wondered way i became slight of hearing :lol:

classic rock has a place in my collection

thebastardnextdoor
07-10-2015, 12:49 PM
Slade... Noddy Holder doing his best to fuck my young brain up...Mama We're All Crazy Now....Look Wot You Dun...Coz I Luv You...they had heaps of great songs...fuck yes...got into the Stones and Led Zep big time later..Quo and Pink Floyd to come...