This was a live recording for a TV program in the UK. The audience were asked to sit quiet and still during the performance so they didn’t affect the recording. Also, they would have been a pretty generic audience that had applied to be on that TV show. By their dress and hair styles, they were certainly not Deep Purple fans, probably more likely pop music fans… a bit like a Justin Timberlake audience reacting to Metallica!
I've read that but I still get the vision of the band scene from Back To The Future where Marty/Fox completely loses the crowd during his Johnny Be Good solo and says "You may not be ready yet, but your kids are gonna love it."
@@SlayWithBrandy This is 1970. Deep Purple are in their twenties. However the woman and her friend with the kids at the front(considering the boy has similar features to the brunette) are clearly in their thirties for two reasons. She and her friend are wearing a beehive hairstyle that was popular with young women during the early to mid sixties by the seventies that fashion was dropped by the people the same age as deep purple. So its generational. The second reason is when they introduced chart music to TV for young teens they were allowed to dance with the song or the artist. So someone from her generation being told to sit down and be quiet, then listen to a 7 to 10 minute song talking gibberish and changing notes every three minutes from a group of guys who look unkempt and have long hair(which was considered to be effeminate for men to have at the time)compared to the well groomed all in suits bands with 2 minute pop jingles of the early sixties wouldn't be her idea of a good time. And i seen enough of these videos in the seventies from rock music to the jackson 5 to know the audience just didnt know what to make of it and simply just stood there not knowing what to do and looking gobsmacked. So its more than just being told to stand still by the producers.
@@jonasfermefors Your´s is the proper approach. Yes, they did tell them to keep quiet due to filming, but there´s another reason: about 1969 four bands emerged who laid ground for heavy rock, Black Sabbath, Deep Purple, Uriah Heep and Led Zeppelin. NOBODY was used to this hearing-experience. At that point of music-history, prog-rock and heavy rock had to be "learned" by the ears.
The greatest 5 musicians ever to play together on stage. Usually bands had to deal with one ego in band. Deep Purple Mark ll had 5 egos. They all were that damn good. Child In Time may be the greatest hard rock song along with Highway Star.
@@StanEngland Is hard to rank because you are right. In those days there were so many great musicians, singers and Band's. But Deep Purple was heads above most live.
When I listened to all three groups I liked them but after I saw them live Deep Purple I had to see a second time. Most people preferred Led Zeppelin but I was such a fan of Ian Gillan's voice none compared to him. The other members of the band were masters of their craft and they always played better live than any other group. @@lyndoncmp5751
@@lyndoncmp5751no. Pink floyd is prog rock, nothing like zeppelin. The unholy trinity is considered the three biggest pioneers to heavy metal with sabbath inventing it.
I was fortunate to see this same line up live and I can assure you, the Karens took that night off 😂. You're so right, that era brought us some of the most amazing music on a level I'm afraid will never be matched. ❤❤
The audience were told to sit still and not everyone in there will have been a Deep Purple fan . . . . their live concerts were always wild and very loud.
You must have good listeners. They gave you good requests. This exact band was my first concert ever. I was spoiled from the beginning. By exact I mean the exact same members. Ian Gillian had the chops and Richie Blackmore. The entire band were unbelievably talented, as you just saw. Thatvwas live without any studio tricks. Also the audience were demanded to stay silent until the recordings were over. Can you imagine how a bunch of screaming and shouting would have ruined perfection.
I love the early 70's bands and their fearless ability to go to the places no one had been before. Not cookie cutter in any way. These bands are still part of all the bands that are worth listening to this day. Thank you Brandy for a great reaction .😎
Great reaction! I have seen Deep Purple 7 times in my life. The last time was on the Perfect Strangers tour, and it was as good as the first time I saw them. Every member of the band is a master of their instrument.
Deep Purple were the most unique band, they inspired the NWOBHM movement, more than any other band. Live they were next level, compared to the contemporary bands of that day. Thank you for your review, what an awesome ride, 😅!
The audience had no idea that they had just witnessed on of the Greatest live performances in history by what would become one of the most legendary groups
Welcome to my world. When people talk about Deep Purple, the first thing they think of its Smoke on the Water, which is cool But, when you hear Child in Time, it just blows you away to a whole new level. Your reaction was so real, You are right about the era of the music. I always look at the British Invation (1964 to pre disco, call it 1976) as being the greatest era of rock. That i my opinion which is based upon my emotions, intensity, yes sound, LOL and the goose pimples I get when I hear true classics. thank you for the great video.
Led Zeppelin live Danmark Radio 1969, Royal Albert Hall 1970,How The West Was Won 1972, BBC Sessions etc are on another level. There was a reason Zeppelin were the biggest live attraction of the 1970s.
This is from 35 years before old TH-cam times, and the squareness is because it was recorded in the standard aspect ratio for broadcast television at the time
I was Stationed in Germany in the Mid 70's and went to a lot of Concerts and that's the way the European Concert goers were, They would Sit on their Hands and Show no Emotions ! The Americans were the only ones Rocking Out
What you most likely heard when young was their album called Machine Head, as a handful of the songs on that album got FM radio play and became part of the culture.
Nice reaction. My first time here. The Child in Time reaction brought me in as this song always amazed first time listeners. The 70s is my era and I love when I see young people appreciate music from my youth. This was my kind of music, Deep Purple, Led Zeppelin, UFO, Black Sabbath, Robin Trower etc. Nowadays I am little more into Blues Rock (Ally Venable, Laura Cox, When Rivers Meet, Marcus King, Larkin Poe, Tyler Bryant and the Shakedown etc.) and they still often still have the guitar solos. I also like The Warning, three hard rock sisters from Mexico and Dea Matrona classic rock ladies from Northern Ireland as well as bands like Dirty Honey, Rival Sons and The Answer. I was always on the edge of metal, having seen Judas Priest, Iron Maiden and Dio era Sabbath, but was really more into hard rock. I will check out your other videos to see if you do any of my other favorites,
Hey Brandy. The thing about 1970 was that heavy metal was still very counter culture for the bubblegum teeny bop crowd and that's what you're seeing with the audience who simply weren't sure how to react to a progressive band like DP.
Another memorable live performance of that era is Janis Joplin singing "Summertime" (1969 live version). She converts this George Gershwin written lullaby into something never seen before.
This is a Live-Performance in 1970. The Vietnam War was still going on and the song is a reaction to this war. The audience was told to be calm during the performance because of the war. If you look at the performance 1972 Live in Japan you will perhaps agree, that that concert is even better. Sorry for my awful English
1970 , i was 3 years old and my real start as a Metalhead was 1980 , Deep Purple was a big Part - long hair ? 2023 I got still my long hair with over 55 years
You are spot on about the music of that era. Particularly rock from the late '60's to the mid '70's. There's just something about the way the artists then would just PLAY, seemingly without constraints or record label restrictions and they allowed their ability to shine with musicianship to the forefront. From that era, Deep Purple, Led Zeppelin, The Who were - particularly live - the perfection embodiment of that mindset. Jimi Hendrix was really the one who started that type of playing which was not unlike the greatest jazz players would do: just f**king play. Check out Hendrix doing "Machine Gun" from his 1970 BAND OF GYPSYS album, or Led Zeppelin's "In My Time Of Dying" from 1975, or The Who's unique blend of part metal, part punk on "Young Man Blues" from 1970.
"Deep Purple" was the first metal band that I had access to. They didn't hit as big or maybe as deep in the U.S. as they did in the U.K. But, like a lot of little kids the "Smoke on the Water" 45 made it into my hands after my older Bro had tattooed it into his brain. Everybody in the band was so good, but also seem pretty humble because they could all go ham all day everyday, but they don't. I love Ritchie Blackmore's guitar work, it's so musical (not just shredding). I look at this video now, and have to ask myself. How are Ian Paice and Joey Ramone related, because holy crap does IP look like JR here.
How about some more Deep Purple , but the next one is , Strange Kind Of Woman , live from 1972 !! Yes , it is black and white , but well worth watching ! You will like it !!
Gotta remember the period. They weren't allowed to go crazy on TV. I first saw Deep Purple in 1973 in Tampa. I was 13. Trust me we were tripping balls and acting up. Try the song Lazy. The studio version is better than the Made in Japan version is pretty good.
Tremendous performance by one of the best bands of that era, you are right, the 70s were amazing, I am 68 and was 9 when the Beatles debuted on Ed Sullivan, it literally changed my life and made me a rock fan forever. For me, the golden era of rock and music in general was from 1964 (Beatles) to 1994 (end of Grunge era) there are more songs by all kinds of artists that you term great in that 30 year span than what has happened since. I can listen to a little modern country and the few contemporary rock bands out right now like Halestorm but music in the 21st century generally sucks. You can't go wrong listening to classic rock, there are more brilliant songs to react to than you will ever have time for, which is a good thing, endless great music to discover. Try something other reactors are just discovering, the great classic rock of UFO, do Rock Bottom, both the studio original and the live performance on Strangers in the Night Live will amaze you, they just had one of the best sounds of the 70s and influenced all the 80s hair bands and metal heads as well, great band with the legendary Michael Schenker on guitar. Enjoy! 🎵🎸🎤🎹🎶
It WAS a "sick guitar solo"! AND a sick everything ELSE solo, including vocal! Deep Purple, a near-miraculous ensemble of stellar musical talent, much like Led Zeppelin. The audiences in "those days" were told during TV filmings to sit down and shut up, lest their shouts get picked up on mics and stay forever, as they didn'thave great editing tech back then, apparently.
Nice review. I was a mere ten years too young for DP so it’s great to see someone thirty more years younger enjoy it as much as I did. Guitarist is better on studio version but overall they were a live band.
As you probably realized After People commented on this the video is a lot older than 13 years old! These musicians are my age and I'm mid-70s and this from a live performance is not just a video!
No exploration of 60s and early 70s music is complete without The Doors. My fav is "The End" (album version). Another of their classic songs is "Break On Through". If you listen to that, you MUST also search for and listen to a live cover version by Midnite Trippers. They convert the Doors' 2 1/2 minute classic into an 8-minute live masterpiece.
😂 Don't rant on her (*this Karen*) she could've been your grandma at her spiritual opening to new fresh unheard before music in 1970... This live performance w/ Ian's vocal delivery is top top top notch. Eternity.
There was a Band from Canada, early 80's named "Saga" I think you'll like, one album is "Worlds Apart (1981)" and the song is "On the Loose", to start off with. Their songs (all albums) are very Instrument heavy.
Greetings from Scotland Brandy. Well, if you liked that, check out later Deep Purple featuring the mighty Glen Hughes (same wild voice) singing Burn at the California Jam 1974. You will not be disappointed. Love the channel!
Have you tried RUSH! Tom Sawyer or Xanadu Live and Supertramp songs School, Goodbye Stranger or Logical song. Both bands are iconic 70s into 80's acts. Deep catalogues. Some of the best musicianship ever
Now try Post Toastee, Homeward Strut and Wild Dogs by Tommy Bolin . Ritchie Blackmore’s replacement at Deep Purple. You might enjoy Flying Fingers as well.
Less well-known but just as powerful is The Journey, by Mott the Hoople, contemporaries of Deep Purple. No live videos, sadly, but the album version has peaks and troughs, and lots of fire.
They did tell them to keep quiet due to filming, but there´s another reason: about 1969 four bands emerged who laid ground for heavy rock, Black Sabbath, Deep Purple, Uriah Heep and Led Zeppelin. NOBODY was used to this hearing-experience. At that point of music-history, prog-rock and heavy rock had to be "learned" by brain and ears.
The greatest era of rock music 60s70 and the early 80s listen to a group called Family the track titled The Weavers answer Roger Chapman has the most memorable voice. For lyrics with meaning listen to the gunners dream or when the tigers broke free by Pink Floyd
The audience were told to keep quiet durng the performance as the recording equipment could'nt handle it as you can hear when Ian Paice hits the tom just before he starts to sing
If u really, really want to feel the late 60's early 70's do the band FREE song Mr. Big. U gotta watch the vibe so do the live version. PR fronted Free & after they broke up PR formed & fronted Bad Company. These 2 bands Greatly influenced the bands of the 80's up till this day. The video is jaw dropping!!!!
Brilliant hard rock as ROCK should be. Ian Gillan is even better years later doing When A Blind Man Cries live..... but not with Deep Purple. Ritchie didn’t like the vocal song . lol Another from 1970 / 71 you will like is Chicago live at Tanglewood, doing 25 or 6 to 4. One of the best guitar solos ever. Also Echoes live at Pompeii.... a very young Pink Floyd performing to an empty Roman Ampitheatre in 1971.
The range of his voice.... - but more famous is that in life-action the singer got out by the guitar solos and allowed some chicks to pleasure him verbally :) Sometimes he got some sandwich to eat. These guys were LEGENDS and they deserved it. Great music by great musicians....
If you want to see some sick guitar solos, then you need to watch (or react to) these three videos: 1- Pink Floyd - Comfortably Numb (PULSE Restored & Re-Edited) 2- Pink Floyd - On the Turning Away Remastered 2019 3- Lynyrd Skynyrd - Freebird - 7/2/1977 - Oakland Coliseum Stadium (Official) I guarantee there won't be any Karens among those spectators.
They were told to be very quiet - so they did NOT mess up the recording ! That's the story - anyway ! That must have been "torture" to a rock lover ! P.S. Oh...hey Mike 😉🤑
Is there any band from like after the 80s (i already dont like most of the sound of the 80s) that can compare with the 65 to 75 era? I cant think of any.. I am 29 now and thankfully got 'brainwashed'/raised right, by my father..❤
This was a live recording for a TV program in the UK. The audience were asked to sit quiet and still during the performance so they didn’t affect the recording. Also, they would have been a pretty generic audience that had applied to be on that TV show. By their dress and hair styles, they were certainly not Deep Purple fans, probably more likely pop music fans… a bit like a Justin Timberlake audience reacting to Metallica!
Hahah true true that makes sense. I was just like HOW IS SHE SO UNINTERESTED LOOKING WHAT THE HECK hahah
I've read that but I still get the vision of the band scene from Back To The Future where Marty/Fox completely loses the crowd during his Johnny Be Good solo and says "You may not be ready yet, but your kids are gonna love it."
@@SlayWithBrandy Deep Purple was the first mega band that had their own jetliner
@@SlayWithBrandy This is 1970. Deep Purple are in their twenties. However the woman and her friend with the kids at the front(considering the boy has similar features to the brunette) are clearly in their thirties for two reasons. She and her friend are wearing a beehive hairstyle that was popular with young women during the early to mid sixties by the seventies that fashion was dropped by the people the same age as deep purple. So its generational. The second reason is when they introduced chart music to TV for young teens they were allowed to dance with the song or the artist. So someone from her generation being told to sit down and be quiet, then listen to a 7 to 10 minute song talking gibberish and changing notes every three minutes from a group of guys who look unkempt and have long hair(which was considered to be effeminate for men to have at the time)compared to the well groomed all in suits bands with 2 minute pop jingles of the early sixties wouldn't be her idea of a good time. And i seen enough of these videos in the seventies from rock music to the jackson 5 to know the audience just didnt know what to make of it and simply just stood there not knowing what to do and looking gobsmacked. So its more than just being told to stand still by the producers.
@@jonasfermefors Your´s is the proper approach. Yes, they did tell them to keep quiet due to filming, but there´s another reason: about 1969 four bands emerged who laid ground for heavy rock, Black Sabbath, Deep Purple, Uriah Heep and Led Zeppelin. NOBODY was used to this hearing-experience. At that point of music-history, prog-rock and heavy rock had to be "learned" by the ears.
The greatest 5 musicians ever to play together on stage. Usually bands had to deal with one ego in band. Deep Purple Mark ll had 5 egos. They all were that damn good. Child In Time may be the greatest hard rock song along with Highway Star.
A least a dozen 'greatest bands ever' from that era. I don't even try to rank them.
@@StanEngland Is hard to rank because you are right. In those days there were so many great musicians, singers and Band's. But Deep Purple was heads above most live.
The British Unholy Trinity Led Zeppelin Black Sabbath and Deep Purple...The LEGENDS
AND, Uriah Heep 👍
Nah, Zeppelins peers were Pink Floyd, Stones, Who.
When I listened to all three groups I liked them but after I saw them live Deep Purple I had to see a second time. Most people preferred Led Zeppelin but I was such a fan of Ian Gillan's voice none compared to him. The other members of the band were masters of their craft and they always played better live than any other group.
@@lyndoncmp5751
@@lyndoncmp5751no. Pink floyd is prog rock, nothing like zeppelin. The unholy trinity is considered the three biggest pioneers to heavy metal with sabbath inventing it.
@@ronnie6613no...
Happy to say that me and wifey grew up listen to these songs and my kids lucky for them grew up listen to it all via us 🤗😎🇧🇻
I was fortunate to see this same line up live and I can assure you, the Karens took that night off 😂. You're so right, that era brought us some of the most amazing music on a level I'm afraid will never be matched. ❤❤
The audience were told to sit still and not everyone in there will have been a Deep Purple fan . . . . their live concerts were always wild and very loud.
Another one of the greats from Deep Purple "Knocking at Your Back Door".
Deep Purple was the first mega band that had their own jetliner
The Deep Purple Starship.
You must have good listeners. They gave you good requests. This exact band was my first concert ever. I was spoiled from the beginning. By exact I mean the exact same members. Ian Gillian had the chops and Richie Blackmore. The entire band were unbelievably talented, as you just saw. Thatvwas live without any studio tricks. Also the audience were demanded to stay silent until the recordings were over. Can you imagine how a bunch of screaming and shouting would have ruined perfection.
My community is the best!
I love the early 70's bands and their fearless ability to go to the places no one had been before. Not cookie cutter in any way. These bands are still part of all the bands that are worth listening to this day. Thank you Brandy for a great reaction .😎
Great reaction! I have seen Deep Purple 7 times in my life. The last time was on the Perfect Strangers tour, and it was as good as the first time I saw them. Every member of the band is a master of their instrument.
That’s incredible!
Deep Purple were the most unique band, they inspired the NWOBHM movement, more than any other band. Live they were next level, compared to the contemporary bands of that day. Thank you for your review, what an awesome ride, 😅!
The audience had no idea that they had just witnessed on of the Greatest live performances in history by what would become one of the most legendary groups
Welcome to my world. When people talk about Deep Purple, the first thing they think of its Smoke on the Water, which is cool But, when you hear Child in Time, it just blows you away to a whole new level. Your reaction was so real, You are right about the era of the music. I always look at the British Invation (1964 to pre disco, call it 1976) as being the greatest era of rock. That i my opinion which is based upon my emotions, intensity, yes sound, LOL and the goose pimples I get when I hear true classics. thank you for the great video.
Ooh God! What a band and awesome song!
INDEED
An amazing song, from the year before I was born, that I didn't discover until TH-cam reactors did.
Ritchie Blackmore top 3 guitarist in the world in his day.
Rock n Roll at it's best 🤘🎸🎵
Excellent reaction they have so many good songs .
Deep Purple were the greatest live band of their era.
Check out any track off the Made in Japan live album.
will do!
@@SlayWithBrandy you won't regret it
Led Zeppelin live Danmark Radio 1969, Royal Albert Hall 1970,How The West Was Won 1972, BBC Sessions etc are on another level.
There was a reason Zeppelin were the biggest live attraction of the 1970s.
and live in Stockholm 1970 too!! :)
British bands are elite
This is from 35 years before old TH-cam times, and the squareness is because it was recorded in the standard aspect ratio for broadcast television at the time
I was Stationed in Germany in the Mid 70's and went to a lot of Concerts and that's the way the European Concert goers were, They would Sit on their Hands and Show no Emotions ! The Americans were the only ones Rocking Out
Oh wow i had no idea!
What you most likely heard when young was their album called Machine Head, as a handful of the songs on that album got FM radio play and became part of the culture.
Nice reaction. My first time here. The Child in Time reaction brought me in as this song always amazed first time listeners. The 70s is my era and I love when I see young people appreciate music from my youth. This was my kind of music, Deep Purple, Led Zeppelin, UFO, Black Sabbath, Robin Trower etc. Nowadays I am little more into Blues Rock (Ally Venable, Laura Cox, When Rivers Meet, Marcus King, Larkin Poe, Tyler Bryant and the Shakedown etc.) and they still often still have the guitar solos. I also like The Warning, three hard rock sisters from Mexico and Dea Matrona classic rock ladies from Northern Ireland as well as bands like Dirty Honey, Rival Sons and The Answer. I was always on the edge of metal, having seen Judas Priest, Iron Maiden and Dio era Sabbath, but was really more into hard rock. I will check out your other videos to see if you do any of my other favorites,
I will certainly be checking out more!
This is a very good song to play right now giving the fact on what is going on today!..🤔😎👍
Hey Brandy. The thing about 1970 was that heavy metal was still very counter culture for the bubblegum teeny bop crowd and that's what you're seeing with the audience who simply weren't sure how to react to a progressive band like DP.
Another memorable live performance of that era is Janis Joplin singing "Summertime" (1969 live version). She converts this George Gershwin written lullaby into something never seen before.
Excellent reaction
This is a Live-Performance in 1970. The Vietnam War was still going on and the song is a reaction to this war. The audience was told to be calm during the performance because of the war. If you look at the performance 1972 Live in Japan you will perhaps agree, that that concert is even better.
Sorry for my awful English
Black Sabbath,Led Zeppelin,Deep Purple the holy triad of rock music🤘
🤘🤘
Unholy trinity of metal pioneers. Sabbath is much more metal than rock.
Ian Gillan, la llamada "voz de plata" .
Cinco genios reunidos, Deep Purple la mejor banda de todos los tiempos!!
💜💜💜💜💜
Another good one from Deep Purple you should check out is Strange Kind Of Woman , live in 1972 !! You will enjoy it !!
Rock on 🤘 🎸 🎵
1970 , i was 3 years old and my real start as a Metalhead was 1980 , Deep Purple was a big Part - long hair ? 2023 I got still my long hair with over 55 years
The Audience was unaware of what a Masterpiece the were witnessing !🤪
facts!
GRANDI,VISTI E CONOSCIUTI,,ED HO AVUTO L'ONORE DI AVERE ALLA BATTERIA CON LA MIA BAND SIR IAN PAICE,SPETTACOLAREEEE
Deep Purple and Uriah Heep really early metal bands along with Sabbath of course but most people leave DP and UH out.
She should hear Stealing by Uriah Heep, it is a great intro tune and makes the listener an instant fan.
Yeah I agree 100%
You are spot on about the music of that era. Particularly rock from the late '60's to the mid '70's. There's just something about the way the artists then would just PLAY, seemingly without constraints or record label restrictions and they allowed their ability to shine with musicianship to the forefront.
From that era, Deep Purple, Led Zeppelin, The Who were - particularly live - the perfection embodiment of that mindset. Jimi Hendrix was really the one who started that type of playing which was not unlike the greatest jazz players would do: just f**king play. Check out Hendrix doing "Machine Gun" from his 1970 BAND OF GYPSYS album, or Led Zeppelin's "In My Time Of Dying" from 1975, or The Who's unique blend of part metal, part punk on "Young Man Blues" from 1970.
it just hits different ya know?
@SlayWithBrandy I genuinely think it's rock music's equivalent of the renaissance period. What's followed it just ain't the same.
Keep in mind that they are still active today, albeit with a different guitarist and keyboardist, and continue to release very good albums.
Ahh! Take me back! I want to go back!
An instrumental and vocal masterpiece is all I can say.
"Deep Purple" was the first metal band that I had access to. They didn't hit as big or maybe as deep in the U.S. as they did in the U.K. But, like a lot of little kids the "Smoke on the Water" 45 made it into my hands after my older Bro had tattooed it into his brain.
Everybody in the band was so good, but also seem pretty humble because they could all go ham all day everyday, but they don't. I love Ritchie Blackmore's guitar work, it's so musical (not just shredding). I look at this video now, and have to ask myself. How are Ian Paice and Joey Ramone related, because holy crap does IP look like JR here.
They were big in Canada
Yea IAN GILLAN VOICE INCREDIBLE
How about some more Deep Purple , but the next one is , Strange Kind Of Woman , live from 1972 !! Yes , it is black and white , but well worth watching ! You will like it !!
Gotta remember the period. They weren't allowed to go crazy on TV. I first saw Deep Purple in 1973 in Tampa. I was 13. Trust me we were tripping balls and acting up. Try the song Lazy. The studio version is better than the Made in Japan version is pretty good.
It just felt so off ya know?
@@SlayWithBrandyyou should probably react to the studio versions of songs so you don't get distracted by the crowd😂
Tremendous performance by one of the best bands of that era, you are right, the 70s were amazing, I am 68 and was 9 when the Beatles debuted on Ed Sullivan, it literally changed my life and made me a rock fan forever. For me, the golden era of rock and music in general was from 1964 (Beatles) to 1994 (end of Grunge era) there are more songs by all kinds of artists that you term great in that 30 year span than what has happened since. I can listen to a little modern country and the few contemporary rock bands out right now like Halestorm but music in the 21st century generally sucks. You can't go wrong listening to classic rock, there are more brilliant songs to react to than you will ever have time for, which is a good thing, endless great music to discover. Try something other reactors are just discovering, the great classic rock of UFO, do Rock Bottom, both the studio original and the live performance on Strangers in the Night Live will amaze you, they just had one of the best sounds of the 70s and influenced all the 80s hair bands and metal heads as well, great band with the legendary Michael Schenker on guitar. Enjoy! 🎵🎸🎤🎹🎶
Rock and Roll......may it fire you up,like it did me!...if so,I will follow your journey! 🤘🍺✌️
Rock on!
It WAS a "sick guitar solo"! AND a sick everything ELSE solo, including vocal! Deep Purple, a near-miraculous ensemble of stellar musical talent, much like Led Zeppelin. The audiences in "those days" were told during TV filmings to sit down and shut up, lest their shouts get picked up on mics and stay forever, as they didn'thave great editing tech back then, apparently.
Nice review. I was a mere ten years too young for DP so it’s great to see someone thirty more years younger enjoy it as much as I did. Guitarist is better on studio version but overall they were a live band.
Glad you enjoyed it!
As you probably realized After People commented on this the video is a lot older than 13 years old! These musicians are my age and I'm mid-70s and this from a live performance is not just a video!
No exploration of 60s and early 70s music is complete without The Doors. My fav is "The End" (album version).
Another of their classic songs is "Break On Through". If you listen to that, you MUST also search for and listen to a live cover version by Midnite Trippers. They convert the Doors' 2 1/2 minute classic into an 8-minute live masterpiece.
Rock Music at it's best😊I stil experienced this line-up of the band live.
😂 Don't rant on her (*this Karen*) she could've been your grandma at her spiritual opening to new fresh unheard before music in 1970... This live performance w/ Ian's vocal delivery is top top top notch. Eternity.
This song was/is about the cold war.
In Rock was first album I bought with paper route money in 71
There was a Band from Canada, early 80's named "Saga" I think you'll like, one album is "Worlds Apart (1981)" and the song is "On the Loose", to start off with. Their songs (all albums) are very Instrument heavy.
🤘🏼💜🤘🏼
Greetings from Scotland Brandy. Well, if you liked that, check out later Deep Purple featuring the mighty Glen Hughes (same wild voice) singing Burn at the California Jam 1974. You will not be disappointed. Love the channel!
welcome in!
Sorry the first line in the chorus is of course falsetto!
Have you tried RUSH! Tom Sawyer or Xanadu Live and Supertramp songs School, Goodbye Stranger or Logical song. Both bands are iconic 70s into 80's acts. Deep catalogues. Some of the best musicianship ever
The Best version is from there Album Deep Purple "Made in Japan" Live, matter of fact is there best album.
Now try Post Toastee, Homeward Strut and Wild Dogs by Tommy Bolin . Ritchie Blackmore’s replacement at Deep Purple. You might enjoy Flying Fingers as well.
Less well-known but just as powerful is The Journey, by Mott the Hoople, contemporaries of Deep Purple. No live videos, sadly, but the album version has peaks and troughs, and lots of fire.
They did tell them to keep quiet due to filming, but there´s another reason: about 1969 four bands emerged who laid ground for heavy rock, Black Sabbath, Deep Purple, Uriah Heep and Led Zeppelin. NOBODY was used to this hearing-experience. At that point of music-history, prog-rock and heavy rock had to be "learned" by brain and ears.
Try next Pictures of Home, of course Deep Purple.
"Children Of The Grave" by Black Sabbath, really anything from the Ozzy era.✌✌
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If you haven’t, band is Rainbow song “Stargazer” a must listen (live)
ill add it to my list!
The greatest era of rock music 60s70 and the early 80s listen to a group called Family the track titled The Weavers answer Roger Chapman has the most memorable voice. For lyrics with meaning listen to the gunners dream or when the tigers broke free by Pink Floyd
Pink Floyd is chefs kiss!
Just a tip! It's a great song to do on acid!😎👍
Not to mention, this was a British audience in the BBC studio,
The protest song's about the viet nam war produced some of the best music ever heard .
The audience were told to keep quiet durng the performance as the recording equipment could'nt handle it as you can hear when Ian Paice hits the tom just before he starts to sing
You need to react to Deep Purple, LAZY 👍
❤ 👍🎸🎸🎸🎸
One of the greatest guitarists ever R. Blackmore
Check out "Smoke In The Water"!!!!!!!!!
If u really, really want to feel the late 60's early 70's do the band FREE song Mr. Big. U gotta watch the vibe so do the live version. PR fronted Free & after they broke up PR formed & fronted Bad Company. These 2 bands Greatly influenced the bands of the 80's up till this day. The video is jaw dropping!!!!
Yes, Mr Big from Free Live is Dope!
This may sound familiar but our parents didn't like our music. The audience reflects that.
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It was a live recording and the audience were asked to keep quiet
Brilliant hard rock as ROCK should be.
Ian Gillan is even better years later doing When A Blind Man Cries live..... but not with Deep Purple. Ritchie didn’t like the vocal song . lol
Another from 1970 / 71 you will like is Chicago live at Tanglewood, doing 25 or 6 to 4.
One of the best guitar solos ever.
Also Echoes live at Pompeii.... a very young Pink Floyd performing to an empty Roman Ampitheatre in 1971.
Thank you for the suggestions!!
Recorded 4 December 1969
He wrote this song to protest the Vietnam War
He is NOT singing falsetto! This is full tone !
either way its incredible!
Mixed voice
My second album ever 70. Ck out, Burn, Lazy, Highway Star, Smoke on the Water.
My third after Zep I & II. I had to save my stingy pocket money for a month.
When music was real
The range of his voice.... - but more famous is that in life-action the singer got out by the guitar solos and allowed some chicks to pleasure him verbally :) Sometimes he got some sandwich to eat.
These guys were LEGENDS and they deserved it. Great music by great musicians....
The audience wasn't ready for this....
if you were impressed by ritchie blackmores solo and enjoyed the strong vocals....might i suggest stargazer by rainbow.
Sick guitar solo? You should listen to the album "Deep Purple in Rock" original version - it's even better!
People in the audience are civilized.
NO BRANDY, HIS VOICE MAKES THE SONG.
the audience were told to sit quietly because the it was recorded for radio I think and they only wanted the music.
Ahhh gotcha okay.
Slaughter to Prevail used to open for them
If you want to see some sick guitar solos, then you need to watch (or react to) these three videos:
1- Pink Floyd - Comfortably Numb (PULSE Restored & Re-Edited)
2- Pink Floyd - On the Turning Away Remastered 2019
3- Lynyrd Skynyrd - Freebird - 7/2/1977 - Oakland Coliseum Stadium (Official)
I guarantee there won't be any Karens among those spectators.
Thank you for the suggestions!
Pink Floyd - Live at Pompeii 1972 with the band in their prime and David Gilmour piercing your soul. 🎸
As good as it is,most "Child in Time" versions I've heard have a better Blackmore solo than this. Especially the one from "Made in Japan".
They were told to be very quiet - so they did NOT mess up the recording ! That's the story - anyway ! That must have been "torture" to a rock lover !
P.S. Oh...hey Mike 😉🤑
SAME! I dont know if i couldve stayed still lol
Is there any band from like after the 80s (i already dont like most of the sound of the 80s) that can compare with the 65 to 75 era? I cant think of any.. I am 29 now and thankfully got 'brainwashed'/raised right, by my father..❤
It’s just such a different feel! Honestly i only really like 80s metal.
@@SlayWithBrandy you get it :)
@@SlayWithBrandy why does yt notify me after six days about your answer? 🤦♂️