Together with Led Zeppelin and Black Sabbath was Deep Purple the unholy trinity of rock music in the 70´s. And if you want to hear more of Ian Gillian. Listen to when he sings the original version of the song, Gethsemane. From the musical Jesus Christ superstar. Or you could listen to him sing, When a blind man cries.
Me too, my brothers. Were a bunch of old bastards. But man, they are the yardstick that all other bands were measured by in live performance and in provisation on the spot. No one could touch them live. And i've seen them all including led zeppelin. Purple always stood out the best of the best live. Rock on 🤘
The band in the video was young they were all in their early 20's thy are now in their mid to late 70's and unfortunately the keyboard player Jon Lord is no longer with us RIP Jon
… Rock music is explained like this: There is a lead guitar, an organ, a bass, a singer, a drummer... and there is DEEP PURPLE!! … There is nothing more to say!! 🎸🎹🥁🎤 Thank you
Great reaction, young lady. I really love how closely you listened, and appreciated the music, vocals and lyrics. Keep up the good work, and do more Deep Purple... they are all top notch musicians.
Good to see a sincere, honest reaction from the heart from someone who clearly appreciates a great musical performance. Your comments were insightful and spot on.
@@MrsPenPal Well keep up the good work. What I especially liked, is that you didn't just analyze it to death from a totally technical perspective, dissecting the song like a dead frog on a laboratory table, as so many reactors tend to do... you looked deep into the living heart of the music and spoke about the feeling of it, which is what really matters. Don't ever change that. 😺,
Great reaction. You understood the dynamics in the group, and those dynamics made a live performance by the band in this lineup something very special indeed. They basically jammed their way through the set each night, and no two nights would ever be the same, even if the set list was!
Hey Ms B. Good catch on the military cadence. These guys were all beasts at what they did. I can't believe you haven't heard Deep Purple before! They've got some great stuff. But yeah his vocal performance on this is incredible and it's really not in a very good setup and it sounds like the monitors weren't really there for him or something on what looks to be a television soundstage with a live audience. And yet it still just takes your breath away. Highway Star, Lazy, Space Truckin', Hush, so much great stuff.
This is one of the few hard rock groups I enjoyed in the 60's-70's. "Smoke On The Water" is their most popular song. Everyone has heard that famous riff. Some of my favorites are their covers of Joe South's "Hush" & Neil Diamond's "Kentucky Woman". Also like "Woman From Tokyo", "Highway Star", "Burn", "Lazy", "Fireball", "Speed King", "Space Truckin'" etc.
Thank you for your great comments about one of my prefered if not no1 bands of all time, certainly in hard rock, note. I am 64 so when this played I was very young but still had an early birth in top hard rock music, in a time where all musicians where great
Wished I arrived at the party a little earlier for this song, and for your reaction to it (like when you started a few hours ago). I first heard Child in Time a few months ago, and it instantly became my favorite song. The vocals, instrumentation, lyrics, performance were amazing and addictive. I can't get enough of this song. For the last month, I was hoping you react to it because I had a feeling you would love the song, and have some interesting things to say about it. I was very impressed with what you picked up from a one time listen. It never occurred to me that when the tempo got fast it was a military sequence, but it definitely makes sense. I thought it was to signify the intensity, horror, and fear of war. The song came out during the Vietnam War, and is considered an anti war song. I am a Led Zeppelin fan, and I would say that Deep Purple plays with the same great musicianship and intensity. However I like the way LZ moves around on stage. Anyway I loved your reaction, and thanks for making my evening a little brighter.
I have seen them both live and Deep Purple is the best live band wit h Ian Gillan singing it couldn't be better, the band itself is amazing they are all top musicians I loved them from the start I found that Led Zeppelin is better in the studio not so great live. Deep Purple has been my favorite since I saw them in 1972 and I still listen to them today
🤩👌💥💯🎼 No need to type if I am still here for the fact that hardly ever skip a reaction to this awesomeness of music nor Ms.Penmate(of the month 😹💥😻) if coming on sight in this Utuub universe... 🤘😎 🇫🇮 💙
Great reaction ! In the 70's musicians actually had to be able to do it! Not like today's groups where you have Auto Tune Beat Detective and digital processing. The bands when I saw them live could actually play the songs live as good or better than the studio version. Glad to see that this music lives on by people like you keeping it alive. *cheers*
Now listen to it properly: take the album version, headphones, no interruptions for the whole 10 minutes, eyes closed all the time (or sit in a dark room) - a very intense experience of an overwhelming piece of masterclass music.
@@beawsbiz It's the same case with "Stairway to Heaven" - most popular on TH-cam is the live version with "Do you remember laughter?" and some other blunders (and no, it's not because of the imperfections that it's so popular, but because of the myth), while the album version is so much more compelling. Wouldn't you agree?
@@arturnienartowicz7213 YES, Absolutely. A hate to say this but people either don’t listen or cease to be objective. The 70’s live TV version has Ritchie playing the most obvious, careless mistake on guitar because he wasn’t paying attention. I have NEVER heard any reviewer remark on this, yet it is so obvious. I appreciate that a lot of Deep Purple’s live renditions are pushing the creative boundaries. Unfortunately there does not appear to be any video footage of them to enjoy or remark on.
@@beawsbiz I've seen them live 4 times (3 times with Gilmour, once with Joe Lynn Turner) - and I wish at least two of these shows where properly recorded. One of them included a twelve-minute solo from Paice, and it still is probably the best drum solo I've heard live.
@@arturnienartowicz7213 Classic times. I Saw them when Who do we Think We Are was out. Disappointed then that they didn’t do Child in Time. Also once with the Mk 3 line up and finally with Steve Morse and Jon Lord. Great memories.
the history of hard rock, Deep Purple, I have a Deep Purple tribute band, and I had the honor and pleasure of having Ian Paice on drums, I sing Deep Purple.
if you want and like it, you can find me and the band (never before) on you tube by writing you keep on moving jail break, a rock club in Rome. I'm not Gillan.Ciaoooo
I just saw him a couple nights ago still singing with Deep Purple at age 79. Of course he can’t get that high anymore (A5) but still screamed and he sounded great.
I saw Deep Purple back in the day and it is probably the most jamming concert I've ever seen... It was ridiculous how much they jammed... That show was exhausting... I also saw the rare one tour where Ian sang for Black Sabbath and it was so great... If you want to hear Ian go absolutely crazy listen to Disturbing the Priest by Black Sabbath... It sounds like it might be evil but it's actually about them renting a castle to record an album in and it was to close to a church and the priest would keep coming by and telling them to keep the noise down...
"Child in Time" is a song by English rock band Deep Purple, taken from their fourth studio album, Deep Purple in Rock, released in 1970. The track is loosely inspired by the Cold War; Although it resonated with the Vietnam war Americans were subjected to.
Love your reaction and comments. Ian Gillan was the first star, in the original "Jesus Christ Super Star" !! You are right Ian had to tell his band mates in 1972 (after the Live in Japan, 1972 album) that he could not sing this song live anymore, to help save his voice. He still sing it today but in a much more subduded way. Keep up the good work !!
Huge fan of the band, and just saw them last week end in Nancy (France). Gillian, main singer is 77 years old now, but they still give the magic in every note... Sometimes we can understand how these phenomenal bands from the 70's are still there 50 years later. Talent... Time was different of course, it's not like now where everyone can record at home a high quality sounding album. Just of few bands were produced. But @MrsPenPal, if I can give you a few more songs to listen, check Lazy, Black Night, Highway Star and of course their most famous song Smoke on the Water. It was not just a singer, musicians in this band were all amazing artists. Greetings and hugs from France !
Of course I made it to the end Blessing... You are yourself a reaction performer! This WAS an anti-war song, and with the world the way it is, we are right back there again, which is a great and lasting shame. Peace&Love
Gillan played Jesus on stage but Ritchie Blackmore is one HELL of guitarist. Highway Star is my favourite, Black Night is another stonking riff. And the band famously sings about Frank Zappa my absolute favourite. Ah Ah Ah Ah Oh Ah Ah Ah Oh yeh Ah Ah Ah Aaah.
There was a deliberate accelerando coming up to and during the 'jam session' to create that rising sense of climax. Cutting off at the climax itself was magical and very effective.
I love your reaction, first time I see you. Thank you for recognize the muscial talent so detailed. Please keep reacting to other Deep Purple songs. I highly recommend you to react to HIGHWAY STAR (Made in Japan live album) also "LAZY", "BLACK NIGHT" and "SMOKE ON THE WATER" from the same album, and "BURN", then you can choose others as you like. Thank you again, I will follow you.
I bought my first album in 1968; "Shades of Deep Purple". Their AM radion hit was; "HUSH". Their second album was a better Rock and Rock. Tunes "Kentucky Woman"; "River Deep, Mountain High". My favorite one is; "Shield".
Jon Lord on the organ and Ritchie Blackmore on the guitar were both into classical music and both became rock legends. A lot of Bach in Ritchie's solos and Beethoven in Jon's organ runs. The drummer, Ian Paice , started out as a very young jazz drummer ......like many English rock drummers from the 1960's. For the singer, Ian Gillan, I recommend a much older Ian doing a live performance of " When A Blind Man Cries " with a different band. Ian's vocals are next level.......and his voice older and mature.
Aw yea what a song and so clear for a tv show from 1970 ,it looks like it just came out. You gotta hear Smoke on the Water My woman from Tokyo BURN Black Night
This is DP Mark2, the best line up imho. Ian Gillan’s vocals are just superb. The late great Jon Lord on his cutdown and modified Hammond C3 organ fed through Marshall amps is mind blowing, especially his rendition of Flight of the Bumble Bee at the start of the second half. Genius. Ritchie Blackmore absolutely shreds his Fender Stratocaster in the crescendo. A true legend. Ian Paice is brilliant as usual on the drums, then there is Roger Glover in the engine room on bass, so under rated. I always get a kick out of watching twenty somethings reacting to the music of my late teens, early twenties. I am 71 now and still love my DP, LOUD!
Allot of the band members of Deep Purple are classical trained so this band and the band Yes to me are the founders of Prog Rock and definetly influnced allot of Prog metal bands that came later like Tool and Dream Theater
It is rather mind-blowing experience, wasn't it? Ian Gillian is a top 10 hard rock/metal singer for me, one of the all time greats in a band full of all time greats. Masterclass is right my dear, I was beyond lucky to see Deep Purple 6 times, 3 times each with Ian Gillian or David Coverdale as lead singer, 4 times with Ritchie Blackmore on lead guitar, once each I saw Tommy Bolin then years later, Steve Morse on lead guitar. I also saw Ritchie 4 times in Rainbow, twice with Ronnie James Dio and once each with Graham Bonnet, then Joe Lynn Turner as lead vocalists. To say I'm a fan of all mentioned above would be a gross understatement for this 68 year old hippie and old school hard rocker/metal head! For more great Deep Purple do Highway Star live, it is a killer rocker of a tune, the best audio is from the classic live album Made In Japan, there are also live video versions of it with Ian on vocals from 1972/1973 worth looking for. One of my top 10 hard rock/early metal bands for sure, they have tons of great songs and whole albums worth listening to. Yep, most Led Zeppelin fans are indeed Deep Purple fans as well, some may not know it but as soon as they hear them, they are! Lastly, their set at the California Jam 1974 is also breathtaking with now David Coverdale on vocals along with Glenn Hughes on bass/vocals as well, adding a different spice to the Deep Purple experience and Ritchie goes totally off in You Fool No One. One of the best guitar outbursts I ever saw/heard. Killer Band, will be heard forever! Enjoy! 🎵🎸🎤🎹🎶
So much is lost in the distance of generations from the time of the Vietnam war and the music it inspired, hopefully people will take note of the lyrics and what they were describing and the atrocities that were being committed along with feelings of the culture of the time .
Ian Gillan sang the part of Jesus on the original Jesus Christ Superstar album! He decided to play with his new band DP, when the production JC Superstar went on tour Ian declined!
While this is fresh in your memory, might I suggest you do a reaction to "Bombay Calling" by the band It''s A Beautiful Day? It might sound very familiar.
@@MrsPenPal good morning to you (as in Malaysia right nowl...oh yes, like I said earlier I am still here, at 73 and had first fallen for Deep Purple right from their first vinyl album back on 1967... I like to be your friend, but how to write to you directly? Is by email or WhatsApp?
One of the most captivating live performances ever! My very first Deep Purple💜✨ Like, comment, subscribe! Let’s connect: linktr.ee/mrspenpal
Y'all just entered a rabbit hole. :)
Together with Led Zeppelin and Black Sabbath was Deep Purple the unholy trinity of rock music in the 70´s. And if you want to hear more of Ian Gillian. Listen to when he sings the original version of the song, Gethsemane. From the musical Jesus Christ superstar. Or you could listen to him sing, When a blind man cries.
for sure, viva Deep Purple
React to Rainbow - Catch the Rainbow (live version). With the same guitarrist (Ritchie Blackmore) and another monster singer : Ronnie James Dio
@@citizenkane4831 And Gethsemane was recorded only 2 months later from this performance, as first ever of singing it, making it to his own.
“wait for the ricochet” we all waiting for it right now
I've seen SO many reactions to this performance. You just vaulted to #1.. I have no words.👏👏👏
I've listened to Deep Purple since they released their first album I still listen to them every day I'm now 68
I'm 68 too and bought their single Hush in 1968, made me a fan for life, saw them a bunch and such a great band!
Me too, my brothers. Were a bunch of old bastards. But man, they are the yardstick that all other bands were measured by in live performance and in provisation on the spot. No one could touch them live. And i've seen them all including led zeppelin. Purple always stood out the best of the best live. Rock on 🤘
The band in the video was young they were all in their early 20's thy are now in their mid to late 70's and unfortunately the keyboard player Jon Lord is no longer with us RIP Jon
… Rock music is explained like this: There is a lead guitar, an organ, a bass, a singer, a drummer... and there is DEEP PURPLE!! … There is nothing more to say!! 🎸🎹🥁🎤 Thank you
you feel it all, you are so right, thank you, you are prof!
Great reaction, young lady. I really love how closely you listened, and appreciated the music, vocals and lyrics. Keep up the good work, and do more Deep Purple... they are all top notch musicians.
Good to see a sincere, honest reaction from the heart from someone who clearly appreciates a great musical performance. Your comments were insightful and spot on.
Wow what a heartfelt comment thanks for sharing
@@MrsPenPal Well keep up the good work. What I especially liked, is that you didn't just analyze it to death from a totally technical perspective, dissecting the song like a dead frog on a laboratory table, as so many reactors tend to do... you looked deep into the living heart of the music and spoke about the feeling of it, which is what really matters. Don't ever change that. 😺,
still here! hey, I just love the lower harmony you made
Awwh thanks Guata I appreciate you! ✨
Absolutely fantastic live, over 2 hours of brilliance.
One of my favorite bands!! This takes me back in time to some great days. 😅
Love to see young folk from different backgrounds appreciate the music I grew up on. Deep Purple are extremely talented musicians, some of the best
One of my favorite bands of all-time!
Great reaction. You understood the dynamics in the group, and those dynamics made a live performance by the band in this lineup something very special indeed. They basically jammed their way through the set each night, and no two nights would ever be the same, even if the set list was!
Deep Purple= Cinco genios reunidos!!
Gracias por tu preciosa reacción ❤ a la mejor banda del mundo!!
💜💜💜💜💜
I asked my midwives to play this song during the home birth of my youngest daughter! She was brought into the world hearing epic music!
Wow👍👍👏👏
Did you scream along? Sorry😅 thats nice tho! :)
Congratulations what a great song.
This is the most amazing voice I have ever heard.
Of course I watched to the end. Great reaction as always. Great stuff to think about and talk about.
Hi Steve always awesome to see you!
Hey Ms B. Good catch on the military cadence. These guys were all beasts at what they did. I can't believe you haven't heard Deep Purple before! They've got some great stuff. But yeah his vocal performance on this is incredible and it's really not in a very good setup and it sounds like the monitors weren't really there for him or something on what looks to be a television soundstage with a live audience. And yet it still just takes your breath away.
Highway Star, Lazy, Space Truckin', Hush, so much great stuff.
This is one of the few hard rock groups I enjoyed in the 60's-70's. "Smoke On The Water" is their most popular song. Everyone has heard that famous riff. Some of my favorites are their covers of Joe South's "Hush" & Neil Diamond's "Kentucky Woman". Also like "Woman From Tokyo", "Highway Star", "Burn", "Lazy", "Fireball", "Speed King", "Space Truckin'" etc.
Thank you for your great comments about one of my prefered if not no1 bands of all time, certainly in hard rock, note. I am 64 so when this played I was very young but still had an early birth in top hard rock music, in a time where all musicians where great
Another good one of Deep Purple , is Strange Kind Of Woman , live in 1972 !! Then you can hear him sing some more high notes !!
Wished I arrived at the party a little earlier for this song, and for your reaction to it (like when you started a few hours ago). I first heard Child in Time a few months ago, and it instantly became my favorite song. The vocals, instrumentation, lyrics, performance were amazing and addictive. I can't get enough of this song. For the last month, I was hoping you react to it because I had a feeling you would love the song, and have some interesting things to say about it. I was very impressed with what you picked up from a one time listen. It never occurred to me that when the tempo got fast it was a military sequence, but it definitely makes sense. I thought it was to signify the intensity, horror, and fear of war. The song came out during the Vietnam War, and is considered an anti war song. I am a Led Zeppelin fan, and I would say that Deep Purple plays with the same great musicianship and intensity. However I like the way LZ moves around on stage. Anyway I loved your reaction, and thanks for making my evening a little brighter.
Awwh your comment is so heartfelt I felt your energy on a personal level thanks for sharing in the way you did AK ✨
I have seen them both live and Deep Purple is the best live band wit h Ian Gillan singing it couldn't be better, the band itself is amazing they are all top musicians I loved them from the start I found that Led Zeppelin is better in the studio not so great live. Deep Purple has been my favorite since I saw them in 1972 and I still listen to them today
Hi . I want to recommend Deep Purple 's double live album titled Made in Japan ! This would be a good album review ! Glad you discovered Deep Purple !
Flight of the butterfly on the organ for just for a second, That's true musicianship. 💜
🤩👌💥💯🎼
No need to type if I am still here for the fact that hardly ever skip a reaction to this awesomeness of music nor Ms.Penmate(of the month 😹💥😻) if coming on sight in this Utuub universe...
🤘😎 🇫🇮 💙
😂🫶😅
Great reaction ! In the 70's musicians actually had to be able to do it! Not like today's groups where you have Auto Tune Beat Detective and digital processing.
The bands when I saw them live could actually play the songs live as good or better than the studio version. Glad to see that this music lives on by people like you keeping it alive. *cheers*
Great reaction to an awesome performance! Love it ❤️
Youre reaction is soooo nice!!!!!!. I cried about you look.
Now listen to it properly: take the album version, headphones, no interruptions for the whole 10 minutes, eyes closed all the time (or sit in a dark room) - a very intense experience of an overwhelming piece of masterclass music.
YES, the studio version is perfectly recorded and performed. Absolutely definitive without any needless “doodling”
@@beawsbiz It's the same case with "Stairway to Heaven" - most popular on TH-cam is the live version with "Do you remember laughter?" and some other blunders (and no, it's not because of the imperfections that it's so popular, but because of the myth), while the album version is so much more compelling. Wouldn't you agree?
@@arturnienartowicz7213 YES, Absolutely. A hate to say this but people either don’t listen or cease to be objective. The 70’s live TV version has Ritchie playing the most obvious, careless mistake on guitar because he wasn’t paying attention. I have NEVER heard any reviewer remark on this, yet it is so obvious. I appreciate that a lot of Deep Purple’s live renditions are pushing the creative boundaries. Unfortunately there does not appear to be any video footage of them to enjoy or remark on.
@@beawsbiz I've seen them live 4 times (3 times with Gilmour, once with Joe Lynn Turner) - and I wish at least two of these shows where properly recorded. One of them included a twelve-minute solo from Paice, and it still is probably the best drum solo I've heard live.
@@arturnienartowicz7213 Classic times. I Saw them when Who do we Think We Are was out. Disappointed then that they didn’t do Child in Time. Also once with the Mk 3 line up and finally with Steve Morse and Jon Lord. Great memories.
This is one of the best breakdowns of this song, and there still going 55 years later except jon keyboards died 2012 cancer 😢...at 71 ..
Deep Purple Led Zep Black Sabbath the Unholy Trinity of rock. Top 3 to do it . Gillan amazing vocals
Damn straight... It's even Type o negative s favorite band
Imo Rainbows first 3 albums were better than purple
FACT!! All three are a must listen.
I would suggest a listen to their “Made in Japan” album as their live stuff is amazing and this album is the best example of that, great reaction btw.
Great job on your analysis.
Thanks for watching ✨
the history of hard rock, Deep Purple, I have a Deep Purple tribute band, and I had the honor and pleasure of having Ian Paice on drums, I sing Deep Purple.
Lovely
if you want and like it, you can find me and the band (never before) on you tube by writing you keep on moving jail break, a rock club in Rome. I'm not Gillan.Ciaoooo
Black Sabbath,Led Zeppelin,Deep Purple the holy triad of rock music🤘
Fr. And pink floyd
Imo, the best rock band of all time
Great live band music sounds great 😊
your a sweetheart !!! great reaction
that massage you referred to is called an EARGASM
Great video!
And you sound like you have a great set of pipes yourself. 😊
Thank you I appreciate you watching and sharing your thoughts ✨
I just saw him a couple nights ago still singing with Deep Purple at age 79. Of course he can’t get that high anymore (A5) but still screamed and he sounded great.
I saw Deep Purple back in the day and it is probably the most jamming concert I've ever seen... It was ridiculous how much they jammed... That show was exhausting... I also saw the rare one tour where Ian sang for Black Sabbath and it was so great... If you want to hear Ian go absolutely crazy listen to Disturbing the Priest by Black Sabbath... It sounds like it might be evil but it's actually about them renting a castle to record an album in and it was to close to a church and the priest would keep coming by and telling them to keep the noise down...
I know this song Very well,but even so ,it was difficult to pay proper attention when confronted with such incredible beauty! ❤❤😁
"Child in Time" is a song by English rock band Deep Purple, taken from their fourth studio album, Deep Purple in Rock, released in 1970. The track is loosely inspired by the Cold War; Although it resonated with the Vietnam war Americans were subjected to.
Love your reaction and comments. Ian Gillan was the first star, in the original "Jesus Christ Super Star" !! You are right Ian had to tell his band mates in 1972 (after the Live in Japan, 1972 album) that he could not sing this song live anymore, to help save his voice. He still sing it today but in a much more subduded way. Keep up the good work !!
Every member is in my top 3 Off the best at ever
Huge fan of the band, and just saw them last week end in Nancy (France). Gillian, main singer is 77 years old now, but they still give the magic in every note... Sometimes we can understand how these phenomenal bands from the 70's are still there 50 years later. Talent... Time was different of course, it's not like now where everyone can record at home a high quality sounding album. Just of few bands were produced. But @MrsPenPal, if I can give you a few more songs to listen, check Lazy, Black Night, Highway Star and of course their most famous song Smoke on the Water. It was not just a singer, musicians in this band were all amazing artists. Greetings and hugs from France !
Thx babe, I had a similar wonderous experince back in the late 1980's,,,,,
My Got Boy......it is Life!!!
Still here. Of course you have to watch this masterpiece to the end.
1970 What a performance!
Of course I made it to the end Blessing... You are yourself a reaction performer!
This WAS an anti-war song, and with the world the way it is, we are right back there again, which is a great and lasting shame.
Peace&Love
Thanks Fred for your attention to this video what a stunning performance worth every minute! Always nice to see you in the comments!
I miss those days in the seventies. In the basement, having a few beers, cool summer nights, friends, family, and Deep Purple.
Gillan played Jesus on stage but Ritchie Blackmore is one HELL of guitarist. Highway Star is my favourite, Black Night is another stonking riff. And the band famously sings about Frank Zappa my absolute favourite. Ah Ah Ah Ah Oh Ah Ah Ah Oh yeh Ah Ah Ah Aaah.
Ian Gillan didn't play Jesus Christ on stage...but he did sing the part on the original concept album.
Wiki Walloped
Ian Gillen Elvis Presley are the only 2 artists that bring tears to my eyes when they sing, such perfect voices with absolute control.
There was a deliberate accelerando coming up to and during the 'jam session' to create that rising sense of climax. Cutting off at the climax itself was magical and very effective.
When you consider how these magicians of their crafts came together it's just another Zeppelin.
I love your reaction, first time I see you. Thank you for recognize the muscial talent so detailed. Please keep reacting to other Deep Purple songs. I highly recommend you to react to HIGHWAY STAR (Made in Japan live album) also "LAZY", "BLACK NIGHT" and "SMOKE ON THE WATER" from the same album, and "BURN", then you can choose others as you like. Thank you again, I will follow you.
Nice to meet you!
Nice to meet you too!
I bought my first album in 1968; "Shades of Deep Purple". Their AM radion hit was; "HUSH". Their second album was a better Rock and Rock. Tunes "Kentucky Woman"; "River Deep, Mountain High". My favorite one is; "Shield".
Muito legal sua reação. Deep Purple é top!
More Purple please. Yeah. Peace
still here.💚
🎉🎉🎉🎉 Albert look at you! Thanks for your attention to this video! #watchcrew
Jon Lord on the organ and Ritchie Blackmore on the guitar were both into classical music and both became rock legends.
A lot of Bach in Ritchie's solos and Beethoven in Jon's organ runs.
The drummer, Ian Paice , started out as a very young jazz drummer ......like many English rock drummers from the 1960's.
For the singer, Ian Gillan, I recommend a much older Ian doing a live performance of " When A Blind Man Cries " with a different band.
Ian's vocals are next level.......and his voice older and mature.
Thanks for sharing such a rich background they have ✨
Still here!👌👍✌️😁
Look at that you have a great attention span! #watchcrew 👏👏✨
Deep Purple mk2 is my favourite band of all time. Ian Gillan played Jesus in the original stage version of Jesus Christ Superstar
Aw yea what a song and so clear for a tv show from 1970 ,it looks like it just came out. You gotta hear Smoke on the Water My woman from Tokyo BURN Black Night
And and and and ....!
@@warrenturner397 And The Address ?
This is DP Mark2, the best line up imho. Ian Gillan’s vocals are just superb. The late great Jon Lord on his cutdown and modified Hammond C3 organ fed through Marshall amps is mind blowing, especially his rendition of Flight of the Bumble Bee at the start of the second half. Genius. Ritchie Blackmore absolutely shreds his Fender Stratocaster in the crescendo. A true legend. Ian Paice is brilliant as usual on the drums, then there is Roger Glover in the engine room on bass, so under rated. I always get a kick out of watching twenty somethings reacting to the music of my late teens, early twenties. I am 71 now and still love my DP, LOUD!
great song
“ Smoke On The Water”!!!!!
You is beatifful
Únicoooooooos ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Allot of the band members of Deep Purple are classical trained so this band and the band Yes to me are the founders of Prog Rock and definetly influnced allot of Prog metal bands that came later like Tool and Dream Theater
I don't know which I enjoyed more.. The power house performance, or watching you experience it.
Awwh that’s so sweet of you! Thanks for watching ✨
Still Here. 😉
🎉🎉👏👏👏
Still here!! Of course!!!😂
Look at you! Thanks for your attention to this video #watchcrew ✨
It is rather mind-blowing experience, wasn't it? Ian Gillian is a top 10 hard rock/metal singer for me, one of the all time greats in a band full of all time greats. Masterclass is right my dear, I was beyond lucky to see Deep Purple 6 times, 3 times each with Ian Gillian or David Coverdale as lead singer, 4 times with Ritchie Blackmore on lead guitar, once each I saw Tommy Bolin then years later, Steve Morse on lead guitar. I also saw Ritchie 4 times in Rainbow, twice with Ronnie James Dio and once each with Graham Bonnet, then Joe Lynn Turner as lead vocalists. To say I'm a fan of all mentioned above would be a gross understatement for this 68 year old hippie and old school hard rocker/metal head! For more great Deep Purple do Highway Star live, it is a killer rocker of a tune, the best audio is from the classic live album Made In Japan, there are also live video versions of it with Ian on vocals from 1972/1973 worth looking for. One of my top 10 hard rock/early metal bands for sure, they have tons of great songs and whole albums worth listening to. Yep, most Led Zeppelin fans are indeed Deep Purple fans as well, some may not know it but as soon as they hear them, they are! Lastly, their set at the California Jam 1974 is also breathtaking with now David Coverdale on vocals along with Glenn Hughes on bass/vocals as well, adding a different spice to the Deep Purple experience and Ritchie goes totally off in You Fool No One. One of the best guitar outbursts I ever saw/heard. Killer Band, will be heard forever! Enjoy! 🎵🎸🎤🎹🎶
Ian Gillan (just one i in his last name, no i between l and a) is not only top 10, but the top No.: 1.
To have some of the best Guitarist of the time, one of the best keyboarder. one of the... Okay, that's easy to be a talented band. ;)
Ian Gillans favourite song is Dance of the screamers by Ian Dury and the Blockheads. Carly Simon was right nobody does it better
still here
Thanks Gary for your attention to this video #watchcrew
So much is lost in the distance of generations from the time of the Vietnam war and the music it inspired, hopefully people will take note of the lyrics and what they were describing and the atrocities that were being committed along with feelings of the culture of the time .
This song is about the Cold War not Viet Nam
Deep and wide purple
wow
Love it
More Mk2 Deep Purple, Led Zeppelin and you need to hear YES as well....
I have a great number of Yes reactions on this channel dig in :)
Soul mates!
Thank you for enjoying this, it was an anti-vietnam war song, do you were spot-on
A tip, listen to the duell between Gillan and Blackmore, " Strange kind of women " from " Made in Japan "
Thanks
Ian Gillan sang the part of Jesus on the original Jesus Christ Superstar album! He decided to play with his new band DP, when the production JC Superstar went on tour Ian declined!
You hear this band you've been purpled😂😂
But i love youuuuuu!!!!!!
Hello; react to Grand funk "Inside looking out" live (1969) . hugs from Guanaqueros; Chile.
While this is fresh in your memory, might I suggest you do a reaction to "Bombay Calling" by the band It''s A Beautiful Day? It might sound very familiar.
"Steel here"! Hello blessing; react to "Whit a little help from my friends" from Joe Cocker live in Woodstock (1969). A big hug from Chile.
Still
Hi Roy thanks for your attention to this video ✨✨✨👏👏👏✨✨✨
Hello Mrs Penpal; react to "When the music's over" from The doors (studio version). Greetings from Chile.
Am still here
That’s wonderful to hear nice to meet you
@@MrsPenPal good morning to you (as in Malaysia right nowl...oh yes, like I said earlier I am still here, at 73 and had first fallen for Deep Purple right from their first vinyl album back on 1967...
I like to be your friend, but how to write to you directly? Is by email or WhatsApp?
Robert and Ozzy: Scream an A5 for 16 beats? No way.
Ian: Hold my beer 🍺
Robert and Ozzy: Bet you can’t do it twice.
Ian:🥱
and still here.....
👏👏👏