When I was younger (currently 75) I had a good friend who at the time was around my current age who talked down Rock. So I indroduced him to Emerson Lake and Palmer "Pictures at an exibition" . From that point on he had a whole different view of wat rock could be.
Excellent! I think true music aficionados can appreciate a pretty wide range of things. We all have our preferences, but there is certainly a lot of talent across all the genres.
I am not a huge keyboard fan, piano yes, keys not so much. But John Lord's sound was so distinctive and it fit the sound so well. He was just on a whole nother level. Another Piano player I love was Billy Powell with Lynard Skynard. I could pick out a Skyanrd tune just by hearing him play. The song Red, White, and Blue was one I picked out the first time I heard him start up.
@@rickcoffey5309 It’s interesting how often keys of one sort or another were integral to many classic rock bands. And you can never go wrong with Skynyrd!
Great stuff! Like Deep Purple, myself, but couldn’t call myself a real hardcore on em, just listened to bunch of their stuff😅 Lord is lauded, though- ha- and the inclusion of keys/organ did kind of set them apart some, in the genre! Certainly amongst contemporaries I’d say, and then they’ve undoubtedly influenced great later era bands, such as Dream Theater🤘
I'm not too familiar with Deep Purple and it's members but my good friend and bandmate was with Blackmore from 2000 to 2002...He's playing recorders here but played mostly violin and guitar with "Blackmore's Night"...th-cam.com/video/FSk0sdG1RXQ/w-d-xo.html
When I was younger (currently 75) I had a good friend who at the time was around my current age who talked down Rock. So I indroduced him to Emerson Lake and Palmer "Pictures at an exibition" . From that point on he had a whole different view of wat rock could be.
Excellent! I think true music aficionados can appreciate a pretty wide range of things. We all have our preferences, but there is certainly a lot of talent across all the genres.
Thank you for the chat😊
I learned something today.
@@paterlehnert3929 I’m so glad you enjoyed it!
The performance was at the Royal Albert, so you would have also been good if you were smoking Prince Albert 😎😎😎😎
@@HNXMedia LOL! LOVE IT! Prince Albert is, in fact, my go-to.
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
I am not a huge keyboard fan, piano yes, keys not so much. But John Lord's sound was so distinctive and it fit the sound so well. He was just on a whole nother level.
Another Piano player I love was Billy Powell with Lynard Skynard. I could pick out a Skyanrd tune just by hearing him play. The song Red, White, and Blue was one I picked out the first time I heard him start up.
@@rickcoffey5309 It’s interesting how often keys of one sort or another were integral to many classic rock bands. And you can never go wrong with Skynyrd!
Great stuff! Like Deep Purple, myself, but couldn’t call myself a real hardcore on em, just listened to bunch of their stuff😅
Lord is lauded, though- ha- and the inclusion of keys/organ did kind of set them apart some, in the genre!
Certainly amongst contemporaries I’d say, and then they’ve undoubtedly influenced great later era bands, such as Dream Theater🤘
@@UncleBurntApostrophe Thanks for your comment! They have indeed been influential on many other bands.
✨️🙂✨️
At 8:27 you will see why I can’t smoke a pipe, talk, and do math. 1968-1976 is eight years, mot eighteen. Yikes!
I'm not too familiar with Deep Purple and it's members but my good friend and bandmate was with Blackmore from 2000 to 2002...He's playing recorders here but played mostly violin and guitar with "Blackmore's Night"...th-cam.com/video/FSk0sdG1RXQ/w-d-xo.html
@@jeffpotter6428 I am just geeking out over this! I now know a guy who knows a guy who has played with Ritchie Blackmore! 💜💜💜
@@jeffpotter6428 awesome!!