This is exactly the way it should be done. Studio version first and then the live version. Most of us were introduced to these songs on the studio album and then the live versions. This way you have something to compare the live version to. Thank you. Really good reaction
@@retroreactions....I’ve been lucky enough to see “Lazy” live!! Deep Purple is always great live, as they genuinely seem to be enjoying themselves and having as much fun as the audience. And those sounds Jon gets out of his Hammond are amazing!! I’ve seen him lean and rock that organ back and forth making some strange sounds. He’d plug his Hammond C3 directly into Ritchie’s amplifier. Back in 1973, Jon’s Hammond C3 crapped out, and he got another through Fleetwood Mac’s own Christine McVie.
"Lazy" is also an absolute masterpiece 💎 ... Blues - Rock that is awesome !! Deep Purple has a lot of good songs ... especially from 1969-1975! 🎸🎹🥁🎤 Thank You
Jon Lord with is "ancient" Hammond C3 connected to Marshall amplifiers! Roger Glover... mamma mia! Deep Purple they were singing and playing all the time "white" blues. To me.
This is Deep Purple at their best. Jon Lord is a beast on that Hammond organ! I found on my first reactions that I assumed many of the sounds were coming from Ritchie Blackmore. But most of them were coming from Jon Lord. It seems that Ritchie was not keen on laying down a repetitive riff so Jon often took on intros and riff duties. Whatever the case, this was the period where they were all on top of their game - the famed Mark II line up. And amazing improvisation in concert.
yes, Lord does a lot to the sound and he plays alot of stuff that many people assume most be a guitar because they are not used to the more aggressive keyboard playing style of Jon Lord. But Ritchie does a lot to! He definitely does intros, riffs and rhythms.
Amigo, tuviste el acierto de mostrar en una misma sesión, las dos mejores versiones de esta joya musical creada por los inigualables Deep Purple. Por eso... tienes tu like y un nuevo suscriptor 😂 Saludos desde SCL 🇨🇱
Wasn't familiar with that one 🤔👀 Great energy song were you still feel the blues root, put you to move and some smile on your face, organ heaven and wicked electric 🎸guitar too. Nice symbiosis, it's Deep purple. That's about the best in Rock! If you feel low or anyone, that's the one you need. The Live is... Somewhat different, 🎹 keyboard intro as well as several happenings, wow ! 😎 Oh! By the way, did you changed your introduction? 😜
Please play the studio and "Made in Japan" versions of "Strange Kind of Woman". The former is @ 4 minutes, but the latter is @ 9½ minutes! The live version includes one of the most extraordinary extended jams I have ever heard. Mind-blowing! 💥
"Laziness cannot do without work; one rests voluptuously only if one has been able to tire oneself out." (Rivarol, 18th century French writer; my translation). A very hard cocktail hard/blues served by DEEP PURPLE, it never refuses! Thank you, Brandon.
Ritchie later said he didn't like funk (referring to the sound they went for on the Stormbringer album two years later, his last with the band during the seventies) but Lazy is damn fine example of the fusion of rock and funk, isn't it? :) Loooooove Jon Lord's grainy, rich Hammond organ sonorities here! 💗
where is the funk in this? To my ears it sounds like a heavy jazz blues. Besides, Ritchie doesn't like funk music, but playing funky isn't the same as playing funk music.
@@michaelkarlsson5966 The intro (in between Lord's organ opening and the first verse) certainly sounds like it has a funk undercurrent in it to me. Happens at other points in the track too, not least in the interplay of Glover, Lord and Paice, but I don't have the time to go into specifics here.
Saw them at California Jam I with Black Sabbath and ELP(headlined) before and after them with nine other bands for, get this! $10.00 a ticket and I was 14yrs old where I’m 65 now.🎸😎✌️
THIS IS EXACTLY HOW ONE SHOULD HEAR THIS- the studio version is a perfect ..... however, it gives you the reference point to understand it live. ONE CORRECTION MY FRIEND, THAT WAS NOT BLACKMORE AT THE BEGIINING that was ALL JON LORD.!!!!!! You should know that this right here makes you MY FAVORITE REACTOR that and the fact you also listened to GETHSEMANE with us. A suggestion some is retro now- PLEASE REACT TO SOME BLACKMORES'S NIGHT- Medieval falk rock it is under appreciated I will make suggestions soon tHANK YOU this is better than friends LOL
Hello Thomass. Glad you liked my format in this one. Thanks for confirming that it was the organ all along! Thanks for the awesome compliment, very nice to hear that. Appreciate you stopping by, and for the great comments 😊
...like your review, Brandon, and the words you found to overall describe the music! and loved to re-listen to that song (not heard it for decades...) A special treat might be to react to DP's 'April' - very different to this one, from their earlier period, but I don't want to spoil it here with a description, ...you know anyway, that it will be interesting and high quality! Its even longer, just over 12 mins (make sure not to catch a shortened version - it was a single, for which they cut out some of the best stuff!)
Hello! Happy I helped you revisit this one after decades... Thanks for the suggestion. It's from the 60s, but I will add it for sure to my next "60s week", whenever I can get to that again 😊 Thanks my friend...
Grew up with Deep Purple, Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin, Uriah Heep, King Crimson, T-Rex, … such richesses in music and styles. Would you listen to “Place in Line” from Deep Purple’s album ‘Who do you think we are” (and listen also to Rat Bat Blue , woman from Tokyo, Mary Long). Enjoy the fabulous sound !!!
Good jams! 👍 At the beginning of the live "Lazy" that was "probably" the organ the whole time, with it being processed through a ring modulator pedal. (at first I assumed it was a guitar through a ring modulator pedal) A ring modulator takes two input signals and outputs the sum and difference of those two signals mixed together. Those early guitar pedal effects boxes had an internal oscillator whose pitch was set by a knob manually and the other input was external for an electric guitar or other source, in this case probably Jon's organ? A very common function found in modular synths and there you just have two external inputs which is much more useful. For those interested in hearing more early ring modulator experiments check out John McLaughlin's guitar solo on "On the Way Home to Earth" from the 1975 Mahavishnu Orchestra album "Visions of the Emerald Beyond". It jams and is interesting but probably challenging to listen to the first many times and some may never appreciate it? BUT about half way through he turns off the ring modulator and continues playing over the top of the frantic and driving rhythm section with a normal guitar tone. The really brilliant part is at the end where slow string/keyboard chords fade in and his soloing eventually synchronizes with the chords as the drums and bass fade out, ending with just the chords, chimes and guitar. It's well worth a listen all the way through IMHO! 🥰 If you want the whole spacy experience you should listen to the last three cuts on the album: "Pegasus" (1:51) + "Opus 1" (0:23) + "On the Way Home to Earth" (4:46) as those three together are sort of one connected piece. The calm focused resolution after all the chaos is really satisfying.
@@retroreactions.... 😫😭 I was typing one of my typically excessive long posts but before I finished it I hit a wrong key or something and lost it all! Nothing too important, just rambling about my love for the Mahavishnu Orchestra! 😅 IMHO their two best albums are "Birds Of Fire" and "Visions Of The Emerald Beyond" (very different lineups for each album) and I think choosing songs from those two is the way to go? Hard to choose which ones though because they span a lot of moods throughout the albums!
yes, it's the organ. All of it. You hear when the guitar enters. It's very clean and unmistakably guitarish. Mahavishnu Orchestra are great by the way!
Super bounce, super groove...Cocky, confident and rip-roaring blues!!! Sorry for my "laziness" 🤣
🥱😴🤪
If you only ever buy one Deep Purple album it should be 'Made in Japan'. Probably the greatest live album ever made.
I can see why, based on this song. Thanks for watching Andy!
@@retroreactions....: Gracias a tí, por reaccionar a éstos genios!!
💜💜💜💜💜
DEEP PURPLE AMAZING 💜💜🎸🎸🤘🏻🤘🏻VIVEN EN MI CORAZÓN!!!!
De nada!
Thanks for watching!
For my 9th birthday back in 1979, I asked for Made In Japan, I got it and I loved it ever since!!!
Wow, to me that is EPIC! To love Deep Purple at 9 years old!! A true lifelong fan, I bow to you sir 😊
This is exactly the way it should be done. Studio version first and then the live version. Most of us were introduced to these songs on the studio album and then the live versions. This way you have something to compare the live version to. Thank you. Really good reaction
Hi William. Yes, very happy I heard both versions to compare. You're welcome and thanks for watching and for the nice compliment 🙂
Excellent. Respect.🙏🙏🙏 I bow before Deep Purple.💙💙🎵🎶🎶🎶
No denying their excellence. I really enjoyed hearing their later stuff too, from the 2000s... 💜
The beginning of the live version (and studio) was all Jon. Blackmore comes in at 15:09 on this video.
They fooled me again! Thanks for confirming that, and for watching!!
Yes……LAZY!! Great tune!!
Took me long enough LOL....Didn't know it would be all of this haha! It's playing now and I'm still bouncing.... 🎹🎸 🥇
@@retroreactions....I’ve been lucky enough to see “Lazy” live!! Deep Purple is always great live, as they genuinely seem to be enjoying themselves and having as much fun as the audience. And those sounds Jon gets out of his Hammond are amazing!! I’ve seen him lean and rock that organ back and forth making some strange sounds. He’d plug his Hammond C3 directly into Ritchie’s amplifier. Back in 1973, Jon’s Hammond C3 crapped out, and he got another through Fleetwood Mac’s own Christine McVie.
Ha... yea I'm guessing the organ had an even bigger part in this song than I realized! Pure wonderful chaos!!
Great great reaction to a great song, Thank you
"Lazy" is also an absolute masterpiece 💎 ... Blues - Rock that is awesome !! Deep Purple has a lot of good songs ... especially from 1969-1975! 🎸🎹🥁🎤 Thank You
Jon Lord with is "ancient" Hammond C3 connected to Marshall amplifiers! Roger Glover... mamma mia! Deep Purple they were singing and playing all the time "white" blues. To me.
Awesome song. Great album! Thanks Brandon!
For sure! Top tier delivery. Thanks for dropping by Larry!
Ooh, you must do Space Truckin’, studio plus Made in Japan. Friggin’ awesome, especially the live.
Your votes have been added, thanks!!
This is Deep Purple at their best. Jon Lord is a beast on that Hammond organ! I found on my first reactions that I assumed many of the sounds were coming from Ritchie Blackmore. But most of them were coming from Jon Lord. It seems that Ritchie was not keen on laying down a repetitive riff so Jon often took on intros and riff duties. Whatever the case, this was the period where they were all on top of their game - the famed Mark II line up. And amazing improvisation in concert.
Thought you might like this song! Yes, they fooled me once again with that "guitar-sounding organ"! Definitely a great ride in both versions....😎
@@retroreactions.... Please note my request which I have put as a separate comment.
Saw it...will address later today I'm sure 😊
yes, Lord does a lot to the sound and he plays alot of stuff that many people assume most be a guitar because they are not used to the more aggressive keyboard playing style of Jon Lord. But Ritchie does a lot to! He definitely does intros, riffs and rhythms.
@@michaelkarlsson5966 Yes. Sorry for giving you the impression that Ritchie doesn't do intros, riffs and rhythms.
Amigo, tuviste el acierto de mostrar en una misma sesión, las dos mejores versiones de esta joya musical creada por los inigualables Deep Purple.
Por eso... tienes tu like y un nuevo suscriptor 😂
Saludos desde SCL 🇨🇱
Mr Ritchie Blackmore 🎸🎸👏👍
My favorite DP song!
Awesome! Thanks for tuning in David 😊
My uncle gave me this album for Christmas that year I was 11.. lol
Wasn't familiar with that one 🤔👀 Great energy song were you still feel the blues root, put you to move and some smile on your face, organ heaven and wicked electric 🎸guitar too. Nice symbiosis, it's Deep purple. That's about the best in Rock! If you feel low or anyone, that's the one you need. The Live is... Somewhat different, 🎹 keyboard intro as well as several happenings, wow ! 😎 Oh! By the way, did you changed your introduction? 😜
Thanks for checking this strong song out! Yea, I got a little "lazy" when making this video LOL.....🥱
Pretty heavy for a cat like you, Brandon! Bluesy, funky progressive and psychedelic all in one!
For sure! This channel has expanded my musical mind!!
jazzy
Please play the studio and "Made in Japan" versions of "Strange Kind of Woman". The former is @ 4 minutes, but the latter is @ 9½ minutes! The live version includes one of the most extraordinary extended jams I have ever heard. Mind-blowing! 💥
Your vote added! Do you like 2000s Deep Purple?
"Laziness cannot do without work; one rests voluptuously only if one has been able to tire oneself out." (Rivarol, 18th century French writer; my translation). A very hard cocktail hard/blues served by DEEP PURPLE, it never refuses! Thank you, Brandon.
You're most welcome, dear friend!!
heavy jazzy blues
Quel son de la guitare 🎸 🎸👏👏👏
Ritchie later said he didn't like funk (referring to the sound they went for on the Stormbringer album two years later, his last with the band during the seventies) but Lazy is damn fine example of the fusion of rock and funk, isn't it? :) Loooooove Jon Lord's grainy, rich Hammond organ sonorities here! 💗
Hello! Yes, an excellent fusion for sure. That organ just slayed from start to finish!! Always nice to see you 😊
where is the funk in this? To my ears it sounds like a heavy jazz blues. Besides, Ritchie doesn't like funk music, but playing funky isn't the same as playing funk music.
@@michaelkarlsson5966 The intro (in between Lord's organ opening and the first verse) certainly sounds like it has a funk undercurrent in it to me. Happens at other points in the track too, not least in the interplay of Glover, Lord and Paice, but I don't have the time to go into specifics here.
I chose to go see frank zappa at the paramount in Portland Oregon and deep purple was playing the same night at the memorial coliseum.
Black Sabbath,Led Zeppelin,Deep Purple the holy triad of rock music🤘
Muy buena reacción !!! La próxima tenés que hacer la de Burn en estudio y la versión de Made in Europe. Saludos desde Buenos Aires.
¡Gracias! De hecho, reaccioné a Burn (estudio), ¡así que está aquí en mi canal! ¡Muchas gracias por mirar!
The fans don't tour, that's why the the band toured ! I was lucky when bands toured in my city but I sure wasn't traveling around to see anyone !
Yes, the furthest I've traveled for a concert is about 400 miles. It can get quite expensive!
Saw them at California Jam I with Black Sabbath and ELP(headlined) before and after them with nine other bands for, get this! $10.00 a ticket and I was 14yrs old where I’m 65 now.🎸😎✌️
THIS IS EXACTLY HOW ONE SHOULD HEAR THIS- the studio version is a perfect ..... however, it gives you the reference point to understand it live. ONE CORRECTION MY FRIEND, THAT WAS NOT BLACKMORE AT THE BEGIINING that was ALL JON LORD.!!!!!! You should know that this right here makes you MY FAVORITE REACTOR that and the fact you also listened to GETHSEMANE with us. A suggestion some is retro now- PLEASE REACT TO SOME BLACKMORES'S NIGHT- Medieval falk rock it is under appreciated I will make suggestions soon tHANK YOU this is better than friends LOL
Hello Thomass. Glad you liked my format in this one. Thanks for confirming that it was the organ all along! Thanks for the awesome compliment, very nice to hear that. Appreciate you stopping by, and for the great comments 😊
Studio and then live space trucken . Is a must.
Your votes have been added! Thanks so much for dropping by...
...like your review, Brandon, and the words you found to overall describe the music! and loved to re-listen to that song (not heard it for decades...)
A special treat might be to react to DP's 'April' - very different to this one, from their earlier period, but I don't want to spoil it here with a description, ...you know anyway, that it will be interesting and high quality! Its even longer, just over 12 mins (make sure not to catch a shortened version - it was a single, for which they cut out some of the best stuff!)
Hello! Happy I helped you revisit this one after decades... Thanks for the suggestion. It's from the 60s, but I will add it for sure to my next "60s week", whenever I can get to that again 😊 Thanks my friend...
💙💙💙💙💙
Hello and thanks so much for watching!
Grew up with Deep Purple, Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin, Uriah Heep, King Crimson, T-Rex, … such richesses in music and styles. Would you listen to “Place in Line” from Deep Purple’s album ‘Who do you think we are” (and listen also to Rat Bat Blue , woman from Tokyo, Mary Long). Enjoy the fabulous sound !!!
Good jams! 👍 At the beginning of the live "Lazy" that was "probably" the organ the whole time, with it being processed through a ring modulator pedal. (at first I assumed it was a guitar through a ring modulator pedal) A ring modulator takes two input signals and outputs the sum and difference of those two signals mixed together. Those early guitar pedal effects boxes had an internal oscillator whose pitch was set by a knob manually and the other input was external for an electric guitar or other source, in this case probably Jon's organ? A very common function found in modular synths and there you just have two external inputs which is much more useful.
For those interested in hearing more early ring modulator experiments check out John McLaughlin's guitar solo on "On the Way Home to Earth" from the 1975 Mahavishnu Orchestra album "Visions of the Emerald Beyond". It jams and is interesting but probably challenging to listen to the first many times and some may never appreciate it? BUT about half way through he turns off the ring modulator and continues playing over the top of the frantic and driving rhythm section with a normal guitar tone. The really brilliant part is at the end where slow string/keyboard chords fade in and his soloing eventually synchronizes with the chords as the drums and bass fade out, ending with just the chords, chimes and guitar. It's well worth a listen all the way through IMHO! 🥰 If you want the whole spacy experience you should listen to the last three cuts on the album: "Pegasus" (1:51) + "Opus 1" (0:23) + "On the Way Home to Earth" (4:46) as those three together are sort of one connected piece. The calm focused resolution after all the chaos is really satisfying.
The Mahavishnu Orchestra --> ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐!!!
@@sagitt1856 👌🥰
They are on my "to do" short list!!
@@retroreactions.... 😫😭 I was typing one of my typically excessive long posts but before I finished it I hit a wrong key or something and lost it all! Nothing too important, just rambling about my love for the Mahavishnu Orchestra! 😅 IMHO their two best albums are "Birds Of Fire" and "Visions Of The Emerald Beyond" (very different lineups for each album) and I think choosing songs from those two is the way to go? Hard to choose which ones though because they span a lot of moods throughout the albums!
yes, it's the organ. All of it. You hear when the guitar enters. It's very clean and unmistakably guitarish.
Mahavishnu Orchestra are great by the way!
There is a better live video filmed in a TV studio with an audiance also 'Child in time'
Oh nice, would be awesome to actually watch it live. Do you know if it's also from 1972?
You assume that no japanese Deep Purple fans could be watching your reactions?
Hello. Good point, but only .2% of my recent views come from Japan, so pretty unlikely.. Thanks for watching
Don;t be soo lazy
🤣 Sorri, I just culdnt help it this timme...................😏