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This
new version is taken direct from the audio track of the pristine
2" video masters, unearthed in 2002. Although there remain some
balance problems (the guitar is a little too far back in the mix
at the start), it is a far better recording, and with digital
mastering and restortion, the end result is also much louder and
clearer than the previous edition.
"Deep
Purple's 1974 US tour promoting the Burn album climaxed with this
show at the Ontario Motor Speedway in California. The band were
well into their stride, they were the highest selling artist in
the US in 1973 and were enjoying the rewards and the lifestyle
that went with it.
Anyway,
Deep Purple co-headlined with ELP. The show has gone down as their
most infamous largely due to Ritchie's attempt to burn his hair
off. It has been available on video for ages now. The new Sonic
Zoom edition sound mix is a vast improvement on the previous effort
which to be frank was dreadful. Not only is the sound improved
but we also get to hear a 'new' track for the very first time.
So what's the craic?
The CD starts with Ritchie's strat feeding back before cranking
into the Burn riff. It takes a while to get the sound levels
right and as a consequence Ritchie's solo is a little down in
the mix. He has developed his playing style since Mk 2 with a
much faster right hand evident here and elsewhere on this disc.
(In my opinion, Ritchie was at the start of his peak in 1974,
lasting into Rising ).
Might
Just Take Your Life follows and whilst not an obvious live
choice it contains some excellent playing by Jon. It's great to
hear the band hitting a groove and just jamming.
Lay Down, Stay Down is the missing track. Until recently
the only clue to its existence was the suspicious change in daylight
levels on the video. There had to be something chopped out! Worth
the wait? Of course! Any new live track from 68-76 is. There is
a bit of an aimless preamble from Jon, then they're off, with
Paicey all over the kit throughout the song. Ritchie's solo features
the fast plectrum work but perhaps lacks real drive or the manic
beauty of the Perks version. Still I'm splitting hairs. It's great!
Better
still is the underrated take of Mistreated. Without the
visuals the track comes to life. Big Dave is on good form throughout
and the mix is kinder to him during the climatic screaming bit,
aided by Glenn, with some amazing fluid playing from Ritchie.
Cool.
Smoke On The Water has a nice little intro from Ritchie
before that riff kicks in. It's a good performance again,
with the band blasting along, and Jon soloing over the top before
Glenn does his thang.
You
Fool No One is the highlight of the show with Jon's Lazy
intro, Paicey setting up the groove as Ritchie riffs then Glenn
join in... you know the score. Great vocals from Dave and Glenn.
Fantastic first solo from Ritchie, while the second shows off
his repertoire with some heavy neck wringing, lightning runs,
a beautiful quiet blues, and the funky grooves he sets up. Paicey's
solo is quite straightforward - for him that is, before a wonderful
Mule ending.
Space Truckin', as was the way with Mk3's take on the number,
is a bit stop start but features some beautiful playing from all
of the band. The vocals are a bit ropey at times, it's not really
their style. Glenn plays the Dance to the Rock and Roll riff,
so we can forgive him his "I don't want to see anybody sitting
down" line, a little unnecessary as everybody is stood in a field!
Ritchie plays an unbelievably quiet Greensleeves prior to hitting
the volume and some more amazing playing before the mayhem begins
- although unless you are some kind of pervert (Hi Andy) Ritchie's
full demolition of everything he owned on the night is a bit taxing
without the visuals.
The
only edits on the disc appear to be during some of the between
song chat - so we lose "I keep swallowing flies up here", but
we do gain Glenn's comment about Paicey "...sweating his tit's
off..." so it's not all bad news! All in all though, and under
the circumstances, a fine show - 8 out of 10."
review:
Mike Galway
Re. the missing chat bit....
We had a timing dilemma. To leave every snippet of between song
stuff on would have taken the disc 90 seconds over the absolute
maximum length for a single CD. We couldn't justify making this
a double CD just to accommodate 90 seconds worth of material so
the engineers just pruned it enough to shoe-horn it on to one
disc.
This
title is available to order from the dpas
online store

purple
records / sonic zoom catalogue
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