Biography
:
The
Montreux Jazz Festival, Royal Albert Hall, Melbourne Entertainment
Centre, a Blizzard somewhere in the Alps, Tokyo, Rio, Moscow’s
Olympic Hall, Cape Town, Bangalore, La Paz, Toronto and Kansas City.
What
do they have in common? They are just a few of the places where
you could have seen a Deep Purple show over the last couple of years.
Simply reading the itineraries gives you an idea of how this band
operates on a truly international level.
Deep
Purple is not a conformist group. There never was, nor ever will
be, any fawning to trends. What you do get from them are cutting
edge performances based on a sound philosophy: ‘the music
comes first’. That music comes from within the core spirit
of the band, nowhere else. They won’t be bagged. Why?
In
the sixties and early seventies they were described (by others)
as ‘Progressive’ or ‘Underground’, when
they made a conscious decision to depart from the ‘Hush’
era in order to record the seminal album ‘Deep Purple in Rock’.
‘Fireball’, ‘Machine Head’, ‘Made
in Japan’ and ‘Who Do We Think We Are’ quickly
followed, and they were then tagged (along with Zeppelin and Sabbath)
as leaders of the ‘Hard Rock’ explosion. At this point
began the gradual disintegration of the famous MK 2 line-up, (Blackmore,
Gillan, Glover, Lord, Paice) and some long overdue individual R
& R.
The
eighties re-union as ‘Perfect Strangers’ shook the world
(again) with a fresh look at the music but with a bold detachment
that stated ‘this is Deep Purple’. The era was to end
in disharmony, however (again), with first Gillan leaving, then
Blackmore and then Gillan returning; confusing? Not really.
After
the divorce, and seeing this as a genuine opportunity to get back
to the music, the guys invited Joe Satriani to join as locum, and
he spent the best part of a year on the road with the newly revitalized
band before returning to his own commitments. The scene was set
for the most important line-up change since ’69.
Steve
Morse was the only name on the list, and the question he asked,
(after a couple of out of town gigs had confirmed the chemistry)
‘Is there a dress code?’ paved the way for a return
to the humorous disdain the band have for what they used to call
‘poseurs’.
They
never set out to be ‘Rock Stars’. Call them ‘Classic’
and they will laugh and patiently explain that nostalgia is not
a creative word. Sure they’ve been through the mill a few
times. However each time they’ve emerged stronger, and now
you see a band that is hard and professional; displaying texture,
dynamics and a humanity that can only come from those rare artists
who are masters of their craft.
Deep
Purple’s music has evolved organically into an expressive
maturity, and the sell-out shows at the cities mentioned above are
testament enough to the massive fan commitment. There’s a
lot of affection out there for what many say is the greatest of
them all.
Stats:
130m albums.
The
following is what they say about themselves:
Ian
Gillan: singer and writer. Various bands ’62-’69, Deep
Purple, JC Superstar (as JC on the original recording), various
Gillan Bands and solo stuff, Black Sabbath then DP again.
Roger
Glover: bassist , writer and producer. Various bands ’61-’69.
Deep Purple, Rainbow, then DP again.
Production
credits include: Nazareht, Elf, David Coverdale, Judas Priest, Status
Quo, Rory Gallagher, Rainbow, Pretty Maids.
Solo
albums: The Butterfly Ball (1974), Elements (1978), Mask (1984),
Accidentally On Purpose (with Ian Gillan – 1987), Night And
Day (2001).
Steve
Morse: guitarist and writer. Founded and wrote music for 6 time
Grammy nominated Dixie Dregs, was a member of Kansas in the late
80’s. Steve was named Best Overall Guitarist by Guitar Player
Magazine 5 times. He continues to record solo albums and some touring
with the Steve Morse Band.
Ian
Paice: drummer and writer. Early stuff, Deep Purple founder member,
Whitesnake, Gary Moore then DP again. Paul MacCartney album and
tour.
Don
Airey: keyboards. Stints with Cozy Powell, Colosseum II, Sabbath,
Rainbow, Ozzy, Tull, Whitesnake, Gary Moore, ELO, & DP. Credits
as player, arranger or producer on c.200 albums including one solo
venture, “K2”. |