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Bop till you drop

Roger Glover live at the Budweiser Stage, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, September 2, 2017; photo © Nick Soveiko cc-by-nc-sa

On August 26, 2025, Roger Glover has appeared on the satellite radio SiriusXM show Trunk Nation With Eddie Trunk. Blabbermouth has some quotes of what he said.

Well, I see a lot of bands doing the farewell tour or the farewell gig — BLACK SABBATH just did it recently, and other people have done it before — but it doesn’t appeal to me, and I don’t think the rest of the band either. To actually put a date on the final [show], now where’s it gonna be? The pressure is too great. I’d much rather just play and play and play, and suddenly we’re not playing. We don’t need to go out with a fanfare — I don’t think, anyway. It’s possible other people disagree with me, but that’s my feeling.

Quite a few years ago now, at the start of ‘The Long Goodbye’, [then-PURPLE guitarist] Steve Morse, he said, ‘Why don’t we finish on a high and name the last tour and we’d make a lot of money because it’s the last tour and then kiss it goodbye?’ And that didn’t go down well with the band, which is why we called it ‘The Long Goodbye’, because we knew it was gonna happen sometime, but, of course, we didn’t know it was gonna go on and on and on. And thankfully so.

This year is a bit of an off year. We’ve been writing and stuff, and there’ll probably be an album next year. And the last — actually, the last two or three years have been so busy. We haven’t stopped touring and working. So it’s good to have a little bit of a breather.

Read more in Blabbermouth.

[Update Sep 25]: Recording of the show has been posted. For one reason or another, it doesn’t work on other sites, so head over directly to YouTube to listen.



86 Comments to “Bop till you drop”:

  1. 1
    Beate Flohr says:

    Too bad this “little bit of a breather” came too late for Steve. I miss him very much in DP.
    But I think both Steve and DP are happy where they are now and there will be a new abum by the SMB, I just can’t wait!

  2. 2
    timmi bottoms says:

    I’m happy they are going the Rolling Stones route. 😁

  3. 3
    Georgivs says:

    That’s why we love our boys. They put music over business and money and take it step by step, without big announcements. Because of that, they are not as commercially successful as they could be, but they are artistically relevant. This is also a fully legitimate lineup of the band with 3/5 of the golden MkII on board. Compared to that, Sabbath and Zep are gone, Kiss and Aerosmith turned into clowns, Metallica became crooners of thrash metal etc. Our boys still rule.

  4. 4
    John M says:

    Chris Charlesworth (author of the 1983 Deep Purple biography) mentioned on his website back in April of this year that he’d been helping Roger with his autobiography. Sounded good, until he mentioned they had started 3 years ago, and were currently up to 1984!

  5. 5
    AndreA says:

    I hoped the the new release could be in the late 2025…
    Anyway, Morse disbanded DP because was tired of long tours, not only for his wife..so goodbye ciao ciaoo 🖐

  6. 6
    Steve says:

    Is that another little dig at Steve ?
    Hmm …not sure I like that

  7. 7
    QuelloCheHaRagione says:

    https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=zPv06HBSvh8&pp=ygUdc3RldmUgbW9yc2UgYmFuZCBicmVha3Rocm91Z2g%3D

    https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=m6W9MauE-YE&pp=ugMGCgJpdBABugUEEgJpdMoFC3N0ZXZlIG1vcnNl0gcJCbIJAYcqIYzv2AcB

  8. 8
    Uwe Hornung says:

    😂 At this rate, their last – posthumously released of course – live album will be called “Die With Your Boots On!”

    https://images.nightcafe.studio/ik-seo/jobs/TTE0EfHccwFoLpLKraBQ/TTE0EfHccwFoLpLKraBQ–1–wjhaz_7.8125x/horror-zombie-face-thundercloud-in-the-purple-skies-a-masterpiece-8k-resolution-dark-fantasy-concept.jpg?tr=w-1600,c-at_max

    I must say I share a lot of sympathy for Roger’s low key approach. That Steve M wanted an “event” to close down matters is not unusual for someone from the other side of the pond where a certain amount of drama is generally welcomed (—> Steven Spielberg), but given how often Roger retells the tale it must have really rubbed the others the wrong way though I’m sure Steve meant no ill with it.

  9. 9
    Uwe Hornung says:

    Thanks QuelloCheHaRagione, a new Morse album in November called Triangulation then!

  10. 10
    Attila says:

    So it is not late’25 any more

  11. 11
    Joan masip oliveras says:

    Well, at last, not for that least relevant, we know what seems to be the actual reason for Steve’s (short but true) goodbye. I’ll always love his skills, he’s a master, maybe -technically speaking (not that I have a clue of playing guitar)- even better than Ritchie (although Ritchie’s, and always will be, unbeatable. By no one), but if what Roger says is really how it went, I don’t like that attitude, not at all. Maybe is just what Uwe (@8) says, people-“from the other side of the pond” ‘s ways “to close down matters,” and maybe (think so) these usually subtle “isues” between UK and US people never led go for good. I think this second reason (of which the first one would be only the final step) was the true reason that led to the final of MARK VIII, being the terribly sorrowfull personal circumstances arround Steve only the catalist for the inevitable.
    The point is now we have a great NEW Mark, a great new album, a great new one on the way and a great new band that want to go on until the end. And this is all f****g great!

  12. 12
    Steve says:

    I think he’s thrown Steve under the bus there …I mean , he can’t defend himself can he !?
    I just can’t imagine Steve saying anything like that !
    All this spite from the other guys ( except Paicey ) is annoying me …it shouldn’t be like this 😪…and when you think about everything that Steve did for that band .
    I sincerely hope this has been mis interpreted

  13. 13
    Fla76 says:

    #7 QuelloCheHaRagione:

    Thanks for the link to the video, but how boring….if this is what Steve does in 2025 Ritchie was much fresher in 1997 with Blackmore’s night in comparison.

    Steve, like all of Guitar Hero, has been living off self-indulgence for the past 20 years, I much more appreciate Neal Schon’s amazing fusion records from decades past.

  14. 14
    CN says:

    I don’t understand what RG’s big deal is. Why not have a final show? 2 of the guys are in their 80s and lets face it yes they can play nice now and then but they are nowhere near as dynamic as they were even going back 10-15 years. Isn’t their something to be said going out and giving those fans a one time shot to see them? I have more respect for groups stopping like Rush who said enough was enough and haven’t done anything since they stopped, as opposed to bands continuing to play on when they are clearly past their prime. How bad was it to see Moody Blues with their drummer (forgot his name) barely able to hit the drums and continuing to play – who wants to see that? IP isn’t quite there yet but his energy has been waning and IG can sing some songs well but can’t do the fast songs justice anymore. I suppose they will continue to play as long public continues to pay. Self dignity at some point needs to show-up.

  15. 15
    MacGregor says:

    @ 3- “That’s why we love our boys. They put music over business and money and take it step by step, without big announcements.” Except for the year 1984. And I also doubt that that is the reason Purple are not the latest fad and have not been for along time. No band from that era is. Well, except for the much over rated Strolling Bones. Cheers.

  16. 16
    MacGregor says:

    @ 14 – I agree in part to what you are saying, some good points there. However in regard to Rush, it was Neil Peart who retired and for good reasons, he had been warning the other two members for a few years prior. He was worn out, over it all, not Geddy Lee and Alex Lifeson though. They would have kept going and they both lamented the fact that Peart retired. Regarding the Moody Blues, they did have a younger second drummer for many many years before they retired. But I do agree, they should have retired many years before they did as it was a pure nostalgic show, year after year after year. No new music at all. Age catches any of us lucky to live long enough. It is the roll of the dice. Some as the story implies, keep rocking till they drop, or words to that effect. Look at Lemmy with Motorhead, he was a sad figure indeed and could barely stay on stage for more than a few songs at a time from what I was reading. Pride and ego eh? The recent Ozzy and Black Sabbath charade was embarrassing in that aspect. The year off for the Purple sounds a little ominous. Father Time as we all know, waits for NO-ONE. Cheers

  17. 17
    Karin Verndal says:

    @14

    Yeah CN, but this is Purple 🤩
    Deep freaking Purple! 💥⚡️

    I want them to go on until THEY decide to stop.

    And you can’t deny that despite their physical age, they seem very vibrant and downbeat fantastic!

  18. 18
    Georgivs says:

    @11 Agree. I don’t think Roger mentioned Steve just to poke him. We don’t have all the details of what had happened at the time of Steve’s departure. Methinks Steve had not wanted to “leave” by walking out. He just no longer wanted be part of the exhausting tours. And then, being an American (add some drama, out with a bang, y’know), he saw nothing wrong with leaving all together, having one grand final tour with the one grand final show. Then he would quietly return to playing with SMB and taking care of his family. Great idea except the rest of the band, being British (empires never die, if you please) never bought it. Steve ended up by walking out reluctantly. So Roger’s version of the events seems plausible to me and not meant to insult Steve. Bother sides have a grain of truth in this debate.

  19. 19
    Leslie Hedger says:

    I think Roger’s story is about Steve wanting a Long Goodbye Tour is a bunch of crapola!! In an interview in 2016 Paice said it was the band’s Idea as they were all becoming I’ll and knew it was coming to an end. In an interview with Classic Rock Magazine, Gillan said the idea came from the Front Office and promoters went along with it so they could sell more tickets!! I agree with Steve # 12.

  20. 20
    sidroman says:

    Somehow when I read all this the Long Goodbye Tour business which I think has been going on for about a decade now. I picture a Blackmore circa 1984 telling Roger, ” I warned you I wouldn’t let that happen.” Very dryly ala Peter Cushing.

  21. 21
    John H says:

    I think Roger’s approach is the way forward. I can see Steve’s point but it doesn’t seem right for a band that could feasibly carry on for a while yet. But I do think next year would be the time for a one off event with Ritchie, Glenn, Coverdale, Nick Simper, Steve M, all joining on stage doing something or other, with a big group hug at the end. Unlikely I know, but not as unlikely as in the past I think.

  22. 22
    Uwe Hornung says:

    empires never die, if you please

    😂

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=akbzRuZmqVM&t=6s

    Especially not from some Yankee Doodle from the swamplands of the colony! 🤣

    I just think that Steve’s fruitful time with DP had run its course. They’re mainly a touring band, he’s not really an international touring musician, he just adapted to that lifestyle as long as he had to and earned good money while doing it. Plus with the Mk II heaviness of the set in Mk VIII’s end phase, he was getting less and less of his compsitions heard in a live setting. If you’re Steve Morse, then the entertainment value of having to play Blackmore songs live eventually dwindles, I can understand that.

    Steve often said he wanted to be if not the first guitarist of DP, then at least “the last” one, so I think its not unlikely that he was pushing for a joint ending of the band. He underestimated how much touring has beome a way of life for the other guys. Ritchie and Jon had tired of it too, but Roger, the two Ians and Don apparently never will. Separation was then the reasonable thing to do – it happens all the time that individual band members grow tired of the touring life after decades.

  23. 23
    Svante Axbacke says:

    As usual, I think people are reading way too much into a quote. First of all, it is filtered through a journalist. Second, there is no one in the current band that would like to “throw someone under the bus”. These are adults, with better things to do than trash talk other human beings.

  24. 24
    Svante Axbacke says:

    @21: Are you aware of how much work would go into such a thing? It’s not like calling up your mates and meet down the pub tomorrow evening. I don’t think anyone of the old DP members has an organisation behind them that have the resources, or can be arsed really, to do all that work.

  25. 25
    Uwe Hornung says:

    Indefatigable voice of reason Svante is right: Preparation of such a thing and getting a setlist together plus rehearsing it properly would cost the current “living breathing DP” a year or so where they could do little else. They can’t afford that amount of time anymore just to pull off a one-off event.

  26. 26
    Karin Verndal says:

    @24

    Svante this is why you and Nick are my favourite admin people 🙏🏼

  27. 27
    Georgivs says:

    @25 Exactly. Just lining up the plates full of spaghetti and sauce would take an enormous amount of effort.

  28. 28
    Fla76 says:

    #23 Svante:

    I agree 100%

  29. 29
    Joan masip oliveras says:

    @14, as someone sometime already said here, dunno why some people think they are entiteled to say when others have to retire. “they can play nice now and then…” Oh boy, “You hit me with a cheap shot.”
    A beast of an album, a great new guitar man, superb concerts (saw them in Madrid and Barcelona on 2024), and they are supose to retire because… what? They have more than gained the right to quit it when they want. And I wish they want it way ahead.

  30. 30
    Karin Verndal says:

    @22

    Uwe, this:
    “Steve often said he wanted to be if not the first guitarist of DP, then at least “the last” one, so I think its not unlikely that he was pushing for a joint ending of the band.”
    – when did he say this? I’m not doubting you, but I’ve never read it 😊

    And please stop with all these double negatives 😄 my brain is challenged enough already 😃

  31. 31
    Karin Verndal says:

    People – this is a true story (maybe)

    A brunette goes into a doctor’s office and says that her body hurts wherever she touches it.
    ‘Impossible’, says the doctor, ‘show me’!
    She takes her finger, presses on her elbow and screams in agony.
    She pushes her knee and screams, pushes her ankle and screams, and so it goes on; everywhere she touches makes her scream with pain.

    The doctor says, ‘you’re not really a brunette are you?’
    She says, ‘no I dyed my hair, I’m a naturally blonde.’
    ‘I thought so’, he says, ‘your finger is broken’ .
    🤓

    May the weekend be filled with sun, warm and lovely coffee and may you all feel refreshed when Monday arrives 🤗😙

  32. 32
    Uwe Hornung says:

    That joke, Karin … OUCH!!!

    Steve said that sentence “I want to be DP’s last guitarist …” a couple of times, first I think in an interview with the Classic Rock magazine around Infinite in which he already sounded very somber about the band’s long term future and his physical ability to continue playing guitar. In a different wording (“I want to finish with the band …”) you also find it here:

    https://blabbermouth.net/news/steve-morse-on-deep-purple-simon-mcbride-is-fitting-them-better-than-i-was

  33. 33
    Max says:

    @29

    Word!

  34. 34
    Bo Poulsen says:

    As always Roger are spot on and I’m 99% sure there will a new album early next year and then a looong world tour.
    And I’m sooo happy with Simon on guitar. Perfect sound for Purple. Now rock is back. Love it. =1 is one of the best albums since Perfect Strangers.

  35. 35
    Karin Verndal says:

    @32

    Thank you Uwe 😃🙏🏼

    Ok and now comes the ‘big-soft-girl’ question:
    Do you know if Steve has remarried?
    Because I noticed he has a wedding ring on his finger. And if it is in honour of Janine, then it is beyond sweet and cute 🥹
    But if he has remarried, I’m really happy for him 😊

    And before you start yelling at me: yes I know it is NOTHING of my business, but: Ich bin einfach ein (eine?) romantisches Mädchen 🥰

  36. 36
    CN says:

    John H – I am with you and would like to see that – frankly its past due. And since you know where Rod Evans is – invite him too!

    Svante – granted that might be an effort – but if people really want to do something they do it

  37. 37
    Skippy O'Nasica says:

    Didn’t Jon Lord propose the idea of a concert with ALL surviving members, which would have been recorded and filmed? Sometime in the first decade of the millennium, if one remembers correctly.

    Not sure if it was intended as a “final concert”, to commemorate some anniversary or other, or just for the fun of it.

    It would have been great, though! Lord was probably the only guy who could have got Blackmore and Gillan to share a stage again for a night. And possibly even coaxed Rod Evans out of retirement, for however brief a time.

    Seem to recall it was Gillan who nixed the idea.

    Sabbath’s final show was memorable because it was the original four members. Were Purple to schedule a “final show” at this late date, it wouldn’t be anywhere near as big an event. Makes more sense for them to carry on as they have been doing.

  38. 38
    MacGregor says:

    @ 37- memorable? Skippy please. The Sabbath circus was just that, a plethora of other invited ‘guests’ to dress up poor Ozzy to be paraded out as final ritual of sorts. And four songs is not a show, if you know what I mean. For me, it is much better to just go out quietly. They (Sabbath) had their chance earlier to do the big ‘final goodbye’ wank, but they couldn’t be arsed and there were other factors too. We know who controls everything poor Ozzy did. Regarding the Jon Lord comment, I do recall something like that as Lord and Blackmore had reconnected at that time. I doubt though that Ritchie at that point in time would have done it and as we know mr grumpy Ian Gillan definitely wouldn’t have. It was Jon being Jon, nice and cordial and wishing there wasn’t any angst t all, which was one of his many fine attributes. He did mention possibly doing an album with Ritchie though, at some stage as a sort of ‘wish’ list of his. Cheers.

  39. 39
    Uwe Hornung says:

    Karin, I believe Steve is still mourning Janine and wearing the wedding ring. Like you, I’d be happy if he found a new kindred female spirit – my mom in all her wisdom always said: Es ist noch keine(r) zurückgekommen … -, but it’s still a bit early days for that, one step at a time as they say. Steve is such a benign person, I’m sure he’ll find someone, questionable taste in printed T-shirts or not.

  40. 40
    Russ 775 says:

    @35

    “Ich bin einfach ein (eine?) romantisches Mädchen”

    Yes, you are…

    For your penance you must listen to this (not he whose name shall not be mentioned; well not exactly):

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=npCRplP61Qw

  41. 41
    MacGregor says:

    Pete Townshend looking at the final Who concerts and beyond. “I’m 80, I don’t like being away from my family, my studios, my dogs and my friends. I’m not looking to spend the next five years of my life waiting to fucking drop dead on the stage.” Enough said there, good on you Pete. Each to their own. Cheers.

  42. 42
    Uwe Hornung says:

    It’s ein Mädchen, Karin, girls are things in the German language:

    – das Mädchen,

    – der Junge,

    – die Frau &

    – der Mann.

    If you’re German all this makes sense (no, it doesn’t! 😂), but Mark Twain had a few observations to make that are still relevant today:

    Every noun has a gender (edit: in the German language), and there is no sense or system in the distribution; so the gender of each must be learned separately and by heart. There is no other way. To do this one has to have a memory like a memorandum-book. In German, a young lady has no sex, while a turnip has. Think what overwrought reverence that shows for the turnip, and what callous disrespect for the girl. See how it looks in print–I translate this from a conversation in one of the best of the German Sunday-school books:

    “Gretchen: Wilhelm, where did the housemaid put the turnip?

    “Wilhelm: It put her in the kitchen.

    “Gretchen: And where is the accomplished and beautiful English maiden, it’s raining?

    Wilhelm: It has gone to the opera even though her roof is leaking, the management hasn’t repaired it yet, all the actors will get wet.

    To continue with the German genders: a tree is male, its buds are female, its leaves are neuter; horses are sexless, dogs are male, cats are female–tomcats included, of course; a person’s mouth, neck, bosom, elbows, fingers, nails, feet, and body are of the male sex, and his head is male or neuter according to the word selected to signify it, and NOT according to the sex of the individual who wears it–for in Germany all the women either have male heads or sexless ones; a person’s nose, lips, shoulders, breast, hands, and toes are of the female sex; and his hair, ears, eyes, chin, legs, knees, heart, and conscience haven’t any sex at all. The inventor of the language probably got what he knew about a conscience from hearsay.

    https://faculty.georgetown.edu/jod/texts/twain.german.html

    So when you go to bed tonight, do thank your maker on your knees zat vee didn’t vinn ze wär, you would have had to learn it all! 🤣

  43. 43
    Karin Verndal says:

    @39

    “Steve is such a benign person, I’m sure he’ll find someone, questionable taste in printed T-shirts or not.”
    – of course he will, if he wants to!

    And your dear mum was right: no one has returned yet. But of course one needs to be in sync with the inner person, so to speak….

  44. 44
    Karin Verndal says:

    @40

    What have I done to deserve this Russ?
    😂😂😂

    ZZ Top are alright, especially this one:
    https://youtu.be/gOoKzw3JSCM?si=hJsa1oUQzK0qn4eV
    If we have to drag the butter-meister in!

    This is cute:
    https://youtu.be/Pn2-b_opVTo?si=ikC7wF1IlImzXEdG

  45. 45
    MacGregor says:

    Unbelievable that certain folk here think that people simply ‘get or find someone else’ to partner with. What a narrow way of thinking. Nothing to do with music of course. Facebook anyone? Sorry, it has to be said. A tad disrespectful it is too. Cheers.

  46. 46
    Uwe Hornung says:

    “This is cute:
    https://youtu.be/Pn2-b_opVTo?si=ikC7wF1IlImzXEdG”

    Yeah, and stolen from Trapeze who shared the same US promoter with ZZ Top in the first half of the 70s:

    https://youtu.be/KQzxTiq2wPE

  47. 47
    Uwe Hornung says:

    Settle down, Herr MacGregor, even in Medieval times the period of mourning for a lost spouse wasn’t longer than a year. People had to survive.

    https://youtu.be/NbWNVqO3vNQ

    Have you never seen this movie?

    https://youtu.be/4RmC8mVFwMc

    It was a remake of this here:

    https://youtu.be/kRKRb7qjCus

    Finding someone new to share your life with after a tragic loss has nothing to do with disrespect for the past and the people in it.

  48. 48
    Karin Verndal says:

    @45

    Of course you’re right MacGregor 😊
    I just saw a wedding ring on his finger, and you know in my little country a lot of men can do mysterious tricks: the soon the wife is gone shopping, vacation, whatever, so is the wedding ring! And it only re-appears when the wife is coming home!
    I just thought it such a sweet gesture if Steve still wore his wedding ring 😍

    On the other hand, marital bliss is not for everyone, I know that. But personally life is more interesting when shared with a cutie 😃

  49. 49
    sidroman says:

    @41
    Regarding The Who just got Live at The Oval 1971. Only listened to it once but it’s excellent!

  50. 50
    Uwe Hornung says:

    I have it too, but haven’t listened to it yet.

  51. 51
    sidroman says:

    Interesting Uwe, I thought you weren’t a Who fan? I’ve been on a SuperTramp kick lately with the death of Rick Davies. Cheers!!!!!

  52. 52
    MacGregor says:

    I had a listen to a few songs from that live Who album, at the Oval. Raw as they were at that time. Thanks for the heads up sidroman. I am a lot more use to The Who with the added keyboard player on stage. Well for certain songs at least. Still sounds good though, 1971 and that album Who’s Next is a killer indeed. One of rock musics greatest albums. Regarding Rick Davies, yes I have been listening to a few of his classic songs from Crime of the Century and Quietest Moments. He was critical in being the opposite of Roger Hodgson, the darker and dramatic to the lighter and melodic whimsical side of the band. Similar to earlier classic Pink Floyd with David Gilmour lighter and brighter to Roger Waters darker and more dramatic. The opposites attract syndrome. Or Yin and Yang. It only lasts a little while but their most creative music is from that set up. From Now On: ‘Guess that’s all it has to be, living in a fantasy, that’s the way it’s got to be, from now on”. Vale Rick Davies.

  53. 53
    Uwe Hornung says:

    I don’t think that Keith Moon and John Entwistle were really a joint rhythm section in playing together, they played alongside each other, it was often staccato mayhem, yet sometimes brilliant staccato mayhem. But the Who in their prime were a force to be reckoned with. Pete Townshend also couldn’t play a fluid guitar solo to save his life, but as long as they had JAE to do that an octave deeper that didn’t matter.

    Apart from the obvious Who’s Next my favorite Who album is a strange one, the very introverted and somber The Who By Numbers.

    And I really would have welcomed it had Paicey passed the audition and joined them after Keith’s passing rather than being vetoed out by Pete who apparently didn’t want any Purple baggage. Paicey and JAE could have really made a rhythm section. Kenny Jones never understood John’s bass playing and just played simplistic to hold things together, but Little Ian has an ear for bassist nuances as he has proven time and again with Roger Glover, Glenn Hughes, Paul Martinez and Neil Murray. All vastly different bass players (well, Glenn and Paul were somewhat similar), yet he made everyone of them sound great.

  54. 54
    Russ 775 says:

    @53

    “I don’t think that Keith Moon and John Entwistle were really a joint rhythm section in playing together, ”

    They weren’t… The Who had a lead bass player, a lead drummer, a lead vocalist, and Pete as a part-time lead guitarist. In any other outfit such anarchy would’ve resulted in total chaos. But somehow they made it work.

  55. 55
    MacGregor says:

    Ian Paice in The Who would have been really interesting. I suppose Townshend went with someone he knew with Kenney Jones and being over the Moon effect, he was in two minds a lot around that time from what I have read. His solo output (Empty Glass) points to a similar direction with The Who after Keith Moon. It is a wonder Simon Phillips didn’t get the nod, although he was very busy doing sessions and the like at that time, including with Townshend. I do remember Entwistle’s wry reply to a question of, what is it like to play with a different drummer? His answer ‘well at least I can now play with someone who keeps time’, something like that. Cheers.

  56. 56
    sidroman says:

    Absolutely love The Who By Numbers, a criminally underrated album, Dreaming from the Waist, particularly live versions are excellent!!!!!

  57. 57
    Dr.Bob says:

    “Better to burn out than fade away”

    Ozzy’s last gig was the best ending in music history. I don’t want Purple to just fade away. One final performance with Blackmore, Hughes, Coverdale, before someone else passes away. Various bands doing covers and showing their love.

  58. 58
    Russ 775 says:

    @44

    I generally like ZZ Top’s EP covers but that one just stinks. I lump that one in with the rest of their 1980’s “let’s sell out and make a lot of money” crap.

    Regarding your other link… I prefer stuff like this over Sharp Dressed Man: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zEPjmWKDHKM

  59. 59
    Uwe Hornung says:

    To the defense of JAE: He probably simply adapted to ignore Keith and ploughing on with his own extravagant lead bass playing. I too remember him saying in Kenny Jones days that he missed Keith “as a person, but not as a drummer”. Though he might have just said that to be nice to Kenny who was getting a lot of stick (no pun intended) at the time.

    The Who were always a vehicle for Pete’s songwriting craft, but initially ALSO an idiosyncratic rock band collective. Sometime in the latish 70s, Townshend must have seen that as limiting for expressing his own art and began dismantling the rock band spikiness of The Who. Both Keith and John were replaced by people who took up less space and attention – it’s how the bandleader wanted it, but I was no fan of that development.

    Unlike Cozy Powell’s hammering, I never got tired of Keith’s anarchic drumming, it was entertaining and in its own way swinging and smooth, he was never heavy-handed. And JAE’s lead bass playing was just as reckless and at is core undisciplined, he just stood still while doing it.

  60. 60
    Karin Verndal says:

    @58

    I had a feeling you might prefer that!

    Well, what about this then:
    https://youtu.be/HL5MpgKM_9s?si=sFCexQ1jiY-9wxwq

    😂😂😂

  61. 61
    Uwe Hornung says:

    Me too, at one point ZZ Top became just too cartoonish. For me they peaked with Deguello …

    https://youtu.be/PjbaHlTl86Q

    I especially loved it when they swapped lead vocals in a song à la Coverdale/Hughes or Stanley/Simmons. I rated Dusty a stronger singer than Billy.

  62. 62
    MacGregor says:

    Quite ironic that The Who ended up with Zak Starkey, who did plough the trough so well in a similar influenced Keith Moon style. I can adjust to a lesser or no frills at all player, especially after such extravagance from all those years passed. It would have been pointless getting another busy bass guitarist after Entwistle passed, at that later stage of the bands career. I have never witnessed The Who in concert with Entwistle, unfortunately. So when I did attend that 2009 concert, I obviously didn’t miss his influence and sound in a live setting. If I had previously been to a gig with him on the bass guitar, I would have no doubt noticed him missing big time. Cheers

  63. 63
    Fla76 says:

    @Uwe:

    ZZ Top made a very fresh album in the 90s, with a more modern sound and spot-on melodies.

    that album is Rhythmeen:

    https://youtu.be/ULGr2Pe9hok?si=nsj4wgjZmLdWkNsH
    https://youtu.be/tJZWJVaYyjs?si=AdIKOezac3_GRnko
    https://youtu.be/2V3HbsAE1ds?si=jFEHSAJ3356q8-VE

    It’s a beautiful album from start to finish, and curiously in my head here I hear some things that I heard in Roger Glover’s Snapshot

  64. 64
    Uwe Hornung says:

    Fla76: I have Rhythmeen on CD, indeed a return to (almost) old form.

  65. 65
    Russ 775 says:

    @61

    Yes, Dusty was just as good a vocalist as Gibbons.

    They started to lose me after Deguello… never felt the need to buy Eliminator, Afterburner or Recycler. But they got back to what they are best at after a that. IMO XXX, Mescalero & Rhythmeen are as good as their records from the 70’s.

  66. 66
    Russ 775 says:

    @60

    Thanks… never was a big Beatles fan. Although I have always liked this one: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oI8Aw0IGM1I

  67. 67
    Uwe Hornung says:

    Wow, I never knew it was Lennon who played the solo and all the fills, always assumed it was George!

    For me The Beatles are magical, any era. Compared to them, all other bands – including DP – are just that … bands making in some cases excellent music … whereas the Fab Four were cultural icons of a new age.

  68. 68
    Karin Verndal says:

    @67

    Ok, so we are back at the old discussion:

    Would Purple have happened without the Beatles?

    I will the rest of my life on this earth argue that real, raw talent as the true fab 5, that’ll be Ian Gillan, Ritchie Blackmore, Ian Paice, Jon Lord and Roger Glover, could never have been hold down!
    Even if they didn’t have any who had made the path to walk, they would have walked it!
    And how can I suggest that?

    Well, before Beatles there was….?
    Right! No one!
    So if Beatles could happen, so could of course Purple 😊

    I know you lawyer head may will explode now, but Purple are so much more than Beatles ever was! ☺️

  69. 69
    MacGregor says:

    About time they (The Beatles) got out and played live, even if only for a few songs. What could have been eh? And don’t talk to me about that early screaming girlie crap. 1966 to 1970 is The Beatles. With a couple of extra musicians on stage they could have nailed it live. Well they had one extra muso right there with them on that rooftop. Someone else playing mellotron etc, adding that sound and feel to so many classics. Cheers.

  70. 70
    Uwe Hornung says:

    Karin, please. Ignorance is never an asset. And loyalty to whatever shouldn’t make one blind.

    You were ironic, right? Please use appropriate italics next time!

    Without the Beatles, Blackmore would – health allowing – still be playing joints on the Reeperbahn and living off the immoral earnings of his girlfriend.

    It’s laughable to compare DP to them, a lot of DP songs don’t even have a catchy chorus and very few of them adapt to acoustic guitar around the camp fire. Harmony vocals, so key to the Beatles success, are almost non-existent with DP except during the Mk III era. The Beatles appealed to older people t0o, my mom was born 1930 and loved them and knew at least three dozen of their songs, I don’t think she knew a single Purple number, not even SOTW, she might have liked the acoustic first part of April though, that got quite a bit of airplay on German radio.

    Most former and current DP members are avid Beatles fans (Little Ian is a fan of both Ringo’s drumming and of Macca’s bass playing) and recognize their historical significance. They even covered Beatles songs on their first two albums or with their previous bands:

    https://youtu.be/WIM6d_pD_EY

    https://youtu.be/K6FI6ddjFxI

    Saying that DP (and a thousand other bands) could have happened in a vacuum without the Beatles is like saying the NASA space program didn’t need Wernher von Braun.

    https://youtu.be/TjDEsGZLbio

    And a song like this one has “Beatles” written all over it:

    https://youtu.be/6PYjXgabgCQ

  71. 71
    Max says:

    Whooohooo I am in a devil-may-care kinda mood right now and feel strong enough to face the consequences, ich geb dem Affen Zucker:
    The Beatles are overrated.
    Now there you have it. I done it. I said what noone dares to say.

    Well…no…I mean of course they were brillant but just as the automobile or the telephone were results of their time and brainchildren of many a kindred spirit The Beatles didn’t come from nothing. And bands like The Kinks or The Mothers of Invention or …you name them drank from that well of inspiration too. And I guess you could have had DP without The Beatles, yes.

  72. 72
    Karin Verndal says:

    @70

    “Please use appropriate italics next time!”
    – I don’t know how to! And I don’t have that kind of relationship to Nick as you have, so I’m in the dark until ‘someone’ feels so sorry for me that they’ll teach me….☺️☺️

    “Without the Beatles, Blackmore would – health allowing – still be playing joints on the Reeperbahn and living off the immoral earnings of his girlfriend.”
    – 🤣🤣🤣🤣 oohhh boy! You do have a way with words 😆😆😁 (you are ruining my mascara! 😄😆)

    “a lot of DP songs don’t even have a catchy chorus and very few of them adapt to acoustic guitar around the camp fire.”
    – in strictest confidence I can tell you that I actually have been sitting around such a fire and was singing several Purple tunes: SotW, Anyone’s Daughter among others 😄 (however no one was suggesting any songs with Beatles!) (oh and I tell you why: a lot of people acknowledge Beatles of course, but compared to the intricate songs of Purple, a lot of Beatles’ material are quite simple, not so demanding to sing and play as Purple’s songs) (not my words, but the guitarist at the time) (around the bonfire)!

    “The Beatles appealed to older people t0o, my mom was born 1930 and loved them and knew at least three dozen of their songs”
    – ok my mum was born in 1926, and she hated the Beatles so I don’t think it’s legit to claim they appealed to older people as such!
    I’m happy for you and your mum that she liked them, but my mum seemed to think they needed to learn to sing (‘instead of all the screaming Karin!’ – can you imagine how she looked when I played Child in Time for her the first time 😝😂) and she would also like to cut their hair!

    “Most former and current DP members are avid Beatles fans “
    – I’m pretty sure Paul and Ringo also love Purple! I remember that John and George did in fact love them, didn’t George play with them at some concert?

    “ They even covered Beatles songs”
    – they covered several songs! Lucille is a favourite of mine!

    I don’t say Uwe that Beatles wasn’t some kind of influence to Purple, what I indeed say is that raw talents, as the kind we are seeing in Purple, cannot be hold down!

  73. 73
    Uwe Hornung says:

    I need my silver hammer for Max! Non-violence can only go so far. 🤣

  74. 74
    Karin Verndal says:

    @71

    “And I guess you could have had DP without The Beatles, yes.”
    Well, Max, you and I see eye to eye! 😊

    Of course Purple could have happened 😃

    I won’t go so far that I’ll call Beatles for overrated, but well compared to Purple they are ☺️😉 (so I did anyway!)

    I know they made ‘All you need is love’
    https://youtu.be/RJi4iDdxY5M?si=MlJUzG6gYTX4NnpB

    And this one of course:
    https://youtu.be/wXTJBr9tt8Q?si=4FKDvcnwUa5s9fqS

    But COME ON (😉) Purple made this phenomenal gem:
    https://youtu.be/jY2Jk1YMhI8?si=bjlcMy0w_Gnk44oO

    And this:
    https://youtu.be/01-2-7_IRFA?si=sT-BbeAnUw3x5KAc

    Ohhh and this:
    https://youtu.be/jlHEdkL1VoM?si=JaF9lQc7Ystv8oQB

    Not to forget about this:
    https://youtu.be/-RYmt3I4gGQ?si=bplFnrzbuqGDnnnZ

    I can’t forget this one:
    https://youtu.be/uIaXva9akfs?si=rtcrvHEbZaiSp3UG

    And this of course:
    https://youtu.be/u1kZ9zYr7kk?si=uG_qpzzJBzNCyIWK
    (Which is so much better than the one Mark l made!

    This is my favourite 🤩
    https://youtu.be/zi3lxg9SX28?si=Ok-wZSqlzWNdExKj

    And honestly I could go on and on!

    However with Beatles (and I really like Beatles 😃) the list is rather short because they lacked so much substance compared to Purple!
    If one is sad and heartbroken, it certainly isn’t Beatles I reach out for! It is indeed Purple (and yes, Sir, preferably with Ian as the vocalist) (even though DC isn’t that bad… but that we have covered several times 😄)

    Uwe – see your fellow-Germanist agree with the Danish gypsy 😅😅

    I remember Paul (or maybe John) mentioned they couldn’t develop their music because of the fans screaming and fainting!
    Well, to that I can honestly say that Purple has developed and refined their music even though girls also were screaming 😄 (yes they pumped up the volume!)

    Ok, I guess my work here is done!
    And Uwe, if you’re interested I would like to link a very interesting article regarding how people’s minds can work in sync, which was indeed what was happening, re what Max wrote:
    “you name them drank from that well of inspiration too.”

    Thank you and as Dave Allen always said:
    https://youtu.be/66lUk_qYpm4?si=8_9m7ROUe1IU5jxr

  75. 75
    Russ 775 says:

    @67

    “I never knew it was Lennon who played the solo and all the fills…”

    Funny, I came to the same realization when I watched the video just before I posted it here. I was gobsmacked… I too had always assumed that it was George.

  76. 76
    Uwe Hornung says:

    Admittedly, I didn’t even think Lennon had the chops to play something like that. He was an excellent rhythm guitarist and singer, that is how I remembered him.

  77. 77
    MacGregor says:

    Regarding rhythm guitarists playing a little lead here and there, it has always had me wondering, how often (if ever at all) do they take that journey. Lennon is one here in the rooftop performance, however what about Malcom Young in ACDC, always playing rhythm. Tom Fogerty in Creedence is another. David Knopfler didn’t appear to play any in the early Dire Straits. No doubt one of a few frustrations that lead to his resignation from that band. James Hetfield in Metallica, surely he delves into it at times? Bruce Welch in The Shadows, did Hank Marvin play all the lead guitar, quite possibly. The list goes on. Cheers.

  78. 78
    Skippy O'Nasica says:

    As a child my musical taste ran to Purple / Slade / Nazareth / Zeppelin and Grand Funk – heavier sounds.

    The older kids in the neighborhood weren’t too impressed by that kind of music, and were always trying to turn me on to the Beatles.

    They knew who played every solo. Another one I remember them saying was done by John was “You Can’t Do That”.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y8Dpt7TI9q0

  79. 79
    MacGregor says:

    @ 71 – “The Beatles are overrated. Now there you have it. I done it. I said what noone dares to say.” Fair point Max, however I remember saying something along those lines a little while ago here somewhere. As far as the media and certain acolytes go, yes indeed, the Beatles are ‘fawned upon’ far too much. This happens as we have noticed with a few other pop artists over time. Elvis, Dylan and The Stones are a few that spring to my mind. They seem to do no wrong, well some people think that, comical that is. Each to their own, I suppose we can revert to that old chestnut. Thanks for stating the obvious, not many do eh? Plenty of artists would have still produced wonderful music without The Beatles influences. How can some people say that they know that they couldn’t? A crystal ball I suppose could be one way to look at a total hypothetical situation. The Beatles had some influence on a few here and there. I can imagine many artists would have been trying as hard as hell to not be influenced by them. It is the old false worship of a man made deity I fear. Create some sort of myth and surround it with total adoration and submissive worshipping. I had better be careful, I may not live to see another dawn if some folk here get their way. However, I survived the first time I said that, so you should be ok Max. We will live to fight another day. Cheers.

  80. 80
    Karin Verndal says:

    @79

    “Plenty of artists would have still produced wonderful music without The Beatles influences.”
    – MacGregor 🤗 protector of the downtrodden and prosecuted by a certain lawyer and his assistent from the meat-factory in the US! I salute you 🥂

    “Plenty of artists would have still produced wonderful music without The Beatles influences. How can some people say that they know that they couldn’t? A crystal ball I suppose could be one way to look at a total hypothetical situation.”
    – EXACTLY!
    I do acknowledge that Uwe is a clever fella, but even he isn’t clairvoyantic 😁

    “I had better be careful, I may not live to see another dawn if some folk here get their way”
    – don’t be afraid! Uwe is way to busy listening to ms Swift’s newest album…

  81. 81
    Max says:

    Dear Mr. MacGregor, never did I suspect you to be among the faint hearted while on the other hand I had to notice your well founded judgement – so it’s not too big a sursprise to me that you offered your doubt regarding the devine status of the fab four. It may just have escaped my attention when you did. I have a hard time following the threads (as I am pretty sure I did mention before). Sometimes family life, work and grocery shopping, not to mention having to get car and teeth fixed gets in the way of much more imoprtant things here at Max towers.

    Of course The Beatles were great – and even more so are The Stones in my book (btw I cannot see why the Stones alone shouldn’t have been enough to inspire anyone, in fact besides playing the Blues they came up with some very nice ideas of their own just like the Beatles did.) But saying without the Liverpoodles there would not have been other great bands is really stretching things a bit far.

  82. 82
    Karin Verndal says:

    @77

    “however what about Malcom Young in ACDC”

    – actually when thinking of Oasis, you know the British band that Uwe seems to like a lot, there is a guitarist named Bonehead (Paul Arthurs) who seem to be to Noel what Malcom was to Angus 😃
    He is really good!

  83. 83
    Uwe Hornung says:

    “He’s really good!”

    He’s a bar chord pusher, Karin!

    https://m.media-amazon.com/images/M/MV5BNmJlNGJlMWItOWQ4My00ZGZhLTk0NjgtMmNjNGYyZjU1M2UwXkEyXkFqcGc@._V1_.jpg

    https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRgq1yJ0_V5u_KIE764YMnmhwZ3hpytKb2icg&usqp=CAU

  84. 84
    Uwe Hornung says:

    You Beatles naysayers are a bunch of savages! 🤣 Boy, I’m gonna carry that weight of your collective ignorance …

    I’m no Beatologist in a strict sense at all, sure I have all their albums, but I do that with a lot of bands, I haven’t even seen the Let It Be Sessions completely, but still The Beatles are my most prominent musical childhood memory and there was never a time as a teenager when I found them “uncool”. Their iconic special status as a band and for music of the second half of the 20th century is an unquestionable given for me. Taking them out of the Rock & Pop history equation is for me like saying marxism would be the same without Karl Marx or psychoanalysis without Sigmund Freud. I consider them that pivotal for everything that followed. And no, I cannot imagine Jon Lord moving on from The Artwoods or Ritchie from Heinz or Lord Sutch to DP if the Fab Four had not come into existence as a the 60s shaping cultural phenomenon.

    If I were abducted by Martians in their spaceship and they asked the earthling to explain to them what this rock music on my planet is, I wouldn’t play In Rock, Machine Head or Burn to them, I’d play Sgt. Pepper.

    that is not to say that The Beatles could have themselves existed without, say Chuck Berry, Buddy Holly or Elvis – the Fab Four soaked up influences too, but they projected their music into the collective psyche deeper and on a larger scale than anyone before. Of course, the upcoming importance of radio, TV and vinyl played into their hands doing that.

    End of my Beatles sermon! 😇

  85. 85
    Karin Verndal says:

    Hi guys, I just wanted to share this – again,,,,

    So unbelievable beautiful 💔

    https://youtu.be/gZQJuOyDJtU?si=Cx7SmeAYNkcirbRI

    Hope you all have a lovely weekend 🤗😙

  86. 86
    Attila says:

    @42, Uwe do not despair! German may not be the weirdestest language. Ask the French about “la bite”. Excuse my French.

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