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C’mon drummer, let it go

Paicey reacts to Stormbringer cover by a Russian tribute band Leonid & Friends. Continue Reading »

Family affair gone wrong

The second half of Coverdale’s interview to eonmusic starts off with David giving his account of the Rock’n’Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony:

I’d like to talk about Deep Purple’s induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame 2016; were you disappointed that Ritchie Blackmore didn’t attend?
We’d been talking about it [Ritchie and I]. We’d been nominated before and never got in, and I said; “are you going to go?”, and he said; “nah”. I said; “well, I won’t go then!” [laughing]. But what had happened in 2016, literally, once it had been announced that we were officially being inducted into it, the current Deep Purple refused to go if Ritchie Blackmore was going to be there. And this was like, 72 hours before, when I was ready to fly with my family. And this cost me like $75,000 – $85,000, because you have to pay for all the tables apart from the one you’re on, and I had my daughter fly in from Germany, my son came out of college. It was a family affair.

So you were all set to go, and plans changed?
Suddenly, Glenn Hughes and I were told; “well, we don’t want you singing with us”. Initially, I’d spoken to Ian [Gillan] about coming up and singing the backgrounds of ‘Smoke on the Water’, because originally they were going to close the show. So, that suddenly was pulled, the plug. They tried to stop us doing speeches, and my wife was fucking furious!, apart from the fact she spent a fortune on posh dresses! [laughing] And I said; “fuck it, nobody’s going to keep us off!” I got in touch with Carol, Ritchie’s manager, and I said; “tell him to come with me; nobody’s going to fucking touch him, tell him to come with me!”, and he didn’t want to do it.

You did mention Ritchie quite emphatically in your speech.
The first thing I said when I was up there, was; “none of us would have been standing here without Ritchie Blackmore”, and I made sure of that point. Steve Morse and Don Airey [current Deep Purple members] were more complimentary to Glenn and I than the other guys. We had a blast, we had a fucking great time! I’m very happy that I am who I am, and I just talked to Glenn the other day about it; “what the fuck was up THEIR ass?!” Anyroad, so we didn’t get to jam, which was fine; we were back doing press while they were performing, just having a good old time like the unrighteous brothers always do!

How do you think Ritchie would have behaved, had he been there on the night?
You know, it was an amazing scenario, but I know Ritchie, and he probably would have caused trouble by pulling out a water pistol and squirting everybody! [laughing] But it was absolutely obscene that he wasn’t there, but I made sure, and I got a thank you from him and his wife when they saw a recording of it. But you know, he doesn’t give a shit, and he knows he was responsible for the majority of the music there, and its true; none of us, none of us would have been on that stage without Ritchie Blackmore, none of us.

Continue reading on eonmusic.co.uk.

Thanks to BraveWords for the info.

Mixtapes and embellishments

David Coverdale with Whitesnake in Shizuoka, October 10, 2016; photo © Kei Ono cc-by-nc-sa

David Coverdale spoke to eonmusic about various remixes, remasters and other embellishments of his back catalogue, prospects of Coveradle/Page reissue, and many other things.

You wanted Rory [Gallagher] for Deep Purple, didn’t you, when Ritchie Blackmore left?
I loved him so much that when Ritchie said he was leaving [in 1975], the first guitar player I had on the list was Jeff Beck – who I’m still enamoured with entirely – there was Rory, god rest his soul, and then Tommy Bolin. So, yeah, Rory, I thought would have been something, I did. But Rory did really, really well. When he was making ‘Calling Card’ [1976] in Munich, I spent a lot of time there because that was like my second home. I’d often go down there, and there was just books all over, on Catholicism! [laughing!]

Have you had any albums during your career that for you, have fallen short?
The only frustrating albums I had was ‘Lovehunter’ [1979], because the manager refused to put Ian Paice, once Paicey had joined, I just felt Paicey – and no disrespect to the original drummer [Dave Dowle] – but Paicey is fucking Ian Paice! Him and Neil Murray, dear god, they nailed it, as you can hear on ‘Ready an’ Willing’ [1980], and ‘Come an’ Get It’ [1981], and that is sad to me, because I thought ‘Lovehunter’ had great songs that would have benefitted greatly by having Ian Paice on. The other one was ‘Restless Heart’, because it wasn’t supposed to be a Whitesnake album. So, I don’t really have any regrets.

Read more in eonmusic. There’s supposed to be part 2 of the interview published on November 2.

Thanks to Blabbermouth for the info.

Between snobbery and snobbery

Geir Myklebust continues doing God’s work with posting a New Musical Express feature on Jon Lord originally published on March 6, 1971.

Here is how Jon describes the pivotal moment in his musical development:

The group changed its name to the Art Woods and Jon bought a Hammond and became influenced by Graham Bond and Jimmy Smith. But there were still problems.
“We were getting fed up with blues, we couldn’t recreate the sound we would have liked to have done. We were all jazzers really but people didn’t want to listen to it a lot, they started to want to dance. We instilled elements of James Brown and the funky American musicians into the music, playing numbers like ‘Celedonia.’ I got fed up copying Jimmy Smith and looked around for something else to do.”
Jon did find that something else, but purely by accident rather than by design. Though he didn’t know it at the time, it was to have a big effect on his music in later years and at one stage almost lead to the break-up of his group.
“We did one number that was five minutes of organ and drums and one night for no reason I just stuck in a Bach fugue that I remembered and it went down a storm,” he stated. “We had a residency at the 100 Club in Oxford Street and got the same audience every week and they always wanted to hear it.
“That was the first time I ever thought of using classical music. Contrary to what a lot of people think, I didn’t get it from Keith Emerson and he didn’t get it from me. He struck on it at the same time. We did a version of ‘Shake’ that started off with a bit of Tchaikovsky — it got to a ludicrous level — but it worked.”

Read the whole thing in My Things – Music history for those who are able to read blog.

Thanks to Yvonne for the info.

Living on dog biscuits

Ian Gillan, sitting at home in Lyme Regis, amidst of all the gold records and memorabilia, talking to Nicky Horne of Vintage TV. That was recorded in 2016, back in the time when social distancing was unheard of. Enjoy! Continue Reading »

Housekeeper cooking body parts

David Coverdale talks to Darren Paltrowitz for the latter’s podcast. They spoke about degenerative arthritis, tax evasion, naked puppets, ear candy, handsome devils, coats of arms, choking on smoke, ancient Egypt, mutual respect, and in between it all, music. Continue Reading »

Drummers of note, part 2

Paicey’s Drummers of note continues today, October 29, with the second installment that will premiere in about 2 hours, or around 18:00 UTC. There will be a live chat available on Youtube. Continue Reading »

Descending sequence against that chromatic riff

Steve Morse with his MusicMan Y2D, London, Ontario, Feb 11, 2011; photo © Nick Soveiko cc-by-nc-sa

Steve Morse spoke to the Total Guitar and his interview became the basis for a feature promoting Whoosh, and how the new album harks back right into the classic Purple way of constructing the music:

I’m very proud to be still playing with my British brothers.

Diversity has been a big part of the sound. When you hear Highway Star – it wasn’t just blues. It had that structured element, there was a classical sequence that Jon would arpeggiate through in a descending sequence, against that chromatic riff. They were putting something beyond into a rock piece and turning it into something classical. There’s always been that blend, it’s been a part of Deep Purple for a long time.

It gets a lot more technical after that, so if you can tell your Phrygian Dominants from your arpeggiated chords, you can delve right into it on guitarworld.com. But don’t despair — there are also bits that are accessible for the rest of us.

Thanks to Blabbermouth for the info.

A jazz piece in 5/4

Paicey talks about his favourite drummers. Unsurprisingly, many of them come from jazz. Continue Reading »

A new album, an old label, and a Xmas EP

Blackmore's Night in Tarrytown, NY, Oct 25, 2012; photo © Nick Soveiko CC-BY-NC-SA

Blackmore’s Night will release their new album called Nature’s Light some time in the spring of 2021. To that extent they’ve signed up with their old label — Edel/earMUSIC — which back in the day had released their first two albums. Yep, they are on the same record label as Deep Purple now. The new album will be followed by a reissue of the band’s entire catalog later in the year.

To put something on the market in the meanwhile, there will be a 4-track EP of Christmas carols called Here We Come A-Caroling due out on December 4. It will be released on a digipack CD, a limited edition 10″ translucent green vinyl (US vinyl is expected a week later — December 11), and as download/streaming.

Here We Come A-Caroling track listing:

  1. Here We Come A-Caroling (Vinyl Side A)
  2. It Came Upon A Midnight Clear (Vinyl Side A)
  3. O Little Town Of Bethlehem (Vinyl Side B)
  4. Silent Night (Vinyl Side B)

blackmore's night xmas EP 2020

Thanks to Blabbermouth for the info.

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