Pre Purple People This is a fascinating
release for any Deep Purple fan who's familiar with the band's early
catalogue, and has questions about the music that the individual members
were involved in just before they joined... Were elements of Purple already
evident in their work? What would Jon Lord and
Ritchie Blackmore The collection kicks off way back in 1965, with Ritchie Blackmore's ultra-rare (and ultra-tinny) solo single. The musical links to Purple are mainly to the instrumentals that so dominated their early shows, in particular a run in 'Getaway' later jammed around during 'Wring That Neck'. On to early 1967, and getting closer to the formation of Deep Purple, we have three brilliantly quirky sixties instrumentals from Santa Barbara Machine Head, Jon Lord's previous attempt to leave behind the rapidly dating r&b sound of The Artwoods. The group comprised Jon, Twink (Pink Fairies and Pretty Things drummer), Ronnie Wood, and the late Kim Gardner (who ended up in another extremely potent Hammond-driven group, Ashton Gardner & Dyke). Wood's guitar work throughout is hilariously individual, what Ritchie Blackmore might have sounded like with a crate of brown ale in him. But it's still brilliant, I've never heard Wood sound better (certainly not in the Rolling Stones) The Artwoods finally came to a halt in 1967, after trying their hand as a gangsta r&b combo. While Jon was jamming with Ritchie Blackmore and Chris Curtis in his Fulham flat that December, and probably already realising that he'd be needing other musicians with a stronger grip on reality to do the singing and drumming, Slough band The Maze were laying down some deeply unpurple music. 'Cateri Cateri' and 'Easy Street' aren't their best moments, but do show off Rod Evans superb crooning voice, and prove that Ian Paice could restrain himself during quieter numbers, though barely. (This is a full year before he packed an album's worth of drumming into the harpsichord ballad 'Blind').
Were Gillan and Glover
asked to join Purple purely as musicians, or as a writing team?
The four Episode Six tracks help give some clues, especially
the two live Gillan / Glover penned tracks from 1969. These are what
Lord and Blackmore would have witnessed when they checked out Episode
Six, having already decided to David Coverdale's group, The Government, played support for Deep Purple Mk2 at one of their early shows. Just in case the new boy from Episode Six didn't work out, Jon Lord took Coverdale's number. As it was, Purple's career took off big time, and while 'In Rock' was taking up residence in the UK album charts, The Government were trooping into the studio purely to make souvenir recordings for themselves. The resulting four tracks give us our only glimpse of Coverdale's pre-Purple career (for pics see The Government photos in the dp.net image gallery). The band have a choppy guitar and brass soul sound, San Francisco in Sunderland. David is instantly recognisable, and it's a wonder that he had to wait another three years before a big-time recording contract came his way. The quality of music on the cd (and the sound quality) is variable but never dull, and the collection is well worth getting hold of, deserving a place on the cd rack alongside Deep Purple's early catalogue. review: David Browne Pre Purple People is available from the Deep Purple online store |