This isn't MK4's best gig for sure but if you listen to bootlegs from long beach New Zealand or Jakarta they sound pretty damn good live! And tommy was one hell of a player RIP.
It took me 17 years(my entire life) to find out Coverdale was active Pre-Whitesnake....always saw him as some glam star lol! He really KILLS it in this one w Mr. hughes, fuckin sweet
Honestly, I was in my early 20s when I found out Coverdale was in Purple. I bought Burn on CD just because the cover looked so friggin cool. Turned out to be one of my all time favourite albums ever.
David Coverdale did in Deep Purple : Burn (1974) Stormbringer (1974) Come taste the band (1975) After Purple : David Coverdale's whitesnake (1977) Northwinds (1978) Snakebite (1978) Trouble (1978) Lovehunter (1979) Ready and Willing (1980) Come on and get it (1981) Saint and Sinners (1982) Slide it in (1984) Then 1987...
I think that was an easy trap to fall into. I mean I’m in my late 40s and my first memories of Coverdale was me being 9 him singing on MTV while Tawny Kitean did things to a car my young body wasn’t quite sure about but it felt like it would happily trade places with the car and find out. That certainly didn’t scream singer for Deep Purple. I’m the meantime, unknowingly I was trying to find out anything I could about his original band because I was introduced to Jesus Christ Superstar at 5 and had to find out who this Ian Gillan guy was (how did we survive before the internet?).
Actually dp has a few albums with him and I prefer COVERDALE over whatever the other guys name is when I saw white snake 2011 omg they played a looooooooooooooooot of deep purple and wow blew my mind. Now dp really doesn’t sound the same without Lord, Bolin and Coverdale
Recently saw Glenn Hughes with Black Country Communion. They are a great new group with some classic musicians in it, and Glenn can still belt it out at 58. They covered Burn and how you hear Glenn in this video at 23 is how I heard him a few months ago at 58. Purely outstanding music.
@@fpostolache Ian Gillan screams too. Do you not like him? Neither one screams all the time. Glenn Hughes is by far one of be best singers, technically speaking. His high tenor voice is so incredibly hard to cover.
Превосходно !!! Rock Band ,,Deep Purple" словно элитная ,,движимость" : если составы Mark | и Mark ll - это основа, фундамент, «классика», то составы Mark ||| и Mark |\/ - это роскошные, с элементами «фьюжен», апартаменты !!! Что в целом способствовало развитию и обогащению новыми ,,красками" направления, жанра, стиля Hard Rock ! Всем почитателям творчества D.P. - моё почтение, удачи и долгих лет !!!
Феномен англичан - растить длинные густые волосы (до старых лет) и по экспрессивности в рок музыке заткнуть далеко в жопу все остальное человечество. И откуда все это берётся??? «Овсянка... сэр....».......
Some people will never understand the genius and beauty of Tommy Bolin. This was a particularly rough show because the promoter had overdosed Tommy on morphine not long before this gig, and he fell asleep on his arm and it went so numb he could not move his fingers. This concert just happens to be the one that they got on tape. Please stop shit talking him and listen to his absolutely masterful solo albums!
I can only feel sad about Bolin. He was an AMAZING guitarist, but he was always a replacement in big bands (Joe Walsh and Ritchie Blackmore). If he tried to play his own way, he would get booed off stage. It all made him severely depressed which led to heavier substance abuse. His arm is swollen here from having passed out awkwardly on his arm for 8 hours and couldn't physically do more than barre chords and simple phrases. It's a shame some people think this is representative of him as a player.
Love Dave's mike action - apparently he played his first solo gig at the Skybird Club in Birmingham and put his mike-stand through the ceiling. Ho-ho! PS Jon Lord is cool as always.
I've got a problem when there are *musical passages* that sound like a guitar "solo", but they are actually very disciplined, with little improvisation. Blackmore and Lord did that together a *lot*. It was a classical music influence, primarily using Bach's harmonies, because they worked very well with high distortion and all the harmonics that go with it. I'm not sure that an American guitarist from the midwest, and soaked in blues-based improvisation, really understood that. I think Bolin was great on his own and in the James Gang, but I'm not sure he was the right guitarist for Deep Purple. Ritchie Blackmore supposedly recommended Bolin, but I tend to think that was a passive-aggressive move. When Tommy got into deep water, and perhaps forgot the original guitar part, he goes for the improv approach, and it doesn't work with Purple's passages. (Not surprisingly, guitarists and bands that followed years later made entire careers out of the Blackmore/Lord/Bach approach.) 5 out of 10 for me.
1975 .. 4-5 Desember mereka mengunjungi Indonesia.. Dengan band pembuka Godbless. Dan 10 maret nanti mereka akan kembali bertemu satu panggung di solo. Indonesia Ya mereka legenda.. 🙏🙏🙏
Interesting, not one single version except for thenoriginal studio version has tha beautiful melancholic whistly keyboard in the background of the second solo a d thats the most beautiful and the most beautiful.part of the song (from 4.32 of the original studio version).
the soul funk dude 91 i don't think it was because of Bolin. Glenn was taking coke before, when Ritchie was still with them. It's a pity because Glenn was so fucking talented basist. His voice range is huge, but you can like his singing or not. However he was perfect at bass, no one will deny.
Audio and video are perfectly synced up together here. Yay. Sadly, Tommy couldn't quite play all of Ritchie's big hit songs like Burn. So John had to play most of the guitar parts for Tommy. At least the opening riffs anyway. Tommy came around a bit as the song went on. His guitar solo seemed a bit inconsistent. What there was of it anyway. As great a guitarist as Tommy was? And as much as I loved him with Purple on Come Taste the Band? On their biggest hits by Ritchie, Tommy just never fully played them properly live. I saw Deep Purple live with Tommy, back in the mid-70s. I think it was at the Long Beach Arena. Could have been the L.A. Forum. 1974 or 75? Anyway. Just before Tommy died and Purple split up. Tommy just didn't play very many of Ritchie's riffs. Jon Lord played most of Ritchie's guitar parts on his Hammond C-3. Opening riffs especially. Sad. They played a version of Tommy's hit Wild Dogs from his first solo album, Teaser, that was just killer. And Tommy sang it beautifully, too. They had 3 lead Singers in the band at that point. Tommy, David, and Glenn. I just wish Tommy had learned more of their biggest hits with Ritchie, and maybe stayed away from shooting up heroin while he was at it. That's why he could barely play here. His arm was swollen from his chronic intravenous drug abuse. (Not from sleeping on it weird. David Coverdale talked about Tommy's chronic drug abuse prior to Tommy's death from a heroin overdose.) If you've not heard their Last Concert in Japan live album with Tommy? Pretty decent album. Especially Tommy's hit Wild Dogs. Worth a listen. I had it on vinyl, but then lost it in a storage unit auction. (Live in Europe, the last live album Ritchie recorded with them before going off to form Rainbow with Ronnie James Dio? Also great.)
David Coverdale was a great replacement and then came the "Whitesnake" ...I saw Deep Purple on 'ThePerfect Strangers Tour' in 83' or 84' ..Ian Gillian was back in the fold ... a hard rock experience ..musical excellence !! (saw Whitesnake 2X's later.
При всём уважении не согласен с Вами, Болин даже рядом с Блекмором не стоит! Посмотрите на концерт, всё вытаскивает орган,т.е. Лорд, светлая ему память!
@@bremtremont2027 i wouldn't call bolin an average player. His transitions of guitar licks are unreachable , his playing is awesome and his peak was in his work with billy cobham. You can't say bolin is basic. He was having an addiction during the deep purple shows. That's why his playing sounds bad here
@scirp He was a great jazz rock player among the many kind of music He fronted...He was certenly a technically skilled player...just listen closely to 'teaser' 'from the archives vol.I" and "whisper and roses vol.I"... He was a genius:exceptional inventivness, songwriting,playability, peculiar guitar sound and great voice too...He was ahead of his time while being so young...You should know Tommy in depth to judge him and to really understand who he was...
There would be no Purple today without Tommy. Taste the Band was great but not a true Purple album in my eyes. Myself likes to listen to Teaser on the phones kicking back....Thanx Tommy
I recently bought the Phoenix Rising Blu-ray. In the notes it says that the entire concert here was filmed, but it's not known where it is or if it still exists. I really like all the Purples, but I'm really partial to this lineup. Come Taste The Band, superb!
There are a few instances that Ian-Purple did do this song live but it was years ago when Blackmore was still in the band, and maybe no more than 3 times...
They landed in Japan knowing that one of their bodyguards Patsy Collins had been killed in Jakarta. He was assigned to make sure Tommy Bolin was fit to play, the band already aware of his party loving nature. Tommy asked the promotor for some downers, barbiturates I'm guessing, and the promotor gave him liquid morphine. It's not certain whether Bolin injected it or swallowed it but he fell into a deep sleep on his left arm, some say it was wrapped around the arm of a chair at the time, and when he woke up he was paralyzed. He tried acupuncture and massage in Japan and sat with his arm in an electric blanket before the shows, but as you can hear he was still unable to play fluently. If you want to see him speaking on TV in 1973 Google: "Tommy Bolin/Jim Fox on Whistle Test". He had just joined The James Gang and is filmed before alcohol and drugs destroyed him. He's wearing a cool hat.
you can say Bolin did nt paly Blackmore notes, but he came out with his own stuff which made an amazing solo as well, different style does nt mean it sucks.
Bolin (RIP) was a GREAT player and will always be remembered ! Trouble here is that these guys were shootin up all sorts of shit ! Legend goes that he wasn t able to play that riff cos his fingers were numb ! Makes sense ey ....
@y0y0t0. The story goes that when this was recorded Bolin was severely affected by drugs to the extent that it limited what he could do with his hands and he could hardly play at all, thereby leaving Jon to fill in the blank spaces left by Bolin and so Jon carried much of the riffing. On this performance its a believable story and drugs of course were the cause of Bolin's death. His performance on "Come Taste" is rather more credible as was his considerable accomplishments outwith Purple.
The band sounds great it's too bad Tommy didn't know the rifts I love Tommy trust me Rest in peace I wish he would have taken that band more seriously than a paycheck They were the biggest band in the world at the time a year before. I love Tommy's solo music more. He put 100 effort into. I wish he did with purple. Come taste the band is an excellent album don't underestimate that album it's incredible.