to be honest: Simon McBride does a more than good job- i'm literally crying cause it's so good.....Thank you Deep Purple for being one of the best bands that keep on goin....
La più grande rock band della storia del rock! Simon oK ! Fantastici! Averli visti suonare alla metà degli anni 70 e poi nel 2022 alla loro età, è incredibile! Resteranno i numeri uno!
Pure class. Can't wait to see them again in Birmingham later in October. There may have been lineup changes, but they have been going as a band since 1968. Despite that, one aspect is consistent - top class musicians playing top class music.
@@MrBlack-px4ok It's now two days since the concert at Birmingham and I'm still on a high. We had fantastic seats - 3rd row centre - and Purple were amazing. Certainly the best sound I've ever heard - loud but crystal clear. But what capped it all for me was the amazing energy they bought to the stage. Simon McBride was worth the ticket money alone and his interplay with Roger Glover and Don Airey was pure joy - they were really enjoying playing together. Ian Paice was his usual brilliant self, driving the band on and Ian Gillan was superb. Highway Star, with its upper registers, was a challenge but after that he dominated the stage. Two new numbers (No Need to shout and Nothing at all) fitted in perfectly, the latter being quite superb, but the high spot for me was Blindman. What a performance. In short, a wonderful, wonderful concert from a wonderful band. Thank you Purple. Simply the best.
Yes, when we talk DP, there will always be the man - Ritchie Blackmore. As much as I was upset abt him leaving, the guitarists DP replaced him with were simply great, Satriani, Morse, you got to be kidding me! I didn’t follow McBride before, but he’s fantastic. And this rendition of the song, as his playing, is outstanding.
It's always sad to see legends grow old. I know it's nature - everyone gets old, but something inside me says that this is wrong and this should not happen, especially with LEGENDS and their music.
Wow, McBride! Speechless... A genius! In a certain sense better than Blackmore. He could perform those old, so familiar, even beaten songs in his own, freshiest way, with a cristal-sharp techniques and the waterfall of emotions. Wow!
This was always going to be an epic song. But for me, it was that one moment, that one bended note from Ritchie Blackmore's guitar, that made it more than a bit special. Without Ritchie Blackmore, this song no longer has any meaning.
I noticed that, other times his hand seemed level and calm. Could just be a weak arm, bad wrist. At 77 there are going several parts of the body that start getting weak - but not his voice!