Glenn Hughes was amazing in this live version. What a bass line. Too much creative and funk groove. Blackmore, no words to describe. Pace and Lord, masters as usual, and Coverdale, where has this guy found out this voice? Unique. One of the best Purple album.
No there won´t! There are several great guitarplayers today and earlier, but they can´t be Ritchie Blackmore. There is only one Guitarplayer: Ritchie Blackmore . The Greatest!!!!
@@wanmahadi Yes, that´s for sure, absolutely right! Ritchie Blackmore IS Deep Purple. Without Blackmore, nothing, absolutely nothing (even though Jon Lord is equal to him). To me it´s embarrassing to even call the band Deep Purple, that band of today does not exist for me, without Blackmore and even Jon Lord, R.I.P.
Verdade. Ian Paice é o ultimo dos grandes bateristas do rock. Considero ele um dos grandes bateristas do rock ao lado dos falecidos John Bonham e Neil Peart.
Ian Paice drumming on this song is awesome the timing is great his drumming is always great and his drumming on the Burn album is awesome just listen to it.
I heard this song so many times as loud as I could, getting into every single note! This is the best band, one of the best songs and performances, both Made in Europe and Made in Japan are crystallized in my brain forever!
Same here! The first time I heard that song I was like 16. Most.of the time I was into Kiss, BTO ect...and then a friend played that record. At first was like W T H is that??? It has nothing to do with what I was usually listening to...Since then, I'm one of the bigest DP fan in the world;.
@@MrMolack I agree this is the perfect album together with Made in Japan, Ian Paice is a killer machine in this track, during the solo is unbelievable how fast he push the kick. Third best show I'd say is the one in California, I believe the first in America.
02:33 - this is why Ian Paice is fantastic. The studio version on Burn: Blackmore playing fantastic melodically, Lord even underlying it with a grand piano.
Has Richie ever sounded as awesome as he did in this live performance..so many styles in his playing..the blues he plays..before that riff kicks back in..genius player.Havent mentioned Ian Paices drumming , Coverdales amazing vocal..who is there around today who can aspire to compete with this old guard of superlative musicians.
Impossible to single out anyone on this track and album. Everyone is amazing. In its own way, it’s a brilliant testament to Mk III in the way Made in Japan is to Mk II. Hard to believe Blackmore is on his way out even at this stage. His commitment is amazing, he’s rarely given credit for the sheer professionalism he brings to his bands.
Best Jon Lord's live solo: sharp, short, and to the point. Furthermore, that rather rare phase shifter really favours his Hammond sound on the spacey Baroque bit here. And that "Hava Nagila" rendition on the muted Clavinet provides a lovely contrast.
I agree, but that's because it's an edit cut version. The intro, keyboards by Jon Lord, and the two sung verses come from Saarbrücken. The first solo (Ritchie with the others), was recorded in Saarbrücken. The incredible solo he plays alone has been recorded in Paris. The rest comes from Saarbrücken, as is the superb drum solo from Ian Paice. It lacks the end, the instrumental part "The Mule". But that's right. The result is perfect. Absolutely perfect! And that sound !!!
The impossible virtuosity of Glenn Hughes simply shocks. Being admitted to Deep Purple he was a comparatively young man, where did he learn to play so fantastically beautiful?
Always loved this. Aside from all the other superlatives, of which every member is deserving, this must be said: the guitar sound. Obviously it’s Ritchie so it’ll be great, but he just had the most awesome sound at that time. It’s crystal-clear, yet staggeringly heavy with phenomenal sustain. It’s machine-gun fast with incredible definition, yet nearly as liquid as Holdsworth. And you can’t get that any other way than sheer volume.
Uno ian paice strepitoso...un drummer mondiale..un blackmore che scocca frecce avvelenate dalla sua Fender...eccezionale l intermezzo rock and blues...lo avrei prolungato...un Lord fantastico col suo hammond...x il resto mi si perdoni..ma a me mancano sempre Gillan , Glover...con tutto il rispetto x uno Hughes ottimo, ed un altrettan8 volenteroso Coverdale..
they are just pure animal specially glenn hughes...never listen better than that song its just exactly solid rock but bass line is killing me excellent band excellent song
8:23 - that's the kind of spontaneous stuff Blackmore would pull out of nowhere - what was why he was so great! Some nights it'd be happening all over the place.
I’ve seen Ritchie live in Deep Purple and Rainbow about 15 times. He never disappointed. He was the most exciting musician I’ve ever seen. And I saw most of the bands in the 70’s and 80’s and then again in the 90’s. Nobody has ever lit up a stage the way Ritchie did. He was one great big ball of fire.
Simply perfect. The fantastic keyboard solo at the beginning (We miss Jon so much), the sung part with the two voices in a perfect harmony, the guitar solo very very melodic, where Ritchie plays some parts of "Still I'm sad", the bass of Glenn, so inspired and melodic during the solo, then the madness of Ritchie when he plays alone, so amazing, then the beautiful blues, and at the end the extraordinary Ian Paice's drums solo. Not too long, but absolutely perfect. Nothing to add. This song is a total perfection!
Lord intro is superb followed by Paice drums.,Coverdale vocals is unique and from 06:20 to 07:30 the solos from Blackmore really match with the Hughes' bass.......its the best song of DP mark III.
I traveled 175 miles one way on the bus to buy this album as now the producer has maybe he's given us an even better version of the music very good very good
I learned this and what Glenn Hughes was doing by heart. Huge influence on me when I was learning Bass. Chris Squire. Glenn Hughes. Larry Graham. Stanley Clarke. Those 4 were who I listened to the most when I was learning. On a Memphis Bass, with the highest action you could imagine.