Tuesday, December 26, 2017

Machine Head, 1972

    • Author:      Deep Purple
      Released:   1972
Genre:        Hard rock, Heavy Metal

Producer:   Deep Purple

Rating:       ********* (9 out of 10)











Personnel:                                       List of Songs:


Guitar - Ritchie Blackmore                     Highway Star; Maybe I'm a Leo;                       
Bass - Roger Glover                                      Pictures of Home;Never Before;
Drums - Ian Paice                                  Smoke on the Water;Lazy;Space Truckin'
Keys - Jon Lord
Vocals - Ian Gillan



Under the Machine Gun

March 1972 embraced joyfully, as a loving mother her newborn, two singles released from the sixth album by an English Rock ‘n’ Roll band, Deep Purple. Highway Star indeed broke the speed of sound and a woman because of whom Ian Gillan was tired and crying on Never Before must have felt unwell knowing the success that had followed not only those two singles, but ultimately the third mighty one, Smoke on the Water. In May 1973 as a single, but before on album from 25 March 1972, this song had changed everything as well as its birth giving mother, Machine Head.
The album kicks off with a half of a minute Roger Glover’s bass solo playing in turns with Ritchie Blackmore’s leaping Fender Stratocaster, which both launch into the main speeding riff that seems to be on drugs and out of the 1972 world, when the fastest known song was freaking Black Sabbath’s Paranoid. However, both tempo (DP’s 174 vs BS’s 163) and riff signature cannot compete, because powerful Paranoid would eventually lose and nobody wants to hear that (to all devoted Black Sabbath/Ozzy Osbourne fans: Paranoid is a true rocking horse of heavy metal). Gaining No. 19 in Guitar World’s “100 Greatest Guitar Solos” Ritchie’s under-one-minute-and-twenty-seconds solo flares a red light among his contemporary peers that could have been endangered by talent of  the Man in Black. Peeping round the door from the second in a row Maybe I’m a Leo is not the elephantine sound of thumping slow riff that alongside on the boat with wondrous rhythm section rock that boat (Frank Loesser would like that metaphor) with doleful tone of Gillan’s singing. Only nine verses of lyrics and a long music sheet covered by early Heavy Metal notes cut off a listener’s coupon –  staying outside a theater encouraged by listening to rushing at breakneck speed Highway Star and prompted to buy a ticket for the entire show when Maybe I’m a Leo breaks the window. More moody and climbing the Mount Rushmore’s history of the band, Pictures of Home depicts all five members mature enough to write most probably the most transcending and sagacious song in their long as river high catalogue. Fast, but composed tempo of this hasty group born to be wild speeds up a bit to end up on a single shared with another enormous giant, When a Blind Man Cries – highlands of studio spiritual talent of songwriting that missed by whimsical “Wayward Son” Blackmore because of any reason, the song appeared live just in 1990s, when Steve Morse joined the hands of the British giants and extended the live performance to as long as about eight minutes. However, a casual listener could feel a kind of insufficiency during the end of Pictures of Home, when a record player’s needle stops spinning around side one of Machine Head. Fortunately, side two provides the same listener with an equivalent of atomic bomb explosion in mid paced, shuffling and rolling riff of the most recognizable song in the Rock ‘n’ Roll history. Smoke on the Water was recorded at Montreux Casino in Switzerland in 1971 in the first days of December as well as all other six songs, but only this song tells a story of some stupid man with a flare gun who burned the place to the ground and this story and this song had been introduced to the Temple of Rock forever. First couple of seconds are taken by glorious preliminary of Fender Stratocaster chucking out the notes of formidable, venomous riff that carries a massage: I will take your soul away; once you have heard this destructive “music flare”, you will never get rid of it off your head. Afterwards a marching army of bass line and Jon Lord-derived neo-classical progressive chords mix together letting Blackmore fling out a fulminant guitar solo gobbling a hasty scampering of Ian Paice’s large tom-toms. It all ends just to make another dandy comeback finalized in Lord’s keyboard solo. Loose, jazz-like intro of keys, guitar, bass solo and crowned harmonica by Gillan of Lazy proceed into something which is more focused jamming of well talented artists than a measured, strait song with heterogeneous structure and wavering tempos brimful of instrumental solos. One could think that Fireball times influenced this particular recording, although as long as No One Came or Fools shine as diamonds, Lazy seems to be an interlude of rocking side two between Smoke and cosmic Space Truckin’. The last song most presumably contains the most metallic riffing of Blackmore tinged with Lord’s blasting chords and tight rhythm section that lifts up the song contemplating a space travel to the heights of stars. While Highway Star is holding the ground, Space Truckin’ is shooting at the moon and waiving at the Earth grinning at the whole world. 


On 4 December 1971 while at a Frank Zappa’s concert, some stupid fired the roof and then the whole Montreux Casino building with a simple flashing flare gun. There was smoke on the water and fire in the sky and there were days from December 6 through December 21 that gave to the world one of the finest albums ever recorded, and thankfully Roger Glover woke up one day during the recording sessions and spoke: Smoke on the Water. Led Zeppelin’s IV and Black Sabbath’s Paranoid stood the test of time with Machine Head, but only Machine Head had influenced more artists than it has songs on its playlist.
 

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