Deep Purple
Blue Öyster Cult
Edgar Winter
August 12, 2007
Pacific Amphitheatre
Costa Mesa, CA

By Shawn Perry
In the last few years, I've had some incredible close encounters with Deep
Purple. There was the Blockbuster Pavilion show in San Bernardino, a simmering
100 degrees, with the Scorpions and Dio. I paid $11 a piece for 22 ounce plastic
cups of Corona in the VIP area before bowing down to Steve Morse because of
his God-like mastery of the guitar. He just laughed and told me to get up from
the hot asphalt. My knees on the verge of bursting into flames, how could I
say no…
There was the concert in 2004 at the Wiltern Theater in Los Angeles with Thin
Lizzy (or what's left of Thin Lizzy) as the supporter. That night I attempted
to take pictures from the photo pit using a cheap digital camera, and got nothing
but a series of colorful blurs (Is that Ian Gillan with a halo around his head?
Maybe he really is Jesus Christ Superstar). Damn! But at least, they played
Machine Head from top to bottom. After the show, I spoke with
each member to get his take on the performance of what is arguably Deep Purple's
greatest and most popular record.
Ian Gillan: "We do most of the songs already, but it's an interesting
concept."
Roger Glover: "I loved playing Machine Head."
Ian Paice: "Tonight was really good. The trouble with trying to play everything
from a record is that, over the past 30 years, there were certain tracks we
didn't play because we never really thought they made it as stage songs. Only
one or two. But then you have to bring them in and make them work. And that's
a challenge."
Don Airey: "You tell me. I'm on the inside, so I can't really tell…"
Steve Morse: "I enjoyed it very much. I'm a fan and that is one of my
favorite Deep Purple albums, so it was natural for me."
My most recent run-in with the Deep Purple people eaters took place at the
Pacific Amphitheatre in Costa Mesa, California. On this particular balmy night,
the Purps were headlining a big fat bill that included Edgar Winter and Blue
Öyster Cult. The legendary Uncle Joe Benson was prowling around backstage,
shaking hands with everyone like a shady politician (he'd get my vote). And
the price of beer is still outrageously scurrilous (and yet I happily pay and
drink it). But here I was – ready to soak up the energy from one of the
greatest hard rock bands in history, and completely unaware of yet another unscheduled
meeting with the five-headed monster. But more on that later.
The previous night I saw Paul Rodgers and half of the Doors at the same venue.
Now, as I galloped down the aisle with an earful of residual volume, Edgar Winter
and his band were running through a string of hits and lapping up the love.
When "Frankenstein" came along, I eyed one enthusiastic cat in the
third row, pumping his fist in the air so hard I thought he was going to punch
a hole through the ozone layer. Some things never change.
Blue Öyster Cult came out next, and they sounded much better than I expected.
Actually, I didn't know what to expect because I hadn't seen them in almost
30 years (1978 with UFO at the L.A. Forum, to be exact). Maybe hobnobbing with
Eric Bloom and Buck Dharma before the show raised my faith in what they could
do. A definite highlight for me was "Cities On Flame," a classic arena
chestnut that predates "Godzilla" and other commercial minutia. The
jam that ensued chased away any preconceived notions I may have had about BÖC.

Just to show how gainfully cool they still are, Bloom introduced newest member,
Rudy Sarzo, the super bassist who has backed everyone from Quiet Riot to Ozzy
Osbourne to Whitesnake. Sarzo slithered through a few well-meaning notes of
"Crazy Train" before fading into the background for the signature
closer, "(Don't Fear) The Reaper."
Nightfall came and Purple hit the stage with 'Pictures Of Home," a pastoral
graze from Machine Head about a lost traveler trying to get
home. Palatial performances of "Into The Fire" and 'Strange Kind Of
Woman" set the tone as Morse and Airey, the eternal "new" guys,
contrived and maneuvered their instruments through the din with the greatest
of ease.
I chose to ignore the boneheads scratching their heads and yawning aloud: "Is
that Jon Lord up there?" or "What happened to Ritchie?" Lord
gracefully retired to the orchestra podium and Blackmore is prancing around
in tights, strumming a lute. Believe me when I say that Deep Purple is doing
just fine without these guys. Airey and Morse are not cloned replacements: they
both have introduced new dimensions, new ideas and a fresh perspective to the
Purple experience. This is a rare phenomenon that happens with few well-known
bands bringing in new members. Styx, Yes and Fleetwood Mac are all bands that
saw their fortunes grow with new members. For Purple, it's not only helped the
music; it's become a matter of survival. Without Morse and Airey, Deep Purple
wouldn't exist today.
Case in point is "Rapture Of The Deep," the title track from the
band's last studio album. Morse and Airey lock in like lost brothers, effectively
purplizing the song's main riff to the point of seamless integration in
a pile of Deep Purple staples. Really, this number could have easily fallen
into the grooves of Fireball or Burn. A guitarist
like Morse is able to simultaneously maintain his own identity within the context
of a well-known Purple riff. Not an easy task when one considers that someone
like Yngwie Malmsteen, given the opportunity, would have undoubtedly folded
to the pressure of emulating Blackmore over transcending him. Once Morse has
his chance to solo, there is no question that he isn't Ritchie Blackmore.
Be it the Middle Eastern accents that precedes "Woman From Tokyo"
or the Bach-like arpeggios that shape and shift the undercurrent of "Perfect
Strangers," Deep Purple still plays like world-class pros at the top of
their craft. Paice is the most underrated drummer of his era. Glover holds down
the fort without stepping on anyone else's toes. And Gillan, toes exposed as
he prances about barefooted, is no longer the screaming banshee that gave Made
In Japan its zesty kick, but still croons in tune and keeps the show
moving along.
"Smoke On The Water," the closing number, was given extra juice by
the presence of Edgar Winter and his guitarist Doug Rappoport. The two got plenty
of spotlight soloing time between passages of the audience chanting the famous
chorus. After encoring with "Hush," I was ready to head for the door,
but Junkman had other plans. So I followed him backstage just to see how long
it would take for security to throw us out.
Post Show Encounter: Smoke This!

I've been invited into Ian Gillan's dressing room twice after a show. Both
times, he's offered me a Heineken and a Dunhill cigarette. I love beer, but
don't smoke on a regular basis. Still the singer is so obscenely hospitable,
it would have been an insult if I hadn't indulged in his generosity. Years earlier,
bassist Roger Glover bummed a Marlboro from me at the China Club in New York,
so maybe this was payback time.
Tonight, Gillan's kindness went the extra mile. The last time we had talked,
he explained that he was in the process of writing a book. So I innocently asked
him, with Purple constantly on the road, if he had managed to finish the book.
"Well, I'm working on a novel right now," he said.
But what about the travelogue, documenting his various experiences as a rock
star, that he had told me about before? He smiled, opened a box and unwrapped
a bundle of what appeared to be brand new, hot-off-the-press volumes. "Oh,
yeah this." And there it was: Smoke This! The Warblings, Rants, Philosophies
And Musings From The Singer Of Deep Purple. He autographed a copy and handed
it to me. Then he told an off-color joke with Ritchie Blackmore as the punch
line. I was politely asked not to repeat it, and don't remember its exact wording
any way, so…I was given another Heineken to seal the deal.
A couple of hours before I chatted it up with Gillan, as well as Paice about
drums and Paul McCartney, Airey about keyboards and the Discos Biscuits, Glover
about that cigarette, and Morse about being in Deep Purple longer than Ritchie
Blackmore – I watched the band perform a superb set that blithely covered
their revered history. And when they come back, I'll go see them again because
I'm a history buff. Maybe I'll have even get the chance to have another drink
and smoke with the singer.
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