Pulled this one out for a listen for the first time in a long time. Still one of the all time great live album IMO. The band were on fire and I think it still holds up pretty well today 40 years later.
Pulled this one out for a listen for the first time in a long time. Still one of the all time great live album IMO. The band were on fire and I think it still holds up pretty well today 40 years later.
And there's no overdubs (unlike some live albums) or even tracks comped from multiple performances. I remember when Live In Japan (the three CD set with most of the stuff from the three nights in Tokyo and Osaka that didn't make it onto Made In Japan) came out around the 20th anniversary of Made In Japan, there was a comment in the liner notes that there had been rumors of Gillan overdubbing some of the vocals, but they could find no evidence of such post-production on the multitracks.
Excellent album. If I had to pick one from DP, this is it. Heard it mostly in the 80s and a few times since then.
I heard this a million times (on cassette tape) way back in the '80s while first learning guitar. Then somehow I just moved on to other things. I picked up a remastered copy on CD about 2 years ago, but only listened once. I need to spin it again.
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Smoke on the Water had just come out and I loved it...my cousin came through and bought me this for my 12th bday. I spun that vinyl over and over day after day. A few months later the California Jam made it's way to tv and I watched to see Deep Purple but left a Black Sabbath fan. Funny, after I got into Black Sabbath, I just totally lost interest in Deep Purple and I never bought another DP album. Though when Blackmore reformed as Rainbow I did buy the live album and got a lot of good listening out of that
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Ian Paice snare work on the Mule is immense.It might still be a very "rock" solo coming from obvious big band influence, but there were few drummers at the time that could compete with that sort of snare finesse\articulation.
One of the greatest live albums of all time
Ian
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Gordon Haskell - "You've got to keep the groove in your head and play a load of bollocks instead"
I blame Wynton, what was the question?
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Looks like I lost my job at the wrong time. I wanted the deluxe album set and Amazon has none left so I would figure there aren't many out there and the price is probably astronomical. Oh well. I will get the deluxe package that's left sometime here relatively soon when I can put the cash together.
Ian Paice doesn't show up very well on studio records but on Purple live recordings from BITD he's a beast. To boot, he does it on a minimalist drum kit. No fancy bells and whistles. Underrated he is IMO, not unlike the band.
I found an old CD (original pressing) of MIJ years ago. I was kind of on a DP kick at the time, and reading so many gushing reviews over the years I felt I needed it in my collection. I've never been a huge fan of live albums to begin with, but I try to get at least one live album by all my favorite bands. But over the decades I've read/heard nothing but gushing praise about this album, and so many others that I feel I need to have them in my collection. It's been a few years since I've played MIJ but honestly, I just don't think it's anything to go goo goo ga ga over. I felt the same way about "Live And Dangerous" by Thin Lizzy. I guess it's just me. It's not that the albums are bad or anything, I just don't think they're anything special. I prefer the studio albums, that's all. Really, right now I can only think of two live albums that I really love and think they're as good as any studio output by either band: Band Of Gypsys and Two For The Show (the 2 disk remaster).
Mostly. Visconti claims the only thing that wasn't overdubbed was the drums. I think Peter Criss said once that the one you can't fix on a live album is the drums, because then you start having trouble with synching up with the rest of the band. Unless, I imagine, your name is Neil Peart, then I imagine that degree of precision is possible. Hmmm, I wonder if Rush overdubbed the drums (or any of the other instruments) on any of their live albums.
Perhaps the best rock live album ever
The vibe is just amazing the audience is just as "on fire" as the band
All The World's A Stage is heavily dubbed, but still rocks. Exit Stage Left had fixes too, I believe, and unfortunately sounds like it. After that, I'm not sure. Their live sound and precision from the mid '80s on were so great that they probably didn't have to do anything but pick the best performances of a given song.
As for Made In Japan, it's one of those albums that's so fundamental for me, that it's hard to honestly evaluate it anymore.
He's still got it. Like I said in the other thread, he doesn't become the guy you want to emulate ala Peart but he's so damned good you just don't realize it at times. He is great at doing what need to be done, playing when he needs to but he never got into the whole kitchen sink theory of writing a drum track. Which works, well, for this band. They have killer guitar and organ and since they never were the definition of a prog band it's just not needed. I think he gets overlooked in the best drummers argument because of exactly this.
Very, very few drum solos I like. His are among them.
I love his playing on 'Smoke On The Water'. The studio version of that and 'The Mule' have some of his best playing IMHO.
I'm more of a Paice than Peart man when it comes to drummers.
Paice is fantastic. I've always loved his playing. I wonder why you don't hear more drummers who've worked to emulate his snare work?
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I love the "sound" of this live album. It puts me in 5th row center, with the best version of Highway Star ever recorded.
no tunes, no dynamics, no nosebone
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