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North America 2
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Verizon Wireless Theatre, Kansas City, MO, USA
Aug 25, 2004
Boy, what a concert!
It's now a day later and I'm still on a buzz from seeing Deep Purple. I've seen
them many times in different incarnations, but last night was definitely the
best. They were musically very tight, unbelievable musicianship, and they were
very animated, laughing, bouncing around the stage,and generally appearing to
be having a great time.
The set list was the same as they played in Boston, as per that review, with
just enough extra stuff and solo's added to make it interesting.
It never ceases to amaze me how much energy this band has and even though they
have gotten older, (haven't we all), they still kick butt. It was great to see
them headline the show and they gave a superb effort for 1 1/2 hours. I encourage
anyone that has any doubts about seeing them to just go, you won't be disappointed.
They were preceded by Joe Satriani which I thought was very good and
entertaining, despite what some of the previous reviews had stated about him
being boring. I found his guitar wizardry amazing and his attitude very enjoyable.
Very good support from his bandmates also.
Thin Lizzy opened the show, but they sure aren't the band I remembered
them as. Much more metal sounding than before and while some of the crowd obviously
enjoyed them I found them really subpar compared to the original band. They
do rock out however.
Overall, one of the best concerts I've seen in a while. Thanks Deep Purple and
hope to see you again soon.
Ron Rufkahr
Row 1 Seat five, dead center!
Well to start with the weather was nasty and the venue was total open air (won't
go there again).
Now the big moment. Purple came on stage (still no more rain) to a stand up
crowd of I would say 6000 people which I thought was good taking into concideration
of the weather.
I dont remember the exact set but I would say the same as the other reviews.
One thing I did notice was Deep Purple were not as tight as the last couple
shows I saw. Now to me that was not a bad thing, sounded live and not so mechanical.
For the first time I saw Morse not on top of his game. Seemed to me he wasnt
all there, off tempo, not a good mix and actually missed notes. He was having
fun or putting on a good show one. Now with that said I think it was one of
the best shows Ive seen since the Purpendicular tour and the absolute
best version of Highway Star that Ive ever seen. The band and crowd went
absolutely wild jumping and singing. I saw Rodger give Gillan a strange look
of like whats up with this?!
They absolutely rocked (not perfect) but live, loud and the crowd was pumping
them on, absolutely fabulous. The only disappointment was not enough Bananas
stuff, nothing from the previous two LPs (I will touch on that in a minute)
and a whole lot of oldies.
Now to the backstage stuff! We waited about 30 minutes before they would let
us backstage (really a tent behind the stage) so we waited there about 15 minutes
and Don came out first. Very nice, I was probably the loudest in the crowd so
he came over to me first and talked to me for a while (could hardly make out
the accent, besides I was totally deaf from the concert) and signed my Bananas
CD. Roger was next out, then Ian Paice. Last one out was Steve. He immediately
went over to a corner and stood. Everyone had to walk over to him to get his
signature, didnt say a word to hardly anyone. Came my turn, got his signature,
I told him it was a great concert (no reply) and then asked him why dont
you guys put Ted back in the mix thats a true classic? His response was
(very abrupt and low tone) Ive got no say in it then turned
away and didnt look back. This is my personal opinion, but not alls well
in the Purple camp!
Terry Sears
They're playing and sounding like they're in their 20's and
hungry for success. They performed with the precision of a Swiss watch, the
power of a Force 5 hurricane and the passion of a pair of young lovers locked
in a twisted tangle of limbs.
Jim Collins - read Jim's
full review
I cannot believe my luck! On my way in to the concert, I registered
to win a Bananas record at a local radio station's booth. As I placed my slip
in the drawing box, I noticed an envelope on the table labeled, "Deep Purple
Meet and Greet". The guy told me it was the last pair of passes, and that
they should go to a big fan. I only had to answer a trivia question to prove
it, which was to simply name the current members of the band (no problem!)
After the concert, we were led with about 20 others to a picnic area backstage.
All five members came out, and were sincerely friendly and willing to sign their
autographs and pose for pictures. My wife and I got our backstage pass and ticket
signed. I thanked the guys for all the great music through the years, and they
were very receptive to my noting how well the mix of older and newer songs worked
out. Steve Morse was especially accomodating, introducing himself as Steve Morse
of Deep Purple. He even handed out guitar picks with his name inscribed!
The concert itself was terrific. I am the band's biggest fan and its harhest,
knowledgable critic. The small but enthusiastic crowd seemed to please the band.
Morse, Glover, and Gillan exchanged jokes and laughs among themselves and with
the fans throughout the show.
This was certainly a great experience I never expected to have. Thanks to the
band and 101 The Fox!
Don Branham
Olathe, KS
Wow! Fantastic!
This was my third time seeing Purple, it was the best one so far! The other
two were great but this one really got the crowd going to no end! I had an all
access pass thanks to my sister Trish and Steve morse. This time the whole band
was backstage after the show and I was in awe. They are a special bunch of talented
musicians that are down to earth people!
There new CD Bananas is great , go buy it.
On our 200 mile trip home we were ready to turn the car around and go to Texas
to see them again!
The set they played couldn't have been better for me , they played almost all
my favorite Purple songs.
Thanks for the awesome show guys! Oh and the great German beer. Can't wait to
see you play again.
Terry Cherney
Ian Paice simply walked out onto the stage and took his place
behind the kit as the crowd burst into thunderous applause. With a grin on his
face behind those trademark cat-glasses, he raised his arms in the air in a
combination greeting and "Well?" gesture, and the crowd responded
in kind.
With no ado at all, Paicey tapped the slatedown and the Deep Purple ploughed
into the first song: "Silver Tongue." Looking like some kind of Dalai
Lama in what looked like loose-fitting white pyjamas, Ian Gillan grabbed the
microphone and charged the stage. "Well, I'm standing here on a moving
sta-tion...ALL the world is a-travelin' by...To strange outlandish dest-i-na-tions...There
they go, I'm a-wonderin' why..."
Troy D. Wickman - read Troy's
full review
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