Review of show at Beacon Theater, NYC, Nov. 27th
The upper-west side of Manhattan was crazy on
Thanksgiving-day-parade-float-blowup-evening. I felt lucky to get a parking
spot 20 blocks from the Beacon. But my distance from the venue was
contrasted by my 3rd row, left-center seat (standing space) at the concert.
What I was about to witness was pretty intense.
A brand-new pair of Sonic II's saved what is left of my hearing after too
many years in front of my own Leslies. The wall of sound coming from the
left speaker column, in front of my face, propelled the entire orchestra to
stand through the whole show.
Steve Morse was clearly enjoying himself. He was smiling throughout the
concert. And why not--he is one of the premier guitarists in Rock. What
unfolded before me was the guitar performance of the year (decade?)! I'd
LOVE to see Blackmore respond to the challenge.
Ian Paice's splashy snare and bass-drum work during Fireball was as good as
ever. Roger Glover's thumped his purple sunburst bass during Pictures of
Home, which I’ve always felt was a bass player’s song. I like his work on
Loosen My Strings (which they didn’t play). Glover is the fulcrum between
Paice and Morse. Often during the show Morse would come over to stage-left
to sing backup vocals with Glover at their dual mic stand, or just rock in
unison. The interaction between the two skinny guys in the band was beauty
to behold.
Gillan introduced a song as a "mellow one, actually sort of a lullaby", and
went into Speed King. Gillan often looked "Ozzy-esque" when he shook his
stringy hair at the stage right audience. His voice was good, however. Jon
Lord, to whom I owe a good deal of my own organ-playing style, seemed a
little tight during his solos. His studio work on the new CD is much better.
Morse's guitar intro to Smoke on the Water included quick quotes from Page
and Hendrix. I couldn’t help getting the feeling that he's been playing that
song in copy bands since high school.
The encore consisted of Perfect Strangers, Hey Cisco, and Highway Star. The
new songs, especially Hey Cisco and Sometimes I feel Like Screaming, were
among the highlights of the show. After a two hour show, I really wanted to
hear more.
Afterward, I had to go to a bar and de-compress for a while. The combination
of the energy projected by the band, and the perspective of being that close,
left me with a sense of sensory overload. I hadn’t seen Deep Purple since
1974. They had just released "Who Do We Think We Are", and surpisingly,
didn’t play anything from it. The band was clearly feuding, and about to
undergo a personnel change. They are much, much happier now.
Roy Altman
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