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Right to the point, the set list was a bit disappointing. While the
inclusion of "When a Blind Man Cries"and "No One Came" was sweet, the
loss of "Child in Time" was unfortunate. I was surprised, however, at
the rejuvenated "Woman From Tokyo" and a few other classics. I could
have done without "Hush" and added something like "Demon's Eye" or "No
No No".
The talent in this band is unspeakable. A more talented and
entertaining band does not exixt (well, Dio-era Sabbath is close).
While Purple came off magnificently, I nonetheless missed Blackmore.
Morse is fantastic, and seemed comfortable but none of the solos, save
part of "Highway Star", brought out the exotic, snake-charmer mystique
of essential Deep Purple. But what can you do? Overall, they were
amazing.
Other highlights: the band actually getting along, Jon Lord's increased
prominence on stage, the loss of lasers and distracting stage setups.
Other lowlights: the opening band. Granted, the guitarist was
profiecient on his instrument, but the songs were uninspired, boring....
well okay, they sucked. I would like to thank the guy in front of me
with
80's rock hair. He adequately blocked my vision of that cornball
bassist, while my fingers in my ears lessened the degree of pain
derived from his tortured-animal vocal harmonies. How did they get the
opening slot for Purple?
Dave Ertl
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