Deep Purple - Deepest Trilogy Box (2009) (3CD, Japanese K2 HD Mastering VICP-64302~4)


Deep Purple - Deepest Trilogy Box (2009) (3CD)
Year & Label: 1968-69/2009 Victor Entertainment, Inc., Japan | CD#: VICP-64302~4
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Japanese exclusive strictly limited edition K2 24-Bit digitally remastered 38-track 3CD set, compiling the legendary group's 1st 3 longplayers ('Shades Of Deep Purple', 'The Book Of Taliesyn' and 'Deep Purple'), originally released between July 1968 & June 1969, featuring the first line-up including Rod Evans and Nick Simper; each CD features bonus recordings and is superbly presented in a mini LP-style pasted card sleeve with lyricbooklet & individual obi strip, housed in a deluxe sealed metallic-embossed box with exclusive T-shirt & wraparound obi strip. Limited to 500 copies.


CD1 - Shades Of Deep Purple
Year & Label: 1968/2009 Victor Entertainment, Inc., Japan | CD#: VICP-64302
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The usual perception of early Deep Purple is that it was a band with a lot of potential in search of a direction. And that might be true of their debut LP, put together in three days of sessions in May of 1968, but it's still a hell of an album. From the opening bars of "And the Address," it's clear that they'd gotten down the fundamentals of heavy metal from day one, and at various points the electricity and the beat just surge forth in ways that were startlingly new in the summer of 1968. Ritchie Blackmore never sounded less at ease as a guitarist than he does on this album, and the sound mix doesn't exactly favor the heavier side of his playing, but the rhythm section of Nick Simper and Ian Paice rumble forward, and Jon Lord's organ flourishes, weaving classical riffs, and unexpected arabesques into "I'm So Glad," which sounds rather majestic here. "Hush" was the number that most people knew at the time (it was a hit single in America), and it is a smooth, crunchy interpretation of the Joe South song. But nobody could have been disappointed with the rest of this record -- one can even hear the very distant origins of "Smoke on the Water" in "Mandrake Root," once one gets past the similarities to Jimi Hendrix's "Foxy Lady"; by the song's extended finale, they sound more like the Nice. Their version of "Help" is one of the more interesting reinterpretations of a Beatles song, as a slow, rough-textured dirge. "Hey Joe" is a bit overblown, and the group clearly had to work a bit at both songwriting and their presentation, but one key attribute that runs through most of this record -- even more so than the very pronounced heaviness of the playing -- is a spirit of fun; these guys are obviously having the time of their lives rushing through their limited repertoire, and it's infectious to the listener; it gives this record much more of a '60s feel than we're accustomed to hearing from this band. The re-release is notably superior to any prior version of the CD, made from the original master tape (which had been sent directly to the group's American label, Tetragrammaton, leaving EMI with a vinyl dub, astonishingly enough), with textures far closer and crisper than have ever been heard before -- there are also five bonus tracks, two very early outtakes from their earliest sessions, an alternate version of "Help," a BBC recording of "Hey Joe," and a searing live U.S. television performance of "Hush."

Musicians:

Vocals : Rod Evans
Lead Guitar : Ritchie Blackmore
Bass : Nick Simper
Drums : Ian Paice
Organ, keyboards : Jon Lord

Track List:

01. And The Address [4:39]
02. Hush [4:25]
03. One More Rainy Day [3:40]
04. Prelude: Happiness / I'm So Glad [7:19]
05. Mandrake Root [6:10]
06. Help [6:01]
07. Love Help Me [3:49]
08. Hey Joe [7:34]
09. Shadows (Album Outtake) [3:39]
10. Love Help Me (Instrumental Version) [3:30]
11. Help (Alternate Take) [5:24]
12. Hey Joe (BBC Top Gear Session) [4:06]
13. Hush (Live US TV) [3:55]  


 CD2 - The Book Of Taliesyn
Year & Label: 1968/2009 Victor Entertainment, Inc., Japan | CD#: VICP-64303
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Several months after the innovative remake of "You Keep Me Hanging On," England's answer to Vanilla Fudge, was this early version of Deep Purple, which featured vocalist Rod Evans, and bassist Nick Simper, along with mainstays Ritchie Blackmore, Jon Lord, and Ian Paice. This, their second album, followed on the heels of "Hush," a dynamic arrangement of a Joe South tune, far removed from the flavor of one of his own hits, "Walk a Mile in My Shoes." Four months later, this album's cover of Neil Diamond's Top 25, 1967 gem "Kentucky Woman," went Top 40 for Deep Purple. Also like Vanilla Fudge, the group's own originals were creative, thought-provoking, but not nearly as interesting as their take on cover tunes. Vanilla Fudge did "Eleanor Rigby," and Deep Purple respond by going inside "We Can Work It Out" -- it falls out of nowhere after the progressive rock jam "Exposition," Ritchie Blackmore's leads zipping in between Rod Evans smooth and precise vocals. As Vanilla Fudge was progressively leaning more towards psychedelia, here Deep Purple are the opposite. The boys claim to be inspired by the Bard of King Arthur's court in Camelot, Taliesyn. John Vernon Lord, under the art direction of Les Weisbrich, paints a superb wonderland on the album jacket, equal to the madness of Hieronymous Bosch's cover painting used for the third album. Originals "The Shield" and "Anthem" make early Syd Barrett Pink Floyd appear punk in comparison. Novel sounds are aided by Lord's dominating keyboards, a signature of this group.

Though "The Anthem" is more intriguing than the heavy metal thunder of Machine Head, it is overwhelmed by the majesty of their "River Deep, Mountain High" cover, definitely not the inspiration for the Supremes and Four Tops 1971 hit version. By the time 1972 came around, Deep Purple immersed themselves in dumb lyrics, unforgettable riffs, and a huge presence, much like Black Sabbath. The evolution from progressive to hard rock was complete, but a combination of what they did here -- words that mattered matched by innovative musical passages -- would have been a more pleasing combination. Vanilla Fudge would cut Donovan's "Season of the Witch," Deep Purple followed this album by covering his "Lalena"; both bands abandoned the rewrites their fans found so fascinating. Rod Evans voice was subtle enough to take "River Deep, Mountain High" to places Ian Gillam might have demolished. Some CD reissues contain an additional five tracks.

Musicians:
Vocals : Rod Evans
Lead Guitar : Ritchie Blackmore
Bass : Nick Simper
Drums : Ian Paice
Organ, keyboards : Jon Lord

Track List:
01. Listen, Learn, Read On [4:05]
02. Hard Road [5:14]
03. Kentucky Woman [4:45]
04. Exposition / We Can Work It Out [7:08]
05. Shield [6:06]
06. Anthem [6:32]
07. River Deep, Mountain High [10:12]
08. Oh No No No (Studio Outtake) [4:25]
09. It's All Over (BBC Top Gear Session) [4:14]
10. Hey Bop A Re Bop (BBC Top Gear Session) [3:32]
11. Wring That Neck (BBC Top Gear Session) [4:42]
12. Playground (Studio Outtake) [4:31]



CD3 - Deep Purple
Year & Label: 1969/2009 Victor Entertainment, Inc., Japan | CD#: VICP-64304
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This is a record that even those who aren't Deep Purple fans can listen to two or three times in one sitting -- but then, this wasn't much like any other album that the group ever issued. Actually, Deep Purple was highly prized for many years by fans of progressive rock, and for good reason. The group was going through a transition -- original lead singer Rod Evans and bassist Nick Simper would be voted out of the lineup soon after the album was finished (although they weren't told about it until three months later), organist Jon Lord and guitarist Ritchie Blackmore having perceived limitations in their work in terms of where each wanted to take the band. And between Lord's ever-greater ambitions toward fusing classical and rock and Blackmore's ever-bolder guitar attack, both of which began to coalesce with the session for Deep Purple in early 1969, the group managed to create an LP that combined heavy metal's early, raw excitement, intensity, and boldness with progressive rock's complexity and intellectual scope, and virtuosity on both levels. On "The Painter," "Why Didn't Rosemary?," and, especially, "Bird Has Flown," they strike a spellbinding balance between all of those elements, and Evans' work on the latter is one of the landmark vocal performances in progressive rock. "April," a three-part suite with orchestral accompaniment, is overall a match for such similar efforts by the Nice as the "Five Bridges Suite," and gets extra points for crediting its audience with the patience for a relatively long, moody developmental section and for including a serious orchestral interlude that does more than feature a pretty tune, exploiting the timbre of various instruments as well as the characteristics of the full ensemble. Additionally, the band turns in a very successful stripped-down, hard rock version of Donovan's "Lalena," with an organ break that shows Lord's debt to modern jazz as well as classical training. In all, amid all of those elements -- the orchestral accompaniment, harpsichord embellishments, and backward organ and drum tracks -- Deep Purple holds together astonishingly well as a great body of music. This is one of the most bracing progressive rock albums ever, and a successful vision of a musical path that the group might have taken but didn't. Ironically, the group's American label, Tetragrammaton Records, which was rapidly approaching bankruptcy, released this album a lot sooner than EMI did in England, but ran into trouble over the use of the Hieronymus Bosch painting "The Garden of Earthly Delights" on the cover; although it has been on display at the Vatican, the work was wrongly perceived as containing profane images and never stocked as widely in stores as it might've been. Remastered edition sounds magnificent and offers five bonus tracks: a killer hard rock B-side, "Emmaretta," showcasing a slashing Ritchie Blackmore guitar break, and a looser, more flowing BBC-recorded version of the latter song, plus "Lalena" and "The Painter" and a harder alternate take of "The Bird Has Flown."

Musicians:

Vocals : Rod Evans
Lead Guitar : Ritchie Blackmore
Bass : Nick Simper
Drums : Ian Paice
Organ, keyboards : Jon Lord

Track List:

01. Chasing Shadows [5:35]
02. Blind [5:26]
03. Lalena [5:06]
04. Fault Line [1:46]
05. The Painter [3:52]
06. Why Didn't Rosemary? [5:04]
07. The Bird Has Flown [5:36]
08. April [12:10]
09. The Bird Has Flown (Alternate A-Side Vsn.) [2:54]
10. Emmaretta (Studio B-Side) [3:01]
11. Emmaretta (BBC Top Gear Session) [3:10]
12. Lalena (BBC Radio Session) [3:34]
13. The Painter (BBC Radio Session) [2:19]

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