|
AN
EDITOR REMEMBERS.........
|
Issue
Fourteen February/March
1978 |
Issue 14 was a strange one. Having been
the spur for starting the fanclub, Blackmore was starting to
lose the plot a little. A preview of the new Rainbow album 'Long
Live..' was a disappointment (as was the overt commercialism
of the single) and the band themselves were faced with difficult
decisions regarding the American market, which was now crucial
to their continued existence. We also witnessed one of the final
Ian Gillan Band gigs - for which we travelled down to London
- and the first solo album from Glenn had failed to get us moving.
On the other hand, after a patchy debut, Coverdale was back
on form with the second solo album and an excellent UK tour
started just as Issue 14 went out. Getting the magazine done
was still fraught with problems. I trekked out to the Xerox
copy shop (way out in the wilds of Sheffield's East End, two
bus journey's!) only to find that they'd printed the whole run
far too pale, so it all had to be redone.
|
ISSUE
FOURTEEN : DIGEST & INDEX
|
RAINBOW
|
LIVE
REVIEW : Budokan Tokyo |
RAINBOW
|
RECORD REVIEW : Long Live Rock'n'Roll |
DEEP
PURPLE
|
RECORD
REVIEW : Powerhouse |
IAN
GILLAN BAND |
NEWS
: Live Album |
IAN
GILLAN BAND |
LIVE
REVIEW : Camden Music Machine |
IAN
GILLAN BAND |
RECORD
REVIEW : Mad Elaine |
David
COVERDALE |
RECORD
REVIEW : Northwinds |
WHITESNAKE |
LIVE
REVIEW : London Tour Rehearsals |
Glenn
HUGHES |
RECORD
REVIEW : Play Me Out |
bits
& pieces |
NEWS
: Ian Paice & Jon Lord |
RAINBOW
Tokyo
Budo-Kan Hall, 21 / 22 January 1978
- Live Review
|
“The
Tokyo shows were full of contrast. The first night was short
and hurried with no encore, but on the second night all the
stops were pulled out, and Rainbow really rose, with excellent
solos from Ritchie. Cozy’s solo seems to go down really well
with all the crowds in Japan, and is becoming the highlight
for many. David Stone went down better than Carey, for reasons
beyond my comprehension, and half the audience were unaware
of the change in bass player!” Rainbow Fan Club, Japan.
|
Long
Live Rock'n'Roll (advance tape) -
Album Review
|
If
you’re looking for an ecstatic review, you’d better skip this.
I’m very disappointed. There is very little progression at all.
The album appears tailored towards the USA. There is less guitar
on here than on almost any album Ritchie’s appeared on, and
what there is sounds uninspired and drowned in effects. This
was laid down back in June 1977 when Sounds reported, “Blackmore
looks pale, dazed, he’s spent hours playing, searching for ideas
which don’t seem to gel”. (NB. ‘Gates of Babylon’ wasn't
on the tape)
|
DEEP
PURPLE
Powerhouse
- Album Review
|
“'Hush'
is good, with Gillan sounding like Elvis. Blackmore plays great
rhythm, very tight work from Glover / Paice in support. On ‘Wring
That Neck’ Blackmore and Lord work well together but show their
nervousness. I’ve heard better bootleg versions. ‘Child In Time’
is as Simon said, very like the studio version. Perfect solo
from Ritchie. Regarding the album as a whole - rotten title.
And cover. And sleeve-notes!” Keith Stock.
Raspberries
to him for the last bit.
|
IAN
GILLAN BAND
News
|
The
short October UK Tour was very last minute, Island were cutting
their losses with very little publicity. ‘Scarabus’ was released
on October 7th to tie in. After rehearsing from February 17th
they played a single ‘farewell’ gig in Camden, then left to
tour the USA on March 1st. They are scheduled for a return visit
to Japan in September / October following the success of their
visit there in 1977. A live album was recorded at the Tokyo
Budo-Kan Hall, five numbers on a single album.
|
Camden Music Machine, 24th
February 1978 - Live Review
|
The
set was similar to the one they did on the last tour. The group
seemed more self-indulgent, once again playing more for themselves
than the audience. It was up to Gillan to make contact with
the audience – even if it meant staying on stage during instrumental
passages and looking a bit silly. It wasn’t until the encore
that things began to move, with the band beginning to rock and
Gillan belting it out in style.
|
Mad Elaine
- Single Review
|
How
did I miss this on ‘Scarabus’? It is a magnificent track; good
rhythm, mad Gillan lyrics, a neat phased moog solo. Everything!
I doubt it’ll receive enough airplay to make it a hit, a pic.
sleeve might well have gained the initial sales boost it needed.
|
back
to the top
DAVID
COVERDALE
Northwinds
- Album Review
|
The
Whitesnake debut tour was preceded with a single, ‘Breakdown’
on February 24th, and the album ‘Northwinds’ tied in with a
March release date. Some things on it have been altered since
we reviewed the advance tape in Issue
11. First though, a five star rating for the front cover,
which looks superb. ‘Queen of Hearts’ is the first of two new
tracks, quite a nice unexpected format. ‘Breakdown’ is the other,
a nice heavy track with ELO-type classical riff in the middle.
The vocals on ‘Time & Again’ have been re-done, the nervous
sound of the demo version is gone.
|
UK Tour Rehearsals, February
24th 1978
|
We
caught the group in action in a warehouse in London. They had
no keyboard player; a friend was filling in for the purposes
of rehearsing. They launched into ‘Lady Double Dealer’, which
sounded okay, more honest than the 'Made In Europe' version,
though I wasn’t too sure about the two guitars – they both seemed
to be doing the same thing.
|
GLENN
HUGHES
Play
Me Out
- Album Review
|
“Very
much a solo effort, with Hughes playing many of the instruments,
helped out by his old Trapeze mates. The Stevie Wonder influences
are noticed on the initial hearing (with a lot of ‘Georgia On
My Mind’ type singing), though the album is not altogether soul
and funk. The best tracks are ‘I Found a Woman’ and ‘Soulution’.
If you do get the album, give it a few listens as it grows on
you in time.” Rob Davies.
|
Bits
& Pieces
Paice
& Lord
|
Well,
Ian didn’t get the job with Wings (big sigh of relief). Both
he and Jon are holed up in Pinewood Studios with singer Maggie
Bell, trying to get a band together, so rumour has it. They
did try for Coverdale, both before they got Tony, and after
he left. That was the start of the reunion rumours, because
Jon and Ian wanted to call it Deep Purple.
|
back
to the top
also
in the magazine...The Rainbow Story 1 (Ronnie Dio & Elf)....Rainbow,
1978 Japanese Tour Report + dates....Stargazer Convention idea....letters...Coverdale
post-Purple discography..
the magazine can be purchased
from the dpas
online store
joining
the DPAS
© 2002 DPAS/Darker
Than Blue.
Not to be replicated, reproduced, stored and/or distributed in any
way without prior written permission
|