Deep
Purple's two Concerto reenactment shows on 25th & 26th
September 1999 were emotional performances captured in crystal
clear, though sadly fractured fashion for DVD, video and
CD release. Plenty is missing from the 'supporting' performances,
but the final track-listing is at least quite similar to
that used when the band toured the Concerto show around
the world in 2000.
The Albert Hall shows were recorded in their entirety in
audio, but not on film. The cameras were only there for
the second night, and even then were not at work for a section
of the show. So, we're missing Ian Gillan's 'Via Miami'
& 'That's Why God's Singing The Blues', and more frustratingly
Steve Morse's 'Night Meets Light' & 'Take It From The
Top'.
The
picture and sound quality on the DVD is, as expected, A1,
and together with an excellent orchestral performance the
show comes across as a brighter, cleaner and sharper DVD
experience than the corresponding 1969 disc.
It
kicks off with two acutely emotive tracks from Jon Lord's
'Pictured Within' album, the title track sung by Miller
Anderson, and 'Wait A While' by Sam Brown, an incredible
performance. Ronnie Dio is as ever the consummate pro, shifting
the evening up a gear by following a sublime 'Sitting In
A Dream' (a
Butterfly Ball track last tackled at the Albert Hall by
Ian Gillan in 1975) with a rousing 'Love Is All'. Great
fun, though I personally thought the latter lost a lot of
punch by having the intro chords doubled up. Next, we're
straight into Ian Paice's brass led version of 'Wring That
Neck'. It's good mostly just to hear that riff being played
again, but it still frustrates me that the rest of Deep
Purple didn't join in. So near..
The
Concerto itself sounds clean and strong. The sheer variety
of themes and ideas still surprises me, especially as to
my ears classical music often consists of taking one flimsy
idea and riding it relentlessly into the ground. Steve Morse's
opening solo is way shorter than Blackmore's extended barrage
in 1969, and also thinner sounding, lacking the warm Gibson
guitar tone which sat so well on top of the orchestra (whether
they liked it or not!)
Deep
Purple's own set sounds superb, though apart from the marvelous
'Smoke On The Water' free for all is filmed in a rather
patchy fashion.
A wide screen edition would do wonders to enhance the atmosphere
of the recording, but sadly the DVD is strictly 4:3. It
is also relatively old for a DVD release, there are no extras
as you would now expect from an expensive production (the
scope was surely endless), and I won't go on about the shoddy
packaging....
As
a souvenir of the evening the Concerto '99 DVD still scores
highly, though not as much as the corresponding CD.
review:
David Browne
|