FIRST IMPRESSIONS...
CD
"The
CD is a 24 carat five star must-have! They crash through this
set with enthusiasm and panache, and even the very weird counterpoint
on No One Came just somehow adds to the sheer fun of it all. Paicey
is just loving working with Steve, and eveyone is jumping for
joy.
The
1996 tour has been fondly recomembered (sic) at DPAS towers for
a decade, and this proves we weren't just imagining it all. The
only pisser is that they didn't play a full set (and that old
grumpy-pants refused to use my sleeve notes!), but we can thoroughly
recommend this (now I must get back to stuffing copies into envelopes
or we'll miss the post)."
Simon
Robinson
"This
is simply the Best Live Steve Morse era live recording available.
Some may feel that "Total Abandon" is better but it doesn't seem
to be available as a CD any more, at least not in the US. The
mastering on this cd has a glorious crisp sound. Gillan hits every
note, including the high note in the second chorus of "Woman
from Tokyo", and he hits it good! Jon Lord is having a great
night, very tight and fearless. Steve Morse is, again, very tight
and fearless. Glover and Paice are clearly enjoying themselves
as they swing through this thunderous set.
The
DVD should be equally great. I have all of their live stuff from
the Morse era ( the Bootleg Box , the Soundboard box and all the
DVDs) and I can say that this tops all of them. Both the 1996
and 2000 songs are great. No cringing on these performances at
all. Please do yourself a favour and plug this in, light up a
cigar and let the speakers shake your house in glorious Purple
fashion."
Andrew
Wiechman (Jacksonville, USA)
FIRST IMPRESSIONS...
DVD
"This
DVD release is a bit of a mixed bag, but on the whole
it's one I've enjoyed, mainly for the sheer clobbering power of
the '96 set. We caught the band right at the start of the tour
and that was good enough, but six months down the line they have
begun to really gel, breathing new life into the oldies and honing
the Purpendicular material. The mix is great, even on the VHS
viewing copy, with a nice balance of guitar and organ, and a great
cugging bass/drum sound which was one of the hallmarks of the
tour.
The
filming is a pretty typical TV quality shoot; not too imaginative
but it does the job, though the light levels are a bit low at
times. The director gets the hang of it later so the pictures
begin to match the vision and there are some great close-ups of
Paicey and a wonderful sequence of Lord and Morse from behind
the stage duelling away in Speed King. It's a shame this is a
shortened set (it runs for an hour and a quarter), but it's much
more enjoyable than the Polish set issued last year as Gillan
is in fine form. We also get to see Claude Nobs introduced right
at the end. The bonus tracks from 2000 are flatter musically,
but the film quality is a lot sharper and clearer. There seem
to be more of them than we were originally led to believe too."
Simon Robinson
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