This was recorded live for a TV show. The TV people told the audience not to react until the song was over because they didn't want any audience noise on the recording. THAT'S why they're not reacting.
Because this was being recorded live for a TV broadcast the audience were told not to react - I saw Deep Purple live over six times and it was always wild.
Deep Purple was the first rock band I ever got into back in the early 70's. If you want to hear some more great Ian Gillan vocals check out Strange Kind Of Woman live. A great song from a really outstanding band! No matter what you listen to the music is always great!
Deep purple had some wild ass concerts . The one I went to in Waterbury Connecticut was kinda scarry. Seats were torn up and thrown around .. glad I was in the balcony
Way ahead of their time…this song is 51 years old.Their transitions were crazy….shredding to complete stop.The VietNam War was going on and emotions were very high here.
It was recorded on a television show the audience were told to stay seated and quiet. Couldn't even cheer after the solo. Note the original 'autotune'. The cupped hand to the ear to help hear & maintain the right pitch.
CHILD IN TIMEYou betcha! I heard of em when I was attending Mount Saint Michael Academy High School Bronx New York Sophomore year 1972. Song released 1970. Today song is as FRESH and NEW when I first listened to and heard it back then!!!!!!!!!! Today's music......Don't even try to compare compete with 70's ROCK!
This was a Vietnam war protest song. It's also 1 of the first to make an organ/keyboard accompaniment 'cool'. ANd it's also 1 of the 1st songs where controlled screaming on key was done. That's why Bruce was so blown away. Singers of the past with triple octave voices like Roy Orbison and Lou Christie had the range, but Ian took it to a new level!
Deep Purple , live on Granada TV is the full set from this show. About 22 minutes I believe. Great performance by 5 members who are each masters of their individual craft
Funny thing about this song in particular... The keyboard intro part was stolen from another band called Bombay Calling and the song was 'Its a Beautiful Day'. The band, Bombay Calling, seemed good natured about Deep Purple stealing part of their song. In return they ended up stealing a song from Deep Purple called 'Wring that Neck' and then put it on their album. I think it's kinda funny how both bands had a good attitude about sharing/stealing each others music and didn't go to court like things likely would these days.
Deep Purple is still touring today. Singer, Ian Gillan is the singer with Ian Paice, drummer and Roger Glover, Bassist still playing in the band. Guitarist, Ritchie Blackmore moved on to his solo career. Jon Lord died years ago. DP others in their spots.
Proper rock from one third of the "Unholy Trinity of British Rock" and they use a Hammond organ which back then you usually only saw on Parkinson with Harry Stoneham playing it🎹 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
Ian Gillan was Jesus on the original recording of Jesus Christ Superstar in 1970. Amazing range, the definition of a great rock and roll voice. Listen to "Gethsemene" from that recording and you'll be amazed.
I was ready to respond with "no, he didn't! It was Ted Neeley!" and then I googled it. HOLY SHIT! I never knew that and I grew up on Jesus Christ Superstar (can still sing all the lyrics to everything 45 years later! P.S. I was also Judas on our family car rides. LOL) He did incredibly but I still like Neeley's version - maybe because I'm so accustomed to it.
@@melaniejordan1199 Yes! Ted Neeley was my first experience with JCS, on the theatrical version. Good for you getting the most conflicted and emotional parts. :-P
Interesting convo. I agree that Gillan's Gethsemane is one of the greatest vocal performances in history, and I think much better than Neeley or others. Gillan's emotional range, power and control is boggling. His first "Alright, I'll Die..." gives me goosebumps every time.
Simply a collection of amazing musicians and a fantastic anti-war song. As others have said, the crowd were under orders not to make any noise so as not to mess up the mix in the TV studio.
One of the most techically talented bands of all time. All complete masters of their instruments. Jon Lord a classically trained keyboardist (he even works in a llttle of Flight of the Bumblee), Blackmore basically inventing shredding Paice a Top 10 drummer, and Roger Glover totally solid on bass. And Gillan is one of the greatest singers in rock history. A hugely influential band - key to formation of hard rock and heavy metal and set a bar that very few of them could match. It was funny how when you all stopped it the first time you were totally blown away by Gillan. I thought "Theyre about to see how good the rest of them are." LOL
Read a comment from a guy that was there - his father was involved in the production. He said the crowd thing was more about being stunned - this was around 1970 and nobody had heard anything like it before. They weren’t told to be still.
I'm 58 and grew up a huge Deep Purple fan. I also love TWH, please, please cover this song. I'd love to hear what you folks would do with this masterpiece. Like my dad used don't be scared, cuz, no balls no blue chips......
Saw Deep Purple with Joe Satriani on guitar. Jon Lord was quite the band leader. He left the Hammond organ to give directions to Satriani 😎. Lord were so great!. Most of the intro to Smoke on the Water are his Hammond organ
Still,after 51 Years now,one of the Greatest Rock/Metal Songs ever written...besides WAR PIGS one of the Best Anti War/Vietnam Songs ever written.....IAN "JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR" GILLAN on Vocals.....the Deep Purple "MARK 2" were the Best Line Up ever !!!
I'd like to suggest reacting to the following DP songs: Speed King - studio version from "In Rock" - heaviest early 70 song! Black Night - single version Child in time - studio version from "In Rock" Fireball - "live" BBC or studio version from "Fireball" - first speed metal song! Lazy - studio version from "Machine head"or the live version from "Made in Japan" Highway Star - studio version from "Machine head"or the live version from "Made in Japan" Smoke on the water - live version from "Made in Japan" - best heavy guitar sound ever! And you may be THE first to react to this one.... Woman from Tokyo - studio version from "Who do we think we are" Burn - studio version from "Burn" - DP at their very best! Stormbringer - studio version from "Stormbringer"
Hey, I'm from the 60's and every concert I've been to, at least during the mid to end of the 60's. and with particular groups like Cream, Zappa, Iron Butterfly etc, we sat back in silence and let the artists do their thing. Most my concerts were at the Fillmore East or at the The Palladium. Most of us sat in euphoria, a deeper version of how Dolly is seen here but our euphoric state was mostly drug induced. As 'Heads' we sat absorbing the energy of every lyric, tune & note. Only after the song did we express our love & gratitude. I might add that at The Palladium the crowds weren't as many of us hippies of the era so a lot more annoying screaming and generally pain in the ass interruptions was present. I pretty much gave up concert attendance because of that. A prime example was at one Zappa concert when six of us were digging the tunes, this dope of an attendee in the row behind us kept bullshitting throughout the songs and like clockwork, every 40 seconds he'd stop talking and let out a loud (& as deep voiced as he could) 'YEEAAHHH'. Like that meant he was really into the song(s). The dipstick, yuppee,teenybopper A-Hole never heard the songs because he was BS'ing the whole freakin' time. One might compare this to an adult trying to watch a movie at a matinee filled with a bunch of 10 year olds. But don't take it to heart. I'm just an old timer remembering how us heads showed our appreciation. And no, I and company never atteneded the early Beatle concerts along with their own dedicated mobs of screamers. And that's even when the Beatles started getting into the good stuff. One of the reasons they too stopped performing concerts. I'm not sure which reason they stopped most from. The screamers or the musical control they had in studios. Maybe they stopped from the screamers and then discovered the joy of studio performances.
8:26...Other folks have probably explained this guys but this gig was being filmed for tv and the show's producer would have asked the audience to stay quiet during the song and only react at the end...otherwise the whole thing would have had to be re-shot. 😉 🇬🇧
This was a live performance from a recorded TV show in England... for live TV performances, especially back then, you weren't allowed to get up and dance and bang your head. "Decorum" was required. Now I'm not condemning this... times and standards are what they were and are. But that's your explanation as to why the crowd wasn't going crazy. "Live" audiences on "live" TV shows even today are required to conform to and agree to a certain required behavior (just try to sneak in to the "Today Show" with a political statement banner, you know?) to be allowed to be a part of the "live" audience, so this isn't something new. Just explaining to y'all what's going on.
Actually it was filmed in France for a French TV show. The reason the audience remains still is because the song was also being recorded and the electronic filters etc in those days could not filter out audience noise sufficiently, therefore the audience were asked to keep still and quiet. This happened in all countries and you can see it in most UA-cam videos of TV studio concerts during the 70s; it had nothing to do with "decorum". As it is 1970 I would also guess that this is not a Deep Purple audience.
Thanks !!!! Beyond superb !!!!! Also !!!!! TARJA with the band Rata Blanca does a divine ,fun cover of this. Unfortunately the audio and video is not the greatest 💘☮ !!!!!
if you have taken this version and not made in Japan and if in the comments below everyone talk about all the versions except made in Japan, then you have a serious problem or you simply still have a lot to learn.
About the audience just sitting there, that's just what you did back then, You sat and LISTENED to the music, wanting to catch every nuance of the song. Of course, having some degree of a pot buzz undoubtedly contributed, lol.
Same era, another legendary group, listen to "War Pig" by Black Sabbath, the "live in Paris" version is simply phenomenal, with Bill Ward on drums who for my part is the best drummer of all time
To me Ian Gillan's voice was the best back in the days - not Freddy Mercury's - and I also think Phill Lynott's was up there. (I resently saw Ian Gillan, he still can rock!!) To day - Floor Jansen are unique and even more versatile and powerful than these legendary male. phenomenal singers. But damn that were days - been to few Deep Purple concerts - phenomenal!!!
This was the 60's. Rock was so new that people weren't ready to free themselves from the chains of the 50's. In some of the greatest 60's videos, the audience has no idea how to express themselves, except for the teenage girls reacting to the Beatles. They caught on right away.
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in his prime Ian Gillan was a beast!
This was recorded live for a TV show. The TV people told the audience not to react until the song was over because they didn't want any audience noise on the recording. THAT'S why they're not reacting.
Ritchie Blackmore one of the all-time greats
Because this was being recorded live for a TV broadcast the audience were told not to react - I saw Deep Purple live over six times and it was always wild.
Good to know! I thought "what the heck is wrong with these dumbos"? LOL
So did I - always a pleasure to have them in audience :-)
Finally one enigma solved. I always thought they were some kind of braindead zombies
I love this song especially this live version ❤️
Lu et approuvé 👍👏😱
This is the definitive rock song. Absolutely has it all 5 top notch musicians who are all time greats in their own right.
Deep Purple was the first rock band I ever got into back in the early 70's. If you want to hear some more great Ian Gillan vocals check out Strange Kind Of Woman live. A great song from a really outstanding band! No matter what you listen to the music is always great!
Deep Purple, my favorite band in my youth!
Ian Gillan best rock vocalist of all time
Easy
Definitely
🎯
All hail Ritchie Blackmore! Phenomenal guitar player!
Yes, like Duke Nukem would say: Hail to the King baby....
Top 3 in the world 🌎 so is Jon Lord on keys rip
"...wait for the ricochet..." KILLER lyric. And the guitarist is Ritchie Blackmore. Simply one of the best to ever pluck a string...
Talent, talent.... still sends shivers down my spine all these long years later
Great reaction to some of the finest musicians ever to grace a stage.
You dont listen to great music... you feel it. This makes me ARRRRRRRGGGGGGHHHHHHH with its greatness. I have no words to accurately describe it!
Classic to the core. Keyboards were off the hook!! Great reaction. Timeless tune
Deep purple had some wild ass concerts . The one I went to in Waterbury Connecticut was kinda scarry. Seats were torn up and thrown around .. glad I was in the balcony
It is so fabulous to watch when people hear this song for the first time!!!!!!! Please keep at it with other Purple songs!
Way ahead of their time…this song is 51 years old.Their transitions were crazy….shredding to complete stop.The VietNam War was going on and emotions were very high here.
Remember back in the day .. I played a Deep Purple album so much I wore the record out .. vinyl you know :)
Saw these guys so many times, and they were AMAZING! The late Jon Lord was an absolute master of the keys.
By far the best hard rock song ever made in rock/ metal history (the studio version, although this live version is not bad).
Souvenirs souvenirs nostalgie mes années folles OMG je kiiiiffff grave excellent excellent
Zep Sabbath ?
@Michael Taylor not better live seeing all 3 in their heyday 70s. Live Deep Purple ruled the live acts
It was recorded on a television show the audience were told to stay seated and quiet. Couldn't even cheer after the solo.
Note the original 'autotune'. The cupped hand to the ear to help hear & maintain the right pitch.
CHILD IN TIMEYou betcha! I heard of em when I was attending Mount Saint Michael Academy High School Bronx New York Sophomore year 1972. Song released 1970. Today song is as FRESH and NEW when I first listened to and heard it back then!!!!!!!!!! Today's music......Don't even try to compare compete with 70's ROCK!
I love to watch noobs faces drop when Ian steps into that A5 and shows why he is one of the absolute best ever in rock metal vocals
Delivering such a performance without sweating. Amazing stuff. True artists.
OMG Deep purple Mes années folles nostalgie excellent excellent merci à vous reac👏👍😱🙏
ET dire qu'on ose nous traiter de boomer alors qu'on écoutait ça !! Et maintenant ils écoutent Vianney et Nakamura !!!
This was a Vietnam war protest song. It's also 1 of the first to make an organ/keyboard accompaniment 'cool'. ANd it's also 1 of the 1st songs where controlled screaming on key was done. That's why Bruce was so blown away. Singers of the past with triple octave voices like Roy Orbison and Lou Christie had the range, but Ian took it to a new level!
John Lord (RIP) one of if not the best keyboards ever
One of my favourites great reaction thanks
Thanks for the great reaction, appreciate it!
The look on the woman's face in the first row is priceless
The crowd were told "Don't MOVE you Move or show any reaction, your out"
'60 and '70 rock is a best rock of the history ....
musical craftsmanship at its finest! Great reaction guys!
With themes of war and inhumanity, the song is regarded as a heavy metal anthem and an example of art rock.
Deep Purple , live on Granada TV is the full set from this show. About 22 minutes I believe. Great performance by 5 members who are each masters of their individual craft
In the 70s it was the custom to sit at every concert.
Don’t forget. These early rockers were greatly influenced by jazz as well. So they were virtuosos too. Well before machines took over.
Song like this that make people think that Deep Purple was one of the pioneers of metal.
Funny thing about this song in particular... The keyboard intro part was stolen from another band called Bombay Calling and the song was 'Its a Beautiful Day'. The band, Bombay Calling, seemed good natured about Deep Purple stealing part of their song. In return they ended up stealing a song from Deep Purple called 'Wring that Neck' and then put it on their album. I think it's kinda funny how both bands had a good attitude about sharing/stealing each others music and didn't go to court like things likely would these days.
Deep Purple is still touring today. Singer, Ian Gillan is the singer with Ian Paice, drummer and Roger Glover, Bassist still playing in the band. Guitarist, Ritchie Blackmore moved on to his solo career. Jon Lord died years ago. DP others in their spots.
The crowd were warned not too make too much noise as it would effect the recording.. it was the 70’s .. inside they were rocking 😀
Highway Star is another great song.
this is the beginning of "ROCK" as it is now
It's a tv live audience - probably nailed to the chair ... :)
They told the crowd to sit and behave as it was being recorded.
Proper rock from one third of the "Unholy Trinity of British Rock" and they use a Hammond organ which back then you usually only saw on Parkinson with Harry Stoneham playing it🎹
👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
Jon Lord (keyboard) and Richie Blackmore (guitar), two masters at their craft!
Ian Paice wasn't too shabby either.
Great to see and hear real talent.
Ian Gillan was Jesus on the original recording of Jesus Christ Superstar in 1970. Amazing range, the definition of a great rock and roll voice. Listen to "Gethsemene" from that recording and you'll be amazed.
What a great soundtrack that was. Absolutely brilliant.
I was ready to respond with "no, he didn't! It was Ted Neeley!" and then I googled it. HOLY SHIT! I never knew that and I grew up on Jesus Christ Superstar (can still sing all the lyrics to everything 45 years later! P.S. I was also Judas on our family car rides. LOL) He did incredibly but I still like Neeley's version - maybe because I'm so accustomed to it.
@@melaniejordan1199 Yes! Ted Neeley was my first experience with JCS, on the theatrical version. Good for you getting the most conflicted and emotional parts. :-P
@@melaniejordan1199 I heard Ian's version first so I prefer Ian and he was chosen by Andrew Lloyd Weber to do the original
Interesting convo. I agree that Gillan's Gethsemane is one of the greatest vocal performances in history, and I think much better than Neeley or others. Gillan's emotional range, power and control is boggling. His first "Alright, I'll Die..." gives me goosebumps every time.
Simply a collection of amazing musicians and a fantastic anti-war song. As others have said, the crowd were under orders not to make any noise so as not to mess up the mix in the TV studio.
he actually hits A5 in this song
Amazing performance
One of the most techically talented bands of all time. All complete masters of their instruments. Jon Lord a classically trained keyboardist (he even works in a llttle of Flight of the Bumblee), Blackmore basically inventing shredding Paice a Top 10 drummer, and Roger Glover totally solid on bass. And Gillan is one of the greatest singers in rock history. A hugely influential band - key to formation of hard rock and heavy metal and set a bar that very few of them could match.
It was funny how when you all stopped it the first time you were totally blown away by Gillan. I thought "Theyre about to see how good the rest of them are." LOL
Studio audiences back in the day weren't allowed many times to 'rock'. They were told to sit and hold their hands. Hard to do I'm sure with this band.
I had this record album when it was new. Good music never gets old , the rest of us sure as hell do! Haaa.. cool reaction guys!!
I have it signed by all five
Read a comment from a guy that was there - his father was involved in the production. He said the crowd thing was more about being stunned - this was around 1970 and nobody had heard anything like it before. They weren’t told to be still.
I'm 58 and grew up a huge Deep Purple fan. I also love TWH, please, please cover this song. I'd love to hear what you folks would do with this masterpiece. Like my dad used don't be scared, cuz, no balls no blue chips......
Also Ian pace is lars ulrich favourite drummer, a huge inspiration for myself and him 👍🏻
Nice reaction
Saw Deep Purple with Joe Satriani on guitar. Jon Lord was quite the band leader. He left the Hammond organ to give directions to Satriani 😎. Lord were so great!. Most of the intro to Smoke on the Water are his Hammond organ
Sos only...not a permanent guitarist
Still,after 51 Years now,one of the Greatest Rock/Metal Songs ever written...besides WAR PIGS one of the Best Anti War/Vietnam Songs ever written.....IAN "JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR" GILLAN on Vocals.....the Deep Purple "MARK 2" were the Best Line Up ever !!!
Listen to him scream on Black Sabbaths Born Again album. INSANE
I'd like to suggest reacting to the following DP songs:
Speed King - studio version from "In Rock" - heaviest early 70 song!
Black Night - single version
Child in time - studio version from "In Rock"
Fireball - "live" BBC or studio version from "Fireball" - first speed metal song!
Lazy - studio version from "Machine head"or the live version from "Made in Japan"
Highway Star - studio version from "Machine head"or the live version from "Made in Japan"
Smoke on the water - live version from "Made in Japan" - best heavy guitar sound ever! And you may be THE first to react to this one....
Woman from Tokyo - studio version from "Who do we think we are"
Burn - studio version from "Burn" - DP at their very best!
Stormbringer - studio version from "Stormbringer"
I think the crowd Was instructed to sit still cause they recorded. Technics Was different
Ian Gillian also sang the part of Jesus in Andrew Loyd Weber's
Jesus Christ Superstar
Gillan 😊
Live man that was live.
Liking your reaction guys
6'08"-6'10" Beast mode !! Already reacted from Travis and Suzi i am so gratefull you reacted to it too !
I don't know how the audience remained very calm
Hey, I'm from the 60's and every concert I've been to, at least during the mid to end of the 60's. and with particular groups like Cream, Zappa, Iron Butterfly etc, we sat back in silence and let the artists do their thing. Most my concerts were at the Fillmore East or at the The Palladium. Most of us sat in euphoria, a deeper version of how Dolly is seen here but our euphoric state was mostly drug induced. As 'Heads' we sat absorbing the energy of every lyric, tune & note. Only after the song did we express our love & gratitude. I might add that at The Palladium the crowds weren't as many of us hippies of the era so a lot more annoying screaming and generally pain in the ass interruptions was present. I pretty much gave up concert attendance because of that. A prime example was at one Zappa concert when six of us were digging the tunes, this dope of an attendee in the row behind us kept bullshitting throughout the songs and like clockwork, every 40 seconds he'd stop talking and let out a loud (& as deep voiced as he could) 'YEEAAHHH'. Like that meant he was really into the song(s). The dipstick, yuppee,teenybopper A-Hole never heard the songs because he was BS'ing the whole freakin' time. One might compare this to an adult trying to watch a movie at a matinee filled with a bunch of 10 year olds. But don't take it to heart. I'm just an old timer remembering how us heads showed our appreciation. And no, I and company never atteneded the early Beatle concerts along with their own dedicated mobs of screamers. And that's even when the Beatles started getting into the good stuff. One of the reasons they too stopped performing concerts. I'm not sure which reason they stopped most from. The screamers or the musical control they had in studios. Maybe they stopped from the screamers and then discovered the joy of studio performances.
8:26...Other folks have probably explained this guys but this gig was being filmed for tv and the show's producer would have asked the audience to stay quiet during the song and only react at the end...otherwise the whole thing would have had to be re-shot. 😉 🇬🇧
Ian Gillan sang the part of Jesus Christ in the Broadway production of Jesus Christ Superstar.
9:42 the flight of the bumblebee
The audience was told to be quite... for the recording. And you ain't seen nothing yet.
Other bands wanted to have a lead organ player, until they found out they weren't Jon Lord.
And Deep Purple was the biggest influence on Lars Ulrich. You could almost say that, without Deep Purple, we might not have Metallica.
This was a live performance from a recorded TV show in England... for live TV performances, especially back then, you weren't allowed to get up and dance and bang your head. "Decorum" was required. Now I'm not condemning this... times and standards are what they were and are. But that's your explanation as to why the crowd wasn't going crazy. "Live" audiences on "live" TV shows even today are required to conform to and agree to a certain required behavior (just try to sneak in to the "Today Show" with a political statement banner, you know?) to be allowed to be a part of the "live" audience, so this isn't something new. Just explaining to y'all what's going on.
They go wild at the end, though...
Actually it was filmed in France for a French TV show. The reason the audience remains still is because the song was also being recorded and the electronic filters etc in those days could not filter out audience noise sufficiently, therefore the audience were asked to keep still and quiet. This happened in all countries and you can see it in most UA-cam videos of TV studio concerts during the 70s; it had nothing to do with "decorum". As it is 1970 I would also guess that this is not a Deep Purple audience.
The drummer is wearing black velvet.
Thanks !!!! Beyond superb !!!!!
Also !!!!! TARJA with the band Rata Blanca does a divine ,fun cover of this.
Unfortunately the audio and video is not the greatest 💘☮ !!!!!
you have to listen to the studio version too
if you have taken this version and not made in Japan and if in the comments below everyone talk about all the versions except made in Japan, then you have a serious problem or you simply still have a lot to learn.
I guess those parents in the crown thought of leaving and protecting their children. THIS was some revolutionary music back then
The Crowd is not "Chilling",they are "Shocked" and were not allowed(!) to react overwelmed.Dont forget,its UK 1970 !!!!
Purpleeeeee
for the record Richie Blackmore only wears black
Guitarist: Ritchie Blackmore; one of the best ever.
About the audience just sitting there, that's just what you did back then, You sat and LISTENED to the music, wanting to catch every nuance of the song. Of course, having some degree of a pot buzz undoubtedly contributed, lol.
No one is dancing because they are mesmerized
A pop tv show.......not expecting ROCK
Same era, another legendary group, listen to "War Pig" by Black Sabbath, the "live in Paris" version is simply phenomenal, with Bill Ward on drums who for my part is the best drummer of all time
To me Ian Gillan's voice was the best back in the days - not Freddy Mercury's - and I also think Phill Lynott's was up there. (I resently saw Ian Gillan, he still can rock!!)
To day - Floor Jansen are unique and even more versatile and powerful than these legendary male. phenomenal singers.
But damn that were days - been to few Deep Purple concerts - phenomenal!!!
With you man.
The crowd totally bemused..not heard anything like it before
My Got,Дякую Вам за це....
This was the 60's. Rock was so new that people weren't ready to free themselves from the chains of the 50's. In some of the greatest 60's videos, the audience has no idea how to express themselves, except for the teenage girls reacting to the Beatles. They caught on right away.
Please watch AC/DC Bad Boy Boogie live 1978…BBC Rock goes to college, more epic! 😊
React to Deep Purple hush
Nobody was allowed to move on TV
Listen to It's A Beautiful Day's BOMBAY CALLING which came out first and think about this from that perspective. I think you'll see the problem.
👍👍👍
Ah, the days when singers could actually sing and not just shout into a mic! And guitarists played and didn't have to rely on electronics!
Audience was told to be still so as not to disrupt the recording