Don't fortet his ring modulator! He bought 6 at the same time so he would have enough if they stopped manufacturing them, he had 3 left still when he retired from Purple. Good quality, considering:-)
Lord used a thing called Maestro ring modulator, which can modify and mix 2 different frequences... that's how he got that distorted sound similar to a fuzz sound, which is typical for electric guitars
@TubetakerBHV Sure, but I see where @G J is coming from. The tone in some parts sounds quite a bit fuzzier than others, or than he usually sounds. I doubt there's any pedal involved though. I'm thinking it's a drawbar setting.
That is Jon Lord on Organ and Richie Blackmore on guitar , Ian Gillan on vocals . Where British hard rock meets the Blues . These are blues runs intensified . Thanks for playing guys .
That's the curse for someone being really good at something. They make the difficult look easy. Way back in high school a friend of mine was a drummer, and every time he tried playing any Deep Purple, he'd get too excited and start playing too fast and screw everything up.
Guys like these were amazing. They didn't have boards to make sounds for them. All they could really do was change frequency. These are true musicians. I wish people knew how amazing musicians guys like Prince were. He was an AMAZING guitar player.
@@sssbob, I agree. I had every vinyl album they put out. I used to love to get bombed and put on the earphones and put on Zeppelin, DP, Uriah Heep or some Robin Trower depending on my mood.
Had a friend in the 70's sit down at one of those organ stores in the mall, and start playing Lazy. Had huge crowd of kids hanging around, store owner, guy about 60 something was freaking LOL
Must listen to Deep Purple in Rock Album. From beginning to end. So hard for me to believe it came out in like 1969. It a must listen. Ahead of it’s time in my book
And they absolutely influenced so many bands especially in the 80s and 90s. Listen to Motley Crue and Metallica among others and don't tell me you don't hear Deep Purple.
I bought all the early Deep Purple albums and absolutely loved tracks like this. Fireball, The Mule such a brilliant band, Jon Lords Hammond organ playing was second to none. Fabulous.and I still have all that vinyl!!
Brad and Lex, I'm 68 and saw Deep Purple, mach 2 and mach 3 and Led Zeppelin in a 3 year time frame from 72 to 75. Those two groups were our favorites and still are. BTW the open of Lazy is the great Jon Lord on organ, not Blackmore on guitar who comes in later. Deep Purple played nearly 2 hours and Led always played 3 + hours both times. Incredible bands, no computers just pure genius!
What a jam! Deep Purple with Buddy Miles @ the Sam Houston Coliseum in Houston 1972 was my first concert at the tender age of 13. Thanks Brad & Lex!✌️ ☮️ 🎵🎶🎼🎸
I was 11 years old in 1972 when this was played in the family home for the first time. A great song from a truly great album. Thank you Brad and Lexi for playing this. 😊
Jon Lord has this unique ability to make you take a trip in your mind.I don't know how he creates all theses incredible sounds from his organ, synthesizer keyboards just amazing how he keeps his mind so focused on everything he does and still stands up there and rocks that instrument back and forth while keeping time he's just incredible.
Ooh, been waiting for y'all to do this one! Best Deep Purple song ever! And that instrument that starts it off is an organ, not a guitar. The guitar comes in later. They introduced swing into a rock song, for one of the first-ever rock-jazz fusions. Fusion became big in the '70s with a lot of top guitarists. And this has one of the catchiest riffs in it. Love this song! The entire Machine Head album was awesome! Hard to believe it came out in 1972.
Rumor has it that they made this song so Ritchie and Jon could riff off each other on stage. One of their best songs by the real Deep Purple line-up. (The other line-ups were good, but this is who I think of when I think Deep Purple.)
Lex is almost always right on with identifying instruments. Shocking to see her mistake Jon Lord's organ for a guitar. Don Arey with the current Purple is great, but I do miss Jon Lord.
That’s spot on Lynn. Much of “Purples” flavor was swing. Ian Paice (Paicey) was and is one of the greatest swing/rock drummers around. His wrist and stick speed was always a big part of their choices in tempo, not to mention their sound. Regards 🤘😎
Not a guitar it's an organ. Later a guitar kicks in. Deep Purple was one of the great bands that merged Keyboard and Guitar together to make fantastic music. One of my earliest rock album s was a Deep Purple album. I was 16 or 17 years old and it just came out with. Man I feel old but privileged to be alive then with all of the great hard rock groups being formed back in the late 60's early 70's. And as always I love you guys. Stay cool, rock on.
I love when you react to 60s music. I was born in '68. I have a wide range of music knowledge across genres and decades, but I'm finding there's a lot of 60s music I didn't know existed. I'm very familiar with huge chunks of libraries like Zeppelin, Simon & Garfunkel or Van Morrison. But for the most part, I may recognize a song but not know the artist. In the case of 'Deep Purple', I know a couple of their most popular tunes, but I see there many I never knew about. This is one of those. I love their sound, so this encourages me to continue my music journey. It is so much easier than it used to be with the help of YT! Another 60s band I found (by following a guy on Twitter who posts daily music polls) is 'Traffic'. I think you've listened to one of their songs recently. I only recognized 2-3 of their songs that I've checked out so far. They have an incredible sound, especially for the 60s! Anyway, keep covering every genre and every decade! I love watching your expressions to songs I feel passionately about. It's just an added bonus when you do one I've never heard before. I enjoy seeing how my emotional reactions align with B&L. It's actually exciting to get a first listen to a song over 40 or 50 years old! I'm pretty sure the wiring of musical pleasure in the brain looks almost identical between me & Lex. Most music lovers probably feel like that as well. We all love it when we find others who feel music like we do!!
From what I have heard, when it came to songwriting, that version of Deep Purple would start with a riff and build a song around it, and then add lyrics after the fact. Deep Purple is one of those bands that you should listen to the live versions after you hear the studio version. You'll then realize how much the studio versions were really just a framework for them to play off of in their live shows. Check out 'Lazy' from the Made in Japan double live album to hear how different it is from the original version that came out just a year prior to when they recorded the studio version.
In my early 20's (70's) they were touted as the loudest band in the world, I got to see them in concert with ELO, they were both fantastic, it was an epic concert.
The sound in the beginning difficult to figure out was John Lord, keyboards, running a Leslie Organ through a Marshall amp. Fun listening to him and the guitarist solo back and forth. Great reaction!
When I used to skive from School, I used to put this song on full blast in a darkened room. The musicianship, and vibe is first class. Love that whole album, classic.
Deep Purple are an English rock band formed in London in 1968. Originally formed as a psychedelic rock and progressive rock band, they shifted to a heavier sound with their 1970 album Deep Purple in Rock. Deep Purple, together with Led Zeppelin and Black Sabbath, have been referred to as the "unholy trinity of British hard rock and heavy metal in the early to mid- seventies". Unholy should really be holy cow, how and why are they all so good.
That is a Hammond B3 organ that opens the song. The thing has a strange, great, funky tone. Lot's of blues, jazz, and classic rock bands used them. As well as Churches. :-)
The instrument on the intro is Jon Lord on "The Beast", his Hammond C3 Organ played through a Marshall guitar amp instead of the usual Leslie organ amp. Ritchie did not like playing rhythm guitar and Jon thought making his play the Hammond the the Marshall would give it a guitar sound and so The Beast was born.
Yup, a few times they have passed the live versions when they should have done them, no biggy they are still music kids. Many more years for them to get the better versions. Lazy live has a master guitar solo that i just love. Child in time on the other hand is like night and day, the release i don't care for much, that live version is near unequaled. Maybe what 5-7 better live songs ever? maybe? either way the error richie makes mid way in seems to force him to pick it up, and then blows the doors off the solo. Ian's work is even better to, but seeing it, is just so totally different. Maybe they will do it some day, and start trying some TOM WAITS. Why people pass him up is beyond me, radio is so sold out, it makes Tom look like a god of art.
The local church organist composed a version of Child in Time for my uncles funeral. He was a huge Deep Purple fan ever since the 60's. I was already on the verge of crying, but the way he performed it on the church organ broke me and everyone else in attendance. Such a special song.
Haha yeah! Brad has really grown on me and I really do think he's come a long way, but you could almost feel him going crazy here waiting for the lyrics!
Lazy is my favorite song on Machine Head... an almost blues and the band as pretty much jammin'. It is a song of the time really when you know how the album came to be.
The heart and soul of the machine head album. So well mixed for all that was going on. I love that it starts with a jam for like 5 minutes before the lyrics kick in,
One reason I like the purple so much is because in most bands the organ is a background for Mid ground instrument but they use it in the foreground a lot
There Machine head album was one of the biggest records of the 1970's ,and Smoke on the Water was the biggest hit from it,but this is really the best tack of that record the older I get the more I like it.
Eric Clapton used to say (regarding Cream) that the songs were just excuses for endless soloing. This song is a good example of that notion. For the record I'm a big fan of endless soloing. Flaunt it if you've got it.
Deep Purple was a fantastic band in the seventies, that Jon Lord on keyboards, Hammond D3,is awesome. Check out their performance on California Jam 1974, that will give you a look at what the seventies was like. Watch the whole thing it's great,Black Sabbath,Black Oak Arkansas, Deep Purple, Emerson Lake and Palmer,the Eagles, Rare Earth and more. Thanks friends
How amazing is listening to Deep Purple, thanks for your reaction! The instrument that Lex asked was a Hammond organ; Jon Lord is playing it aroud all song (plugged on guitar amplifiers). It's a song almost instrumental, showing how good these guys were jaming (or are, since 3 of them are still with the band in 2024)
finally!!! One of the things what made them so great was there skills. If you listen to the guitar and organ solos again you will notice that they are almost note for note identical. Same on highway star. Nobody could do what those 2 did. They did tht on many other songs like #Place in line and many others. And the drum and bass on lazy and groovy. My friend once said that it sounded like the instruments were all talking to each other. And the lazy riff is one of the most distinquishable in history- much like smoke on the wawer. th3 more you hear it the more you appreciate what they are doing . Lazy is my fav song because it just makes me happy. Thank you
You guys should watch a live song. All 4 musicians are awesome. Richie Blackmore is probably my favorite guitar players to watch. The Beat Club videos on UA-cam are all great to watch.
Like all the classic rock you've reacted to, I grew up with this music. If I had to pick a single Deep Purple album, it would definitely Made In Japan, which was one of the best live albums ever released. This song is on it, but at a much higher energy level.
I picture band playing while singer Ian Gillan lies in bed til his verse arrives I feel that was not my imagination This one of my favourites from Deep Purple The musical conversation between Jon Lord on Hammond Organ and Ritchie Blackmore shredding it on lead guitar is just fantastic. It's almost blues but a little bit more.
That's a perfect Rock n' Roll song IMO!!! It's got everything you want to hear in it.🤘🤘🤘🤘Still blows me away how Brad can't let loose even when the song is JAMMIN!!!!😆
In an interview I watched, Ian Gillan said that Deep Purple are essentially an instrumental band with some vocals thrown in for good measure. Lazy and Child in Time demonstrate what he means, exactly.
Deep Purple must be listened to live. The live versions are like watching an IMAX movie compared to your TV. Search this song with "Made in Japan". Also "Strange Kind Of Woman Made in Japan". Oh, hell. Just listen to the whole Made in Japan live album. four-minute made-for-radio versions become 10+ minute jams/shreds.
That instrument in the beginning is Jon Lord's Hammond B-3 organ with its signal routed through a Marshall amplifier.
And run through a fuzz box during part of it, I'm pretty sure.
@@gj8683 the distortion came from the Marshall amp. Another effect came from the Leslie speakers Lord are famous for.
Don't fortet his ring modulator! He bought 6 at the same time so he would have enough if they stopped manufacturing them, he had 3 left still when he retired from Purple. Good quality, considering:-)
Lord used a thing called Maestro ring modulator, which can modify and mix 2 different frequences... that's how he got that distorted sound similar to a fuzz sound, which is typical for electric guitars
@TubetakerBHV Sure, but I see where @G J is coming from. The tone in some parts sounds quite a bit fuzzier than others, or than he usually sounds. I doubt there's any pedal involved though. I'm thinking it's a drawbar setting.
That is Jon Lord on Organ and Richie Blackmore on guitar , Ian Gillan on vocals . Where British hard rock meets the Blues . These are blues runs intensified . Thanks for playing guys .
roger glover on bass and the great ian Paice on drums
@@timsears951 both very underrated
@@sean3038 sorry but wrong again ...especially about Ian .
@@timsears951 Thank you...
Don’t forget Ian
Nobody talks about the outstanding bass lines of Mr. Roger Glover!!!
Did you here the drumming by Ian Paice?? wow!! so crisp and groove.. powerful drummer. One of the best rock drummers of all time..
That's the curse for someone being really good at something. They make the difficult look easy.
Way back in high school a friend of mine was a drummer, and every time he tried playing any Deep Purple, he'd get too excited and start playing too fast and screw everything up.
At their very best… the musicianship is of the highest standard. I saw them at least six times. They were simply brilliant
One of my all-time most favorite down and dirty rock songs.
Ritchie Blackmore had some of the greatest riffs ever, but, let's not forget Jon Lord's organ riffs. The heaviest organ I've ever heard.
Vaya DOS TIPOS, NUNCA BAJARON DE LA CÚSPIDE,COMO MÚSICOS EXCEPCIONALES,A LOS TIEMPOS QUE ERAN,¿COMO? DOS GENIOS,SIN APUROS,LA OSTIA QUE FACILIDAD,.🎉😮😊
Don't forget Graham bond who started it all
It's an organ in the beginning. John Lord was known for playing it through a distorted guitar amp.
Best band to ever hit their instruments. Absolute masters, no one came close to them live.
ROGER!!!
Guys like these were amazing. They didn't have boards to make sounds for them. All they could really do was change frequency. These are true musicians. I wish people knew how amazing musicians guys like Prince were. He was an AMAZING guitar player.
Dp has several songs with cool intros. Woman from Tokyo, Hush.
Yep we were truly blessed to be young in the 1960/70's -the amount of new raw talent in progressive and rock musc was astounding!
@@sssbob, I agree. I had every vinyl album they put out. I used to love to get bombed and put on the earphones and put on Zeppelin, DP, Uriah Heep or some Robin Trower depending on my mood.
@@stanflahaut1893, I went and checked them out. Just not my thing, man. But hey... enjoy.
Had a friend in the 70's sit down at one of those organ stores in the mall, and start playing Lazy. Had huge crowd of kids hanging around, store owner, guy about 60 something was freaking LOL
This is a jam guys, they're having fun, enjoyin' themselves. Great music, great musicians, great track, great album!
I'm so happy right now. This is the exact song I needed to hear right now. God bless all. Rock on Brad & Lex
Thank you Brad & Lex for recognizing me. I comment on most of your vids😀
Must listen to Deep Purple in Rock Album. From beginning to end. So hard for me to believe it came out in like 1969. It a must listen. Ahead of it’s time in my book
An old song but a great song! Deep Purple was always at the forefront of rock in the 60’s and 70’s!
new disc in 2020
And they absolutely influenced so many bands especially in the 80s and 90s. Listen to Motley Crue and Metallica among others and don't tell me you don't hear Deep Purple.
DP was my first big name concert 1973 I believe... Cloverleaf Speedway, Cleveland, Ohio. Billy Preston opened.
Deep Purple's mark on Rock can't be denied.
I bought all the early Deep Purple albums and absolutely loved tracks like this. Fireball, The Mule such a brilliant band, Jon Lords Hammond organ playing was second to none. Fabulous.and I still have all that vinyl!!
Brad and Lex, I'm 68 and saw Deep Purple, mach 2 and mach 3 and Led Zeppelin in a 3 year time frame from 72 to 75. Those two groups were our favorites and still are. BTW the open of Lazy is the great Jon Lord on organ, not Blackmore on guitar who comes in later. Deep Purple played nearly 2 hours and Led always played 3 + hours both times. Incredible bands, no computers just pure genius!
Amazing! Led Zeppelin and DP were tied as fave bands in my 13 year-old heart back then. Did not know which band I loved more.
Grade 8 - loved them both!!!
This whole album is great.
What a jam! Deep Purple with Buddy Miles @ the Sam Houston Coliseum in Houston 1972 was my first concert at the tender age of 13. Thanks Brad & Lex!✌️ ☮️ 🎵🎶🎼🎸
I was 11 years old in 1972 when this was played in the family home for the first time. A great song from a truly great album. Thank you Brad and Lexi for playing this. 😊
Jon Lord has this unique ability to make you take a trip in your mind.I don't know how he creates all theses incredible sounds from his organ, synthesizer keyboards just amazing how he keeps his mind so focused on everything he does and still stands up there and rocks that instrument back and forth while keeping time he's just incredible.
Ooh, been waiting for y'all to do this one! Best Deep Purple song ever! And that instrument that starts it off is an organ, not a guitar. The guitar comes in later. They introduced swing into a rock song, for one of the first-ever rock-jazz fusions. Fusion became big in the '70s with a lot of top guitarists. And this has one of the catchiest riffs in it. Love this song! The entire Machine Head album was awesome! Hard to believe it came out in 1972.
Rumor has it that they made this song so Ritchie and Jon could riff off each other on stage. One of their best songs by the real Deep Purple line-up. (The other line-ups were good, but this is who I think of when I think Deep Purple.)
Saw them on that tour, paid five dollars, the original Fleetwood Mac was the warm up band. Peter Green was the original lead guitarist
Made In Japan 1972 !!
Lex is almost always right on with identifying instruments. Shocking to see her mistake Jon Lord's organ for a guitar. Don Arey with the current Purple is great, but I do miss Jon Lord.
That’s spot on Lynn. Much of “Purples” flavor was swing. Ian Paice (Paicey) was and is one of the greatest swing/rock drummers around. His wrist and stick speed was always a big part of their choices in tempo, not to mention their sound. Regards 🤘😎
Love this jam. 🙃
This was a jam session with a few lyrics thrown in at the end! It's on my all-time best list.
That's when each musician just knew what to do with his instrument !.....today, music's another thing.
Not a guitar it's an organ. Later a guitar kicks in. Deep Purple was one of the great bands that merged Keyboard and Guitar together to make fantastic music. One of my earliest rock album s was a Deep Purple album. I was 16 or 17 years old and it just came out with. Man I feel old but privileged to be alive then with all of the great hard rock groups being formed back in the late 60's early 70's. And as always I love you guys. Stay cool, rock on.
I love when you react to 60s music. I was born in '68. I have a wide range of music knowledge across genres and decades, but I'm finding there's a lot of 60s music I didn't know existed. I'm very familiar with huge chunks of libraries like Zeppelin, Simon & Garfunkel or Van Morrison. But for the most part, I may recognize a song but not know the artist.
In the case of 'Deep Purple', I know a couple of their most popular tunes, but I see there many I never knew about. This is one of those. I love their sound, so this encourages me to continue my music journey. It is so much easier than it used to be with the help of YT! Another 60s band I found (by following a guy on Twitter who posts daily music polls) is 'Traffic'. I think you've listened to one of their songs recently. I only recognized 2-3 of their songs that I've checked out so far. They have an incredible sound, especially for the 60s!
Anyway, keep covering every genre and every decade! I love watching your expressions to songs I feel passionately about. It's just an added bonus when you do one I've never heard before. I enjoy seeing how my emotional reactions align with B&L. It's actually exciting to get a first listen to a song over 40 or 50 years old! I'm pretty sure the wiring of musical pleasure in the brain looks almost identical between me & Lex. Most music lovers probably feel like that as well. We all love it when we find others who feel music like we do!!
From what I have heard, when it came to songwriting, that version of Deep Purple would start with a riff and build a song around it, and then add lyrics after the fact.
Deep Purple is one of those bands that you should listen to the live versions after you hear the studio version. You'll then realize how much the studio versions were really just a framework for them to play off of in their live shows. Check out 'Lazy' from the Made in Japan double live album to hear how different it is from the original version that came out just a year prior to when they recorded the studio version.
No doubt they were on another level live, Highway Star is a classic in studio but on Made in Japan it is super nova, exploding in your headphones.
In my early 20's (70's) they were touted as the loudest band in the world, I got to see them in concert with ELO, they were both fantastic, it was an epic concert.
The sound in the beginning difficult to figure out was John Lord, keyboards, running a Leslie Organ through a Marshall amp. Fun listening to him and the guitarist solo back and forth. Great reaction!
Awesome, this was our music when I was a teenager back when this album was released. Thanks guys.
One of the greatest bands of all time!!! Organ was the first instrument!👌👌👍👍✌✌😁😁
Great reaction. For more Deep Purple maybe try their song “Space Truckin”. Thanks
Deep Purple Black Night mind blowing Lex will love it the Riff and Rat Bat Blue is amazing as well
One of my all time favourite songs ... Of All Time!
When I used to skive from School, I used to put this song on full blast in a darkened room. The musicianship, and vibe is first class. Love that whole album, classic.
Love your reactions. Thanks for Lazy. God bless you!
Great reaction as always. I've been listening to this song so many times over so very many years and i still love it . Im glad to hear it get played!
Deep Purple are an English rock band formed in London in 1968. Originally formed as a psychedelic rock and progressive rock band, they shifted to a heavier sound with their 1970 album Deep Purple in Rock. Deep Purple, together with Led Zeppelin and Black Sabbath, have been referred to as the "unholy trinity of British hard rock and heavy metal in the early to mid- seventies". Unholy should really be holy cow, how and why are they all so good.
That is a Hammond B3 organ that opens the song. The thing has a strange, great, funky tone. Lot's of blues, jazz, and classic rock bands used them. As well as Churches. :-)
The instrument on the intro is Jon Lord on "The Beast", his Hammond C3 Organ played through a Marshall guitar amp instead of the usual Leslie organ amp.
Ritchie did not like playing rhythm guitar and Jon thought making his play the Hammond the the Marshall would give it a guitar sound and so The Beast was born.
I saw their review of Child in Time and they didn’t seem too stoked on it- I think they should watch the live in 1970 version to truly appreciate it!
Yup, a few times they have passed the live versions when they should have done them, no biggy they are still music kids. Many more years for them to get the better versions. Lazy live has a master guitar solo that i just love. Child in time on the other hand is like night and day, the release i don't care for much, that live version is near unequaled. Maybe what 5-7 better live songs ever? maybe? either way the error richie makes mid way in seems to force him to pick it up, and then blows the doors off the solo. Ian's work is even better to, but seeing it, is just so totally different. Maybe they will do it some day, and start trying some TOM WAITS. Why people pass him up is beyond me, radio is so sold out, it makes Tom look like a god of art.
I knew I wasn't the only one who noticed that.
Different things for different folks. They don't seem to grasp the raw power and talent of every member of this band.
The local church organist composed a version of Child in Time for my uncles funeral. He was a huge Deep Purple fan ever since the 60's. I was already on the verge of crying, but the way he performed it on the church organ broke me and everyone else in attendance. Such a special song.
Love Deep Purple! I had several of their albums as a teen!
Brad & Lex, you'll love their “Woman From Tokyo”!
would you put the live version from "Made in Japan" or the studio version? Me: the live version
@@djl9919 Absolutely "Made in Japan".
Friend, I I've all your suggestions.. so great, keep up it up.I see you eveeywhere..great suggestions!
deep purple c est grandissime 🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸👍👍👍👍
On ne s en lasse passe pas très haut de gamme musicale 🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸👍👍👍👍
Brad always waiting so intently for the lyrics to pop up on screen…… 🤣 enjoy the music brother! 🤟
Haha yeah! Brad has really grown on me and I really do think he's come a long way, but you could almost feel him going crazy here waiting for the lyrics!
@@brettkenschaft4239 Yeah he´s really paying attention to lyrics. Would like to see him reacting to The Shadows.
If he lsitened to the Shadows he would become a foot tapper.........
Brad needs to cut down on the ambien.
Lazy is my favorite song on Machine Head... an almost blues and the band as pretty much jammin'. It is a song of the time really when you know how the album came to be.
Great rock pick. Deep Purple rocks. Lazy is one of thier best! Keep rocking!
It's Hammond, I think.
This song is so awesome in that it really allowed the band to individually showcase their incredible musicianship!
The heart and soul of the machine head album. So well mixed for all that was going on. I love that it starts with a jam for like 5 minutes before the lyrics kick in,
My fave off this album is "Pictures Of Home". It rocks.
Where have they hidden my thrown?
But there’s no worship
Roger Glover gets the spotlight.
@@robertcartwright4374 ian paice gets the spotlight with the drum intro alone. best fucken drummer ever to live.
@@bluesfortheredsun Paice is my fave Deep Purple.
One reason I like the purple so much is because in most bands the organ is a background for Mid ground instrument but they use it in the foreground a lot
Deep purple resteras deep purple du très très haut de gamme musicale 🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸
There Machine head album was one of the biggest records of the 1970's ,and Smoke on the Water was the biggest hit from it,but this is really the best tack of that record the older I get the more I like it.
I grew up listening to this kind of stuff .I like seeing younger people listen to one of the greatest bands in the world
One of the truly Great Bands
Been waitimg for yall to do this one! Bass groove is awesome! Favorite Purple tune!
Mac and cheese, with baked beans, and Deep Purple. 🤣
Eric Clapton used to say (regarding Cream) that the songs were just excuses for endless soloing. This song is a good example of that notion. For the record I'm a big fan of endless soloing. Flaunt it if you've got it.
Amen.
As long as solos don't meander
Incredible rockin' blues from masters. Loved it.
This song freakin rocks, man ! 😎
Deep Purple was a fantastic band in the seventies, that Jon Lord on keyboards, Hammond D3,is awesome. Check out their performance on California Jam 1974, that will give you a look at what the seventies was like. Watch the whole thing it's great,Black Sabbath,Black Oak Arkansas, Deep Purple, Emerson Lake and Palmer,the Eagles, Rare Earth and more. Thanks friends
You meant B3?
@@cyberia55 thanks man I did,don't know why but I put d3., definitely B3.
This song still sounds awesome being 50 years old.
Lex u make me laugh, I am 62, keep the smile on your face, and the light in your eyes ! My best to both of you!
I freaking love this song, so glad you didn’t do the live version
How amazing is listening to Deep Purple, thanks for your reaction! The instrument that Lex asked was a Hammond organ; Jon Lord is playing it aroud all song (plugged on guitar amplifiers). It's a song almost instrumental, showing how good these guys were jaming (or are, since 3 of them are still with the band in 2024)
OMG!! WHOA. You gotta hear this LIVE from the album Made in Japan! R.I.P. JON LORD!! WE REMEMBER YOU!! 😘
He was the best
finally!!! One of the things what made them so great was there skills. If you listen to the guitar and organ solos again you will notice that they are almost note for note identical. Same on highway star. Nobody could do what those 2 did. They did tht on many other songs like #Place in line and many others. And the drum and bass on lazy and groovy. My friend once said that it sounded like the instruments were all talking to each other. And the lazy riff is one of the most distinquishable in history- much like smoke on the wawer. th3 more you hear it the more you appreciate what they are doing . Lazy is my fav song because it just makes me happy. Thank you
You guys should watch a live song. All 4 musicians are awesome. Richie Blackmore is probably my favorite guitar players to watch. The Beat Club videos on UA-cam are all great to watch.
Like all the classic rock you've reacted to, I grew up with this music. If I had to pick a single Deep Purple album, it would definitely Made In Japan, which was one of the best live albums ever released. This song is on it, but at a much higher energy level.
I forgot how good this is. They were incredible musicians.
The best
Unparalleled
i always forget how good this song is until i hear it again.
This is a good track, but the live version from "Made In Japan" is much more electrifying!
Amen. Now that you know the original, you're ready to appreciate the live version.
Absolutely!
Every song on Made In Japan was better than studio versions. I sir concur.
My comment, my brother. Well done.
I think a lot of people who bought Made In Japan wore that out and let their copies of Machine Head gather a little dust.
Deep Purple can swing!
"Man those cats can really swing"
No auto tune or fake backup on this, just serious musicians all doing their thing in a major way from the best music era ever--the 70's-!! (JMO)
I picture band playing while singer Ian Gillan lies in bed til his verse arrives
I feel that was not my imagination
This one of my favourites from Deep Purple
The musical conversation between Jon Lord on Hammond Organ and Ritchie Blackmore shredding it on lead guitar is just fantastic. It's almost blues but a little bit more.
Can't say that I ever heard this one before. Didn't think I was going to like it from the start of it but it was jammin'!
Perfect Strangers is one of my favorite Deep Purple songs
what an amazing bass line
LAZY ,,, just another tune showing that DEEP PURPLE was the greatest hard rock band ever!!!!
That's a perfect Rock n' Roll song IMO!!! It's got everything you want to hear in it.🤘🤘🤘🤘Still blows me away how Brad can't let loose even when the song is JAMMIN!!!!😆
My favorite, it has everything and a killer guitar! Love it!
You just made Jon Lord turn over in his grave when Brad said at the beginning that the organ/keyboards was a guitar....lmao !!!!!
In an interview I watched, Ian Gillan said that Deep Purple are essentially an instrumental band with some vocals thrown in for good measure. Lazy and Child in Time demonstrate what he means, exactly.
how cool is it that your jamming to deep purple and have on an aerosmith shirt! it just doesn't get any better then that. great jam and yes, baked!!
Lex: "What instrument?" Brad: "Guitar." No sir, that was Jon Lord on organ at the very beginning.
I remember seeing Ian Paice doing a drum clinic in a pub where I lived, I figured we were old back then that was forty years ago.
So so good. Master musicians in the 70’s
Jon Lord like a mid evil wizard on the keys....the whole band rocked but he was my favourite! RIP brother
Deep Purple must be listened to live. The live versions are like watching an IMAX movie compared to your TV. Search this song with "Made in Japan". Also "Strange Kind Of Woman Made in Japan". Oh, hell. Just listen to the whole Made in Japan live album. four-minute made-for-radio versions become 10+ minute jams/shreds.
One of my favorite bands.. And my favorite song... The Late Great John Lord on Keyboard, one if the all time greats
This song was their take on a old blues song. Personally I say they nailed it!
My favourite Purple song and has been since 1972.
Jon Lord starts out with his B-3 Organ cranking!
Just hearing that intro brought back so many memories. More!!!
IMHO, this is Deep Purple's greatest song.
Tous les 5 ont un niveau exceptionnel que l on ne retrouve plus 🎸🎸🎸🎸🎶🎶🎤🎤👏👏👏👏