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Deep Purple - Royal Philharmonic 1990 - [EAC - FLAC](oan)

Infohash:

52626358602E718F6FE08D7A7F725504294481CB

Type:

Audio Lossless

Title:

Deep Purple - Royal Philharmonic 1990 - [EAC - FLAC](oan)

Category:

Audio/FLAC

Uploaded:

2011-04-10 (by oneanight)

Description:

Deep Purple - Concerto For Group And Orchestra - Royal Philharmonic 1990 - [EAC - FLAC](oan) http://leetleech.org/images/13020774061736263561.jpg Review by Bruce Eder Back in 1970, it seemed as though any British group that could was starting to utilize classical elements in their work -- for some, like ELP, that meant quoting from the classics as often and loudly as possible, while for others, like Yes, it meant incorporating classical structures into their albums and songs. Deep Purple, at the behest of keyboardman Jon Lord, fell briefly into the camp of this offshoot of early progressive rock with the Concerto for Group and Orchestra. For most fans, the album represented the nadir of the classic (i.e., post-Rod Evans) group: minutes of orchestral meandering lead into some perfectly good hard rock jamming by the band, but the trip is almost not worth the effort. Ritchie Blackmore sounds great and plays his heart out, and you can tell this band is going to go somewhere, just by virtue of the energy that they put into these extended pieces. The classical influences mostly seem drawn from movie music composers Dimitri Tiomkin and Franz Waxman (and Elmer Bernstein), with some nods to Rachmaninoff, Sibelius, and Mahler, and they rather just lay there. Buried in the middle of the second movement is a perfectly good song, but you've got to get to it through eight minutes of orchestral noodling on either side. The third movement is almost bracing enough to make up for the flaws of the other two, though by itself, it wouldn't make the CD worthwhile -- Pink Floyd proved far more adept at mixing group and orchestra, and making long, slow, lugubrious pieces interesting. As a bonus, however, the producers have added a pair of hard rock numbers by the group alone, "Wring That Neck" and "Child in Time," that were played at the same concert. They and the third movement of the established piece make this worth a listen. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- From Wiki The Concerto for Group and Orchestra is a concerto composed by Jon Lord, with lyrics written by Ian Gillan. It was first performed by Deep Purple and The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Malcolm Arnold on 24 September 1969 and released on vinyl in December 1969. The release was the first Deep Purple album to feature Ian Gillan on vocals and Roger Glover on bass. After the score was lost in 1970, it was performed again in 1999 with a recreated score. 01. [12:51] - Wring That Neck [Bonus Track] 02. [12:27] - Child In Time [Bonus Track] 03. [19:06] - First Movement - Moderato - Allegro 04. [19:01] - Second Movement - Andante 05. [15:25] - Third Movement - Vivace - Presto Playing Time.........: 01:18:49 Total Size...........: 420.75 MB All tracks accurately ripped No errors occurred End of status report http://leetleech.org/images/70779370720069666585.gif http://leetleech.org/images/13745361545411549163.jpg

Tags:

  1. Deep Purple
  2. Royal
  3. Philharmonic
  4. 1990

Files count:

1

Size:

440.02 Mb

Trackers:

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udp://tracker.coppersurfer.tk:6969
udp://exodus.desync.com:6969