DPAS Magazine Archive. Issue 29. July 1984 (original) (raw)
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AN EDITOR REMEMBERS......... Issue 29 July 1984 | |
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ISSUE 29: DIGEST & INDEX | |
DEEP PURPLE | NEWS : Deep Purple Mk2 Reform |
WHITESNAKE | RECORD REVIEW : Slide It In |
WHITESNAKE | LIVE REVIEW : Liverpool Royal Court |
WHITESNAKE | NEWS : Sykes In, Galley Injured, Lord Out |
WHITESNAKE | RECORD NEWS : Slide It In (US Mix) |
GARY MOORE (with Ian Paice) | LIVE REVIEW : Hammersmith Odeon |
BLACK SABBATH (with Ian Gillan) | LIVE REVIEW : Toledo Sports Arena |
RAINBOW | NEWS : Live With An Orchestra |
JON LORD | RECORD REVIEW : The Country Diary Of An Edwardian Lady |
GLENN HUGHES | NEWS : Hughes Thrall |
DEEP PURPLE
Deep Purple Mk2 Reform - News |
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That we should get so many people writing and asking us if it was true is an indication of the frequency at which the Deep Purple to reform stories have been and gone over the years; so much so that when it did happen, people still thought it was another rumour. At the end of 1982 the Mk 2 reunion got within a hair's breadth of coming off. The plans were for a new album, some warm-up dates in South America then a world tour. One European promoter had provisionally booked the venues, and for the UK Glasgow, Manchester and London were singled out. Of the main protagonists Blackmore and Glover were free to jack Rainbow in as they wished. lan Paice had landed a "temporary permanent position" with Gary Moore. Jon was still with Whitesnake but his contributions were becoming less and less audible with each album and tour. lan Gillan, well lan had dropped himself in it. Half way through the winter 82 Gillan tour the news broke that he had been advised to quit singing for six months or risk permanent damage to his throat. He disbanded Gillan but amidst pointed accusations from some members as to his real motives. The reunion fell through for reasons never really explained, and the plans were dropped, or more likely simply postponed. There was only one news report to reach us, from Sweden's daily newspaper in Jan 83 which gave the reunion dates as the summer of 1984 pending Jon's agreement. With hindsight this turned out to be something of a scoop, though at the time it simply got filed with all the other reports. On or around April 18th 1984 the five members of Deep Purple Mk 2 met up at the offices of Thames Talent over in New York, and a contract was signed for the band to reform. The news broke in the London Evening Standard on Friday April 27th and later that evening on BBC Radio One. It was about 11.30 pm. and Tommy Vance started rambling on about how he had some news about a band who had been very very (about 12 very's) very big in the 70's... "I'm going to play four records which featured the members of this band before the group was formed". A split second after the first note I knew it had to be...Ritchie's solo single. We were left to ponder the enormity of the task they'd set themselves and try to get some sleep. The album will have to be superhuman to even come close to living up to the legend they've become. |
WHITESNAKE
Slide It In - Record Review |
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Liberty LBG 2400001 UK:Feb 1984 Leave it out. Mr. Coverdale finds more ways to recycle the same old phrases yet again. All in all nothing much has changed; can you honestly find much difference between this and the Snakebite EP six years back? (Quiet those who say sure, that was better!). 'Slide It In', tatty chorus / hook with a vocal leer at the end which makes me shudder. 'Standing In The Shadow' has but a very brief low key vocal bit near the end to recommend it, while 'Give Me More Time' highlights the vocal problems which are very much in evidence, something which hasn't been a problem in the past ( and to be fair may well be something to do with the strained circumstances under which they were taped). The high register work sounds really strained. 'Love Ain't No Stranger', shows promise, though for me the track is ruined by being taken at twice the speed it ought to have been. Another ethereal Lordy intro opens 'Slow & Easy' , but I don't find Coverdale at all convincing . The Zepplinesque feel is no great worry, Plant's not got much of a voice anyway, but Zepp could write and knew when to lay off - I'm talking of that drum barrage repeated over and over til it loses all it's impact. We close with 'Guilty Of Love', which like 'Gambler' seems to have lost a lot of the bite which it had on 45, which wasn't that much. I can't understand how bands with far less talent can come out with incredibly powerful studio sounds when here Cozy sounds like he's playing a cardboard box. |
Sykes In, Galley Injured, Lord Out - News |
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Following the UK tour the band crossed into Europe where the dates came to an abrupt end after Mel Galley suffered a crushed arm. They did a couple of shows as a five piece and returned home, only to say good-bye to Jon. This threw the plans for concentrated US dates into confusion. Geffen had mailed back the Slide It In LP marked unsuitable, so it was remixed and partly retaped to include Sykes & Murray, and this was to be heavily plugged in a market where the band have had little success so far. John Sykes' confirmation came in December 83, and they were in the studios for a photo session on Jan 4th 1984. He's a veteran of Thin Lizzy and has done some solo stuff too, but don't expect too much coverage in the mag. Neil Murray slipped back into the band as if he'd never been away. However he still seems to get ignored on stage, the 40 second romp with Jon being his "solo"; but his playing cut through well at Nottingham. The band aim to be back in action headlining some Jap festivals during the summer, possibly using an off-stage keyboard player rather than a proper replacement. |
Slide It In (US Mix) - Record News |
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Geffen GHS 4018: USA: 1984 "Murray's work doesn't seem that different, so it's mainly Sykes and the mix which need noting. 'Slow & Easy; has a very different sound, crisper, and more echo. 'Love Ain't No Stranger' has a clean jingly sound, while 'All or Nothing' is dirty sounding, heavy too, the direction they seem to be moving in general. The 'Spit It Out' riff is sharper and cleaner. 'Give Me More Time' has a different guitar solo which goes nowhere quickly. Moody is also missed in the slower passages of 'Standing In The Shadow' where he was more fluid." Brian Jackson |
IAN PAICE (with Gary Moore)
Hammersmith Odeon - Live Review |
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"I can't remember the order of the tracks, but highlights for me were 'Shapes Of Things', 'Wishing Well' and 'Empty Rooms'. Although Gary Moore's guitar playing was breathtaking at times, tracks tended to be spoilt by his singing, which at best is second rate. Barry Manilow clone Neil Carter sang much better. Craig Gruber seemed a little uninspired, standing very still while Moore and Carter jumped around like a couple of fairies! Paice's drum solo was their best I've ever seen, and he got the biggest applause of the evening. An enjoyable concert bar the vocals." Philip Hobson Ian Paice is not on the 'Live At The Marquee' album issued in Japan. It comes from a 1981 show with Tommy Aldridge on drums. There will be a new live album out in the autumn, many of the UK shows being taped specially for this. The band also managed plenty of UK TV coverage; with half an hour on 'Sight & Sound In Concert' (no drum solo) and two tracks on 'The Tube'. The TV sound was dire for 'Sight & Sound..' |
IAN GILLAN (with Black Sabbath)
Toledo Sports Arena, 25th February 1984 - Live Review |
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"This couldn't be the same Ian Gillan I saw two months ago in Detroit. That Gillan couldn't hit the simplest notes without cracking to a mere croak. Tonight he was a new man, reaching highs I thought were lost forever. There was one problem, a power failure of five minutes during the last song of the set - 'Children Of The Grave'. They came back to bring the house down with 'Smoke On The Water'; it's thrilling to see the crowd react like that to an old Deep Purple song." John Barnes The Sabs did a touring blitz of the States in October/November, followed by more dates in January and February. Ian handed his notice in after the tour, with the news reaching the English press in mid March. |
RAINBOW
Live In Tokyo With Orchestra - News |
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It was difficult to attach great significance to the Rainbow wind-down which took place after the US shows in November, when reports of less than wonderful ticket sales leading to the cancellation of some shows reached us. Stories of the band being 'put on ice' appeared, but when the Japanese dates went ahead in March we didn't pay them much heed. These were at the Castle Hall in Osaka on March 11th, and at the Budokan in Tokyo on 13th & 14th (the latter with a 25 piece orchestra during Difficult To Cure). The show on 14th was filmed for the (Japan only) video cassette. |
JON LORD
The Country Diary Of An Edwardian Lady - Single Review |
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GLENN HUGHES
Hughes Thrall - News |
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The Hughes Thrall unit is back in action once more. They began work at once on a title track for a film called 'Ghost Business'. They were then due to start work on a new HughesThrall album in March, with a planned summer release. Both are itching to some real touring and seem almost certain to play Europe later this year, though this could fall through as they were penciled in to do both Reading and Donnington last year. Glenn's other plans include an LP with Gary Moore. |
also in the magazine...Looking Back Over 8 Years Of Deep Purple Reunion Rumours....Reaction To The Deep Purple Reunion.....Whitesnake 1984 UK Tour Reviews.....Ian Paice / Gary Moore Band Line-Ups.....Gary Moore 1984 UK Tour Reviews.....Episode Six History & UK Discography....Deep Purple Reel-To-Reel Tapes....Whitesnake & Rainbow Bootleg Reviews.....Deep Purple HM Photo Book Review.....plus much more.
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