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Shades Of Deep Purple 1968 Album

Shades Of Deep Purple Shades Of Deep Purple
Affinity
100%
0.5
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1
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1.5
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2
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2.5
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3
1
50%
3.5
1
50%
4
0%
4.5
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5
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Recent Ratings
3.5 AlRog 3 jfclams
First Ratings
3 jfclams 3.5 AlRog
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Item description
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Length
43m 33s
Country
United Kingdom
Release Dates
1968-09-00 United Kingdom 1968-07-17 United States
Description
Shades of Deep Purple is the debut studio album by the English rock band Deep Purple, released in July 1968 on Tetragrammaton in the United States and in September 1968 on Parlophone in the United Kingdom.
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producer
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Other Roles
Jon Lord
Jon Lord
Organ, Backing Vocals
Ian Paice
Ian Paice
Drums
Nick Simper
Nick Simper
Bass, Backing Vocals
Rod Evans
Rod Evans
Lead Vocals

Reviews

All Reviews
Welcome to the many "marks" of Deep Purple. In the initial phase of the story, they were essentially court jesters jackknifing around the fringes of rock royalty…but other than the odd flash or two, were not taken at face value. Then again, Shades of Deep Purple - at its' core - was a shameless Vanilla Fudge imitation, laden with exquisite classical-tinged covers and faux-expressive psychedelic passages. Really, its' calling card (and only saving grace) were the 3 core members - Blackmore, Lord, and Paice - injecting enough tension to make things interesting. Rod Evans croons Elvis-style over the odd din, definitely standing out on the Joe South cover/hit "Hush", which became a bona fide flower power anthem. And unlike the 'Fudge debut (which was all covers), 4 of the 8 tracks were band originals - the guttural "Mandrake Root" easily the best of the four.
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