DVDRip | 688 x 368 | .AVI/XviD @ 1939 Kbps | 50 min 2 s | 742 MB
Audio: English MP3 128 Kbps, 2 channels | Subs: None
Genre: Documentary
When British hard rock band Deep Purple released their MACHINE HEAD album in 1972, it almost immediately became part of the hard rock canon. Featuring the song that non-fans know them for, “Smoke On The Water,” the album is still considered a classic. This documentary tells the story of the record’s creation through interviews with the key personalities available.
Within weeks of Fireball’s release, the band was already performing songs planned for the next album. One song (which later became “Highway Star”) was performed at the first gig of the Fireball tour, having been written on the bus to a show in Portsmouth, in answer to a journalist’s question: “How do you go about writing songs?” Three months later, in December 1971, the band traveled to Switzerland to record Machine Head. The album was due to be recorded at a casino in Montreux, using the Rolling Stones Mobile Studio, but a fire during a Frank Zappa and the Mothers of Invention gig burned down the casino. The album was actually recorded at the nearby empty Grand Hotel. This incident famously inspired the song “Smoke on the Water.” Gillan believes that he witnessed a man fire a flare gun into the ceiling during the concert, prompting Mark Volman of the Mothers to comment: “Arthur Brown in person!”
Continuing from where both previous albums left off, Machine Head has since become one of the band’s most famous albums, including tracks that became live classics such as “Highway Star,” “Space Truckin’,” “Lazy,” and “Smoke on the Water.” Deep Purple continued to tour and record at a rate that would be rare thirty years on: when Machine Head was recorded, the group had only been together three and a half years, yet it was their seventh LP. Meanwhile the band undertook four US tours in 1972 and the August tour of Japan that led to a double-vinyl live release, Made in Japan. Originally intended as a Japan-only record, its worldwide release saw the double LP become an instant hit. It remains one of rock music’s most popular and highest selling live-concert recordings (although at the time it was perhaps seen as less important, as only Glover and Paice turned up to mix it).
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