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Deep Purple - Concerto For Group And Orchestra (Pathe Marconi Harvest #C064-90749 French Pressing Needledrop)(Jgster6969) (1969)

Track listing:
  1. First Movement: Moderato-Allegro 19:06
  2. Second Movement: Andante (Part One) 6:28
  3. Second Movement: Andante (Part Two) 12:26
  4. Third Movement: Vivace - Presto 15:26
  5. Hush 4:24
  6. Wring That Neck 12:58
  7. Child In Time 12:25

Notes


Deep Purple Concerto for Group and Orchestra PATHE MARCONI HARVEST #C064-90749 French PRessing Vinyl Rip Flac WIth Bonus
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Concerto for Group and Orchestra
Live album by Deep Purple
Released December 1969 (United States)
January 1970 (United Kingdom)
Recorded 24 September 1969
Genre Classical/rock
Length 59:26
Label Harvest Records (UK)

Producer Deep Purple
Professional reviews

* Allmusic 3/5 stars link



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.
Contents
Musical form

The Concerto for Group and Orchestra displays some characteristics of the concerto grosso, sinfonia concertante, and concerto for orchestra genres:

* First movement (Moderato - Allegro): after an elaborate orchestral introduction the Group and the Orchestra work as separate blocks, trying to get dominance over the main theme - this opposition of a group of soloists against an orchestra is quite "concerto grosso" style.
* Second movement (Andante), with lyrics sung by Ian Gillan: here the group integrates more with the sound of the orchestra while still clearly on top of the orchestral texture, giving a sinfonia concertante look and feel.
* Third movement (Vivace - Presto): apart from Ian Paice's drum solo, the music is so tightly knit that the distinction between the group and the orchestra is almost lifted: in a way the group becomes part of an extended orchestra, with one elaborate "solo" passage, by an instrument that is no soloist throughout the movement, giving a concerto touch: this is more or less what is understood by the Concerto for Orchestra genre.

Original 1969 Royal Albert Hall Performance


The piece was first performed and recorded on 24 September 1969 in the Royal Albert Hall, London, by:

* Deep Purple
o Jon Lord: keyboards
o Ritchie Blackmore: guitar
o Ian Gillan: vocals
o Roger Glover: bass
o Ian Paice: drums
* The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by Malcolm Arnold

The programme consisted of:

1. Symphony No. 6, Op. 95 (Malcolm Arnold), performed by The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra
1. "1st Movement: Energico" (9:19)
2. "2nd Movement: Lento" (8:52)
3. "3rd Movement: Con Fuoco" (7:02)
2. "Hush" (Joe South, 4:42), performed by Deep Purple
3. "Wring That Neck" (Ritchie Blackmore, Nick Simper, Jon Lord, Ian Paice, 13:23), performed by Deep Purple
4. "Child in Time" (Blackmore, Ian Gillan, Roger Glover, Lord, Paice - 12:06), performed by Deep Purple
5. Concerto for Group and Orchestra (Jon Lord, with lyrics by Ian Gillan), performed by Deep Purple with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra
1. "First Movement: Moderato-Allegro" (19:23)
2. "Second Movement: Andante" (19:11)
3. "Third Movement: Vivace-Presto" (13:09)

Parts of the Concerto's "Third Movement" - 5:53 - were given as an encore.
Releases

The Concerto for Group and Orchestra was first released on vinyl in December 1969 in the United States (Tetragrammaton) and in January 1970 in the United Kingdom (Harvest). These releases contained only the "Concerto", with the second movement broken in two halves.Copies of the original U.S. editions are rare as Tetragrammaton went bankrupt while the album was still being issued. In the following year, the Concerto became the only Tetragrammaton release to be reissued by Warner Bros., Deep Purple's new U.S. label.

On 4 April 1970, the Concerto was shown on British television as The Best of Both Worlds.

1970 Los Angeles performance

The Concerto was performed one more time, with the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Lawrence Foster at the Hollywood Bowl on 25 August 1970, after which the score was lost.


Also included is Deep purples set before the Concerto (From Powerhouse Vinyl)
"Hush"
"Wring That Neck"
"Child in Time"

Released December 1969 (United States)
January 1970 (United Kingdom)
Recorded 24 September 1969

Label Harvest Records (UK)

Producer Deep Purple


The Concerto for Group and Orchestra displays some characteristics of the concerto grosso, sinfonia concertante, and concerto for orchestra genres:

* First movement (Moderato - Allegro): after an elaborate orchestral introduction the Group and the Orchestra work as separate blocks, trying to get dominance over the main theme - this opposition of a group of soloists against an orchestra is quite "concerto grosso" style.
* Second movement (Andante), with lyrics sung by Ian Gillan: here the group integrates more with the sound of the orchestra while still clearly on top of the orchestral texture, giving a sinfonia concertante look and feel.
* Third movement (Vivace - Presto): apart from Ian Paice's drum solo, the music is so tightly knit that the distinction between the group and the orchestra is almost lifted: in a way the group becomes part of an extended orchestra, with one elaborate "solo" passage, by an instrument that is no soloist throughout the movement, giving a concerto touch: this is more or less what is understood by the Concerto for Orchestra genre.

Original 1969 Royal Albert Hall Performance


The piece was first performed and recorded on 24 September 1969 in the Royal Albert Hall, London, by:

* Deep Purple
o Jon Lord: keyboards
o Ritchie Blackmore: guitar
o Ian Gillan: vocals
o Roger Glover: bass
o Ian Paice: drums
* The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by Malcolm Arnold

The programme consisted of:

1. Symphony No. 6, Op. 95 (Malcolm Arnold), performed by The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra
1. "1st Movement: Energico" (9:19)
2. "2nd Movement: Lento" (8:52)
3. "3rd Movement: Con Fuoco" (7:02)
2. "Hush" (Joe South, 4:42), performed by Deep Purple
3. "Wring That Neck" (Ritchie Blackmore, Nick Simper, Jon Lord, Ian Paice, 13:23), performed by Deep Purple
4. "Child in Time" (Blackmore, Ian Gillan, Roger Glover, Lord, Paice - 12:06), performed by Deep Purple
5. Concerto for Group and Orchestra (Jon Lord, with lyrics by Ian Gillan), performed by Deep Purple with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra
1. "First Movement: Moderato-Allegro" (19:23)
2. "Second Movement: Andante" (19:11)
3. "Third Movement: Vivace-Presto" (13:09)

Parts of the Concerto's "Third Movement" - 5:53 - were given as an encore.
Releases

The Concerto for Group and Orchestra was first released on vinyl in December 1969 in the United States (Tetragrammaton) and in January 1970 in the United Kingdom (Harvest). These releases contained only the "Concerto", with the second movement broken in two halves.Copies of the original U.S. editions are rare as Tetragrammaton went bankrupt while the album was still being issued. In the following year, the Concerto became the only Tetragrammaton release to be reissued by Warner Bros., Deep Purple's new U.S. label.

On 4 April 1970, the Concerto was shown on British television as The Best of Both Worlds.

1970 Los Angeles performance

The Concerto was performed one more time, with the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Lawrence Foster at the Hollywood Bowl on 25 August 1970, after which the score was lost.


Also included is Deep purples set before the Concerto (From Powerhouse Vinyl)
"Hush"
"Wring That Neck"
"Child in Time"