Classic Rock

PURPLE PATCHES

The 10 best Deep Purple songs from 1994 to today.

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LOOSEN MY STRINGS

Ritchie Blackmore’s exit following the sub-standard The Battle Rages On rejuvenate­d the band. Purpendicu­lar was their finest album in years. Loosen My Strings bristled with elegant confidence, and new boy Steve Morse played like a man with a point to prove.

SOMETIMES I FEEL LIKE SCREAMING

(1996) Seven and a half minutes of Purple majesty. Jon Lord’s graceful keyboards, Ian Paice’s rocksteady backing, and Ian Gillan delivered a vocal performanc­e that was the equal of anything he recorded in the 70s.

’69

Although 1998’s Abandon fell short of Purpendicu­lar’s heights, it was still a creditable collection of songs. ’69, buried towards the back of the album, was a playful, buzzy number that looked back towards the salad days of youth, tempering its rosy nostalgia with knowing irony.

WALK ON

Jon Lord’s departure rocked the band way more than Ritchie Blackmore’s did 12 years earlier, and 2005’s Bananas found them struggling for purpose. The slowly unfolding Walk On was a rare highlight – eight minutes of slow-burning blues that allowed Don Airey to show he was the right choice to fill Lord’s shoes.

CLEARLY QUITE ABSURD

Purple have never been celebrated for their ballads. Which is shame, because when they do slow things down the

results are frequently stellar, as with this stately highlight from 2005’s Raputre Of The Deep.

VINCENT PRICE The death of founder member Jon Lord and bringing in producer Bob Ezrin galvanised Purple into action after an eight-year break from the studio. Their comeback album Now What?! bristled with renewed vigour: the winking Hammer Horror grandeur of Vincent Price masked the sound of a band reborn.

ABOVE AND BEYOND

Purple rarely deal in unvarnishe­d emotion, but they do on Above And Beyond, a tribute to the late Jon Lord that forgoes mawkishnes­s and instead delivers a mix of heaviness and grave. A serious contender for the greatest Purple song of the past 30 years.

TIME FOR BEDLAM

The opening track from Infinite, their second album recorded in collaborat­ion with Bob Ezrin, gallops out of the gate like the work of a band half – well, two-thirds – its age. Gillan’s on spiky form, taking pot shots at ‘the system’: ‘Sucking my milk from the venomous tit of the state/This clearly designed to suppress every thought of escape.’

THE SURPRISING A song that crams multiple shifting moods into a punchy six minutes: evocative balladry, rat-atatting heaviness, blissful ambience. Exactly 50 years after Purple started, there was still life in them.

MAN ALIVE Retirement, schmetirem­ent. The high point of new album Whoosh! conjures the kind of sunset majesty that marks their best work, although the song’s barbed lyrical content takes aim at humanity’s endless stupidity and capacity for self-destructio­n.

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