Qantas

Then & Now

Hotel Eden Palace au Lac’s Deep Purple past

- By Chris Sheedy.

ON THE night of December 4, 1971, young and devoted music fans from across Europe descended on the concert hall of the opulent Montreux Casino in Switzerlan­d to see American musician Frank Zappa and his band, The Mothers of Invention. Instead, the stage was set for a far more significan­t moment in rock’n’roll history.

By the end of the night the casino would be destroyed by fire and from its ashes would rise one of the most recognisab­le riffs – in a single that would see another band, Britain’s Deep Purple, soar into the musical stratosphe­re.

The five Deep Purple musicians had travelled to the swanky Swiss town to utilise the casino’s concert hall as a recording space. During the Zappa gig, which they attended as audience members rather than performers, they saw a fan shoot a flare gun at the ceiling. The venue soon began to burn.

“The fire was unbelievab­le,” Deep Purple vocalist Ian Gillan later said. “The whole town was closed off while the bloody thing [the casino] burned to the ground... We were moved to a hotel called the Eden Palace au Lac.”

From their lakeside digs, the band members looked on as flames shot into the night sky. The next morning, smoke billowed over the still waters of Lake Geneva.

In the weeks that followed the inferno, the rockers penned an extraordin­arily powerful four-note song about the blaze. It was recorded in various locations around Montreux but was never meant to be included on the 1972 album Machine Head (the band was concerned the song’s title,

Smoke on the Water, would have drug connotatio­ns). The track was added only at the last minute after canny colleagues convinced the band of the song’s catchiness.

Today, visitors to Montreux can stay at the four-star Eden Palace au Lac, an imposing Victorian landmark first opened in 1896. Be sure to request a lakeside room, which has a balcony or terrace overlookin­g Lake Geneva and the Alps. The hotel has hosted blues king Sammy Price, pianist Charles Thompson, jazz trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie and many other artists – but none have put Montreux on the musical map as indelibly as Deep Purple.

 ??  ?? Eden Palace (left and below) on Lake Geneva; the inferno in the Swiss resort town of Montreux was front-page news
Eden Palace (left and below) on Lake Geneva; the inferno in the Swiss resort town of Montreux was front-page news

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia