REVIEWS FROM MY VINYL COLLECTION

Day: November 23, 2021

DEEP PURPLE – The House Of Blue Light

This is the second album after the band’s return after their disbandment in ’75. Also, this lineup is what most regard as the classic Purple Mk2 version. Blackmore seemed to be loving this at the time (we all know what transpired later), but he brought with him a more commercial edge to the band after his stint with taking Rainbow in that direction. In fact, the opening track Bad Attitude is a very commercial sounding track and was released as a single – as well as Call Of The Wild.

It’s a good album and it definitely has its moments, but there does seem to be that spark missing from proceedings. Even when we get to speedier songs like Mad Dog, it all seems a bit to polished and the edge has been removed. It’s not until we get to The Spanish Archer when the vibe has that old Purple feel to it, and that’s in the intro. It’s ironic that the best track on the album is the last one, Dead Or Alive, as it does rock quite well and has a light shining to the past.

It’s nowhere near their best effort, but there is still enough here to keep the most discerning rock fan happy.

7.5/10 from The Grooveman.

RAINBOW – Long Live Rock n Roll

This is the last of (what I call) the classic Rainbow and Blackmore albums before he went in a more commercial direction. Depending who you believe (Richie or Ronnie), this was Dio’s last involvement with Rainbow. Richie said Ronnie was becoming lazy and disillusioned, and he didn’t like the fact that the band were Richie Blackmore’s Rainbow, so he decided to remove Ronnie and get another singer in. Dio says he left the band because he did not want to go in a commercial direction and wanted to carry on the way things were. ‘m sure the real reason is somewhere between the two, and we will never know for sure.

Even though this is the weakest album with Dio, it still has some kick as moments. The title track is a killer opening and is just classic Blackmore with that trademark simple riff. Gates Of Babylon is just an epic piece of rock and one of my favourite Rainbow tunes. Kill The King, which opens Side 2, is another beast of a song. There is some great playing by Blackmore on this record, in fact, some of his best.

Dio must have loved this record as he was playing Kill The King and Gates of Babylon in his live shows. It’s an end of an era album for sure, as Rainbow were never the same after this as Blackmore wanted to explore different things.

8.5/10 from The Grooveman.