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Deep Purple ‎– The Book Of Taliesyn

59,99

Original US 1968 pressings have heavy brown cardboard covers with a glued back flap attached to rear paper panel. Labels are a Silver gloss paper with a Blue “Tetragrammaton” Logo, and thick black lettering. Dead wax has small inscription “T-107-Side 1” and “T-107-Side 2”

Several months after the innovative remake of “You Keep Me Hanging On,” England’s answer to Vanilla Fudge, was this early version of Deep Purple, which featured vocalist Rod Evans, and bassist Nick Simper, along with mainstays Ritchie Blackmore, Jon Lord, and Ian Paice. This, their second album, followed on the heels of “Hush,” a dynamic arrangement of a Joe South tune, far removed from the flavor of one of his own hits, “Walk a Mile in My Shoes.” Four months later, this album’s cover of Neil Diamond’s Top 25, 1967 gem “Kentucky Woman,” went Top 40 for Deep Purple. Also like Vanilla Fudge, the group’s own originals were creative, thought-provoking, but not nearly as interesting as their take on cover tunes. Vanilla Fudge did “Eleanor Rigby,” and Deep Purple respond by going inside “We Can Work It Out” — it falls out of nowhere after the progressive rock jam “Exposition,” Ritchie Blackmore’s leads zipping in between Rod Evans smooth and precise vocals. As Vanilla Fudge was progressively leaning more towards psychedelia, here Deep Purple are the opposite. The boys claim to be inspired by the Bard of King Arthur’s court in Camelot, Taliesyn. John Vernon Lord, under the art direction of Les Weisbrich, paints a superb wonderland on the album jacket, equal to the madness of Hieronymous Bosch’s cover painting used for the third album. Originals “The Shield” and “Anthem” make early Syd Barrett Pink Floyd appear punk in comparison. Novel sounds are aided by Lord’s dominating keyboards, a signature of this group.
Though “The Anthem” is more intriguing than the heavy metal thunder of Machine Head, it is overwhelmed by the majesty of their “River Deep, Mountain High” cover, definitely not the inspiration for the Supremes and Four Tops 1971 hit version. By the time 1972 came around, Deep Purple immersed themselves in dumb lyrics, unforgettable riffs, and a huge presence, much like Black Sabbath. The evolution from progressive to hard rock was complete, but a combination of what they did here — words that mattered matched by innovative musical passages — would have been a more pleasing combination. Vanilla Fudge would cut Donovan’s “Season of the Witch,” Deep Purple followed this album by covering his “Lalena”; both bands abandoned the rewrites their fans found so fascinating. Rod Evans voice was subtle enough to take “River Deep, Mountain High” to places Ian Gillam might have demolished

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Description

Tetragrammaton Records ‎– T-107 Stereo Vinyl LP 1968 1st US Pressing

Side 1.

1. Listen, Learn, Read On
2. Hard Road
3. Kentucky Woman
Written-By – Neil Diamond
4. Exposition
5. We Can Work It Out
Written-By – Lennon, McCartney

Side 2.

1. The Shield
2. Anthem
3. River Deep, Mountain High
Written-By – Spector, Greenwich, Barry

Credits:
Arranged By [String Arrangement] – Jon Lord
Art Direction – Les Weisbrich
Bass Guitar, Vocals – Nicky
Cover [Cover Arrt] – John Vernon Lord
Drums – Ian
Engineer – Barry Ainsworth
Lead Guitar – Richie
Mastered By – Darrell Johnson
Organ, Vocals – Jon
Producer – Derek Lawrence
Vocals – Rod

Additional information

Weight 0,5 kg
LP Condition

Cover Condition

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