Rock/Pop
CDアルバム

Concerto For Group & Orchestra

5.0

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2,629
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在庫状況 について

フォーマット CDアルバム
発売日 1993年07月13日
国内/輸入 輸入
レーベルEMI
構成数 1
パッケージ仕様 -
規格品番 CDP7948862
SKU 077779488629

構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 01:18:46
Personnel: Ian Gillan (vocals, harmonica); Ritchie Blackmore (guitar); Jon Lord (keyboards); Roger Glover (synthesizer, bass guitar); Ian Paice (drums). Recording information: 09/24/1969. Unknown Contributor Role: Royal Philharmonic Orchestra. Back in 1970, it seemed as though any British group that could was starting to utilize classical elements in their work -- for some, like ELP, that meant quoting from the classics as often and loudly as possible, while for others, like Yes, it meant incorporating classical structures into their albums and songs. Deep Purple, at the behest of keyboardman Jon Lord, fell briefly into the camp of this offshoot of early progressive rock with the Concerto for Group and Orchestra. For most fans, the album represented the nadir of the classic (i.e., post-Rod Evans) group: minutes of orchestral meandering lead into some perfectly good hard rock jamming by the band, but the trip is almost not worth the effort. Ritchie Blackmore sounds great and plays his heart out, and you can tell this band is going to go somewhere, just by virtue of the energy that they put into these extended pieces. The classical influences mostly seem drawn from movie music composers Dimitri Tiomkin and Franz Waxman (and Elmer Bernstein), with some nods to Rachmaninoff, Sibelius, and Mahler, and they rather just lay there. Buried in the middle of the second movement is a perfectly good song, but you've got to get to it through eight minutes of orchestral noodling on either side. The third movement is almost bracing enough to make up for the flaws of the other two, though by itself, it wouldn't make the album worthwhile -- Pink Floyd proved far more adept at mixing group and orchestra, and making long, slow, lugubrious pieces interesting. As a bonus, however, the producers have added a pair of hard rock numbers by the group alone, "Wring That Neck" and "Child in Time," that were played at the same concert. They and the third movement of the established piece make this worth a listen. ~ Bruce Eder

  1. 1.[CDアルバム]
    1. 1.
      Hard Road (Wring That Neck)

      アーティスト: Deep Purple

    2. 2.
      Child in Time

      アーティスト: Deep Purple

    3. 3.
      First Movement: Moderato-Allegro

      アーティスト: Deep Purple

    4. 4.
      Second Movement: Andante

      アーティスト: Deep Purple

    5. 5.
      Third Movement: Vivace-Presto

      アーティスト: Deep Purple

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: Deep Purple

商品の紹介

Until the release of this DVD, one could have no idea that the Deep Purple Concerto for Group and Orchestra had been captured on video at its September 24, 1969, premiere. The film, running 52 minutes, opens with a short introductory sequence concentrating on composer/keyboard player Jon Lord and conductor Malcolm Arnold. The performance itself is well photographed, the director making allowances for the fact that this was not a typical Royal Philharmonic concert. Indeed, the shooting is almost as schizophrenic as the work they're performing, with nice, flowing moves from one camera to another as the different sections of the orchestra come in, but as soon as the band comes in, the camerawork (and the shifts between cameras) triples in speed, shooting each bandmember in close-up at his work. There are also some shots of the RPO members looking impatient, if not downright unhappy, listening to one of Ritchie Blackmore's solos. The music itself can be an acquired taste, as it was for the band -- one that, apart from composer Lord, they never did acquire. ~ Bruce Eder|
Rovi

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いつもの自己中プレイでなくいかにも弾かされている風のリッチーが意外といい。指グセでないフレーズが新鮮で迫力満点。この種のアルバムでは、メタリカの「M&S」に次ぐ第二位。”ロック不朽の名盤!これを聴かずに死ねるか”シリーズ選出。
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