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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:14,915 --> 00:00:19,261 It all began here, at 33 Addicott Road, in Weston-super-Mare, 2 00:00:19,353 --> 00:00:22,857 in 1945, when Ritchie Blackmore was born. 3 00:00:28,996 --> 00:00:32,273 He would go on not only to write one of rock's most famous riffs, 4 00:00:32,366 --> 00:00:35,438 but to explore a number of musical forms including Bach, 5 00:00:35,569 --> 00:00:39,847 classical symphonic rock, hard rock, blues and medieval ballads. 6 00:00:44,111 --> 00:00:46,717 Ritchie was interested in the guitar from an early age 7 00:00:46,780 --> 00:00:49,886 but his father insisted he took proper lessons. 8 00:00:54,421 --> 00:00:57,197 My father insisted I went to music lessons when I was eleven. 9 00:00:58,258 --> 00:00:59,298 He said to me at the time, 10 00:00:59,359 --> 00:01:03,637 "If you don't learn this properly, I'm gonna put it across your head." 11 00:01:03,730 --> 00:01:07,769 I used to cycle about four miles to the guy who was teaching me. 12 00:01:09,903 --> 00:01:11,610 And I'd often fall off my bike. 13 00:01:26,286 --> 00:01:29,563 Throughout his life, Ritchie has been the object of much criticism, 14 00:01:29,656 --> 00:01:31,602 adulation and speculation. 15 00:01:31,658 --> 00:01:35,572 But until now, he has never given the world his take on his story. 16 00:01:35,662 --> 00:01:41,271 A story with more than its fair share of tantrums, break-ups, rivalry and rouse. 17 00:01:41,335 --> 00:01:44,578 He was such an advanced musician, way ahead of his time, 18 00:01:44,671 --> 00:01:45,843 way, way ahead. 19 00:01:45,973 --> 00:01:48,954 He's a fire ball, you know, he really is beyond belief. 20 00:01:49,009 --> 00:01:52,013 His technique is incredible. Where did that come from? I have no idea. 21 00:01:57,618 --> 00:01:59,154 And this is before Hendrix. 22 00:01:59,252 --> 00:02:05,533 Ritchie really is a great originator and creator of the wild electric guitar. 23 00:02:13,033 --> 00:02:17,539 The way he holds the guitar and everything, it's sort of ingrained in my mind 24 00:02:17,671 --> 00:02:20,071 as that's what a cool guitar player is supposed to look like, 25 00:02:20,173 --> 00:02:21,733 that's how they are supposed to behave. 26 00:02:21,808 --> 00:02:25,984 In a lot of ways, ifs a little tragic that Ritchie didn't stand up 27 00:02:26,046 --> 00:02:30,153 and shine the light on himself. 28 00:02:30,217 --> 00:02:32,561 Which is why I'm happy to be here. 29 00:02:32,653 --> 00:02:35,657 He needs the light right on him, 30 00:02:35,722 --> 00:02:39,067 because unlike many people he actually deserves it. 31 00:02:49,670 --> 00:02:54,244 It's like a sword' almost like a clean sharp sword, 32 00:02:54,341 --> 00:02:57,254 that weighs a real lot, you know. 33 00:02:58,378 --> 00:03:02,053 His precision when he plays was stunning. 34 00:03:02,249 --> 00:03:07,858 A true pioneer as somebody who was truly unique and original. 35 00:03:13,360 --> 00:03:16,341 To me he was like the Caucasian Hendrix. 36 00:03:22,335 --> 00:03:24,455 It actually changed my life. It was my first gig ever. 37 00:03:24,571 --> 00:03:27,745 We got right up against the stage, right in front of Ritchie. 38 00:03:27,841 --> 00:03:30,913 He came out and Purple came out and he just blew me away. 39 00:03:31,011 --> 00:03:35,756 It was way more than I expected, it was just a lot. 40 00:03:35,849 --> 00:03:37,192 After that I was dazed, 41 00:03:37,284 --> 00:03:40,731 I went home to my mum and dad and said, "I need a guitar, I have to have a guitar." 42 00:03:51,598 --> 00:03:53,976 He is measured, he is thoughtful. 43 00:03:54,101 --> 00:03:59,983 He knows the value of clear space, of daylight between the notes. 44 00:04:00,073 --> 00:04:03,077 It's not all about... 45 00:04:03,143 --> 00:04:06,420 It's about phrasing, it's about time. It's about... 46 00:04:06,480 --> 00:04:09,757 The spaces are as important as the notes that they separate. 47 00:04:18,759 --> 00:04:22,172 It's a mystery. I still find Ritchie Blackmore a complete mystery. 48 00:04:22,295 --> 00:04:24,502 It's also a mystery that people don't talk about him that much. 49 00:04:24,631 --> 00:04:28,443 It's odd because he's absolutely there as one of the pioneers. 50 00:04:28,835 --> 00:04:32,510 The pioneering Ritchie was single-minded from an early age. 51 00:04:33,907 --> 00:04:37,013 I won't do what I'm told to do. 52 00:04:37,110 --> 00:04:39,181 That seemed to go back to when I was five. 53 00:04:39,579 --> 00:04:40,899 I've seen pictures of me at five, 54 00:04:40,981 --> 00:04:44,428 and I remember distinctively, my mother saying, "Smile for the cameraman." 55 00:04:44,518 --> 00:04:46,361 And I'm going, "No", 56 00:04:46,486 --> 00:04:48,693 and I felt resentment to the cameraman. 57 00:04:48,989 --> 00:04:49,990 Why do you need... 58 00:04:50,090 --> 00:04:53,094 And I used to say to my mother, "Why do you need a picture of me?" 59 00:04:53,193 --> 00:04:58,006 She goes, "Because to remember you, you're five." 60 00:04:58,098 --> 00:05:01,102 "Well, I'm here now." And I couldn't understand the principle. 61 00:05:01,868 --> 00:05:05,145 There's something in there psychologically. 62 00:05:05,205 --> 00:05:08,778 Why was I so uptight at the age of five? 63 00:05:10,377 --> 00:05:12,220 But before he was in his teens, 64 00:05:12,312 --> 00:05:16,522 Ritchie made a promise to himself to be the best there was, whatever it took. 65 00:05:17,350 --> 00:05:18,727 I was such a poor pupil 66 00:05:18,819 --> 00:05:23,734 and I was always near the bottom of the class, in my tests. 67 00:05:23,857 --> 00:05:25,457 I thought, "You know what I'm gonna do?" 68 00:05:25,525 --> 00:05:29,371 "I'm going to excel in music, on the guitar." 69 00:05:29,462 --> 00:05:34,571 So they go, "Well, he was a terrible pupil, but he was a really good guitar player." 70 00:05:34,668 --> 00:05:39,344 And I had that thought in my head, ever since I was 12, onwards. 71 00:05:40,373 --> 00:05:43,911 Well, he doesn't know anything, but he can really play the guitar. 72 00:05:44,010 --> 00:05:47,014 And I always wanted the teachers to say that. 73 00:05:52,819 --> 00:05:55,766 From the age of eighteen, Ritchie worked for producer Joe Meek, 74 00:05:55,889 --> 00:06:00,201 as a sessions musician in London and toured with Screaming Lord Sutch. 75 00:06:04,264 --> 00:06:07,438 And later with Gene Vincent and Jerry Lee Lewis 76 00:06:07,567 --> 00:06:09,843 until the gigs dried up in 1968. 77 00:06:10,270 --> 00:06:13,251 I was working in a dry cleaners, 78 00:06:13,340 --> 00:06:17,550 I had about sixteen telegrams from Chris Curtis, 79 00:06:17,611 --> 00:06:21,787 who was in the band The Searchers, who I had met in Hamburg. 80 00:06:21,882 --> 00:06:24,954 And he really liked my playing, 81 00:06:25,085 --> 00:06:29,431 and he said, "I have a backer, I want you to come to England", 82 00:06:29,522 --> 00:06:34,437 "I'm gonna start a band, you're gonna play second guitar." 83 00:06:35,295 --> 00:06:37,605 Okay, who's playing first guitar? 84 00:06:37,697 --> 00:06:40,143 "I am", Chris Curtis. 85 00:06:40,300 --> 00:06:42,143 Okay, good. 86 00:06:42,235 --> 00:06:44,408 Who's playing drums then? 'Cause he's a drummer. 87 00:06:44,471 --> 00:06:46,815 He said, "I'm playing drums." 88 00:06:47,374 --> 00:06:50,253 Bass? He goes, "I'm bass player." 89 00:06:51,144 --> 00:06:53,954 "Yeah, I kind of thought that was gonna happen." 90 00:06:54,080 --> 00:06:55,889 I said, "ls there anybody else in this band?" 91 00:06:55,982 --> 00:06:58,553 He said, "We have a keyboard player, Jon Lord.โ€œ" 92 00:06:59,486 --> 00:07:03,332 It was the start of a partnership that would last for 25 years. 93 00:07:03,423 --> 00:07:07,269 We played together for a little bit, and I realised how good he was. 94 00:07:07,327 --> 00:07:08,431 And it was mutual. 95 00:07:08,828 --> 00:07:10,774 I said, "I can get a brilliant drummer." 96 00:07:10,830 --> 00:07:15,336 Jon said, "I know a really good bass player." It was Nick Simper. 97 00:07:15,468 --> 00:07:18,574 And so we just needed a singer. 98 00:07:18,672 --> 00:07:20,583 They took on Rod Evans as vocalist. 99 00:07:20,674 --> 00:07:24,747 And Chris Curtis soon dropped out to be replaced by Ian Paice on drums. 100 00:07:24,844 --> 00:07:27,450 All they needed now was a name. 101 00:07:29,449 --> 00:07:31,622 Jon put in Orpheus. 102 00:07:31,685 --> 00:07:35,292 The drummer put in The Hill. And I put in Deep Purple. 103 00:07:35,422 --> 00:07:37,459 Just 'cause of the song Deep Purple, 104 00:07:37,524 --> 00:07:40,801 my grandmother used to play it on the piano. 105 00:07:40,860 --> 00:07:42,862 And they seemed to like that. 106 00:07:42,963 --> 00:07:46,376 In those days you have to have a double-barrel name. 107 00:07:48,368 --> 00:07:51,815 Moody Blues, Pink Floyd, Deep Purple. 108 00:07:52,605 --> 00:07:55,882 It was a name that would become synonymous with British hard rock, 109 00:07:55,976 --> 00:07:58,980 and launched the career of Ritchie Blackmore. 110 00:08:07,554 --> 00:08:13,061 We did the usual, going away to a cottage in the country. 111 00:08:13,193 --> 00:08:15,537 Which was the in thing to do at the time. 112 00:08:15,628 --> 00:08:19,804 Proverbial cottage, we were practicing. 113 00:08:19,899 --> 00:08:24,006 Thief's hole, I think it was called. And it was haunted. It had to be haunted. 114 00:08:24,504 --> 00:08:27,383 And we made that record, the first one in 24 hours. 115 00:08:27,474 --> 00:08:29,750 We did it in two days. The whole thing. 116 00:08:29,843 --> 00:08:32,824 And while it wasn't an amazing record in its own right, 117 00:08:32,912 --> 00:08:36,018 you do get struck by the fact that there are times on the record 118 00:08:36,082 --> 00:08:38,722 when Ritchie Blackmore's guitar performances 119 00:08:38,818 --> 00:08:41,230 were different to anything else. 120 00:08:41,321 --> 00:08:42,925 They weren't a copy of Hendrix. 121 00:08:43,056 --> 00:08:45,161 Even though you could hear little bits of notations 122 00:08:45,258 --> 00:08:48,000 that maybe led towards Hendrix. 123 00:08:48,094 --> 00:08:50,005 They weren't a copy of anybody else. 124 00:08:50,096 --> 00:08:54,408 They were influenced by, yet taking its own direction. 125 00:08:54,501 --> 00:08:57,880 He had a classical feel, the rock feel and a rock and roll feel. 126 00:09:16,389 --> 00:09:19,097 Some tracks also had a distinctly pop feel. 127 00:09:19,192 --> 00:09:22,196 And it was a cover of a Joe South song, Hush, 128 00:09:22,295 --> 00:09:24,138 which launched the band in the U.S.A. 129 00:09:33,606 --> 00:09:37,110 Back in England, Ritchie heard Robert Plant singing. 130 00:09:37,444 --> 00:09:39,924 There was a place called Mothers in Birmingham, 131 00:09:39,979 --> 00:09:44,121 Robert started singing and I'm going, "My God, who's this? This amazing singer." 132 00:09:44,217 --> 00:09:48,222 He had the range, the voice and the look. 133 00:09:48,321 --> 00:09:50,824 That's when I decided we have to get someone 134 00:09:50,924 --> 00:09:54,064 who can belt it out and project. 135 00:09:54,727 --> 00:09:56,832 That when we got Ian Gillan. 136 00:09:57,163 --> 00:10:00,406 As soon as I heard him scream, I went, "That's the guy for us.โ€œ" 137 00:10:00,500 --> 00:10:05,415 He looked like Jim Morrison, which I knew that would go down well. 138 00:10:06,306 --> 00:10:08,252 So we have someone who looks like Jim Morrison 139 00:10:08,341 --> 00:10:11,083 and who can scream like Arthur Brown and Edgar Winter. 140 00:10:11,444 --> 00:10:13,754 That scream was his identity. 141 00:10:30,763 --> 00:10:35,178 In came Ian Gillan and his scream and new bassist Roger Glover. 142 00:10:35,268 --> 00:10:37,270 And out went Evans and Simper. 143 00:10:37,370 --> 00:10:38,815 Ritchie was now lead guitar 144 00:10:38,872 --> 00:10:41,876 in what was to become the classic Deep Purple line-up. 145 00:10:43,810 --> 00:10:45,949 It became, I suppose, 146 00:10:46,045 --> 00:10:51,188 obvious to all of us that they were not just another flash-in-the-pan 147 00:10:51,284 --> 00:10:54,197 pop rock band, but there was something more of substance. 148 00:10:54,554 --> 00:10:58,331 And Ritchie was a figure of mystery and wonder already, you know. 149 00:10:58,391 --> 00:11:00,234 Ritchie Blackmore was something incredible. 150 00:11:00,360 --> 00:11:02,320 I mean, nobody could play like that in those days. 151 00:11:23,349 --> 00:11:24,589 No, it's not just speed, you know, 152 00:11:24,717 --> 00:11:28,096 there are a lot of people who can play fast, you know, now. 153 00:11:28,221 --> 00:11:30,098 But they can't be Ritchie Blackmore. 154 00:11:30,223 --> 00:11:31,759 He plays right on the money 155 00:11:31,891 --> 00:11:34,770 and leaves enough space to allow the music to breathe 156 00:11:34,861 --> 00:11:37,603 and the listener to become enveloped in 157 00:11:37,697 --> 00:11:41,839 the whole atmosphere of what's being performed and created and generated. 158 00:11:42,001 --> 00:11:44,743 I went through a period of shredding 159 00:11:44,837 --> 00:11:47,784 and thinking that everything revolved around speed. 160 00:11:47,907 --> 00:11:51,719 And now I go, "That really doesn't mean anything." 161 00:11:51,778 --> 00:11:56,955 It's good to be fast now and again, but you have to say something thoughtful. 162 00:11:57,050 --> 00:12:00,122 You can't just go, look at me... 163 00:12:00,220 --> 00:12:01,198 Am I not great? 164 00:12:01,287 --> 00:12:04,291 Ritchie will lake you on a couple of hours' journey of guitar playing, 165 00:12:04,390 --> 00:12:06,700 which will cover a lot more ground. 166 00:12:06,793 --> 00:12:10,935 It's not just like tipping a pot of multi-coloured paint over somebody, 167 00:12:11,030 --> 00:12:15,604 this is about drawing people into your dark mysterious web. 168 00:12:23,710 --> 00:12:26,987 But while Ritchie was keen to develop Deep Purple as a rock band, 169 00:12:27,113 --> 00:12:29,992 his co-founder Jon Lord had other ambitions. 170 00:12:30,717 --> 00:12:34,790 Jon Lord was inspired to write a concerto for group and orchestra, 171 00:12:34,887 --> 00:12:36,992 and it was a big challenging venture. 172 00:12:37,123 --> 00:12:40,502 The band Nice had previously recorded with orchestras 173 00:12:40,593 --> 00:12:44,405 and had classical aspirations. 174 00:12:44,497 --> 00:12:48,309 But Jon Lord wanted to write a really sort of important piece that would 175 00:12:48,401 --> 00:12:52,747 include the group with an orchestra in a kind of artistic way, 176 00:12:52,839 --> 00:12:55,012 a way that would work effectively. 177 00:12:55,141 --> 00:12:57,485 And they tried it out at the Royal Albert Hall. 178 00:12:57,577 --> 00:13:01,423 And it was a big success, a big challenge. 179 00:13:22,869 --> 00:13:26,180 You can see Ritchie in the video for the Albert Hall concert, 180 00:13:26,272 --> 00:13:29,719 and he plays great, but you could feel he's very constrained. 181 00:13:29,842 --> 00:13:32,288 He's sort of itching to break out somewhere. 182 00:13:32,378 --> 00:13:33,721 He has this edge to him, 183 00:13:33,846 --> 00:13:36,725 which is indefinable and not quite tameable. 184 00:13:36,816 --> 00:13:39,888 The first record we did, I thought was not bad. 185 00:13:41,287 --> 00:13:43,062 The two after that 186 00:13:43,456 --> 00:13:45,959 were lacking in direction. 187 00:13:46,893 --> 00:13:49,339 We were going in the studio with, really, no ideas, 188 00:13:49,395 --> 00:13:52,239 'cause we were on the road all the time. 189 00:13:52,365 --> 00:13:57,872 It wasn't until we did the concerto with Jon and the orchestra, 190 00:13:57,970 --> 00:14:01,679 and I said to them, "I really don't want to play with orchestras any more." 191 00:14:01,741 --> 00:14:04,347 "Let's do a rock and roll record." 192 00:14:04,877 --> 00:14:08,518 I said, "Jon, we'll do the whole thing as a rock and roll record", 193 00:14:08,581 --> 00:14:12,222 "and if it doesn't work, we'll play with orchestras for the rest of our lives." 194 00:14:12,318 --> 00:14:13,592 So he said, "Yeah, that's sounds fair." 195 00:14:13,720 --> 00:14:17,065 We had Zeppelin starting Black Sabbath. 196 00:14:17,156 --> 00:14:19,033 Everybody was hitting with hard rock. 197 00:14:19,158 --> 00:14:22,230 Gave me an idea to play the hard rock stuff. 198 00:14:22,328 --> 00:14:26,276 I was going through kind of a angry, uptight, 199 00:14:26,366 --> 00:14:29,279 "Come on, let's get on with it." 200 00:14:29,402 --> 00:14:34,044 I'd had enough of playing with orchestras and everything being wishy-washy. 201 00:14:34,107 --> 00:14:37,088 The wishy-washy orchestra versus hard rock debate 202 00:14:37,176 --> 00:14:40,055 was resolved when the band wrote and recorded Black Night. 203 00:14:40,113 --> 00:14:43,117 And it went to number two in the UK charts. 204 00:14:43,282 --> 00:14:47,924 We were in the studio doing Deep Purple in Rock 205 00:14:48,020 --> 00:14:50,125 and the management came in. 206 00:14:51,924 --> 00:14:55,303 Amazing, you know, these people that go, 207 00:14:55,428 --> 00:14:58,432 "You know, what you need is a hit record." 208 00:14:58,531 --> 00:15:02,809 And you go, "I never thought of that. A hit record, yeah." 209 00:15:02,969 --> 00:15:05,313 And I started playing. 210 00:15:06,606 --> 00:15:08,313 I just started playing. 211 00:15:14,213 --> 00:15:15,817 Okay, let's have a verse. 212 00:15:18,451 --> 00:15:20,260 Put a verse in there. 213 00:15:26,092 --> 00:15:28,936 And we did that very quickly. 214 00:15:28,995 --> 00:15:30,099 Very quickly. 215 00:15:30,163 --> 00:15:32,006 And all of a sudden, of course that went to number one 216 00:15:32,098 --> 00:15:34,009 or number two, number one. 217 00:15:35,168 --> 00:15:37,368 It was funny how it was written like that, very quickly, 218 00:15:37,403 --> 00:15:39,440 and that's the best way to write a song. 219 00:15:47,180 --> 00:15:48,682 And that is based on... 220 00:15:55,655 --> 00:16:00,263 Ricky Nelson put out a tune called Summertime in 1958. 221 00:16:02,695 --> 00:16:04,675 Which, he's singing, "Summertime..." 222 00:16:08,801 --> 00:16:11,042 "and the living is easy." 223 00:16:11,304 --> 00:16:14,478 That was the base riff, the top line was... 224 00:16:19,645 --> 00:16:21,283 Right? Adds that. 225 00:16:26,719 --> 00:16:29,825 So right there you got two hit records. 'Cause if you go... 226 00:16:42,502 --> 00:16:43,981 "Hey Joe..." 227 00:16:45,471 --> 00:16:49,544 As soon as I heard Hendrix play that intro, 228 00:16:51,978 --> 00:16:55,892 I thought' "He got that from the same record that we got the base riff from." 229 00:17:23,776 --> 00:17:25,221 The band were on a roll. 230 00:17:25,278 --> 00:17:28,782 And in 1970, their fourth album Deep Purple in Rock 231 00:17:28,881 --> 00:17:33,591 reached number four in the UK charts and went gold in Britain and America. 232 00:17:33,686 --> 00:17:36,860 I just knew I was happy with it at the time, 233 00:17:36,956 --> 00:17:38,799 because the previous three, 234 00:17:38,891 --> 00:17:41,201 I thought, "We don't know where we're going." 235 00:17:41,294 --> 00:17:43,900 "We're dilly-dallying, we're going all over the place." 236 00:17:43,963 --> 00:17:48,935 Ballads, a bit of blues, folk, it was like mishmash. 237 00:17:49,035 --> 00:17:52,642 People like to get a record and put it on, 238 00:17:52,772 --> 00:17:55,912 and go, "I can leave that on and it's party time." 239 00:17:55,975 --> 00:17:59,582 The Deep Purple in Rock, of course, was the definitive album, 240 00:17:59,645 --> 00:18:02,091 I think, for Deep Purple. 241 00:18:02,148 --> 00:18:05,254 It was the era of Black Sabbath, of course, and Led Zeppelin. 242 00:18:05,318 --> 00:18:08,891 Soto see Deep Purple really focusing, 243 00:18:08,988 --> 00:18:12,401 get down to it on their rock album 244 00:18:12,491 --> 00:18:15,563 that really convinced the vast mass of their fans. 245 00:18:15,661 --> 00:18:22,078 And really for the first time Deep Purple became among the top three British bands. 246 00:18:22,168 --> 00:18:26,116 I think what really inspired me more than anything else was the In Rock album. 247 00:18:26,172 --> 00:18:28,846 But it was the fire and it was the passion that really spoke. 248 00:18:28,975 --> 00:18:31,148 That was the bit I wanted to bottle and keep. 249 00:18:31,344 --> 00:18:32,652 When you hear Speed King, 250 00:18:32,745 --> 00:18:35,954 you're looking at, really, proto thrash, proto metal. 251 00:18:36,015 --> 00:18:40,794 This was so influential in what came later in metal terms, 252 00:18:40,853 --> 00:18:45,461 and was really Blackmore delivering a dynamic riff 253 00:18:45,524 --> 00:18:50,371 on which Gillan held his vocals and which Lord played off with keyboard. 254 00:19:05,211 --> 00:19:10,183 And Child in Time is just phenomenal, it's a remarkable piece of epic music. 255 00:19:10,282 --> 00:19:15,960 It's a story. It's almost biblical in the way it reaches out and envelops you. 256 00:19:16,055 --> 00:19:18,126 This was a classical piece of music. 257 00:19:18,224 --> 00:19:21,797 This was a performance by a band on an orchestral level. 258 00:19:48,888 --> 00:19:52,267 With the pressure on to follow up the success of Deep Purple in Rock, 259 00:19:52,358 --> 00:19:53,598 Ritchie and the band once again 260 00:19:53,693 --> 00:19:56,173 locked themselves away from the world to write. 261 00:19:56,262 --> 00:20:00,836 We rented this old dilapidated house down in Devon. 262 00:20:02,234 --> 00:20:05,010 And everybody had their bedroom. 263 00:20:06,105 --> 00:20:09,177 And mine was full of flies, and it was a dreadful place, 264 00:20:09,275 --> 00:20:11,778 but it had a good vibe to it or two. 265 00:20:11,911 --> 00:20:14,790 We were into doing lots of sรฉances at the time. 266 00:20:14,880 --> 00:20:21,627 And I always felt that to do a sรฉance, the best thing was to have a cross. 267 00:20:22,221 --> 00:20:25,862 It was in the early days when I kind of believed in that, 268 00:20:25,958 --> 00:20:30,532 and that was kind of a... As a form of protection. 269 00:20:31,464 --> 00:20:33,808 Of course I didn't have a cross on me. 270 00:20:34,200 --> 00:20:38,307 And I went up to Jon Lord's wife and said, 271 00:20:38,404 --> 00:20:42,113 "Do you have cross I could borrow?" She said, "I'm Jewish." 272 00:20:42,208 --> 00:20:44,484 That didn't go down too well. 273 00:20:44,643 --> 00:20:47,146 So I went, "Roger! Roger will have a cross." 274 00:20:47,246 --> 00:20:50,750 And I went to his bedroom outside, he'd gone to sleep. 275 00:20:50,983 --> 00:20:53,054 "Roger?" "What?" 276 00:20:53,152 --> 00:20:54,722 "Do you have a cross?" "Yeah." 277 00:20:54,820 --> 00:20:56,460 "I need the cross, we're doing a sรฉance." 278 00:20:56,722 --> 00:20:58,565 "No, leave me alone." 279 00:20:58,824 --> 00:21:00,963 So, I got this axe, 280 00:21:01,060 --> 00:21:05,065 so I went crash crash at the door 281 00:21:05,164 --> 00:21:09,613 and made a hole, and I'm axing the door down. 282 00:21:10,503 --> 00:21:13,677 I pulled it and I got through the hole and went over to him. 283 00:21:13,806 --> 00:21:16,980 "I want your cross." "Go on, get off, get off." 284 00:21:17,076 --> 00:21:20,421 Roger is a very gentle man. 285 00:21:20,513 --> 00:21:24,825 Violence doesn't often occur to him as a means to anything. 286 00:21:24,917 --> 00:21:26,089 It was very un-Roger like, 287 00:21:26,185 --> 00:21:32,033 what followed, Roger chasing Ritchie around the house with said axe. 288 00:21:33,092 --> 00:21:35,163 You know, I said, "Roger, wow." 289 00:21:35,261 --> 00:21:36,467 So that was a lot of fun. 290 00:21:44,770 --> 00:21:48,684 In 1971 they released a new single, Strange Kind of Woman 291 00:21:48,774 --> 00:21:53,348 and a follow-up to their landmark Deep Purple in Rock, the album Fireball. 292 00:21:54,213 --> 00:21:57,057 It was great because, 293 00:21:57,183 --> 00:22:01,996 all of a sudden, starving for a few years before that, 294 00:22:02,054 --> 00:22:04,000 and we were suddenly in vogue 295 00:22:04,056 --> 00:22:08,163 and everybody had Deep Purple in Rock until we replaced it with Fireball. 296 00:22:08,227 --> 00:22:10,867 Fireball was put together loo quickly, 297 00:22:11,831 --> 00:22:15,074 for my liking, we didn't have the ideas. 298 00:22:15,167 --> 00:22:18,148 Fireball to me was artificial, contrived. 299 00:22:19,905 --> 00:22:21,578 Despite Ritchie's misgivings, 300 00:22:21,674 --> 00:22:24,086 Fireball reached number one on the UK charts, 301 00:22:24,210 --> 00:22:27,419 and the band set to work on what would be their third album, 302 00:22:27,513 --> 00:22:28,719 Machine Head. 303 00:22:29,815 --> 00:22:33,058 Machine Head, I have great memories of, we did that in the Swiss Alps, 304 00:22:33,152 --> 00:22:34,654 and that was fantastic. 305 00:22:34,753 --> 00:22:38,394 And we did it in three weeks and the ideas were just flowing. 306 00:22:38,557 --> 00:22:42,061 I had written a few things in my time off, so I had those, 307 00:22:42,161 --> 00:22:45,233 like Highway Star. 308 00:22:46,432 --> 00:22:49,777 I had written the solo basically at home, worked it out, 309 00:22:49,869 --> 00:22:51,678 which I had never done before. 310 00:22:51,770 --> 00:22:55,684 It was always on the fly, you know, just jamming. 311 00:22:55,774 --> 00:22:59,620 But, so we had a lot of constructive ideas. 312 00:22:59,745 --> 00:23:04,216 Roger Glover had written Maybe I'm a Leo, which I thought was a great tune. 313 00:23:05,417 --> 00:23:07,124 They were due to record in the casino, 314 00:23:07,219 --> 00:23:09,722 which was then the main concert venue in Montreux. 315 00:23:09,788 --> 00:23:11,290 But the evening before they were due to start, 316 00:23:11,390 --> 00:23:15,361 a fire ignited during a Frank Zappa concert, burning it to the ground. 317 00:23:19,565 --> 00:23:23,206 Festival organizer Claude Nobs came to their rescue. 318 00:23:23,802 --> 00:23:27,045 Claude with enormous selflessness said, 319 00:23:27,139 --> 00:23:30,985 "Don't worry, I'll help you to find somewhere else to record." 320 00:23:31,911 --> 00:23:33,117 Where? Anyway. 321 00:23:33,212 --> 00:23:39,561 So, there was this amazing Victorian glass-walled pavilion 322 00:23:40,386 --> 00:23:43,492 in some gardens, some lovely lakeside gardens. 323 00:23:44,089 --> 00:23:49,767 And with enormous disregard for anyone who might live within 10 or 12 miles of it, 324 00:23:49,828 --> 00:23:52,832 we set up in there, you know. 325 00:23:54,333 --> 00:23:59,442 And it was a very ill-chosen place, 326 00:23:59,505 --> 00:24:01,746 but it was a stopgap. 327 00:24:02,274 --> 00:24:05,016 The recording session was back on track. 328 00:24:05,577 --> 00:24:11,084 Ritchie was astonishingly prolific with guitar riffs. 329 00:24:11,183 --> 00:24:12,184 Profligate almost, you know? 330 00:24:12,284 --> 00:24:13,957 They would just tumble out of him. 331 00:24:14,019 --> 00:24:18,832 And that was heaven, absolute heaven for a band, 332 00:24:18,924 --> 00:24:24,306 because here was a guitarist who just would never tread, it seemed, the same road twice. 333 00:24:24,496 --> 00:24:27,943 And it was the fire that had destroyed their original recording venue 334 00:24:28,033 --> 00:24:31,879 that was to inspire the song that contains one of rock's greatest riffs. 335 00:24:32,671 --> 00:24:35,379 When we got back to the hotel, there was a... 336 00:24:35,474 --> 00:24:38,216 We looked out of the window, I think we all had stiff brandies or something. 337 00:24:38,344 --> 00:24:40,722 We looked out of the window and you could actually see the smoke 338 00:24:40,813 --> 00:24:42,952 from the casino coming across the lake. 339 00:24:43,048 --> 00:24:45,187 This big, billowing cloud coming across the lake, 340 00:24:45,284 --> 00:24:48,322 hence the title Smoke on the Water, the boys came up with that. 341 00:24:48,387 --> 00:24:52,392 The first time I heard Smoke on the Water, of course, from Machine Head, 342 00:24:52,491 --> 00:24:55,370 it was one of those riffs that hit you right away. 343 00:24:55,461 --> 00:24:58,908 It's a bit like Sunshine of Your Love by Cream, 344 00:24:58,998 --> 00:25:01,137 or Whole Lotta Love by Led Zeppelin. 345 00:25:01,233 --> 00:25:05,045 It was just... I don't know where guitarists find these riffs from, actually. 346 00:25:05,137 --> 00:25:08,914 When we did Smoke on the Water, 347 00:25:09,008 --> 00:25:11,921 it was-just Ian and myself, Paice and myself. 348 00:25:12,077 --> 00:25:15,217 I said, "What rhythm haven't we played?" and he went... 349 00:25:16,348 --> 00:25:18,919 He laid that down, so I just went... 350 00:25:21,687 --> 00:25:26,602 That's where we were and the next minute, 351 00:25:26,725 --> 00:25:30,229 the police were knocking at the door 'cause we were making so much racket. 352 00:25:31,363 --> 00:25:33,070 And we knew it was the police, 353 00:25:33,165 --> 00:25:37,773 so we said, "Let's go for a take before they throw us out of here." 354 00:25:39,271 --> 00:25:43,686 Every guitar player dreams of doing with its creators. 355 00:25:43,776 --> 00:25:47,189 Every kid who ever picked up a guitar can do... 356 00:25:47,780 --> 00:25:49,782 Funny thing is, they all do it different. 357 00:25:49,915 --> 00:25:52,875 That's the nice thing, and I found that I had it in my head how to play it, 358 00:25:52,918 --> 00:25:55,797 and it was completely different to the way Ritchie plays it. 359 00:25:56,455 --> 00:25:58,560 Somebody said that music 360 00:26:00,192 --> 00:26:06,302 is many different colours and one of those colours is silence, simplicity. 361 00:26:06,432 --> 00:26:10,744 The quiet pans, the easy parts, the parts you can immediately grasp on to 362 00:26:10,803 --> 00:26:13,147 and wonder why you didn't write it yourself. 363 00:26:13,238 --> 00:26:16,651 That's genius. That's a genius riff. Wish I'd wrote it. 364 00:26:37,896 --> 00:26:41,844 The second record that I ever bought in my life was Machine Head. 365 00:26:41,967 --> 00:26:44,174 What an album. Oh, my God! 366 00:26:44,269 --> 00:26:49,309 To have a record like that and to have a guitar player like Ritchie 367 00:26:49,408 --> 00:26:54,858 in your radar and your field, it was just the greatest. 368 00:26:54,980 --> 00:26:58,484 You just think, "What would my life have been like without that?" 369 00:27:27,880 --> 00:27:32,158 It's the way Ritchie plays the riff. It's not the way that 370 00:27:32,217 --> 00:27:36,529 mo generations of kids have played it in the guitar shop and driven people mad, 371 00:27:36,622 --> 00:27:38,158 to the point where in some shops in London 372 00:27:38,223 --> 00:27:42,194 it says, "If you are trying out a guitar please don't play Smoke on the Water." 373 00:27:42,294 --> 00:27:45,639 The first guitar, that guitar, right over there. 374 00:27:45,731 --> 00:27:48,974 You see the Strat with the maple body, 375 00:27:49,067 --> 00:27:51,707 that was my first real guitar. 376 00:27:51,803 --> 00:27:57,583 And I got it because of the poster on my wall in my bedroom of Ritchie playing. 377 00:27:57,676 --> 00:27:59,553 It was that guitar. 378 00:27:59,645 --> 00:28:02,854 And that's what I wanted. I wanted the Ritchie Blackmore Strat. 379 00:28:15,093 --> 00:28:17,869 Ritchie's solo on Machine Head's Highway Star 380 00:28:17,930 --> 00:28:20,911 was also set to become a Deep Purple statement. 381 00:28:21,233 --> 00:28:26,512 Highway Star is... That's crazy. That's just a crazy song for a guitar player. 382 00:28:26,605 --> 00:28:30,052 It makes everyone who thinks they are a guitar player need to pick up their guitar 383 00:28:30,108 --> 00:28:33,920 and see, "Well, if I'm that good, can I do that?" 384 00:28:34,613 --> 00:28:39,119 Highway Star solo was one of the first things I could get my head around. 385 00:28:39,218 --> 00:28:42,290 Even when I was like 16 or 17, 386 00:28:42,421 --> 00:28:46,028 it wasn't the standard notes you'd use. It wasn't just the blues scale. 387 00:28:46,124 --> 00:28:52,200 It was classically... There was classical stuff coming in there and with this aggression. 388 00:28:52,297 --> 00:28:55,574 Ritchie was really looking to expand on his solos 389 00:28:55,634 --> 00:28:57,636 and wanted a particular sequence, 390 00:28:57,769 --> 00:28:59,612 which is actually almost a classical sequence. 391 00:28:59,705 --> 00:29:02,982 It's probably the defining moment 392 00:29:03,108 --> 00:29:08,615 for Ritchie's soloing, Highway Star to me. It's the most recognizable solo. 393 00:29:08,714 --> 00:29:11,320 I like solos where you know them, 394 00:29:11,450 --> 00:29:14,329 solos where it's just a.โ€ Nothing. 395 00:29:14,820 --> 00:29:19,098 So I think Highway Star was just stunning for that effect. 396 00:29:59,798 --> 00:30:03,678 I always thought American players always go right to the edge of the cliff and fall off 397 00:30:03,769 --> 00:30:06,215 and wave as they are going down. 398 00:30:06,338 --> 00:30:11,378 But the British players seem to take that one half a step back from the cliff 399 00:30:11,510 --> 00:30:14,980 and so it's together right till the end of the song, 400 00:30:15,047 --> 00:30:17,550 but it's still extremely thrilling. 401 00:30:17,649 --> 00:30:22,689 And funny thing about that song is that, 402 00:30:22,788 --> 00:30:26,668 having played it, you can get carried away with the emotion of the song, 403 00:30:26,725 --> 00:30:27,999 the intensity of it, 404 00:30:28,060 --> 00:30:31,564 of what you're doing, and it ruins it in a way. 405 00:30:31,663 --> 00:30:37,511 And that's part of Ritchie's charm for me is his restraint at the right moments, 406 00:30:37,569 --> 00:30:40,846 and it creates a lot of drama in his parts. 407 00:30:40,906 --> 00:30:41,907 It was a game changer, 408 00:30:42,007 --> 00:30:43,927 I thought Machine Head was a game changer myself. 409 00:30:44,409 --> 00:30:48,084 Machine Head reached number seven and went double platinum in the USA 410 00:30:48,213 --> 00:30:50,693 and gold at number one in the UK. 411 00:30:50,749 --> 00:30:53,923 but Ritchie's desire to control events was now leading to clashes 412 00:30:54,019 --> 00:30:56,021 with vocalist Ian Gillan. 413 00:30:57,589 --> 00:31:00,593 He was, as they say, an alpha guy. So was I. 414 00:31:00,726 --> 00:31:05,607 He wanted to control, I wanted to control, so we butted heads because of that. 415 00:31:06,331 --> 00:31:09,574 We still respected each other, but we never got on. 416 00:31:09,668 --> 00:31:11,944 And we just couldn't be in the same room. 417 00:31:12,070 --> 00:31:13,105 That was the problem. 418 00:31:13,205 --> 00:31:16,186 I wasn't speaking to him, he wasn't speaking to me. 419 00:31:17,943 --> 00:31:19,513 We weren't being creative. 420 00:31:19,845 --> 00:31:21,188 The band then toured Japan 421 00:31:21,279 --> 00:31:26,888 which produced their hugely successful 1972 live album, Made in Japan. 422 00:31:26,952 --> 00:31:30,229 Things were coming to a head with Ian Gillan. 423 00:31:30,288 --> 00:31:34,532 I think it started with coming back on the Japanese flight. 424 00:31:36,027 --> 00:31:40,772 Paul Rodgers' you know, to me was just mind-blowing, his voice. 425 00:31:41,900 --> 00:31:44,141 I wanted Ian to be able to do that, 426 00:31:44,269 --> 00:31:47,807 and I couldn't relate lo Ian's screaming and yelling 427 00:31:47,906 --> 00:31:50,113 and the Elvis Presley impersonation. 428 00:31:51,276 --> 00:31:55,452 He said, "So, how do you want me to sing? I'll sing any way you want me to sing". 429 00:31:55,547 --> 00:32:02,089 And I went, "Ian, you can't sing that way, that's a blues thing", you know? 430 00:32:03,288 --> 00:32:06,667 I think after that, that turned him off. 431 00:32:07,125 --> 00:32:10,334 He was rejected, so we went downhill from there. 432 00:32:18,103 --> 00:32:20,674 The aptly titled Who Do We Think We Are 433 00:32:20,806 --> 00:32:25,016 was lo be the final album before Ian Gillan and Roger Glover left the band. 434 00:32:26,945 --> 00:32:30,984 I think Ritchie Blackmore spent a lot of his career looking for the perfect line-up. 435 00:32:31,082 --> 00:32:33,494 And when he found it, he still wasn't happy with it. 436 00:32:33,685 --> 00:32:34,857 We started looking for other people, 437 00:32:34,986 --> 00:32:37,830 we found Glenn Hughes and David Coverdale. 438 00:32:37,923 --> 00:32:38,924 I'd left art college, 439 00:32:39,024 --> 00:32:42,528 and I was working in a boutique in Redcar in the north of England. 440 00:32:42,627 --> 00:32:44,800 And I read in the Melody Maker that... 441 00:32:44,863 --> 00:32:48,868 It was a picture of Jon at his organ, very Monty Python, 442 00:32:48,967 --> 00:32:55,384 saying, "Deep Purple still haven't found a singer and are considering unknowns." 443 00:32:56,107 --> 00:33:00,351 Which was basically a little ding moment. 444 00:33:00,445 --> 00:33:02,015 Paice played me this tape, he said, 445 00:33:02,113 --> 00:33:04,059 "What do you think of this singer?" And it was David Coverdale. 446 00:33:04,149 --> 00:33:05,992 And Jon would go, "What's wrong with him?" 447 00:33:06,051 --> 00:33:09,123 And I'd go, "You can't have him after Gillan." 448 00:33:09,855 --> 00:33:12,734 Gillan was this God with the women, 449 00:33:12,824 --> 00:33:16,636 and we've got to have someone that can 450 00:33:16,728 --> 00:33:20,335 fire up the female interest there. 451 00:33:21,066 --> 00:33:24,570 And they said, "No, we disagree." 452 00:33:25,303 --> 00:33:27,715 The girls in the office think he is cute. 453 00:33:27,806 --> 00:33:29,683 I'm going, "Cute? Okay." 454 00:33:57,002 --> 00:34:00,575 Then we did Mistreated, which is a bluesy thing, and we had that voice, 455 00:34:00,705 --> 00:34:03,618 Paul Rodgers kind of overturned to it. 456 00:34:03,842 --> 00:34:06,118 And Burn itself, the song worked, 457 00:34:06,244 --> 00:34:08,781 I felt we had some good songs there. 458 00:34:27,132 --> 00:34:30,443 And, of course, Glenn was very effervescent. 459 00:34:30,535 --> 00:34:34,142 He had a great funky way of playing the bass. 460 00:34:35,106 --> 00:34:36,915 He was a very rhythmic bass player. 461 00:34:47,919 --> 00:34:51,423 'Cause before that we had more of a... 462 00:34:52,057 --> 00:34:54,799 Glenn was more... 463 00:34:54,893 --> 00:34:56,668 There would be this rhythmic... 464 00:34:57,495 --> 00:35:01,739 He was very good with his rhythmic syncopation. 465 00:35:15,513 --> 00:35:18,960 You know, it bears noting that, for me, Ritchie Blackmore, 466 00:35:19,017 --> 00:35:21,861 unlike many guitar players, 467 00:35:22,787 --> 00:35:27,532 never lost his edge, if it were. 468 00:35:28,326 --> 00:35:32,172 Burn is every bit as important as Space Truckin' 469 00:35:32,263 --> 00:35:34,709 and some of the later stuff. 470 00:35:34,833 --> 00:35:39,873 You can actually hear a guitar player at the lop of his game. 471 00:36:14,739 --> 00:36:17,811 Ritchie is convinced that the clock in his bar is haunted 472 00:36:17,909 --> 00:36:20,253 and chimes whenever it is happy. 473 00:36:22,480 --> 00:36:23,925 Very happy.- 474 00:36:25,150 --> 00:36:27,494 - It doesn't do it at a set time or anything? - No. 475 00:36:27,585 --> 00:36:29,258 - It does it just... - No, only when it's happy. 476 00:36:29,387 --> 00:36:31,367 It will stay off for months. 477 00:36:32,090 --> 00:36:33,890 It's haunted, it was given to me by a friend. 478 00:36:41,866 --> 00:36:45,279 Ritchie's lifelong interest in haunting and practical jokes 479 00:36:45,403 --> 00:36:48,782 was something else newcomer Coverdale had to get used to. 480 00:36:48,907 --> 00:36:51,581 Some of them were very close to the knuckle. 481 00:36:51,676 --> 00:36:54,850 We were at Clearwell Castle in Gloucestershire, Forest of Dean. 482 00:36:55,280 --> 00:37:00,457 A guy called Tony Ashton was coming down from London for the weekend, for the hang. 483 00:37:01,786 --> 00:37:06,030 So Ritchie and I had the crew empty the guest bedroom 484 00:37:06,124 --> 00:37:09,731 of all the furniture and took up the carpets, took up the floor boards, 485 00:37:09,794 --> 00:37:13,071 and put a huge speaker, I mean, a really big Marshall speaker 486 00:37:13,131 --> 00:37:16,806 underneath the bed. 487 00:37:16,935 --> 00:37:21,111 Put the boards back in, put the carpets back over, 488 00:37:21,206 --> 00:37:23,277 everything just looking normal. 489 00:37:23,441 --> 00:37:26,752 Fed the wires down to another room down the way, 490 00:37:26,811 --> 00:37:31,760 and sat up and waited for Tony Ashton to come back from the pub. 491 00:37:31,816 --> 00:37:35,662 And as we hear the steps coming down the corridor 492 00:37:35,787 --> 00:37:39,291 and Tony's door close. 493 00:37:39,390 --> 00:37:43,930 So we give him time to bathroom and whatever and get into bed' 494 00:37:43,995 --> 00:37:48,501 And then we turn the speaker, the microphone on, and I went up, 495 00:37:48,633 --> 00:37:53,912 started scratching against a board, which you can imagine, this is under a bed, 496 00:37:54,005 --> 00:37:57,509 and saying, "Let me out." 497 00:37:59,010 --> 00:38:01,286 Well... 498 00:38:01,346 --> 00:38:04,691 We heard the most unearthly scream and... 499 00:38:04,783 --> 00:38:08,424 Which, you know, and panicking footsteps running down the corridor. 500 00:38:08,520 --> 00:38:10,830 It certainly wasn't a guy's voice. 501 00:38:10,922 --> 00:38:12,128 Tony was still at the pub, 502 00:38:12,190 --> 00:38:14,693 this was a guest of the family who owned the castle, 503 00:38:14,826 --> 00:38:19,036 who'd actually just come back from Bristol after seeing The Exorcist movie. 504 00:38:19,130 --> 00:38:23,806 So, and was last seen heading into the deep, dark forest. 505 00:38:24,536 --> 00:38:30,487 He has no boundaries when it comes to his pranks, his japes. 506 00:38:34,546 --> 00:38:38,323 This is Ontario, 40 miles east of Los Angeles. 507 00:38:38,383 --> 00:38:41,364 The only sound you'll hear today are the railway track to the south 508 00:38:41,452 --> 00:38:43,227 and the highway to the north. 509 00:38:44,656 --> 00:38:49,503 But the 40,000 plus people who gathered here for the 1974 Cal Jam festival 510 00:38:49,561 --> 00:38:52,838 were about to witness Ritchie at his most theatrical. 511 00:38:54,199 --> 00:38:59,581 Cal Jam, it was pretty romantic when it happened, I'll tell you, it was. 512 00:38:59,671 --> 00:39:03,175 I remember a beautiful southern California day. 513 00:39:07,745 --> 00:39:10,919 I'd come from driving a little transit van's local gigs 514 00:39:11,049 --> 00:39:15,725 into flying in a customized, private 707, 727. 515 00:39:15,820 --> 00:39:19,768 The star ship, which is how we flew into that environment. 516 00:39:19,858 --> 00:39:21,565 It was breath-taking to me. 517 00:39:21,860 --> 00:39:24,670 There must have been 350,000 people there. 518 00:39:24,762 --> 00:39:28,938 I think 100,000 burned the fence down. 519 00:39:29,067 --> 00:39:30,876 Then it was probably 350,000. 520 00:39:31,002 --> 00:39:34,347 When we look at the visual images from above, 521 00:39:34,439 --> 00:39:39,946 you cannot imagine what it's like to walk onto a stage and you can't see... 522 00:39:41,079 --> 00:39:45,619 You can see the skyline, but in the skyline there is people. 523 00:39:45,783 --> 00:39:47,956 It really was stunning. 524 00:39:48,119 --> 00:39:50,292 There was a whole host, the Emerson, Lake & Palmer 525 00:39:50,421 --> 00:39:54,699 and Black Sabbath, Earth, Wind & Fire, Seals and Crofts, 526 00:39:54,792 --> 00:39:58,706 Black Oak Arkansas and Rare Earth. I think that was the bill. 527 00:39:58,796 --> 00:40:01,709 And we were offered the headline slot. 528 00:40:01,799 --> 00:40:05,872 John Coletta, the management, called me up six months before that festival 529 00:40:05,970 --> 00:40:09,315 and said, "They want you to do California Jam." 530 00:40:09,440 --> 00:40:12,546 I said, "No, thanks. I'm not interested in any more festivals." 531 00:40:12,644 --> 00:40:14,624 They are a nightmare, they always will be, 532 00:40:14,712 --> 00:40:17,625 there is always complete catastrophe backstage. 533 00:40:17,715 --> 00:40:21,492 Nothing ever goes right, you're always on late or early. 534 00:40:21,619 --> 00:40:24,828 The billing is all wrong, it's just awful. 535 00:40:24,923 --> 00:40:28,336 I said, "You know what, I might do it", 536 00:40:28,426 --> 00:40:32,499 "but we have to write down all these conditions," 537 00:40:32,630 --> 00:40:35,167 "because I'm tired of doing festivals." 538 00:40:35,300 --> 00:40:39,749 We're gonna go on at dusk, which is 9:00, around there. 539 00:40:39,837 --> 00:40:42,841 And I said, "We'll be the first band with lights, 'cause that's important." 540 00:40:42,941 --> 00:40:45,182 It's a subliminal thing, people see lights, 541 00:40:45,310 --> 00:40:48,257 and they go, "I really like this band compared to the rest of them." 542 00:40:48,346 --> 00:40:51,020 It's only 'cause they've got lights going on, 543 00:40:51,149 --> 00:40:55,655 and it's a psychological thing that I've noticed, so I insisted on that. 544 00:40:56,788 --> 00:40:58,961 And they said, "Absolutely no problem." 545 00:40:59,357 --> 00:41:03,464 In the event, the organizers demanded the band go on when it was still light. 546 00:41:03,528 --> 00:41:06,099 But Ritchie stuck to his guns. 547 00:41:06,197 --> 00:41:10,270 People were yelling and screaming and threatening this and threatening that, 548 00:41:10,368 --> 00:41:14,680 and I just get the door bolted, and I'd have a few drinks playing the guitar. 549 00:41:14,772 --> 00:41:16,217 I was not gonna go on. 550 00:41:16,674 --> 00:41:20,850 Finally when it was dark, Ritchie, the musician, went on stage. 551 00:41:21,045 --> 00:41:24,891 You look fucking great from here. Really good. 552 00:41:25,717 --> 00:41:27,788 And they were terrific on stage, they were absolutely terrific. 553 00:41:27,885 --> 00:41:31,628 Ritchie is a spectacularly visual guitarist, he was. 554 00:41:33,057 --> 00:41:36,231 He ran around, put his back to the audience, threw his guitar around, 555 00:41:36,327 --> 00:41:38,568 and of course, he did a bit of a Townshend sometimes, 556 00:41:38,663 --> 00:41:39,664 and smashed the guitar at the end. 557 00:41:39,731 --> 00:41:44,476 Of all the guys in Deep Purple, it was Ritchie who was the most quixotic 558 00:41:44,569 --> 00:41:45,980 and mischievous. 559 00:41:46,571 --> 00:41:50,883 And the quixotic and mischievous Ritchie was also on stage that night. 560 00:41:51,509 --> 00:41:56,049 He's had enough, you know, he's playing away and you can hear, 561 00:41:56,147 --> 00:41:59,720 he said he could hear this guy going, "Limey, get back in there, so I can..." 562 00:41:59,817 --> 00:42:01,763 You know, and all this kind of stuff, 563 00:42:01,853 --> 00:42:05,733 and he killed the camera, it was brilliant showmanship. 564 00:42:05,823 --> 00:42:11,273 Probably among the definitive moments of his kind of sense of spectacle 565 00:42:11,396 --> 00:42:16,038 and wanting to kind of turn it up to another notch or whatever. 566 00:42:42,460 --> 00:42:46,203 And Ritchie had plans for notching things up even further. 567 00:42:47,131 --> 00:42:48,974 So, I went to my roadie and said, 568 00:42:49,067 --> 00:42:52,139 "What I'm gonna do is blow up the amplifiers." 569 00:42:52,270 --> 00:42:56,616 I said, "What I want you to do is cover the amplifiers in petrol." 570 00:42:56,707 --> 00:43:01,417 "I'll go across one side of the stage. You douse my Marshalls," 571 00:43:01,479 --> 00:43:03,584 "dummy Marshalls, with petrol." 572 00:43:03,648 --> 00:43:08,324 Ronnie Quinton, his beloved guitar tech, who is no longer with us, 573 00:43:08,453 --> 00:43:13,596 loaded way too much gun powder into Ritchie's stuff, 574 00:43:13,658 --> 00:43:17,162 so when that... It blew Paice's glasses off. I thought I was gonna die. 575 00:43:37,949 --> 00:43:41,089 Exploded and, like, blew a hole in the stage, 576 00:43:41,185 --> 00:43:45,930 Paice's glasses got blown off, he was like... He can't see anything. 577 00:43:46,023 --> 00:43:49,937 It made some cameraman temporarily deaf. 578 00:43:51,429 --> 00:43:52,874 But, it looked great. 579 00:43:53,831 --> 00:43:59,543 Everybody was up and happy. Deep Purple just killed, I mean, they killed. 580 00:43:59,637 --> 00:44:05,849 Because this was still a bit of a transition into heavy metal, still kinda new. 581 00:44:05,943 --> 00:44:08,389 They really came through, let me tell you. They were good. 582 00:44:08,479 --> 00:44:14,327 I was a total novice outside of the remarkable 583 00:44:14,385 --> 00:44:18,731 schooling of working men's clubs and it's just a walk in the park, you know, 584 00:44:18,823 --> 00:44:22,168 after you've played Wingate Constitutional Club. 585 00:44:22,226 --> 00:44:25,070 Yeah, he did a great job, he pulled it off. 586 00:44:35,806 --> 00:44:37,080 And we had a helicopter, 587 00:44:37,208 --> 00:44:40,655 we were bundled into the helicopter and flown out. 588 00:44:40,745 --> 00:44:44,215 The police were coming to arrest us, for blowing up the stage, 589 00:44:44,315 --> 00:44:47,592 being dangerous to all the people, what have you. 590 00:44:48,352 --> 00:44:54,064 You know, it worked, and the idea was to upstage ELP, which I think we did. 591 00:44:55,092 --> 00:44:59,666 That was probably one of the peak moments certainly in economic terms 592 00:44:59,764 --> 00:45:02,074 and in terms of record breaking. 593 00:45:02,166 --> 00:45:04,442 That was one of the highlights of Deep Purple's career, 594 00:45:04,535 --> 00:45:06,845 because they played to this vast audience. 595 00:45:06,938 --> 00:45:09,179 I think it is in the Guinness Book of Records, 596 00:45:09,273 --> 00:45:12,618 some hundreds of thousands of people at this event. 597 00:45:12,710 --> 00:45:14,690 I think it got better musically for them. 598 00:45:14,779 --> 00:45:18,352 They continued, thank God, to progress musically. 599 00:45:18,449 --> 00:45:24,195 But, I don't know that their popularity ever got bigger than Cal Jam ll' 600 00:45:26,290 --> 00:45:29,965 Cal Jam had radically ramped up Ritchie's profile in America, 601 00:45:30,061 --> 00:45:34,305 but he was growing increasingly unhappy with the funky direction the band was taking. 602 00:45:35,566 --> 00:45:38,308 My first LP Burn was great. 603 00:45:38,436 --> 00:45:42,578 We had Mistreated, Burn, and it was all working. 604 00:45:42,640 --> 00:45:46,986 Now, the second record we made, Stormbringer was good. 605 00:45:48,779 --> 00:45:53,319 But Jon, I think Ian, and even Dave, 606 00:45:53,417 --> 00:45:57,763 and, of course, Glenn, were getting into this funk stuff. 607 00:46:01,158 --> 00:46:03,832 And I'm like, "That's not me." 608 00:46:04,328 --> 00:46:07,969 It's gonna be rock, blues. I don't wanna be involved in that. 609 00:46:08,099 --> 00:46:11,103 Me, Jon and David wrote Holy Man together. 610 00:46:11,168 --> 00:46:14,479 And it was, "You can't do it right with the one you love". 611 00:46:14,572 --> 00:46:18,611 It was group compositions, Hold On. 612 00:46:19,277 --> 00:46:22,986 Jon came up with that great Fender Rhodes thing. 613 00:46:44,335 --> 00:46:45,939 And with his Deep Purple colleagues 614 00:46:46,037 --> 00:46:48,950 unwilling to take the music in the direction he wanted, 615 00:46:49,040 --> 00:46:53,352 Ritchie now found someone who was, a singer named Ronnie James Dio. 616 00:46:54,512 --> 00:46:56,788 That's when I did, 617 00:46:56,881 --> 00:46:59,384 I think, 16th Century Greensleeves with Ronnie. 618 00:47:13,497 --> 00:47:17,877 He actually recorded an album with Ronnie and the guys is in Elf. 619 00:47:17,968 --> 00:47:19,641 And we didn't know about this. 620 00:47:20,471 --> 00:47:21,882 And that turned out even better, 621 00:47:21,972 --> 00:47:25,852 and I went, "We've gotta form a band 'cause this is just flowing." 622 00:47:27,078 --> 00:47:30,685 There is none of this... No committee meetings. 623 00:47:30,748 --> 00:47:33,490 And no briefcases involved 624 00:47:33,584 --> 00:47:35,825 and trying to get hold of people that were never around. 625 00:47:36,887 --> 00:47:39,731 Because Purple became a big business, the monster. 626 00:47:40,091 --> 00:47:44,062 So, that's when I left 'em and formed Rainbow. 627 00:47:44,695 --> 00:47:46,174 Ritchie's new band was named after 628 00:47:46,263 --> 00:47:48,607 the famous rock and roll Rainbow Bar and Grill 629 00:47:48,733 --> 00:47:50,940 on Sunset Boulevard in west Hollywood. 630 00:47:51,035 --> 00:47:53,174 He was his own boss at last. 631 00:48:18,062 --> 00:48:20,702 It was very exciting. We had Ronnie Dio. 632 00:48:20,798 --> 00:48:22,607 He could come around and write a tune like that. 633 00:48:22,700 --> 00:48:27,115 I'd give him an idea, he'd put the top line to it, everything was fresh. 634 00:48:27,204 --> 00:48:28,706 He had that ridiculous voice. 635 00:48:29,407 --> 00:48:30,647 After the first album, 636 00:48:30,741 --> 00:48:34,120 Ritchie Blackmore's Rainbow became simply Rainbow. 637 00:48:34,445 --> 00:48:37,949 We held auditions to put Rainbow together. 638 00:48:38,115 --> 00:48:41,756 And the 13th drummer was Cozy Powell. 639 00:48:43,320 --> 00:48:45,280 And he was the only one that could play a shuffle. 640 00:48:45,656 --> 00:48:50,162 I was looking for some fire and then Cozy came in and he did it. 641 00:49:08,179 --> 00:49:10,125 He and Ritchie got on very well together. 642 00:49:10,181 --> 00:49:15,028 They both shared a love, apart from rock and roll, of pranking. 643 00:49:15,152 --> 00:49:17,598 Practical jokes, so... 644 00:49:17,688 --> 00:49:21,500 And, of course, Cozy is quite a strong personality as well so, 645 00:49:21,592 --> 00:49:23,868 they respected each other and they liked each other, 646 00:49:23,994 --> 00:49:27,032 and that was really the basis of the success of Rainbow, 647 00:49:27,164 --> 00:49:32,273 I think, was this very powerful guitar player, incredibly strong drummer 648 00:49:32,369 --> 00:49:34,975 and enormously talented singer. 649 00:49:35,039 --> 00:49:38,043 I think Cozy was a perfect foil for Ritchie, 650 00:49:38,142 --> 00:49:40,281 and I know even Cozy found it hard at times. 651 00:49:40,377 --> 00:49:42,687 Cozy used to tell me, "It isn't easy, you know?" 652 00:49:42,780 --> 00:49:44,817 But I think Cozy had such a respect for Ritchie 653 00:49:44,882 --> 00:49:47,055 and likewise the other way around. 654 00:49:47,184 --> 00:49:50,063 So, yeah, I think it was great combination. 655 00:49:50,154 --> 00:49:56,161 As a fan, it seemed like it was one more step into what was heavy metal. 656 00:49:58,529 --> 00:50:03,569 Certainly with Dio singing, 657 00:50:03,701 --> 00:50:07,046 it was a remarkable step forward in that genre. 658 00:50:07,137 --> 00:50:09,913 I mean, a lot of people today, they listen to those records 659 00:50:10,007 --> 00:50:12,647 and they think that's where it really started. 660 00:50:12,743 --> 00:50:15,246 It's almost as if he is playing more on those records, 661 00:50:15,379 --> 00:50:17,416 there is like more of Ritchie on those records. 662 00:50:17,548 --> 00:50:21,257 It was a band in his own image, which Deep Purple would never... 663 00:50:21,552 --> 00:50:25,398 Deep Purple were partly his image and partly his creativity, 664 00:50:25,489 --> 00:50:27,400 but it belonged to everybody else. 665 00:50:27,491 --> 00:50:28,561 Rainbow was him. 666 00:50:28,659 --> 00:50:32,835 Rainbow was definitely his moment of stepping into the spotlight 667 00:50:32,930 --> 00:50:35,035 and saying, "This is me, this is where I want to go." 668 00:50:35,266 --> 00:50:39,112 Cozy suddenly turned up, turned around, Cozy Powell, and said, 669 00:50:39,236 --> 00:50:41,876 "You know who my favourite band is?" 670 00:50:41,939 --> 00:50:44,749 It's "ABBAโ€œ and we went..." 671 00:50:46,043 --> 00:50:47,044 "ABBA!" 672 00:50:48,045 --> 00:50:50,582 "How could you?โ€œ as in like... 673 00:50:50,681 --> 00:50:54,686 And he is like, "Yeah, I know, but that's my favourite band." 674 00:50:54,885 --> 00:50:57,388 Then I said, "And mine." 675 00:50:59,456 --> 00:51:03,097 Then, I think the bass player there went, "And mine." 676 00:51:03,193 --> 00:51:06,037 And we suddenly all went, "Let's play some ABBA." 677 00:51:06,797 --> 00:51:10,939 But, unsurprisingly, no ABBA tracks made it on to the band's second album, 678 00:51:11,035 --> 00:51:12,378 Rainbow Rising. 679 00:51:28,619 --> 00:51:33,090 Rainbow Rising was done in Munich in the studio Arabella House, I think. 680 00:51:34,291 --> 00:51:37,738 That was done quickly and done very well, 681 00:51:37,828 --> 00:51:39,569 and we had a good time playing it. 682 00:51:39,663 --> 00:51:41,233 By the time we got to Long Live Rock 'N' Roll, 683 00:51:41,332 --> 00:51:43,175 things were getting... 684 00:51:44,435 --> 00:51:47,939 Ronnie was more into his girlfriend Wendy, 685 00:51:48,072 --> 00:51:50,348 and things were starting to slow down for ideas. 686 00:51:50,441 --> 00:51:54,184 I don't think Rainbow ever equalled the success of Deep Purple, 687 00:51:54,311 --> 00:51:58,782 not in the public's perception or in the critics' minds, should we say. 688 00:51:59,583 --> 00:52:02,189 Despite the fact that it did produce some great music. 689 00:52:02,286 --> 00:52:04,789 It was very... And it was a great live band. 690 00:52:04,855 --> 00:52:06,129 It was very entertaining, 691 00:52:06,190 --> 00:52:09,694 and gave Ritchie Blackmore opportunities to play with other people. 692 00:52:10,260 --> 00:52:13,036 As far as the personnel changes go, 693 00:52:13,130 --> 00:52:18,011 you would need an abacus and a Cray Computer 694 00:52:18,102 --> 00:52:20,446 to figure that one out. 695 00:52:20,537 --> 00:52:24,781 But, that family tree is tall, wide and complicated. 696 00:52:24,875 --> 00:52:27,879 But through it all, there is Ritchie Blackmore. 697 00:52:51,301 --> 00:52:55,909 And a Ritchie Blackmore who was still unpredictable and more than a little scary. 698 00:52:56,073 --> 00:52:59,077 I have seen Ritchie lose it with someone, I better not say who it is. 699 00:52:59,209 --> 00:53:02,918 but it was very explosive. 700 00:53:03,047 --> 00:53:06,893 Yeah, he doesn't suffer people to be fools. 701 00:53:06,984 --> 00:53:09,931 And I know Ritchie can be quite physical. 702 00:53:10,254 --> 00:53:14,430 Ritchie got physical in Vienna in 1977. 703 00:53:15,592 --> 00:53:20,837 We were playing in Austria to about 5,000-?, 000 people. 704 00:53:20,931 --> 00:53:25,937 A good show and this little girl comes up to the front stage, 705 00:53:26,070 --> 00:53:29,608 she had come up and handed up a note, 706 00:53:29,740 --> 00:53:33,381 like, "I'm a big fan of the band" or something like that, I don't know. 707 00:53:33,444 --> 00:53:35,117 And I'm just watching her 708 00:53:35,212 --> 00:53:39,786 and the next minute she gets hit by this guy with a truncheon and this bouncer, 709 00:53:40,617 --> 00:53:43,928 and, of course, I thought, "He is not gonna get away with that." 710 00:53:44,021 --> 00:53:46,262 So I kicked him. 711 00:53:46,356 --> 00:53:50,361 And I have strong legs, so of course I broke his jaw 712 00:53:50,461 --> 00:53:53,601 and he went down, blood, and I went... 713 00:53:53,964 --> 00:53:57,969 The resourceful stage crew hid Ritchie in a large flight case 714 00:53:58,102 --> 00:53:59,911 and pushed him towards the exit. 715 00:54:00,037 --> 00:54:04,452 Every exit had police helmets and dogs. 716 00:54:04,541 --> 00:54:08,990 And they were about to push me up into the truck, into the lorry. 717 00:54:09,379 --> 00:54:13,987 And they insisted, opened it up, and, of course, 718 00:54:14,118 --> 00:54:17,622 I just came out like a Jack in the box, "Hi, everybody.โ€œ" 719 00:54:18,489 --> 00:54:21,936 And then they locked me up for four days, which was pretty miserable. 720 00:54:22,326 --> 00:54:26,172 'Cause the first night, they would just like, throw me on the floor. 721 00:54:27,331 --> 00:54:30,491 And they wanted to beat the shit out of me because I just hit one of their guys. 722 00:54:30,667 --> 00:54:33,238 The consulate was of no use whatsoever, 723 00:54:33,337 --> 00:54:36,147 they just came and said, "You have done a really bad thing." 724 00:54:36,240 --> 00:54:38,345 "You might be here forever." 725 00:54:39,409 --> 00:54:40,752 That's a wakeup call. 726 00:54:40,844 --> 00:54:45,486 You know, I had a bad temper. My temper is not so bad any more 727 00:54:45,582 --> 00:54:46,902 'cause I always think about that. 728 00:54:46,950 --> 00:54:49,089 As well as his unscheduled jail visit, 729 00:54:49,186 --> 00:54:52,190 Ritchie now had to contend with a changing music market 730 00:54:52,289 --> 00:54:53,962 and an unchanging Ronnie. 731 00:55:09,706 --> 00:55:12,778 Ronnie Dio and Ritchie Blackmore had a chemistry, 732 00:55:12,876 --> 00:55:17,188 but then, as Blackmore got further into the Rainbow career, 733 00:55:17,281 --> 00:55:21,559 he saw himself as wanting to become a little bit more commercial. 734 00:55:21,652 --> 00:55:27,000 And Dio very much wanted to stay into the myths and the dragons feel 735 00:55:27,057 --> 00:55:31,199 that he would put forward in the lyrics, metaphorical, 736 00:55:31,295 --> 00:55:33,400 rather than physical, than actual. 737 00:55:33,530 --> 00:55:36,409 So that the two of them went their separate ways, as we know. 738 00:55:37,034 --> 00:55:40,504 But that isn't the whole story, as Ritchie now reveals. 739 00:55:41,205 --> 00:55:44,311 Wendy, apparently, had told him transatlantically, 740 00:55:44,408 --> 00:55:46,888 she said, called him up and said, "Ronnie", 741 00:55:46,977 --> 00:55:50,652 "Ritchie is on the front page of Circus magazine in America" 742 00:55:50,747 --> 00:55:52,226 "and you two aren't." 743 00:55:52,316 --> 00:55:54,193 "There should have been the three of us." 744 00:55:54,685 --> 00:55:56,392 That's what did it. 745 00:55:56,486 --> 00:56:02,402 And he said to me, "Cozy and I are not gonna... We are not your sidekicks", 746 00:56:02,492 --> 00:56:04,995 "and we are not standing for it." 747 00:56:05,362 --> 00:56:08,707 I don't want to work with someone who is that trivial, that ridiculous. 748 00:56:08,765 --> 00:56:13,441 I said, "I can't work with this guy any more, just get him out of my life." 749 00:56:13,570 --> 00:56:19,111 And I remembered Graham Bonnet from the Marbles, 750 00:56:19,209 --> 00:56:23,351 and I said to Roger Glover, I said, "What about trying to find him?" 751 00:56:23,447 --> 00:56:25,007 "I wonder what he is doing these days." 752 00:56:25,048 --> 00:56:28,518 So I had to learn a Rainbow song because I knew nothing. 753 00:56:28,619 --> 00:56:31,122 I didn't know who Rainbow was, I had no clue. 754 00:56:31,221 --> 00:56:33,599 So I had to go out and buy albums and listen to the music. 755 00:56:33,690 --> 00:56:37,194 And I thought, "I don't think this is really me." 756 00:56:37,394 --> 00:56:40,307 I'm more into like R&B and pop kind of stuff. 757 00:56:40,464 --> 00:56:43,308 That guy had an amazing voice. 758 00:56:43,400 --> 00:56:46,574 Could sing an F-sharp above Top C and that was going some. 759 00:56:46,637 --> 00:56:48,116 I remember going over there one afternoon, 760 00:56:48,205 --> 00:56:50,085 and I heard this Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow 761 00:56:50,140 --> 00:56:52,552 or something in the background, and it was off of my album. 762 00:56:52,643 --> 00:56:55,920 I said to Roger, "Why is he playing that?" He says, "He just loves your voice." 763 00:56:55,979 --> 00:56:59,426 Ritchie also loved the idea of being more commercial. 764 00:57:23,407 --> 00:57:24,784 We needed some radio play. 765 00:57:24,841 --> 00:57:27,014 We got a little bit too underground. 766 00:57:27,110 --> 00:57:29,021 Since You've Been Gone, we got rid of that, and we... 767 00:57:29,112 --> 00:57:32,616 'Cause it's a number one, all of a sudden we were a big band. 768 00:57:33,850 --> 00:57:38,526 We were riding high at that time, 1980 was our biggest moment, I think. 769 00:57:39,456 --> 00:57:41,129 We were quite big in England. 770 00:57:41,591 --> 00:57:42,865 I love Since You've Been Gone. 771 00:57:42,960 --> 00:57:48,342 It's uncompromising and it has the perfect element of pop, which is you can sing it 772 00:57:48,432 --> 00:57:51,538 and it's in your head all day, and it's passionate. 773 00:57:51,635 --> 00:57:56,812 It has a real tug on your emotions. 774 00:57:56,873 --> 00:58:00,377 But Ritchie's in it, and Ritchie is powering the whole thing. 775 00:58:00,477 --> 00:58:02,047 The under solo is just brilliant. 776 00:58:19,663 --> 00:58:21,506 They did the immortal version of it. 777 00:58:22,499 --> 00:58:24,979 Powered by their more commercial sound, 778 00:58:25,068 --> 00:58:29,414 Rainbow headlined the first ever Monsters of Rock festival at Donington. 779 00:58:30,474 --> 00:58:32,010 The critics hated us. 780 00:58:32,676 --> 00:58:35,919 For whatever reason, we were not a fashionable, 781 00:58:36,013 --> 00:58:38,220 on the front page of Rolling Stones type of band. 782 00:58:38,315 --> 00:58:41,762 We were... They just hated us. 783 00:58:41,852 --> 00:58:43,559 But the more they hated us, 784 00:58:43,653 --> 00:58:47,157 the more the people kind of went, "We love them." 785 00:58:47,657 --> 00:58:49,432 The fans may have loved Rainbow, 786 00:58:49,559 --> 00:58:53,268 but Ritchie was now having a problem with Graham Banners hair. 787 00:58:53,397 --> 00:58:57,436 Ritchie was 100% behind me being in the band, 788 00:58:57,534 --> 00:59:00,208 but 100% against my haircut. 789 00:59:01,038 --> 00:59:03,245 There was a hair situation. 790 00:59:03,340 --> 00:59:07,584 We were known to have Denim people following us, 791 00:59:07,677 --> 00:59:10,317 and most people were kind of growing their hair long in those days. 792 00:59:10,514 --> 00:59:13,222 I went to get my hair cut in Sheffield really short. 793 00:59:13,283 --> 00:59:15,456 I mean, like, spiky and the whole thing. 794 00:59:20,957 --> 00:59:23,767 And I went on stage and Ritchie hadn't seen me all day, 795 00:59:23,860 --> 00:59:26,306 and there he was playing his guitar, and the first song comes up 796 00:59:26,396 --> 00:59:27,716 and he turns to me and he goes... 797 00:59:27,764 --> 00:59:29,471 You know, his mouth dropped. 798 00:59:29,566 --> 00:59:31,773 He was singing to the audience and doing his bit, 799 00:59:31,868 --> 00:59:34,974 and I saw the back of the shaved neck, you know that. 800 00:59:35,072 --> 00:59:40,146 You know, very cut hair and I went, 801 00:59:40,243 --> 00:59:42,814 "I'm just gonna put my guitar across his head." 802 00:59:42,913 --> 00:59:44,153 but then I might... 803 00:59:44,247 --> 00:59:46,318 I'll be back in prison again, you know. 804 00:59:46,450 --> 00:59:49,954 I really was, like, so tempted just to take it off and go whack. 805 01:00:01,264 --> 01:00:03,904 Graham Bonnet and his hair lived to sing another day. 806 01:00:04,000 --> 01:00:07,504 But he had no luck persuading drummer Cozy Powell to stay on board. 807 01:00:07,804 --> 01:00:12,082 Powell didn't like the overtly commercial work the band was now doing. 808 01:00:12,509 --> 01:00:13,647 And he was gone. 809 01:00:13,743 --> 01:00:19,193 And it was a very sad day, and he left the band and later I did. 810 01:00:19,282 --> 01:00:22,627 That was my last show too, but I didn't know this at that time. 811 01:00:22,686 --> 01:00:24,427 Graham Bonnet was a great singer 812 01:00:24,521 --> 01:00:28,128 and Down to Earth was a thoroughly undervalued Rainbow album. 813 01:00:28,191 --> 01:00:31,035 But again, the problem was that Blackmore saw Bonnet 814 01:00:31,161 --> 01:00:34,438 not quite as having what it took in terms of personality, 815 01:00:34,531 --> 01:00:36,875 to allow Blackmore to be himself. 816 01:00:37,501 --> 01:00:40,038 Song writing wasn't good, the way we wanted it to. 817 01:00:40,170 --> 01:00:41,444 It was very slow. 818 01:00:41,538 --> 01:00:45,850 Nothing was happening, we had one song and that was the song Russ Ballard wrote. 819 01:00:45,942 --> 01:00:47,888 I Surrender, the song was called. 820 01:00:48,011 --> 01:00:49,285 And that's all we had. 821 01:00:49,379 --> 01:00:51,882 And so we... It was... 822 01:00:51,982 --> 01:00:54,519 I left because Ritchie didn't come to rehearsal sometimes. 823 01:01:07,964 --> 01:01:10,137 Graham left the band in 1980. 824 01:01:10,634 --> 01:01:14,047 Like a month or so later, I thought, "What have I done?" 825 01:01:14,137 --> 01:01:17,243 I have left something that was great. 826 01:01:17,340 --> 01:01:20,810 It would be nice to see him again 'cause I like him very much. 827 01:01:20,911 --> 01:01:26,361 He was a good friend, and he taught me a lot about the music I was suddenly pushed into, 828 01:01:26,416 --> 01:01:29,260 which I knew nothing about, and he was a great teacher. 829 01:01:29,753 --> 01:01:33,200 Ritchie's friend Barry Ambrosio suggested Joe Lynn Turner 830 01:01:33,256 --> 01:01:35,395 as a replacement for Graham Bonnet. 831 01:01:36,059 --> 01:01:37,936 He said, "Listen to this record." 832 01:01:38,061 --> 01:01:42,532 I said "Look, Barry, I've heard so many singers, I can! Hear any more." 833 01:01:42,599 --> 01:01:44,078 "I've got to get out of here." 834 01:01:44,167 --> 01:01:47,842 He said, "Just listen to this," and he played one track as I was leaving. 835 01:01:47,938 --> 01:01:49,178 And I went, 836 01:01:49,272 --> 01:01:51,775 "Actually, that sounds interesting, who is this guy?โ€œ 837 01:01:51,875 --> 01:01:53,912 And he said, "Guy from New Jersey." 838 01:01:54,077 --> 01:01:56,785 I didn't know that he came to see me. 839 01:01:56,913 --> 01:02:00,122 I later found oui when I got a phone call, 840 01:02:00,217 --> 01:02:04,359 living in Manhattan, lower Manhattan in the west village, 841 01:02:04,688 --> 01:02:07,294 one-room studio, I think you call it. 842 01:02:07,457 --> 01:02:09,562 And mattress on the floor, 843 01:02:09,626 --> 01:02:11,299 money running out. 844 01:02:11,428 --> 01:02:14,932 And got a phone call from Barry Ambrosio, 845 01:02:15,031 --> 01:02:17,637 and he put Ritchie on the phone, 846 01:02:17,767 --> 01:02:20,475 and of course I... Complete disbelief. 847 01:02:20,604 --> 01:02:24,108 And he said, "No, it's really me." And I said, "Well, all right." 848 01:02:24,207 --> 01:02:26,551 And they told... They put their road manager on 849 01:02:26,643 --> 01:02:29,817 and told me the train to take and to go out to the studio. 850 01:02:56,906 --> 01:02:59,512 I was playing in New Jersey, and I went to see him. 851 01:02:59,643 --> 01:03:03,955 And I really liked his voice, very resonant and warm. 852 01:03:04,014 --> 01:03:06,858 He came in with a couple of beers and said, "You got the job if you want it." 853 01:03:06,983 --> 01:03:09,156 And I said, "Want it? I need it." 854 01:03:09,619 --> 01:03:14,090 And kept me there in the studio and we just kept being creative, 855 01:03:14,190 --> 01:03:17,637 and Glover and I started to write more lyrics, 856 01:03:17,694 --> 01:03:22,006 and we finished the album Difficult to Cure, like, in a couple of weeks, I think, 857 01:03:22,098 --> 01:03:23,543 since my entrance. 858 01:03:24,367 --> 01:03:27,871 Ritchie recorded three Rainbow albums with Joe Lynn Turner. 859 01:03:29,673 --> 01:03:33,849 I think I wrote, with Joe, 860 01:03:33,943 --> 01:03:37,186 one of my favourite tunes which is Street of Dreams. 861 01:03:37,280 --> 01:03:41,729 That, to me, was the ultimate Rainbow song. I love that song. 862 01:03:42,319 --> 01:03:45,357 Come on the jukebox, I go, "I'm proud of that." 863 01:03:45,789 --> 01:03:47,860 'Cause it was exactly where I wanted to go. 864 01:03:47,991 --> 01:03:50,028 When we heard it, we knew we had something. 865 01:03:50,126 --> 01:03:54,336 There was just chills up and down our... We felt it. 866 01:03:54,397 --> 01:03:56,673 We said, "Man, this is deep, this is something." 867 01:04:15,385 --> 01:04:18,423 And the fact that I could kind of write something that was poppy 868 01:04:18,555 --> 01:04:20,557 was something new for me. 869 01:04:20,657 --> 01:04:22,000 And I liked that groove. 870 01:04:22,092 --> 01:04:26,234 I just don't want to play, crash, crash, crash for the sake of it. 871 01:04:26,329 --> 01:04:27,706 I've got to hear a melody. 872 01:04:27,831 --> 01:04:32,439 Melody was always at the bottom of, for me musically, where I was going. 873 01:04:50,787 --> 01:04:52,858 While Ritchie had been developing Rainbow, 874 01:04:52,956 --> 01:04:58,269 his Deep Purple fans still wanted to see the classic Mark ll line-up back together again. 875 01:04:59,796 --> 01:05:05,872 1983, I think, the management called me up and said, "Purple wants to re-form." 876 01:05:05,969 --> 01:05:07,778 I said, "Well, I have to think about it." 877 01:05:07,871 --> 01:05:11,944 Rainbow was just now taking off really big in America. 878 01:05:12,041 --> 01:05:15,989 And we were really getting somewhere, we were doing big shows. 879 01:05:16,112 --> 01:05:20,322 I don't know if I want... It's so easy to just go back to Purple, you know. 880 01:05:20,984 --> 01:05:22,964 I was like... 881 01:05:23,052 --> 01:05:24,827 And Gillan was really up for it. 882 01:05:24,954 --> 01:05:28,333 And I'm like, "Okay, let's try it." 883 01:05:29,092 --> 01:05:34,337 I put up no fuss, no fight, no nothing like that, so I really felt good about it. 884 01:05:34,431 --> 01:05:36,570 And also at that point in time, 885 01:05:36,666 --> 01:05:40,273 I had a solo album for Elektra Records, 886 01:05:40,336 --> 01:05:41,747 and things were going well for me. 887 01:05:41,838 --> 01:05:44,842 And Ritchie and I promised to get back together again anyway. 888 01:05:44,941 --> 01:05:48,855 So, I had no compunction about it. I felt good about it. 889 01:05:49,479 --> 01:05:51,652 Of course there was money entered into it. 890 01:05:51,748 --> 01:05:55,821 And the management is going, "It's worth X amount..." 891 01:05:55,919 --> 01:05:59,833 I'm like, "Might be an interesting idea. Okay, I'll try it.โ€œ" 892 01:06:00,757 --> 01:06:02,361 Cut a long story short. 893 01:06:02,992 --> 01:06:04,699 So we did it. 894 01:06:04,994 --> 01:06:08,498 You know, we had a good time, Perfect Strangers is a good record. 895 01:06:08,765 --> 01:06:10,335 And we all had a good time doing it. 896 01:06:10,867 --> 01:06:12,847 It was very comfortable being with them. 897 01:06:29,385 --> 01:06:32,298 Perfect Strangers was a brilliant comeback album by Purple. 898 01:06:32,388 --> 01:06:34,629 It was a phenomenal performance 899 01:06:34,724 --> 01:06:37,170 because it got Mark ll back together. 900 01:06:37,227 --> 01:06:39,036 They did it in the mid-80's fashion. 901 01:06:39,128 --> 01:06:40,471 They weren't living in the past. 902 01:06:40,563 --> 01:06:43,567 They weren't living in 1971, 72, 903 01:06:43,700 --> 01:06:47,238 they were actually being part of the modern hard rock world. 904 01:06:48,538 --> 01:06:51,576 I think the relationship at the time between Gillan and Blackmore, 905 01:06:51,674 --> 01:06:55,349 which is always pointed out as being the problem, was quite amicable. 906 01:06:56,246 --> 01:06:59,750 The amicable band toured in support of the album. 907 01:07:00,250 --> 01:07:01,251 They were trying to say 908 01:07:01,351 --> 01:07:03,331 that Bruce Springsteen was doing the biggest business. 909 01:07:03,419 --> 01:07:07,595 Biggest business was us and Grateful Dead, then Bruce Springsteen. 910 01:07:08,558 --> 01:07:11,937 I don't know what people see in Bruce Springsteen whatsoever. 911 01:07:12,061 --> 01:07:13,096 I have never got that. 912 01:07:13,997 --> 01:07:17,069 The ticket sales showed that the old magic was still there, 913 01:07:17,166 --> 01:07:19,544 but so were the old rivalries with Gillan. 914 01:07:19,702 --> 01:07:25,175 I put it down to he wanted to kind of maybe steer the band, 915 01:07:25,275 --> 01:07:26,879 and I was steering the band. 916 01:07:26,943 --> 01:07:29,685 So I think it was that more than anything. 917 01:07:29,846 --> 01:07:32,884 Of course it worked, I thought, Perfect Strangers worked. 918 01:07:32,949 --> 01:07:36,692 Everybody was on form, we played, it worked. 919 01:07:36,786 --> 01:07:39,062 But, we should have stopped right there. 920 01:07:39,689 --> 01:07:43,136 And then we did... House of Blue Light, to me, was disastrous. 921 01:08:09,552 --> 01:08:13,159 And the relationship with Ian was soon back in the disaster zone too. 922 01:08:13,823 --> 01:08:15,461 He had lost his voice completely. 923 01:08:15,558 --> 01:08:17,231 And we are going, "What are we gonna do?" 924 01:08:17,327 --> 01:08:21,400 I was always already disgusted with Ian, we weren't getting along. 925 01:08:21,497 --> 01:08:24,808 Soto me, I was like, "We gotta get another singer." 926 01:08:24,901 --> 01:08:26,101 "I mean, this is just a joke." 927 01:08:27,170 --> 01:08:31,949 By 1987 Ritchie had played with scares of musicians and dozens cf bands. 928 01:08:32,008 --> 01:08:35,512 A self-confessed wind-up merchant who thrived on conflict. 929 01:08:35,645 --> 01:08:38,626 The uneasy rider was about to meet his match. 930 01:08:38,681 --> 01:08:41,184 Appropriately enough, on the football field. 931 01:08:42,018 --> 01:08:45,192 I used to have my roadie call up radio stations too. 932 01:08:45,288 --> 01:08:49,361 Deep purple would like to do a game of soccer against you, 933 01:08:49,492 --> 01:08:51,631 if you feel like playing a charity. 934 01:08:51,694 --> 01:08:54,538 It's kind of my fairy tale Cinderella story 935 01:08:54,664 --> 01:08:58,476 because I was working for this radio station on Long Island. 936 01:08:58,534 --> 01:08:59,706 I was interning there. 937 01:08:59,802 --> 01:09:02,715 And apparently somebody from Deep Purple had called up. 938 01:09:03,373 --> 01:09:04,977 So the DJs came out and they played, 939 01:09:05,041 --> 01:09:07,351 and Purple showed up, it was Ritchie and Roger. 940 01:09:07,443 --> 01:09:10,117 He signed an autograph for me and he looked up at me and said, 941 01:09:10,213 --> 01:09:13,160 in that very classy English accent that I'm sure you are familiar with, 942 01:09:13,650 --> 01:09:16,324 "You are very beautiful girl." And I went, "That's nice." 943 01:09:16,386 --> 01:09:17,956 And that would have been my Ritchie Blackmore story 944 01:09:18,054 --> 01:09:19,328 that he said I was beautiful. 945 01:09:19,389 --> 01:09:21,027 And that was enough at that point. 946 01:09:21,124 --> 01:09:22,967 And I said, "Thank you", and I walked off the field. 947 01:09:23,059 --> 01:09:26,233 And he sent his roadies through the crowd to find out who I was 948 01:09:26,329 --> 01:09:28,309 and to ask me to meet him at a pub later. 949 01:09:28,665 --> 01:09:33,808 Candice Night was a musical New Yorker, who had been modelling from age 12. 950 01:09:33,903 --> 01:09:35,507 She had her own radio rock show, 951 01:09:35,571 --> 01:09:40,645 and had studied communications at New York Institute of Technology. 952 01:09:40,743 --> 01:09:44,919 And Ritchie had the most brilliant, proper 953 01:09:45,014 --> 01:09:47,995 upper-class English way of breaking the ice. 954 01:09:48,084 --> 01:09:51,031 - He was taking off his soccer cleats. - Oh, right. 955 01:09:51,087 --> 01:09:53,897 And his dirty, mud-filled, sweaty soccer socks 956 01:09:53,990 --> 01:09:57,267 and he balled one up and threw it right in my face. 957 01:09:58,828 --> 01:10:00,432 That's the way to get a girl. 958 01:10:00,530 --> 01:10:02,373 And I didn't worry about my nails after that any more 959 01:10:02,432 --> 01:10:04,241 'cause I thought this is ridiculous, and we just... 960 01:10:04,333 --> 01:10:05,937 After that, there was really nothing... 961 01:10:06,035 --> 01:10:08,174 That totally relaxed 962 01:10:08,271 --> 01:10:10,911 - the whole entire environment. - It was a magical smell. 963 01:10:11,507 --> 01:10:14,750 He said to me that when I walked into the room, 964 01:10:14,844 --> 01:10:17,051 meeting him at that pub that afternoon. 965 01:10:17,113 --> 01:10:22,062 He said, "I felt like, when you walked in that an old friend had walked into the room." 966 01:10:22,118 --> 01:10:23,597 "Like it felt like home." 967 01:10:23,686 --> 01:10:26,257 Ritchie now had an ally who put him at ease. 968 01:10:26,355 --> 01:10:31,031 Soon their shared interest in medieval life and music was to take centre stage. 969 01:10:31,127 --> 01:10:34,131 But first, a replacement had to be found for Gillan. 970 01:10:34,230 --> 01:10:37,939 Ritchie approached his Rainbow vocalist, Joe Lynn Turner. 971 01:10:38,101 --> 01:10:40,809 At first, Joe hesitated, I think. 972 01:10:40,903 --> 01:10:43,816 You know, Paice is going well and he was in Rainbow. 973 01:10:43,940 --> 01:10:45,942 So I was like, "Yeah, well..." 974 01:10:46,042 --> 01:10:47,419 Got any other ideas? 975 01:10:48,277 --> 01:10:51,656 And Jon's like, "Yeah, sounds great." 976 01:10:51,781 --> 01:10:54,091 So we tried him out, it worked, and then he was in. 977 01:10:54,817 --> 01:10:58,230 He started playing Hey Joe, I grabbed the mike, started singing it. 978 01:10:58,321 --> 01:11:00,824 Never even said, "Hello" to Jon or Ian at that point. 979 01:11:00,923 --> 01:11:03,096 Finished the song and then there were some handshakes. 980 01:11:03,159 --> 01:11:06,663 And Jon started to play this keyboard bit, 981 01:11:06,763 --> 01:11:09,767 which later became on the Purple album The Cut Runs Deep. 982 01:11:09,832 --> 01:11:12,438 And I started singing the exact lyric 983 01:11:12,502 --> 01:11:15,915 as Ritchie always called it, I had a magic bag of lyrics. 984 01:11:16,005 --> 01:11:19,748 And I would just pull out a lyric that suited this and sing a melody, 985 01:11:19,842 --> 01:11:23,847 and it was the exact lyric... There it was. There's the song. 986 01:11:23,946 --> 01:11:26,859 So Jon and Ian were convinced that I should be the guy. 987 01:11:48,471 --> 01:11:51,543 But it was to be Joe Lynn's only album with Deep Purple. 988 01:11:51,641 --> 01:11:53,678 He left the band in 1992. 989 01:11:54,377 --> 01:11:57,221 There was a lot of frustration going on, 990 01:11:57,346 --> 01:11:59,155 lot of unhappiness. 991 01:11:59,315 --> 01:12:04,458 The guys, I believe it was Ian and Jon, and I say this with all love and respect 992 01:12:04,554 --> 01:12:07,057 felt they needed Ian Gillan back in the band. 993 01:12:07,156 --> 01:12:11,400 And Ritchie was staunch about me staying in the band and there was a... 994 01:12:11,494 --> 01:12:17,410 And there just wasn't any way that I could deal with the emotions that were happening. 995 01:12:17,500 --> 01:12:21,744 So, I think I quit and got fired at the same time. 996 01:12:21,838 --> 01:12:23,749 Whatever, doesn't really matter. 997 01:12:23,840 --> 01:12:28,255 But, it was nerve-racking and just turmoil 998 01:12:28,344 --> 01:12:30,915 and very stressful. 999 01:12:32,048 --> 01:12:35,325 Meanwhile, Ritchie and Candice had moved in together. 1000 01:12:35,418 --> 01:12:38,024 - By '91 I had moved in with you. - Yeah. 1001 01:12:38,087 --> 01:12:40,863 She moved in but I didn't know who she was. 1002 01:12:41,724 --> 01:12:44,728 I just knew that there was a great female in the house. 1003 01:12:44,827 --> 01:12:45,771 I'm not gonna knock it. 1004 01:12:45,895 --> 01:12:48,205 - I don't know who she is. - I locked my door every night, I bolted it. 1005 01:12:48,264 --> 01:12:50,437 I was on tour as his girlfriend, yes. 1006 01:12:50,566 --> 01:12:53,376 But at our parties at the house... 1007 01:12:53,436 --> 01:12:57,043 When we have parties at our house, everybody has to contribute something, 1008 01:12:57,106 --> 01:12:59,746 so if Ritchie is going to bring out the acoustic guitar and play for people, 1009 01:12:59,842 --> 01:13:01,962 he wants everybody to give a little bit of themselves. 1010 01:13:02,011 --> 01:13:05,288 So he doesn't care if it's a speech about the Alamo, right? 1011 01:13:05,381 --> 01:13:09,796 Or tap dance or a song or something, anything. 1012 01:13:09,886 --> 01:13:14,631 So, when I was at the parties with Ritchie, 1013 01:13:14,724 --> 01:13:16,704 he and I would be doing songs together. 1014 01:13:16,792 --> 01:13:19,033 That's how he first got me singing with him. 1015 01:13:19,762 --> 01:13:22,766 The first song they wrote together was a wedding anniversary present 1016 01:13:22,865 --> 01:13:24,776 for Candice's parents. 1017 01:13:25,735 --> 01:13:29,808 This is something that Rainbow would never have done, 1018 01:13:29,939 --> 01:13:31,941 play a waltz. 1019 01:13:32,408 --> 01:13:33,910 A waltz, go. 1020 01:13:54,263 --> 01:13:55,264 Just follow me. 1021 01:13:55,331 --> 01:13:56,776 With what we didn't see... 1022 01:14:00,670 --> 01:14:02,445 That was very subtle. 1023 01:14:16,786 --> 01:14:18,697 - First song we wrote? - Be Mine Tonight. 1024 01:14:18,854 --> 01:14:20,629 That's what makes me laugh when people say, 1025 01:14:20,690 --> 01:14:22,670 "She must have made him do Renaissance music" 1026 01:14:22,758 --> 01:14:24,965 because you don't make him do anything. 1027 01:14:25,027 --> 01:14:27,473 You never make Ritchie Blackmore do anything. 1028 01:14:27,530 --> 01:14:32,707 Everything that he... His choice of direction is solely up to him, 1029 01:14:32,835 --> 01:14:36,214 and I feel like I'm really on a journey that he has led the way and taken... 1030 01:14:36,339 --> 01:14:39,286 He is the captain of this journey. 1031 01:14:39,375 --> 01:14:40,979 I'll be the co-captain, that's fine. 1032 01:14:42,011 --> 01:14:44,958 Ritchie would make one more album with Deep Purple. 1033 01:14:45,047 --> 01:14:46,390 With Joe Lynn Turner gone, 1034 01:14:46,482 --> 01:14:50,294 the band put down backing tracks and looked for a singer. 1035 01:14:50,386 --> 01:14:54,232 The band thinks that we should get Gillan back, and the record label, 1036 01:14:54,323 --> 01:14:59,033 they sent the tapes of Ian singing, like, three songs that we had done. 1037 01:14:59,128 --> 01:15:01,734 Three backing tracks he had put his voice over. 1038 01:15:01,897 --> 01:15:04,741 And I'm like... 1039 01:15:04,867 --> 01:15:07,575 "This is absolutely dreadful." 1040 01:15:07,670 --> 01:15:12,085 "This is rotten to the core, this is just rubbish." 1041 01:15:12,208 --> 01:15:13,915 That's how bad it was to me. 1042 01:15:14,010 --> 01:15:15,717 It was deadly. 1043 01:15:16,345 --> 01:15:21,988 And then he said, "How much would you take to work with that?" 1044 01:15:22,918 --> 01:15:25,421 I said, "Well, it really doesn't come into it." 1045 01:15:27,089 --> 01:15:29,228 The album was made with Gillan on vocals. 1046 01:15:29,325 --> 01:15:33,603 Then the record company wanted the band to go on tour to promote it. 1047 01:15:33,696 --> 01:15:36,609 It was also the 25th anniversary of Mark ll. 1048 01:15:36,732 --> 01:15:40,339 Ritchie demanded a vast fee thinking it would be refused, 1049 01:15:40,436 --> 01:15:42,541 but his strategy backfired. 1050 01:15:43,606 --> 01:15:48,453 I went, "You know what? I'll take X amount", which was over the top. 1051 01:15:49,045 --> 01:15:53,221 Just to get them off my back so I could look for another singer. 1052 01:15:53,282 --> 01:15:56,388 And they came back with BMG, 1053 01:15:56,452 --> 01:15:59,558 "Okay, they'll pay you that if you work with Gillan." 1054 01:15:59,622 --> 01:16:03,126 And I went, "Now I'm caught." 1055 01:16:28,984 --> 01:16:32,488 Of course I got halfway through the tour and I was like, "I can't take this any more." 1056 01:16:32,655 --> 01:16:38,833 I'm selling my soul here, this is awful. This is dreadful, certainly, you know. 1057 01:16:40,830 --> 01:16:45,779 Ian and I had a showdown with spaghetti, and it was in Cleveland. 1058 01:16:46,635 --> 01:16:50,139 Jim picked up my food from catering, 1059 01:16:50,272 --> 01:16:53,310 and Ian had gone, "Who is that for?" 1060 01:16:53,409 --> 01:16:55,116 And Jim goes, "It's Ritchie's food." 1061 01:16:55,177 --> 01:17:00,354 He says, "Let me add some ketchup to it." And, of course, he put ketchup all over it. 1062 01:17:00,449 --> 01:17:05,262 And I went up to him and I said, "Did you do this to my food?" 1063 01:17:05,354 --> 01:17:07,766 And he went, "Yeah." 1064 01:17:07,857 --> 01:17:10,337 And with that, I saw Jon Lord go... 1065 01:17:11,827 --> 01:17:16,537 And they all parted, it was like a high noon, you know. 1066 01:17:16,632 --> 01:17:18,475 I went, "Really?" 1067 01:17:19,835 --> 01:17:22,145 And then I got it and went, right in his face. 1068 01:17:26,041 --> 01:17:27,611 Well, battle rages on, 1069 01:17:27,710 --> 01:17:29,815 this was the first time we played in Czechoslovakia, 1070 01:17:29,879 --> 01:17:33,986 and he asked me to sing the... 1071 01:17:34,049 --> 01:17:37,462 Just like a vocal part just... Like background... 1072 01:17:37,553 --> 01:17:40,625 Candice was singing off stage and out of sight, 1073 01:17:40,723 --> 01:17:43,363 which confused some local reviewers. 1074 01:17:43,692 --> 01:17:47,162 There was a Czechoslovakian paper who had written the review and said that, 1075 01:17:47,229 --> 01:17:52,076 "Jon Lord must have sampled a female vocal into his keyboards" 1076 01:17:52,168 --> 01:17:55,012 "because they could clearly hear some girl singing." 1077 01:18:03,312 --> 01:18:08,853 I knew if I went to the manager and I said, "I want to leave Bruce Payne management." 1078 01:18:09,318 --> 01:18:12,925 That would go no further and I'd be back at square one. 1079 01:18:13,022 --> 01:18:17,402 So I thought, "I'm gonna have to write a letter to the band to explain how I feel", 1080 01:18:17,493 --> 01:18:19,063 "and I've got to leave," 1081 01:18:19,161 --> 01:18:21,437 "and I'll not be going to Japan with them." 1082 01:18:37,546 --> 01:18:41,255 Ritchie played his last concert with Deep Purple in Helsinki 1083 01:18:41,350 --> 01:18:43,956 on 17th November, 1993. 1084 01:18:46,288 --> 01:18:49,462 So we went back to the hotel, 1085 01:18:49,558 --> 01:18:52,368 and we proceeded to say goodbyes. 1086 01:18:52,461 --> 01:18:55,465 I think I said goodbye to Ian Paice, that was it. 1087 01:18:55,564 --> 01:18:57,475 Everybody else just ran away. 1088 01:18:57,967 --> 01:19:01,437 Paice came up to me and said, "Make some good decisions" 1089 01:19:01,537 --> 01:19:04,643 - and left, and Candice was with me. - That's right. 1090 01:19:04,740 --> 01:19:07,152 And I think Jon was too embarrassed to say anything. 1091 01:19:07,276 --> 01:19:08,836 - Jon went right up to his room. - Yeah. 1092 01:19:11,380 --> 01:19:12,825 It was such a relief. 1093 01:19:14,617 --> 01:19:18,326 Ritchie reformed Rainbow, now with Dougie White on vocals 1094 01:19:18,454 --> 01:19:21,901 and made one final album with them too, Stranger in Us All. 1095 01:19:38,974 --> 01:19:42,012 I think Rainbow probably gave him a little bit more freedom in that regard, 1096 01:19:42,111 --> 01:19:46,355 and then the album I did certainly did give him more freedom. 1097 01:19:46,815 --> 01:19:49,125 This freedom also enabled Ritchie and Candice 1098 01:19:49,184 --> 01:19:51,255 to develop their writing partnership, 1099 01:19:51,353 --> 01:19:55,130 and the album included one of the first songs they wrote together, Ariel. 1100 01:20:13,709 --> 01:20:17,316 The Blackmore side thing kind of happened when we were doing the last Rainbow record. 1101 01:20:17,846 --> 01:20:21,206 We would kind of get together as a son of a jam night thing at the end of the evening 1102 01:20:21,283 --> 01:20:24,162 when we were recording at Long View Farm in Massachusetts. 1103 01:20:24,219 --> 01:20:28,224 And we would just kind of sit around the fire and they were just gonna jam, 1104 01:20:28,357 --> 01:20:32,669 and they would do stuff, Renaissance stuff like Greensleeves, that sort of thing. 1105 01:20:32,995 --> 01:20:34,872 When I was 10, 1106 01:20:34,963 --> 01:20:39,412 there was this kid singing Greensleeves, and I was really taken by that mode. 1107 01:20:42,571 --> 01:20:46,678 Just, it was very reminiscent of another time, 1108 01:20:46,742 --> 01:20:48,244 almost spiritual, I thought. 1109 01:21:02,925 --> 01:21:07,567 And it just seemed to go straight to my soul. 1110 01:21:07,663 --> 01:21:08,733 And I have always been that way. 1111 01:21:08,831 --> 01:21:11,573 If I hear medieval music, I'll immediately come alive. 1112 01:21:15,003 --> 01:21:17,449 Ritchie and Candice formed Blackmore's Night 1113 01:21:17,539 --> 01:21:21,419 and made their first album Shadow of the Moon in 1997. 1114 01:21:22,511 --> 01:21:27,893 His escape from the stress and pressures of that rock and roll world 1115 01:21:27,950 --> 01:21:31,454 wound up being just to sit and just open up on acoustic. 1116 01:21:31,587 --> 01:21:35,125 And just really look into the fire place and just go someplace else. 1117 01:21:35,257 --> 01:21:39,205 And that's where I think the beginning of our project happened, really. 1118 01:21:56,245 --> 01:21:59,317 He often says that if you listen to Smoke on the Water, 1119 01:21:59,415 --> 01:22:03,261 you'll hear medieval fourths and fifths, the modal scales of that era. 1120 01:22:03,318 --> 01:22:06,299 So that was going back to 1971, so that was in him there as well, 1121 01:22:06,388 --> 01:22:09,460 and then of course, fast-forward to Rainbow and you've got 1122 01:22:09,558 --> 01:22:12,505 everything from Temple of The King, 16th Century Greensleeves. 1123 01:22:12,628 --> 01:22:16,132 So it's a lot of medieval flare in a lot of those songs. 1124 01:22:37,686 --> 01:22:41,634 And we are still scratching the surface, it's like, 1125 01:22:41,690 --> 01:22:45,001 I still feel there's so far to go with it. 1126 01:22:45,093 --> 01:22:48,267 Whereas with the others I felt we were at the end. 1127 01:22:48,597 --> 01:22:50,804 One of the best compliments I had was, 1128 01:22:50,866 --> 01:22:54,939 "I hate medieval and Renaissance music, but I love your music." 1129 01:22:55,270 --> 01:23:00,686 And I went, "That's a big compliment, much more than you think." 1130 01:23:16,525 --> 01:23:22,339 With our show, it's more the audience is part of us, we are there to entertain them. 1131 01:23:22,397 --> 01:23:25,241 We are not there to show off and wiggle our hips. 1132 01:23:26,068 --> 01:23:28,708 Since that first album in 1997, 1133 01:23:28,804 --> 01:23:31,580 Ritchie and Candice have made another nine together. 1134 01:23:40,749 --> 01:23:42,854 When Ritchie plunged into medieval music, 1135 01:23:42,918 --> 01:23:47,367 it wasn't so much as a surprise as a natural course of events. 1136 01:24:08,110 --> 01:24:12,354 I also feel that urge because somehow when you've done all the big heavy stuff, 1137 01:24:12,447 --> 01:24:15,189 it's always attractive but you want to explore the other side. 1138 01:24:15,584 --> 01:24:21,535 The minstrels, the peasant, kind of walking from town to town, 1139 01:24:21,623 --> 01:24:25,867 just telling the news from the last town, bit of gossip, 1140 01:24:25,961 --> 01:24:28,635 plays a few tunes, that's what I relate to. 1141 01:24:29,431 --> 01:24:33,743 That doesn't mean that some of the songs don't still include modern rock influences. 1142 01:24:49,217 --> 01:24:51,060 It's like me, I love what I do. 1143 01:24:51,153 --> 01:24:54,566 I truly love what I do, and I can hear that Ritchie loves what he does, 1144 01:24:54,656 --> 01:24:55,964 and I salute him for it. 1145 01:25:11,974 --> 01:25:17,856 True musicians, people who don't have a choice, you know, 1146 01:25:17,946 --> 01:25:21,189 they just love music and that's the path they follow. 1147 01:25:21,750 --> 01:25:25,357 If he wants to switch into something else, 1148 01:25:25,487 --> 01:25:28,934 that's because his inner musical inspiration pulls him there, 1149 01:25:29,024 --> 01:25:33,439 and true musicians are almost slaves to that. 1150 01:25:34,162 --> 01:25:36,301 The music may be historically inspired, 1151 01:25:36,365 --> 01:25:41,610 but Ritchie's electric guitar virtuosity is still very much a part of their medieval journey. 1152 01:26:02,724 --> 01:26:06,137 He sees himself, I think, as the quiet musketeer. 1153 01:26:06,228 --> 01:26:09,573 His rather romantic sort of heroic dashing figure. 1154 01:26:09,665 --> 01:26:11,702 I never feel like we are done, we're just like... 1155 01:26:11,800 --> 01:26:13,040 We are still learning so much about 1156 01:26:13,135 --> 01:26:15,376 the instruments and the songs and ourselves, really' 1157 01:26:32,054 --> 01:26:33,931 It takes me back to another life. 1158 01:26:34,056 --> 01:26:38,664 It might be a past life, reincarnation. 1159 01:26:38,760 --> 01:26:42,867 I just love to be in the 1500's, without getting the plague, 1160 01:26:42,931 --> 01:26:46,105 and having central heating and a satellite dish. 1161 01:26:46,201 --> 01:26:50,547 Whereas if I hear rock and roll, I've heard it all before, Christ. 1162 01:26:50,605 --> 01:26:54,951 It all ended about 30 years ago, everybody now is so generic. 1163 01:26:56,044 --> 01:26:59,514 How long can you keep flogging something? 1164 01:27:00,415 --> 01:27:03,692 It's nearly 50 years since the young school boy from Heston 1165 01:27:03,785 --> 01:27:06,356 decided to show his teachers they were wrong about him, 1166 01:27:06,455 --> 01:27:08,696 by achieving true excellence on the guitar. 1167 01:27:08,790 --> 01:27:11,236 And to make good on the faith his parents had shown in him 1168 01:27:11,293 --> 01:27:14,035 by putting the music first. 1169 01:27:14,129 --> 01:27:15,631 Of all the great guitar players, 1170 01:27:15,764 --> 01:27:18,438 he was the one that people knew least about, I think, 1171 01:27:18,533 --> 01:27:19,944 and that was partly his own doing. 1172 01:27:20,035 --> 01:27:23,949 His confidence was overwhelming. 1173 01:27:24,039 --> 01:27:25,450 It was frightening. 1174 01:27:25,540 --> 01:27:27,110 Inspiring and frightening. 1175 01:27:27,442 --> 01:27:32,983 I think Ritchie will be remembered as somebody wild and untamed 1176 01:27:33,081 --> 01:27:34,151 to the end of his days. 1177 01:27:34,282 --> 01:27:36,785 And I think that's a magnificent thing to be. 1178 01:27:36,918 --> 01:27:39,655 I can buy a Strat, you can buy a Strat, right? 1179 01:27:39,681 --> 01:27:42,359 We can get a Marshall, he can get a Marshall. 1180 01:27:42,424 --> 01:27:45,268 But, none of us ever wind up sounding like Ritchie. 1181 01:27:45,627 --> 01:27:50,440 A high degree of being completely in the moment, impulsive, 1182 01:27:50,499 --> 01:27:54,345 and just being kind of true to himself 1183 01:27:54,469 --> 01:27:59,077 and true to what his perception of that moment was in a live situation. 1184 01:27:59,174 --> 01:28:01,677 He is not an extrovert, he is very much an introvert. 1185 01:28:01,810 --> 01:28:05,257 And when you have somebody like that, they create brilliantly, 1186 01:28:05,347 --> 01:28:09,591 but there is also a lot of depth that they are always constantly dealing with. 1187 01:28:09,785 --> 01:28:14,200 There is nothing better than just sitting with the guitar and emoting. 1188 01:28:14,322 --> 01:28:16,131 I can be in Hawaii, 1189 01:28:16,191 --> 01:28:19,331 and everybody is on water skis and things. 1190 01:28:19,427 --> 01:28:22,271 I'm watching the dolphins, but I'm in my room just looking out, 1191 01:28:22,364 --> 01:28:25,777 looking at the horizons, gotta be playing. 1192 01:28:25,867 --> 01:28:29,838 And that's my friend that I'm kind of emoting with. 1193 01:28:30,372 --> 01:28:33,842 My gut feeling is that Ritchie is probably at his best when he 1194 01:28:33,942 --> 01:28:40,052 tends to actually live out the rather quiet, 1195 01:28:40,148 --> 01:28:46,121 withdrawn, artistic and thoughtful person that I think really 1196 01:28:46,221 --> 01:28:48,064 is what he is ultimately about. 1197 01:28:48,156 --> 01:28:50,193 When people get things all in perspective, 1198 01:28:50,292 --> 01:28:55,173 Ritchie will be right there as one of the cornerstones of what rock and roll is today. 1199 01:28:55,230 --> 01:28:58,234 There's a long list of rock guitar players 1200 01:28:58,333 --> 01:29:00,574 that wouldn't exist without Ritchie Blackmore. 1201 01:29:01,002 --> 01:29:06,008 There are people who enter this band thing for lots of different reasons, 1202 01:29:06,074 --> 01:29:09,317 for money, for fame and for the chicks. 1203 01:29:09,411 --> 01:29:13,826 It seems to me Ritchie Blackmore entered into this for the music. 1204 01:29:14,683 --> 01:29:19,655 And for the two people who encouraged him to take guitar lessons in the first place, 1205 01:29:19,754 --> 01:29:22,860 his mother and especially his father. 1206 01:29:23,491 --> 01:29:27,166 He came to the Albert Hall when we did the orchestra thing, 1207 01:29:27,262 --> 01:29:30,709 Deep Purple and the orchestra, he loved that. 1208 01:29:30,765 --> 01:29:35,441 I think then he suddenly realised, "I think my son's doing something, yeah." 1209 01:29:35,537 --> 01:29:39,041 5,000 people and there's an orchestra. 1210 01:29:40,609 --> 01:29:43,419 If that childhood photograph was taken today, 1211 01:29:43,511 --> 01:29:45,787 they'd probably all be smiling. 102560

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