Download Deep Purple Fireball Album from DCC Mediafire
The beginning of the seventies marked a great period of creativity on the part of the great exponents of hard rock, producing modifications at that time of groups such as Uriah Heep, Led Zeppelin, Black Sabbath and Deep Purple, among others, are considered great classics of the genre that have remained valid until the present, as evidenced by the many reissues that have come out and that sell as well today as when they were originally published.
In the case of Deep Purple, the times could not have been better, since at that time they published works such as «Deep Purple In Rock» in 1970, «Fireball» in 1971 and «Machine Head» 1973, also counting on its most famous lineup that was made up of Ian Gillan on vocals, Ritchie Blackmore on guitar, Roger Glover on bass, Ian Paice on drums and Jon Lord (1941-2012) in the keyboards; For many critics, “Fireball” is an inferior product, known in the middle of the great clubs like “Deep Purple In Rock” and “Machine Head”, and “Fireball” is a personal highlight and essential as either of the other two.
The Disco
Musically here there is a double aspect of not wanting to repeat the formula that they also keep in mind. The absolutely bizarre thing is that he decided not to measure “Strange Kind of Woman” on the piece, and so it came out as a single from the album before Fireball was released as such. In later reissues “Strange Kind of Woman” is, then, one of the group’s most lucid moments. An absolute classic.
About “Strange Art of Woman” it is worth saying that it is one of those purely Purple songs that possesses everything. All the elements of the group are there and the verse of the song is tremendously original. There are compositions that you listen to once and it stays forever, like “Black Night”, “Space Truckin’” or “Highway Star”. Grace is tremendously direct, with the wood of an absolute single and which in its first sketch was titled “Prostitute”. Much better that “kind of strange woman.” Probably the letter will now be seen as something indecent, but everything must be brought closer to its historical framework. This is where Gillan and Blackmore have this very identifying Guitar and Vocal Pique with Deep Purple. Pure magic, rock history.