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List of Deep Purple albums

Deep Purple Album - The Very Best of Deep Purple

Deep Purple Album - The Very Best of Deep Purple (Front side)
Album Information :
Customers rating: (9 ratings)
Release Date:2000-01-03
Type:Audio CD
Genre:Arena Rock, British Invasion, British Metal, England, Hard Rock, Heavy Metal, Pop, Pop/Rock Music, Rock, Rock & Roll, Rock/Pop
Label:EMI Europe Generic
UPC:724349680722
Approx. Price:$15.98 (USD)
Track Listing :
1 . Hush [30th Anniversary Remaster]
2 . Black Night [Single Version Remaster]
3 . Speed King [Single Version]
4 . Child in Time [Single Edit]
5 . Strange Kind of Woman [Single Version]
6 . Fireball
7 . Demon's Eye
8 . Smoke on the Water [25th Anniversary Remaster]
9 . Highway Star ['97 Remix][Version]
10 . When a Blind Man Cries ['97 Remix][Version]
11 . Never Before [Single Edit]
12 . Woman from Tokyo [Single Edit]
13 . Burn [Single Edit]
14 . Stormbringer
15 . You Keep on Moving [Single Edit]
16 . Perfect Strangers [Single Version]
17 . Ted The Mechanic
18 . Any Fule Kno That
Description :
Import only 18 track Re-mastered collection issued through EMI in 1999. Available at an incredibly low price while stock lasts. Tracks, 'Hush', 'Black Night', 'Speed King', 'Child In Time', 'Strange Kind Of Woman', 'Fireball', 'Demon's Eye', 'Smoke On The Water', 'Highway Star', 'When A Blind Man Cries', 'Never Before', 'Woman From Tokyo', 'Burn', 'Stormbringer', 'You Keep On Moving', 'Perfect Strangers', 'Ted The Mechanic', & 'Any Fule Kno That'.
Customer review - 2007-05-23
- The best of several Deep Purple compilations
THE BAND: Over the years - Rod Evans (vocals), Ian Gillan (vocals), David Coverdale (vocals), Joe Lynn Turner (vocals), Ritchie Blackmore (guitar), Tommy Bolin (guitar), Steve Morse (guitar), Nick Simpler (bass), Roger Glover (bass), Glenn Hughes (bass)..... Jon Lord (keyboards) and Ian Paice (drums & percussion) have appeared on every Deep Purple release.

THE DISCS: (1998) 28 total tracks on 2 discs clocking in at approximately 138 minutes (70 minutes on disc-1, 68 on disc-2). Included with the discs is a 22-page heavy duty glossy purple booklet containing an extensive 15-page history of the band, song titles, and what songs came from which albums and year released (sadly no band photos or song lyrics). This compilation follows the band from 1968-98. Digitally remastered sound. Label - EMI Records.

ALBUM REPRESENTATION: Shades Of Deep Purple (2 songs), Book Of Taliesyn (3), Deep Purple (1), A's & B's (2), In Rock (4), Fireball (2), Machine Head (3), Who Do We Think We Are (1), Burn (2), Stormbringer (1), Come Taste The Band (1), Perfect Strangers (2), Slaves & Masters (1), Purpendicular (1), Abandon (1), unreleased - "When A Blind Man Cries" from the "Machine Head" sessions - released on the 2-disc Anniversary edition only (1).

COMMENTS: A collection like this has been a long time coming. A band with such a deep and rich rock history deserves such a tribute. There are several compilations out there, but this double disc set is worth the search (and I truly believe the single disc mixes simply can't do the band justice). Disc-1 concentrates on the early years, 1968-72 only... the sound is dated, but so much of the music from the late 60's is (the remastering helps a tad bit, but not much). Disc-2 has a much broader ranger - following Deep Purple from 1972 through 1998. THE GOOD: Most, if not all, the staples are here - "Hush", "Black Night", "Speed King", "Child In Time", "Strange Kind Of Woman", "Fireball", "Highway Star", "Smoke On The Water", "Woman From Tokyo", "Burn", "Perfect Strangers", "Knocking At Your Back Door", "King Of Dreams", "Ted The Mechanic", etc. The history contained in the liners notes is extensive. Chronological order is a plus - you can hear the band really mature over the years with their sound and line-up changes. Great remastered sound (especially) on the later era material. Many of the tracks are "Anniversary" remasters and/or remixes of which Roger Glover produced. THE NOT SO GOOD: Minor things really. I understand 6 songs from the early Rod Evans era is probably necessary here, but I was never a big fan of the 60's Deep Purple. Track 2, "Mandrake Root" - as much as it the liner notes say it's an early penned Blackmore treasure... I find it 6 minutes of absolute Hell to get through. "Hard Road (Wring That Neck)" sounds more like ELP than Deep Purple thanks to Jon Lord's overbearing keyboards. The crooning vocals in the middle of "The Bird Has Flown" are downright scary. This "DP 30 : Very Best Of" does a very good job taking songs from the wide catalog of Purple's albums over the years, but some albums were passed on - "Made In Japan" (and several other live albums), "House Of Blue Light", "The Battle Rages On"... and "Bananas (2003), "Rapture Of The Deep" (2006) released after the fact. No representation from one of the best live rock albums of the 1970's ("Made In Japan") is simply wrong. DP was always a great band live and there should have been at least 1 live track here. Several songs are missing - the most critical being - "Space Truckin'", "Mistreated", and "The Mule"; as well as some other deserving songs like ""Spanish Archer", "Anya", "Sail Away", "Lick It Up", "You Fool No One", and "Lazy". Utilize the space - between the 2 discs there is 22 unused minutes. OVERALL: "30" represents an excellent mix of Deep Purple tracks despite a few minor things wrong (and what compilation is perfect?). I firmly believe this is their best compilation to date - too bad it's now considerd an import. Lots of music from a legendary band, digitally remastered sound, classic Deep Purple songs (5 stars).
Customer review - 2004-11-05
- Most Pretentious Title Ever....
"In Rock" & "Machine Head" are tied for the best Deep Purple album ever (personally, I do not consider compilation albums real "albums"). It is impossible to appreciate Deep Purple's music to the fullest without hearing it within the context of the original albums. Buying every Deep Purple album, however, is obviously not cost effective for the casual fan, so the compilation "albums" are the next best thing. That being said this title might be the best "one" disc Deep Purple compilation & a great place to start a Deep Purple collection for someone on a budget. But if you have the extra cash, slam it down on the "Shades" 4 cd Box Set. You can pick up "Shades" on eBay or zShops for just over an Andrew Jackson (Amazon always deletes out actually dollar amounts). Or if you're really swimming in the green upgrade to the Mt Olympus of Deep Purple anthologies, the 6 disc "Listen, Learn, Read On". Also for those on a budget, check into Rhino's single disc compilation, "The Very Best Of Deep Purple".
Customer review - 2008-08-02
- Less is more
How can the best music from one of the best bands of all time not make a fantastic Greatest Hits album? If you tamper with the music, that's how.
I listened to this and somehow didn't feel right. The CD gathered dust for more than a year, and when I "rediscovered" it, didn't feel like playing it. "Made in Japan" however...

The simple fact is that Deep Purple's music should be listened to the way it was intended to. I still maintain that their live albums are their best albums. Check out the excellent digitally remastered Made In Japan: The Remastered Edition, or check out the DVD section. This one is best avoided.
Customer review - 2006-07-21
- Good "best of" CD.
Contains almost all standard Deep Purple listening, but for some reason, "Space Trucking" is missing! I understand including "You Keep on Moving" to represent Mk 4, but seriously, which would you rather have? Nothing against Bolin though. I'm disappointed that no best of compilation has included "Mistreated," which is often overlooked. Everything else is good. A good way to get started on Deep Purple, along with Made in Japan, Machine Head, and Burn.
Customer review - 2004-08-26
- Very Good And Interesting Compilation, But...
I think if you're new to Deep Purple you should buy all of their Mark II era albums first, (In Rock, Fireball, Machine Head, Made In Japan and/or Live In Japan, In Concert 1970-72, Who Do You Think You Are etc.) rather than this compilation.

Then you'll now why are they here Now.

Aside from Super Trouper and possibly Call Of The Wild (which are still very good songs, but really not their greatests), this is a superior collection than rhino's Very Best Of disc.

Note: Space Truckin' and Lazy are not included here, which are big problems, because they're one of the band's finest songs (The Rhino compilation does not include Lazy. This is shameful).

If you need one single-disc compilation, you should buy this.
Otherwise buy Studio and Live albums, not compilations.
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