Burn [30th Anniversary Edition] (Deep Purple) from EMI
Disk 1: - Burn (2004 Digital Remaster) - Might Just Take Your Life (2004 Digital Remaster) - Lay Down, Stay Down (2004 Digital Remaster) - Sail Away (2004 Digital Remaster) - You Fool No One (2004 Digital Remaster) - What's Goin' On Here (2004 Digital Remaster) - Mistreated (2004 Digital Remaster) - 'A' 200 (2004 Digital Remaster) - Coronarias Redig (Single B-Side 2004 Remix) - Burn (2004 Remix) - Mistreated (2004 Remix) - You Fool No One (2004 Remix) - Sail Away (2004 Remix)

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Binding/Format: Audio CD Model No: 4735922 Release Date: 04/10/2004 Availability: dispatched within 24 hours Index: Music
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Music Pod Price: £4.49
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Product Description DEEP PURPLE Burn - 30th Anniversary Edition (2004 issue UK digitally remastered 13-track CD album including 5 bonus recordings Coronarias Redig - Single B-Side 2004 Remix Burn Mistreated You Fool No One & Sail Away - 2004 Remixes)
The 30th anniversary reissue of 1974 album is newly remastered and includes five bonus tracks, "Coronarias Redig" (single b-side 2004 remix), "Burn" (2004 remix), "Mistreated" (2004 remix), "You Fool No One" (2004 remix) and "Sail Away" (2004 remix). The departure of vocalist Ian Gillan and bassist Roger Glover seemed to rejuvenate Deep Purple, and 1974's Burn was a huge improvement over their previous effort, the lacklustre Who Do We Think We Are. In an interesting twist, new recruits David Coverdale and ex-Trapeze bassist Glenn Hughes share lead vocals on virtually every track--an enviable tag team, as both possessed exceptional pipes. The title track starts things off at full speed thanks to the phenomenal drumming of Ian Paice, and the intro to "Might Just Take Your Life" is one of organist Jon Lord's finest moments. Full of starts and stops, "Lay Down, Stay Down" features a fantastic solo "What's Going On Here" is about as good a single as Purple ever wrote; "You Fool No One" is compelling in its intensity; and the funky "Sail Away" is a sign of the band's future direction. "Mistreated," a fantastic slow blues, closes the album proper (let's ignore the boring instrumental "A 200," the record's only throwaway) and showcases Coverdale on his own for the first time. So impassioned is the singer's performance that the song would remain his concert trademark long into his post-Purple career with Whitesnake. --Ed Rivadavia, All Music Guide
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Associated music album categories: World & Folk & |
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