Ritchie Blackmore Departure: make all musicians and fans in…

RITCHIE BLACKMORE Says DEEP PURPLE’s Music Became ‘A Bit Monophonic’ Before His Final Departure

In a new interview with Long Island Weekly, DEEP PURPLE and RAINBOW legend Ritchie Blackmore spoke about his reliance on non-traditional instruments with his medieval and Renaissance band BLACKMORE’S NIGHT, in which he is joined by his wife, singer Candice Night.

“I’m not really interested in the modern approach with modern instruments,” he admitted. “We use synthesizers on certain things, but they are there to see how we’re going to progress with the other instruments. It’s all about going back to the basics — simple music.

“Melody is very important to me,” he explained. “It’s an important thing. That’s why, even in DEEP PURPLE, towards the end, before I left, our music was a bit monophonic. There wasn’t too much melody and if I don’t hear a melody, I can’t be inspired. I find that with a lot of hard rock bands today — not the death metal or whatever — the melody is certainly not there and I can’t relate to that.”

Blackmore is a co-founder of DEEP PURPLE and wrote many of their most memorable riffs, including “Smoke On The Water”, but he has not played with the group since his 1993 departure.

During his time away from PURPLEBlackmore established the neo-classical band called RAINBOW, which fused baroque music influences elements with hard rock before gradually progressing to catchy pop-style hard rock.

A year ago, DEEP PURPLE drummer Ian Paice told Darren Paltrowitz, host of the “Paltrocast With Darren Paltrowitz”, that “the only time” he and his bandmates “got concerned” about the group’s future “was towards the end of Ritchie‘s tenure with the band, as he was losing interest and the performances from the band were not great because you need everybody helping each other out; you can’t be a passenger. And we just saw the audiences getting smaller and less impressed, and that was worrying,” he admitted. “And when Ritchie decided to leave, that was pretty traumatic, because [we didn’t] know what to do then. And had we not been contracted to have to go to Japan, it might all have fallen to bits then. But we had to go to Japan, with the wonderful Joe Satriani [filling in], and it proved that there is life after even somebody as great as Ritchie is. He didn’t wanna be there, but it was just as much our band as it was his. And we were still having fun. We started to have fun again when Joe turned up and just became a fifth member of the band, pulling his weight. So that was the light at the end of the tunnel.”

Paice‘s comments echo those made by DEEP PURPLE bassist Roger Glover, who told U.K.’s Planet Rock in a September 2020 interview that it was a “turbulent time” for him and his bandmates when Blackmore left the group for the final time in November 1993 after a concert in Finland. “It was surprise to me when Ritchie handed in his notice and said he didn’t wanna play any more gigs after Helsinki,” he said. “And we were on tour at the time. It was so difficult to take in. Somehow we were determined to carry on, if he was gonna do that. Joe Satriani was a temporary replacement, which did show us the way that we could exist without Ritchie. But I felt very strongly that you can’t replace Ritchie. He is who he is, and there’s no way you can replace him.”

He continued: “If you get someone to play like him or similar or something like that, it would have been a horrible comparison. We needed something different. And to me, the character of PURPLE always was Ritchie and Jon [Lord, late PURPLE keyboardist] as instrumentalists, and they’re both virtuosos. So you’ve gotta have a virtuoso. There’s thousands of guitarists who can play, but there’s very few who stand out as being very individual and different to everyone else. And I felt Steve [Morse, longtime PURPLE guitarist] presented that. He asked me when we first met, he said, ‘What do you want from me?’ I said, ‘I want you to be yourself. You can’t be in the band unless you’re yourself, a hundred percent.’ And he said, ‘So I can play anything?’ I said, ‘Yeah. Anything will do. We’ll let you know if we want it or not.'”

According to Glover, the lineup change had an immediate effect on the band morale.

‘Purpendicular’ was one of the happiest albums I’ve ever made, because suddenly we found ourselves writing songs we could never have written before,” Roger said, referring to DEEP PURPLE‘s first LP with Morse.

Blackmore, 77, quit rock and roll in 1997 to form BLACKMORE’S NIGHT with then-girlfriend Night. Since then, BLACKMORE’S NIGHT has released 11 studio albums.

Blackmore stepped away from his Renaissance-inspired brand of music with BLACKMORE’S NIGHT in 2016 to perform a handful of shows with a brand-new lineup of RAINBOW.

In addition to Blackmore and Night (backing vocals),the current incarnation of RAINBOW includes singer Ronnie RomeroSTRATOVARIUS keyboardist Jens JohanssonBLACKMORE’S NIGHT drummer David Keith, bassist Bob Nouveau (a.k.a. Robert “Bob” Curiano, ex-BLACKMORE’S NIGHT),and backing singer Lady Lynn.

The two shows RAINBOW played in Germany in June 2016 were caught on camera to produce “Memories In Rock – Live In Germany”, which was released in November 2016 via Eagle Rock Entertainment on DVD+2CD, Blu-ray+2CD, and digital formats.

After Ritchie left DEEP PURPLE for the final time in 1993, he reformed RAINBOW for one album (1995’s “Stranger In Us All”) and one tour, ending things in Denmark in 1997.

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