The Deep Purple Project continues! Β Join me for the next week (plus?)Β and seeΒ moreΒ rock majesty than you can shake a purple stick at!
DEEP PURPLE – The House of Blue Light (1987 Polygram)
The Deep Purple reunion was the success beyond what anybody hoped for. Β The band had revitalized after many acrimonious years apart. Β They were fresh and rejuvenated, and the resultant album Perfect Strangers was the proof. Β If the live recordings are anything to go by, then the tour was also dynamite. Β Obviously the next thing to do would have to be a second reunion album.
According to Ian Gillan’s autobiography Child in Time, things went south very fast. Β He found Ritchie Blackmore increasingly difficult to work with, refusing even to record guitar for one song. Β Gillan admits he was no treat either, so it was the band that suffered. Β Ian compared Deep Purple to a beautiful meal, a plate full of gourmet perfection — that’s Roger Glover, Ian Paice and Jon Lord. Β Ian and Ritchie were the fork and knife on either side.
The House of Blue Light (title taken from Little Richard via Purple’s own “Speed King”) was not a fun album for anyone to make. Β Some hold it in high esteem today, such as renowned writer Martin Popoff, who rated it 10/10 in Riff Kills ManΒ (as he did Perfect Strangers). Β While I believe Perfect Strangers is easily a 10, I don’t find The House of Blue Light to be its equal. Β The band may agree; none of its songs have been performed live since this tour. Β That also just could be residual hard feelings.
There is no mistaking the organ of Jon Lord on “Bad Attitude”. Β What an opening statement this is. Β Just as strong as the best songs on Strangers, “Bad Attitude” rules. Β It’s all about the spaces between, but Ritchie ensures there is a catchy trademark Deep Purple riff involved. Β His solos are exotic delight. Β Even in 1987, Purple weren’t afraid to load their single down with solos! Β Jon Lord’s synths are perhaps more prominent than they were in ’84. Β This is not a bad thing, because Jon Lord makes synth sound good. Β Synth and electronics take center stage on “The Unwritten Law”, powerful both because of and in spite of it. Β The pulse and beats give it a dramatic chase-like feel. Β Its drum outro is very reminiscent of “Chasing Shadows” from album #3 in 1969! Β It’s also the only Ian Paice co-write. Β In the 80’s, instead of splitting the writing credits five ways as they always had, PurpleΒ changed to awarding individual credits (and royalties). Β This led to petty squabbles and infighting.
“Call of the Wild” was a single and (pretty terrible) music video, andΒ didn’t really make much of an impact. Β Too bad. Β It’s one of Purple’s more pop songs, but that’s just fine by me. Β Purple have occasionally forayed into commercial songwriting, but have always done so with class. Β This one sounds like a Rainbow song circa the Joe Lynn Turner years. Β “Mad Dog” blows away all three of the previous songs. Β With a killer, choppy Blackmore riff right up front, it sounds vintage. Β Gillan gets to play some bluesy harmonica on “Black & White”, a good mid-paced groove but not an outstanding one. Β Something like this needs a timeless Blackmore solo to drive it home, but the fire fails to light.
There’s a natural split between side one and side two, which still comes across on CD. Β “Hard Lovin’ Woman” (supposedly a sequel to “Hard Lovin’ Man” from In Rock) is one of the few songs that was played live, probably because of its energy. Β It has the pace of an old-school Purple rocker, but not the timelessness. Β It’s largely forgettable and really only notable because it’s on the live album Nobody’s Perfect. Β Back to regal sounding Deep Purple, “The Spanish Archer” could really have been something had they bothered to play it in concert. Β It has a drama to it that is one of Purple’s strengths, but a lot of its strength is sapped by 80’s production values. Β Glover’s bass doesn’t have enough meat to it, and there is a hint of electronic effects on the drums.
Onto “Strangeways”, the only long song (7:35). Β Its vibe is very much in tune with “Hungry Daze” from the previous album. Β The lyrics are unusually topical for Gillan and Glover. Β “Have you seen the headlines? Β Princess engaged. Β Three million out of work, but that’s on the second page.” Β Its length is taken up by some of Ritchie’s most subtle playing, but if you listen carefully, you can hear Ian Gillan on the congas. Β Just like old times. Β “Mitzi Dupri” is the one that Blackmore refused to record. Β The guitar you hear on the album track is taken from the original demo. Β Once Ian came up with the lyrics, Blackmore proclaimed he did not like it and would not participate in recording it for the record. Β I think he found the words a bit dirty. Β Closing the record is “Dead or Alive”, speedy Purple in the classic fashion. Β If only the production of this album were a bit tougher, that song would be mercilessly heavy.
The House of Blue Light is not the equal of its predecessor. Β Given some better production and perhaps one or two different songs, it could have been. Β Someone in Purple (I think it was Glover) said that every other Purple album was “difficult”. Β Perhaps there’s a smidgen to truth to that, because The House of Blue Light does not sound like the same confident band that recorded Perfect Strangers.
3.5/5 stars
