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| Jon Lord |

Jon
Lord
|
| Background information |
| Birth name |
Jon Douglas Lord |
| Born |
June 9, 1941 (1941-06-09) (age 66)
Leicester,
England |
| Genre(s) |
Hard rock
Heavy
metal
classical music |
| Occupation(s) |
Musician, Composer |
| Instrument(s) |
electronic
organ
hammond
organ
synthesizer
piano |
| Years active |
1967 - present |
| Label(s) |
Purple records
EMI
Harvest
Line records |
Associated
acts |
Deep Purple
Whitesnake
Paice, Ashton & Lord
The Artwoods
The Flower Pot Men |
Jon Douglas Lord (born Leicester 9 June 1941) is an English
composer, Hammond organ and piano player.
Born in Leicester, he has been a member of Deep
Purple; Whitesnake;
Paice, Ashton & Lord; The
Artwoods and Flower Pot Men.
He is recognised for his unique Hammond organ blues-rock sound,
compositional flair in both the rock and classical idioms and career
principally with the heavy rock band, Deep Purple.
In 1968, Lord co-founded Deep Purple with drummer Ian Paice.
The two were the only constant band members during the band's existence
from 1968 to 1976 and then from when they reformed in 1984 until Lord's
departure in 2002. He retired from Deep Purple after their UK tour that
year, and was replaced by ex-Ozzy Osbourne and Rainbow
keyboard player Don Airey.
One of his most ambitious works was his composition Concerto for Group
and Orchestra which was performed at the Royal
Albert Hall in 1969 with Deep Purple and the Royal Philharmonic
Orchestra. This was performed after the establishment of the legendary Mk
II lineup featuring Lord with Ritchie
Blackmore, Ian Gillan, Roger
Glover and Ian Paice. The concerto was later revisited in 1999 with
another performance at the Albert Hall with the London Philharmonic
Orchestra, and with Deep Purple guitarist Steve
Morse replacing Ritchie Blackmore.
Lord had been considering leaving the band for some time, due
to his busy touring schedule and his concerto being aired again, after
thirty years, in 1999. In 2001, Don Airey was hired to
substitute Lord for a month after a knee injury. Lord decided to leave
the band for good in 2002.
Lord is well-respected for his mastery of the Hammond Organ
and for his eclectic compositional talents and in his 34-year Deep
Purple career, you can hear his distinctive solos amidst many classic
tracks in the Deep Purple canon. Jon Lord is married to Vickie Lord,
the twin sister of Ian Paice's wife, Jackie. They both live
in the United Kingdom
|
Contents
- 1 Before
Deep Purple 1941-1968
- 2 Deep
Purple 1968-1976
- 3 Lord
as Composer
- 4 Whitesnake
1978-1983
- 5 From
Purple to Now 1984-
- 6 Discography
- 6.1 With
Deep Purple
- 6.2 Solo
- 6.3 With
Whitesnake
- 6.4 Misc
- 7 Further
reading
- 8 Primary
sources
- 9 External
links
|
Before Deep Purple 1941-1968
Born in Leicester, 9 June 1941, to parents Miriam
((1912-1995), nee Hudson) and Reg Lord, both now deceased, Lord studied
classical piano as a youngster from age five and those influences
continue to be a recurring trademark in his band and solo work. His
influences ranged from Bach
(a recurring, life-long connection in Lord's music and even in his
keyboard improvisation), to Medieval-period popular music and stretched
to the English tradition of Elgar. Simultaneously, he absorbed the blues
sounds that played a key part in his rock career and helped create the
"Jon Lord sound", principally the raw sounds of the great American
blues organists Jimmy Smith, Jimmy
McGriff and "Brother" Jack McDuff ("Rock Candy"), as well as
the stage showmanship of Jerry Lee Lewis. The jazz-blues
organ sounds coming from those musicians in the 1950s and 1960s were
seminal influences on Lord, the trademark blues-organ sound created by
utilising the blues scales on the Hammond organ (B3 and C3 models) and
combining it with the now classic Leslie speaker system (the well-known
Hammond-Leslie speaker combo). Where Lord's
keyboard contemporaries in the 70s like Keith
Emerson and Rick Wakeman who generally
steered away from the blues and only showcased it as a novelty, he
embraced it fully into his style.
Lord moved to London in 1959/60, intent on an acting career
and enrolling at the Central School of
Speech and Drama, in London's Swiss Cottage. Small parts followed on
such contemporary TV series as "Emergency
Ward Ten" and others and Lord continued playing piano and organ in
clubs and as a session musician to make ends meet.
He started his London band career in 1960 with the jazz
ensemble, the Bill Ashton Combo. Bill Ashton (jazz
musician), MBE, has subsequently become a key figure in jazz education
in the UK, creating the London Schools' Orchestra in 1965, which later
became the National Youth Jazz
Orchestra. Between 1960 and 1963, Lord (along with Ashton) moved onto
Red Bludd's Bluesicians (also known as The Don Wilson's Quartet), the
latter of which featured Arthur "Art" Wood on vocals. Wood (who died
in November 2006), was the elder brother of (later) Rolling Stones
guitarist, Ron
Wood. Art Wood had previously sung with British blues outfit, Alexis
Korner's Blues Incorporated and
was a junior figure in the British blues movement of the early-1960s,
that spawned much of the talent in British rock music in the 1960s and
1970s. In this period, Lord's session credits included playing
keyboards on You Really Got Me (The
Kinks 1964 classic) and following the break-up of Redd
Bludd's Bluesicians, Wood, Lord and drummer Red Dunnage put together a
new band.
Formed in London in late-1963 as the Art Wood Combo, the band
consisted of Wood (as vocalist), Derek Griffiths (guitar), Malcolm Pool
(bass), Lord (organ) and Dunnage (on drums). When Dunnage left in 1964,
he was replaced by Keef Hartley, who had previously been with Rory
Storm and the Hurricanes, replacing Ringo
Starr (who in turn left to replace Pete Best in
the Beatles).
The Artwoods were worthy of comparison to similar Deep South
blues-influenced bands such as the Spencer
Davis Group (Steve Winwood, organ) and the
Animals (Alan Price, organ), especially
given those bands' similar focus on the organ as the bluesy, rhythmic
core of their sounds. However, the same scale of commercial success
eluded The Artwoods. They did make appearances on TV shows such as Ready
Steady Go!, performed abroad and appeared on the first Ready Steady
Goes Live, promoting their first single Sweet Mary.
Their only chart single was I Take What I Want (released on 29
April 1966), the Sam & Dave cover, which reached
No 28 on 8 May 1966. They released an EP entitled Jazz in Jeans and an
album Art Gallery (both on Decca Records) in 1966. The album
included original and cover material from 1964 to 1966 (the album was
reissued by Edsel in the 1980s). The band reconfigured in 1967 and a
name change followed: to St Valentine's Day Massacre to cash-in on the
1930s gangster connotations of films of the time like Bonnie
& Clyde. They did not achieve success. Keef Hartley left in
1967 to join the well-known John Mayall's
Bluesbreakers. Jon Lord joined Santa Barbara Machine Head (the band
featuring Art's brother, the young Ron Wood) and left soon after to
cover for keyboard player Billy Day in The Flower Pot Men, that band
featuring later Deep Purple Mk I bassist, Nick Simper. Lord toured with
the band in 1967 to support their Let's Go To San Francisco hit single,
but neither Simper nor Lord recorded with them.
In early 1968, now intent to capture a heavier sound (given
the emergence of Cream and the Jimi Hendrix Experience and
the eventual success of similar "heavy rock" bands such as Led
Zeppelin), Lord helped form Boz, featuring Boz
Burrell on lead vocals (later to find fame with 1970s
supergroup Bad Company), session
guitarist Ritchie Blackmore (who
Lord dates as having met for the first time in December 1967), drummer Ian Paice
and bassist, Chas Hodges (later of
'cockney' pop group, Chas & Dave). That
effort was short-lived, but spawned the earliest near-Deep Purple
incarnation, Roundabout (in early 1968), which from March 1968 included
a line-up that became the eventual Deep Purple Mk I unit: Rod Evans
(vocals), Nick Simper (bass), Lord,
Blackmore and Paice.
Deep Purple 1968-1976
It is in this period that Lord's classic keyboard sound
emerged. Blackmore was keen to take the band into new, "heavy"
territory and to replicate the success of Led
Zeppelin. Lord began experimenting to create a keyboard sound
that was based on the Hammond organ as the centrepiece of his set-up
(in spite of the emergence of the Moog synthesizer in rock through the
experimentation of keyboard players like Keith
Emerson), but that was heavier than a blues sound and
delivered a rhymthic foundation to complement Blackmore's speed and
virtuosity as a highly technically-gifted lead guitarist. Lord also
loved the sound of an RMI 368
Electra-Piano and Harpsichord, which was used to great effect of songs
like "Demon's Eye", and "Space Truckin'". Somewhere around 1973, Lord
and a technician combined his Hammond C3 Organ with the RMI.
With a technician, he began to experiment by pushing the
Hammond-Leslie sound through Marshall amplification and
what resulted was the backbone of the Deep Purple sound: a growling,
heavy, mechanical sound that gave Purple a unique rhythmic counterpoint
to Blackmore's lead playing, but that allowed Lord to compete with
Blackmore with an organ that sounded as heavy as a lead guitar. From
early recording like Hush
(1968) to the eventual seminal Deep
Purple in Rock album (1970) it is clear that Lord's sound was as
critical to the Deep Purple sound as Blackmore's. In fact, Lord's
willingness to play many of the key rhythm parts to underpin Blackmore,
gave the guitarist the freedom to let loose both live and on record.
By 1969, the band were at a crossroads: Blackmore was keen to
stick to hard riff-based heavy rock, whilst Lord began indulging in a
passion to fuse rock with classical music. Blackmore agreed to go with
Lord's experimentation and the resulting Concerto For Group and
Orchestra (in 1969) was one of rock's earliest attempts to fuse two
distinct musical idioms. Performed live at the Royal
Albert Hall on 24 September 1969 (with new band members Ian
Gillan and Roger Glover making up the classic Mk
II line up), recorded by the BBC and later released as an album, the
Concerto gave Deep Purple their first highly-publicised taste of
mainstream fame and gave Lord the confidence to believe that his
experiment and his compositional skill had a future. The Concerto also
gave Lord the chance to work with established classical figures, like Malcolm
Arnold (knighted in 1993), who conducted the Royal Philharmonic
Orchestra in the performance and who also brought his technical skills
to bear by helping Lord score the work and to protect him from the
inevitable sneering of the older members of the orchestra.
Classical dalliance over, Purple began work on the now classic
Deep Purple in Rock album,
released by EMI
in 1970 and now one of heavy rock's key early works. Lord's style is a
critical counterpart to Blackmore's playing on the record and it was
clear that the tension between the two, competing to out-dazzle each
other, often in classical-style, mid-section 'call and answer'
improvisation (on track's like Speed King), something they employed to
great effect live, was the start of a unique sound in rock and the
basis of powerful live performances. Similarly, the now classic Child
in Time features Lord's playing to maximum tonal effect. Lord's
experimental solo on "Hard Lovin' Man" (complete with police-siren
interpolation) on the album is his personal favourite amongst his
various Deep Purple studio performances.
Template set, Deep Purple released a sequence of albums
between 1971s Fireball and 1975s Come
Taste the Band, by now, replacing the departed Blackmore with former James Gang
guitarist Tommy
Bolin, whose personal problems with drugs began to manifest themselves,
and after cancelled shows and below-par concert performances, the
writing was on the wall for the band. The break-up was finally made
public in July 1976. The highlights of Lord's Purple work in the period
include his rhythmic underpinning of the classics Smoke
on the Water, Highway Star and Space
Truckin' from Machine Head (1972), his superb
playing on the Burn album from 1974 and the sonic
bombast of the Made in Japan live album from
1972.
Roger Glover later described Lord as a true 'Zen-archer
soloist', someone whose best keyboard improvisation often came at the
first attempt. Alongside Lord's strict reliance on the Hammond C3 organ
sound, as opposed to the synthesizer experimentation of his 1970s
contemporaries, that approach places Lord firmly in the jazz-blues
category as a band musician and far from the progressive-rock sound of Keith
Emerson and Rick Wakeman. That
distinction would often cause Lord to be seen in a lesser light than
flashier players like Emerson, who melded rock and classical music, but
in an entirely more bombastic way than the more measured (and
conventional) Lord. Lord himself would rarely venture into the
synthesizer territory on Purple albums, often limiting his
experimentation to the use of the ring modulator with the Hammond, to
give live performances on tracks like Space Truckin' a distinctive
'spacey' sound. Rare instances of his Deep Purple synthesizer use
(later including the MiniMoog and other Moog
synthesizers) include ``A´´ 200, the final track from Burn.
However, it is clear especially from live recordings (even
including the California Jam concert recording from
1974), that Lord's technical skill with the Hammond and its
accessories, his ability to meld the Hammond soul to a heavy rock
sound, his note control and speed and his ability to match Blackmore's
technical fireworks onstage, suggest that his playing skills and
trademark easy confidence (but perhaps not his ego), were on a par with
Emerson and Wakeman. In fact, Lord's working experience of scoring for
and performing with leading orchestras far exceeded that of his rock
contemporaries by the late 1970s. Emerson ventured into similar
territory a near decade after Lord, with his Piano Concerto No. 1 (with
the London Philharmonic
Orchestra) from the ELP 'Works Volume 1' album of 1977.
Lord as Composer
In Rock set the tone for the Purple sound and Lord continued
to focus on his classical aspirations alongside his Deep Purple career
and often, as a release from the grind of touring that typified the
band's career from 1970 to 1973 and a tension that eventually resulted
in the departure of Gillan and Glover. The BBC, buoyed by the success of the Concerto,
commissioned Lord to do another work and the resulting Gemini Suite was
performed by Deep Purple and the Light Music Society under Malcolm
Arnold at the Royal Festival Hall in September
1970 and then in Munich with the Kammarorchestra conducted by Eberhard
Schoener in January 1972. It then became the basis for Lord's first
solo album, Gemini Suite, released in November 1972, with vocals by Yvonne
Elliman and Tony Ashton and with the London Symphony Orchestra
backing a band that included Albert Lee on guitar.
Lord's collaboration with the highly experimental and
supportive Schoener, resulted in a second live performance of the Suite
in late 1973 and a new Lord album with Eberhard
Schoener, entitled Windows, in 1974. It proved to be Lord's most
experimental work and was released to mixed reactions compared to the
more conventional Lord-composed Concerto and Gemini Suite albums.
However, the dalliances with Bach on Windows and the pleasure of
collaborating with Schoener resulted in perhaps Lord's most confident
solo work to date and perhaps his strongest orchestral album of all,
Sarabande, recorded in Germany between the 3rd and 6 September 1975,
with the Philharmonia Hungarica
conducted by Schoener. The strength of the album coincided with the
dissolution of the Mk IV Deep Purple line-up and the album was released
in October 1976.
Composed of eight pieces (from the opening sweep of Fantasia
to the Finale), at least five pieces form the typical construction of a
baroque dance suite and the key pieces, entitled Sarabande, Gigue,
Bouree, Pavane and Caprice feature rich orchestration complemented
sometimes by the interpolation of rock themes, played by a session band
comprising of Pete York, Mark Nauseef and Andy
Summers, later to find fame as lead guitarist in The
Police and with organ and synthesizers played by Lord.
Alongside his classical bent, Lord continued to find
opportunity to work in the rock vein, but away from Deep Purple. In
March 1974, he and Paice collaborated with friend Tony Ashton (died,
May 2001), on an album, First of the Big Bands, credited under the band
monicker 'Ashton & Lord' and featuring a rich array of session
talent, including Carmine Appice, Ian Paice, Peter
Frampton and Pink Floyd
saxophonist/sessioner, Dick Parry. They performed much of the
set live at the London Palladium in September 1974.
That collaboration gave Lord a new opportunity when Purple
dissolved in 1976 and that year saw the formation of the short-lived
'supergroup' Paice, Ashton & Lord
(PAL) in August 1976, a project that lasted only a year but that
resulted in the release of a single album, Malice in Wonderland in
1977. Such post-Purple freedom gave the popular Lord the chance to
create an informal group of friends and collaborators for himself and
people like Tony Ashton, Bernie Marsden, Ian Paice, Boz
Burrell and later, Bad Company's Mick Ralphs, Simon Kirke and others,
would work on various Lord solo projects. Over the same period, Lord
guested on albums by Maggie Bell, Nazareth and even Richard Digance.
Eager to pay off a huge tax bill upon his return the UK in the
late-1970s (Purple's excesses included their own tour jet and a home
Lord rented in Hollywood from actress Ann-Margret),
Lord joined former Deep Purple band member David Coverdale's new band, Whitesnake
in August 1978 and in 1980, Ian Paice made his debut with that same
band, on the third Coverdale/Whitesnake album, Ready An' Willing.
Whitesnake 1978-1983
The requirements of Lord in Whitesnake were largely limited to
adding colour (or, in his own words, a 'halo') to round out a
blues-rock sound that already accommodated two lead guitarists, Bernie
Marsden and Micky Moody. Whilst Lord's work was a
colourful addition to the Whitesnake sound (Lord now
adding a Yamaha
Electric Grand piano to his set-up and finally a huge bank of
synthesizers onstage courtesy of Moog (MiniMoog, Opus, PolyMoog), all
to give him the opportunity to play the 12-bar blues the band often
required and to recreate string-section and other effects. Such varied
work is evident on tracks like Here I Go Again, Wine, Women and
Song, She's a Woman and Till the Day I Die and a number of singles by
the band entered the UK charts, taking the now 40-something Lord onto Top
of the Pops with regularity between 1980 and 1983. Lord later expressed
frustration that he was a poorly-paid hired hand in the band and his
dissatisfaction (and Coverdale's keenness to revamp the band's line-up
and lower the average age to help crack the US market) resulted in Lord
and Paice leaving to take part in the reformation of Deep Purple in
1984.
During his tenure in Whitesnake, Lord did have a chance to do
two distinctly different solo albums. 1982s Before I Forget, featured a
largely conventional eight-song line-up, no orchestra and with the bulk
of the songs being either mainstream rock tracks (Hollywood Rock And
Roll, Chance on a Feeling), or - specifically on Side Two - a series of
very English classical piano ballads sung by mother and daughter duo,
Vicki Brown and Sam Brown (wife and
daughter of entertainer Joe Brown) and vocalist
Elmer Gantry. The album also boasted the cream of British rock talent,
including prolific session drummer (and National Youth Jazz Orchestra
alumnus) Simon Phillips, Cozy
Powell, Neil Murray, Simon Kirke, Boz Burrell and
Mick Ralphs. Lord used synthesizers more than ever before, principally
to retain an intimacy with the material and to create a jam atmosphere
with old friends like Tony Ashton.
Additionally, Lord was commissioned by producer Patrick Gamble
for Central Television to write the soundtrack for their 1984 TV
series, Country Diary of
an Edwardian Lady, based on the book by Edith
Holden, with an orchestra conducted by Alfred Ralston and with a
distinctly gentle, pastoral series of themes composed by Lord. Lord,
now firmly established as a member of UK rock/Oxfordshire mansion
aristocracy (in Lord's case, a home called Burntwood, complete with
hand-painted Challen baby grand piano, previous owner, Shirley
Bassey), was asked to guest on albums by friends George
Harrison (Gone Troppo from 1982) and Pink Floyd's David
Gilmour (1983's About Face), Cozy Powell (Octopus
in 1983) and to play on an adaptation of Kenneth
Grahame's classic, Wind in the Willows.
From Purple to Now 1984-
Lord's re-emergence with Deep Purple in 1984 resulted in huge
audiences for the reformed Mk II line-up, including 1985s second
largest grossing tour in the US and an appearance in front of 70,000
rain-soaked fans headlining Knebworth on June 22nd 1985, all to
support the Perfect Strangers album.
Playing with a rejuvenated Purple line-up (including spells at a health
farm to get the band including Lord into shape) and being onstage and
in the studio with Blackmore, gave Lord the chance to push himself once
again and his 'rubato'
classical opening sequence to the album's opener, Knocking at Your Back
Door (complete with F-Minor to G polychordal harmony sequence), gave
Lord the chance to do his most powerful work for years, including on
the Zeppelinesque title track, Perfect Strangers. Further albums
followed, often of varying quality and by the late-1990s, Lord was
clearly keen to explore where to take his career next.
In 1997, he created perhaps his most personal work to date,
Pictured Within, released in 1998 and with a European tour to support
it. Lord's mother Miriam had died in August 1995 and the album is a
deeply affecting piece, inflected at all stages by Lord's sense of
grief. Recorded largely in Lord's home from home, the city of Cologne, the
album's themes are Elgarian and alpine in equal measure. Lord signed to
Virgin Classics to release it and perhaps saw it as the first stage in
his eventual departure from Purple to embark on a low-key and
altogether more gentle solo career. One song from Pictured Within,
entitled "Wait A While" was later covered by Norweigan singer Sissel Kyrkjebø on
her 2003/2004 album My Heart. Lord finally retired from Deep Purple in
2002, preceded by an injury that required an operation. He said
subsequently, 'Leaving Deep Purple was just as traumatic as I had
always suspected it would be and more so - if you see what I mean'. He
even dedicated a song to it on 2004s solo effort, Beyond the Notes,
called De Profundis, the album was recorded in Bonn with producer,
Mario Argandona between June and July 2004.
Pictured Within and Beyond the Notes provide the most personal
work by Lord and together, have what his earlier solo work perhaps
lacks, a very clear musical voice that is quintessentially his.
Together, both albums are uniquely crafted, mature pieces from a man in
touch with himself and his spirituality. Lord has slowly built a small,
but distinct position and fan base for himself in Europe, collaborating
with former ABBA
superstar and family friend, Frida (Anni-Frid
Lyngstad), on the 2004 track, "The Sun Will Shine Again" (with lyrics
by Sam Brown) and performing with her across Europe and subsequently,
doing concerts also to première the 2007-scheduled Boom of the Tingling
Strings orchestral piece.
In 2003, he also returned to his beloved Rn'B/blues heritage
to record an album of standards in Sydney, with Australia's Jimmy
Barnes, entitled Live in the Basement, by Jon Lord and the Hootchie
Cootchie Men, 2003. He remains one of British rock music's most
eclectic and talented instrumentalists. Lord is also happy to support
the Sam Buxton Sunflower Jam Healing Trust and in September 2006,
performed at a star-studded event to support the charity led by Ian
Paice's wife, Jacky (twin sister of Lord's wife Vicky). Featured
artists on stage with Lord included Paul
Weller, Robert Plant, Phil
Manzanera, Ian Paice and Bernie Marsden.
Two Lord compositions, "Boom of the Tingling Strings" and
"Disguises (Suite for String Orchestra)", are recorded and scheduled
for Summer 2007 release on EMI Classics. Both feature the Odense
Symfoniorkester, conducted by Paul Mann. Additionally, a second Hoochie
Coochie Men album is in the can as of July 2006 recording in London.
Lord was the next-door neighbour of former Beatle George
Harrison, and played piano on the posthumously released Brainwashed
(2002) album.
Discography
With Deep Purple
- Shades of Deep Purple
(1968)
- The Book of Taliesyn
(1968)
- Deep Purple
(1969)
- Concerto for Group
and Orchestra (1969)
- Deep Purple in Rock
(1970)
- Fireball
(1971)
- Machine Head
(1972)
- Made in Japan
(1972)
- Who Do We Think We Are
(1973)
- Burn (1974)
- Stormbringer
(1974)
- Come Taste the Band
(1975)
- Perfect Strangers
(1984)
- The House of Blue Light
(1987)
- Nobody's Perfect
(1988)
- Slaves & Masters
(1990)
- The Battle Rages On
(1993)
- Come Hell or High Water
(1994)
- Purpendicular
(1996)
- Abandon
(1998)
- In Concert with the London Symphonic Orchestra
(1999)
Solo
- Gemini Suite (1972)
- Windows (1974)
- Sarabande (1976)
- Before I Forget (1982)
- Country Diary of an Edwardian Lady (1984)
- Pictured Within
(1998)
- Live in the Basement, Jon Lord and the Hoochie
Coochie Men (2003)
- Beyond The Notes (2004)
With Whitesnake
- Trouble
(1978)
- Lovehunter (1979)
- Ready an' Willing
(1980)
- Live...In the Heart
of the City (1981)
- Come an' Get It
(1981)
- Saints &
Sinners (1982)
- Slide It In
(1984)
Misc
- Art Gallery (1966, with The Artwoods)
- Gemini Suite Live
(1970, with Deep Purple)
- The Last Rebel (1971, film score with Tony
Ashton)
- Windows (1974, with Eberhard
Schoener)
- First of the Big Bands (1974, with Tony
Ashton)
- Malice in Wonderland (1977, with PAL)
- The Country Diary Of An Edwardian Lady
(1984, with Alfred Ralston)
- From Darkness To Light (2000, not
released)
- Calling The Wild (2000, film score, not
released)
- Boom Of The Tingling Strings (2003, not
released)
- Disguises (2004, not released)
Further reading
- Deep Purple: Charlesworth, Chris (Omnibus Press, 1983)
- Deep Purple, Heavy Metal Photo Book: Welch, Chris with
Hasebe, Koh (Omnibus Press 1984)
- Deep Purple: Sailor, Michael (Hannibal Verlag, 2005)
- Smoke on the Water, The Deep Purple Story: Thompson, Dave
(ECW Press, 2004)
- The Complete Deep Purple: Heatley, Michael (Reynolds
& Hearn, 2005)
Primary sources
- 'Beyond the Notes': Lord, Jon sleeve-notes by subject
(Capitol Music, 2004)
- 'Pictured Within': Lord, Jon sleeve-notes by subject
(Virgin Classics, 1997)
- 'Before I Forget': Jon Lord interviews by Mike Beecher and
Phil Easton (1982)
- 'Sarabande': Notes by Vince Budd, South Uist, research by
Simon Robinson, July 1998
- 'Burn': 30th Anniversary Edition, notes by Nigel Young, May
2004
- 'Made in Japan': sleeve notes to official remastered
recording by Simon Robinson (1998)
- 'Purple Reign': Interview with Jon Lord by Lee Marlow, 26
July 2000
- 'Kindred Sprit' magazine: Interview with Jon Lord, Summer
2000
- 'Daily Mail': Weekend Magazine, Interview with Jon Lord 'On
the Mauve', 1997
- 'Keyboard Review': Interview with Jon Lord by Cliff Douse,
Issue 139, July 1997
- 'Classic Albums: Machine Head' (DVD): Interviews with Jon
Lord, Gillan, Glover, Paice, Blackmore, Eagle Rock Entertainment
Limited, 2002
- 'The Kids Are Alright': Interview with Bill Ashton, MBE, by
Vinyl Vulture.
- 'Jon Lord - With Pictures', 90-minute Australian DVD
documentary on Jon Lord with extensive interviews, 2003
External links
| v • d • e Deep Purple |
| Current
members |
| Ian Gillan | Steve
Morse | Don
Airey | Roger
Glover | Ian Paice |
| Former
members |
| Jon Lord
| Ritchie Blackmore | David
Coverdale | Glenn Hughes | Joe
Lynn Turner | Rod
Evans | Nick Simper | Tommy
Bolin | Joe
Satriani |
| Discography |
| Albums : Shades
of Deep Purple | The
Book of Taliesyn | Deep
Purple | Deep
Purple in Rock | Fireball
| Machine Head
| Who Do We Think We Are
| Burn | Stormbringer
| Come Taste the Band
| Perfect Strangers
| The House of Blue Light
| Slaves & Masters
| The Battle Rages On
| Purpendicular
| Abandon | Bananas
| Rapture of the Deep |
| Live albums: Concerto for Group
and Orchestra | Made
in Japan | Made
in Europe | Last
Concert in Japan | Deep Purple in Concert
| Live in London
| Scandinavian Nights
| Nobody's Perfect
| In the Absence of Pink:
Knebworth '85 | Come Hell or High Water
| King
Biscuit Flower Hour Presents: Deep Purple in Concert
| California Jamming
| Mk III: The Final Concerts
| Live at the Olympia '96
| Gemini Suite Live
| In Concert with the London Symphony Orchestra | Total Abandon: Live
in Australia | Live at the Rotterdam Ahoy
| This Time Around:
Live in Tokyo | The
Soundboard Series | Inglewood - Live in
California | Kneel & Pray
| Space Vol 1 & 2
| Denmark 1972
| Perks and Tit
| Just Might Take Your Life | Live
in Stockholm | Live in Montreux 1969
| Live in Paris 1975 | Live
in Europe 1993 | Live
at Montreux 1996 | They All Came Down to
Montreux |
| Videos
and DVDs:
Concerto for Group
and Orchestra | Special Edition EP
| Live In Concert 1972/73
| California Jam / Live in
California 74 | Rises
Over Japan | Come Hell or High
Water | Bombay Calling | Live
at Montreux 1996 | In Concert with
the London Symphony Orchestra | Total Abandon Australia
'99 | New, Live & Rare
| Perihelion | Live Encounters |
| Compilation Albums: Purple
Passages | The Early Years
| 24 Carat Purple
| When
We Rock, We Rock, and When We Roll, We Roll | The
Mark II Purple Singles | Deepest
Purple: The Very Best of Deep Purple | The
Anthology | Powerhouse
| The Deep Purple
Singles A's and B's | 30: Very Best of Deep
Purple | Days May Come and Days
May Go | Listen, Learn, Read On
| Winning Combinations: Deep Purple and Rainbow | Deep Purple:
The Platinum Collection |
| Related
articles |
| Rainbow | Blackmore's
Night | Ian Gillan Band | Gillan | Whitesnake
| Trapeze
| Black
Sabbath | Dixie
Dregs | Episode
Six | |
| v • d • e Whitesnake |
| Members |
| David
Coverdale - Doug
Aldrich - Reb Beach
- Uriah Duffy - Tommy
Aldridge - Timothy
Drury |
| Jon Lord - Dave Dowle
- Ian
Paice - Cozy Powell - Denny
Carmassi - Aynsley Dunbar - Neil Murray - Rudy Sarzo
- Bernie
Marsden - Mel
Galley - Micky
Moody - John
Sykes - Adrian Vandenberg - Vivian
Campbell - Steve
Vai - Warren DeMartini - Marco
Mendoza |
| Discography |
| Studio albums:
Snakebite
- Trouble
- Lovehunter
- Ready an' Willing
- Come an' Get It
- Saints &
Sinners - Slide It
In - Whitesnake
- Slip of the Tongue
- Restless Heart |
| Live albums:
Live at
Hammersmith - Live...In the Heart
of the City - Starkers
in Tokyo - Live: In The Shadow
Of The Blues |