Deep Purple's 2005 album
Rapture of the Deep generally maintains the quality of 2003's surprisingly sturdy
Bananas. It's the second release from the re-energized lineup of vocalist
Ian Gillan, guitarist
Steve Morse, bass guitarist
Roger Glover, drummer
Ian Paice, and keyboardist
Don Airey, who replaced the retired
Jon Lord. The band's comfort level has increased, and after nearly a decade onboard,
Morse's stamp is all over the place. At first, this guitar genius' presence was noticeable because of what it lacked -- the incredibly distinctive Fender Stratocaster electric guitar tone of
Ritchie Blackmore. Thus, sometimes
Deep Purple didn't sound like
Deep Purple. However, the variety of tones
Morse incorporates in his style gives the pioneering
heavy metal quintet more sonic weaponry.
Airey's long, respectable career as a journeyman keyboardist-for-hire pretty much guaranteed he would largely adopt
Lord's organ-based style, at least at first, but he has expanded his sound on
Rapture of the Deep too.
"Money Talks," "Girls Like That," and
"Wrong Man" ride strong riffs and rhythms into decent grooves.
"Rapture of the Deep" floats along on a lightly hypnotic wave. The mature
ballad "Clearly Quite Absurd" has a lilting, controlled tempo, and it's the biggest surprise on the album;
Gillan's singing is appropriately subdued while
Airey's piano supplies the beauty and
Morse's gradually ascending riffs toward the end build the tension.
"MTV" is a vicious, bile-spewing, all-out attack on how the modern music industry treats classic
rock/heritage artists, although in 2005
Deep Purple clearly appeals more to
VH1 Classic than
MTV. Initially, the song risks biting the hand that feeds by correctly criticizing classic
rock radio for not playing new music by veteran artists. The last verse is a cannon blast that pummels clueless, uninformed disc jockeys who, during interviews, butcher artists' names ("Mr. Grover 'n' Mr. Gillian"), get facts wrong (misinterpreting the
Frank Zappa-inspired
"Smoke on the Water" legend), and avoid in-depth discussion of new music (like
Bananas) in order to record more station IDs.
Rapture of the Deep --
Deep Purple's first album for
Eagle Records -- misses equaling
Bananas by a notch or two, but it's a good example of how many veteran artists still maintain creative vitality. ~ Bret Adams