UncleMeat wrote:
Example that most of you will know:
the song Smoke on the Water by Deep Purple is based on a gig they had
to do in Montreux (Lake Geneva) after Frank Zappa. However, during that
concert someone burned the place down.
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Sorry to correct that story, but they weren't in Montreux for a gig,
but wanted to make a record there. Ian Gillan tells the story as
follows:
"We
all came out to Montreux, to make an album; because the guys were keen
to get a different sound. The Rolling Stones had a state of the art
mobile recording studio built into a truck; so we rented it and had it
set up alongside the Casino, which was a beautiful old wooden building.
(Funky) Claude Nobs; who was (and still is, as I write nearly thirty
years later) the driving force behind entertainment in Montreux
(records, films, the jazz festival and so on), had arranged for us to
use the concert hall in the Casino to make our record, and we duly
arrived and watched the last show of the season, the day before the
Casino (and the town) closed down for the winter of '72.
Frank Zappa and the 'Mothers of Invention' were onstage and I was
sitting in the audience marvelling at the Man and his music. I remember
the exquisite harmonies of Flo and Eddie (Turtles) drifting away, as
there was a disturbance. I didn't seem much at the time as some guy
shot a flare gun from over my right shoulder. I saw two blobs of fire
loop across the hall into the top corner.
Very quickly, the room caught fire and there was a danger of
pandemonium as people started to panic. Frank stopped the band and took
over, controlling the situation and talking almost everyone out safely.
A few kids had run back through the kitchen door and down a flight
to nowhere. Claude Nobs, heroically, found the party and led them to
safety.
No lives were lost; thanks to Frank and Claude and no thanks at all to the dickhead who started it.
We sat in the restaurant of the hotel 'Eden au Lac' and watched the
flames racing into the sky, fed by the downdraught of the wind from the
mountains. Later, as the inferno waned, we looked out across Lake
Geneva and saw that it was covered with a layer of smoke.
Most of us who were there will agree on this version. However, like
anything, it depends upon where you were standing at the time……….
Roger Glover and I have been writing partners since '65. He came up
with the title. I thought he wrote it on a napkin that very moment but
he says it was later on. Roger's memory being what it is, I'd say…..it
doesn't really matter. What does matter though is the phrase…'Smoke on
the Water'. Seems obvious doesn't it? But that's what you do as a
writer; and Roger has never failed to be able to put pictures into
words.
So, Claude helped us to make fresh arrangements and after one
abortive attempt at another hotel we ended up at the Grand, and time
was getting short.
We were also short of material. However, there was one track we hadn't worked on.
A brilliantly simple riff that Ritchie Blackmore had come up with.
Roger's title fitted well over the chorus and we wrote the narrative
lyric, which tells the story (as much as you can in so many words) of
the making of Machine Head (the album title was also Ritchie's idea
btw)."
------------- "We've got to get in to get out"
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