Deep Purple European Tour

The Deep Purple European Tour was a year-long concert tour by English hard rock band Deep Purple, lasting from July 1969 until June 1970. The band played mostly United Kingdom shows, also covering West Germany, Switzerland, Denmark, the Netherlands and Belgium. It was the first tour to feature the classic Deep Purple line-up: Ian Gillan, Roger Glover, Ritchie Blackmore, Jon Lord and Ian Paice. It is considered to be the pre-tour for the In Rock album, as the band mostly played songs from the upcoming album.

Tour pre-history

In 1969, cofounders Ritchie Blackmore and Jon Lord decided to replace vocalist Rod Evans with Ian Gillan. Gillan declined to join Purple without his former bandmate Roger Glover. Lord and Blackmore accepted and, in 1969, Gillan and Glover, replaced Evans and bassist Nick Simper. This new line-up, known as MKII, immediately went on tour throughout Europe and the United Kingdom.

"I remember back in 1969 when Roger and I did our first show with Purple at the Speakeasy," recalled Gillan. "There were only twelve people there; well, twenty if you counted Keith Moon. But I looked at Roger and said, 'Oh man, this is it.' It was the kind of band we had both been dreaming of."

Tour dates

Date

City

Country

Venue

10 July 1969

London

England

Speakeasy Club

18 July 1969

Redcar

Redcar Jazz Club

20 July 1969

Erdington

Mothers

26 July 1969

London

Klooks Kleek

13 August 1969

Revolution Club

15 August 1969

Newcastle

Mayfair Ballroom

16 August 1969

Birmingham

Rebeccas

20 August 1969

London

Revolution Club

22 August 1969

Bilzen

Belgium

Jazz Festival

23 August 1969

Amsterdam

Netherlands

Paradiso

24 August 1969

26 August 1969

London

England

Klooks Kleek

29 August 1969

Lyceum Ballroom

30 August 1969

Gravesend

Kent Pop Festival

3 September 1969

Gothenburg

Sweden

Que Club

5 September 1969

Lund

Store Salen

7 September 1969

Copenhagen

Denmark

Club 6

9 September 1969

London

England

Marquee Club

12 September 1969

Barnstaple

Queen's Theatre

13 September 1969

Narberth

Wales

Queens Hall

20 September 1969

Malvern

England

Winter Gardens

21 September 1969

Redcar

Redcar Jazz Club

24 September 1969

London

Royal Albert Hall

27 September 1969

Nottingham

Nottingham College

28 September 1969

London

The Roundhouse

4 October 1969

Montreux

Switzerland

Montreux Casino

9 October 1969

Augsburg

West Germany

Pfarrsaal

10 October 1969

Stuttgart

11 October 1969

Essen

Grugahalle

12 October 1969

Amsterdam

Netherlands

Amsterdam Concert Hall

14 October 1969

Hamburg

West Germany

Musikhalle Hamburg

22 October 1969

Ipswich

England

Baths Hall

24 October 1969

London

Lyceum Ballroom

25 October 1969

Weston-SUPER-Mare

Winter Gardens

30 October 1969

Leeds

University of Leeds Refectory

1 November 1969

Bristol

Mayfair Ballroom

2 November 1969

London

Lyceum Ballroom

3 November 1969

The Roundhouse

7 November 1969

Romford

King's Head

8 November 1969

Folkestone

Leas Cliff Hall

10 November 1969

Bath

Bath Pavilion

13 November 1969

Newport

Regency Theatre

14 November 1969

Birmingham

Aston View

15 November 1969

Leeds

University of Leeds Refectory

16 November 1969

Glasgow

Scotland

Kinema

17 November 1969

21 November 1969

Eltham

England

Avery Hill

22 November 1969

Bradford

University of Bradford

23 November 1969

Epping

Groovesville

24 November 1969

Birmingham

Bennett Concert Hall

28 November 1969

Guildford

Guildford Civic Hall

29 November 1969

London

Imperial College

30 November 1969

Roundhouse

4 December 1969

Worthing

Worthing Assembly Hall

5 December 1969

Sunderland

Polytechnic

6 December 1969

Manchester

University of Manchester

7 December 1969

Bradford

St George's Hall

9 December 1969

Stafford

Keele University

10 December 1969

London

University College London

11 December 1969

Bournemouth

Rye Ballroom

12 December 1969

Hereford

The Flamingo

15 December 1969

Carlisle

The Cosmopolitan

18 December 1969

Redruth

The Flamingo

19 December 1969

Plymouth

Van Dyke Club

20 December 1969

Dagenham

Dagenham Roundhouse

21 December 1969

Birmingham

Mothers Club

28 December 1969

Croydon

Greyhound

5 January 1970

Paris

France

Anciennes

6 January 1970

Worthing

England

Assembly Hall

10 January 1970

Reading

University of Reading

19 January 1970

Dunstable

Dunstable Civic Hall

21 January 1970

Newcastle

Newcastle Music Hall

23 January 1970

Lancaster

University of Lancaster

24 January 1970

Hatfield

Curzon Cinema

30 January 1970

London

Royal Albert Hall

31 January 1970

Cottenham

Lawns Centre

6 February 1970

Waltham Forest

Technical College

7 February 1970

Leicester

Union Hall

8 February 1970

Erdington

Mothers

13 February 1970

Cardiff

Wales

Cardiff University

14 February 1970

Manchester

England

Free Trade Hall

15 February 1970

Nottingham

Boat Club

16 February 1970

Romford

Kings Head

19 February 1970

London

Paris Theater

20 February 1970

Preston

Preston Civic Hall

21 February 1970

Twickenham

St. Mary's University College

22 February 1970

Croydon

Greyhound

24 February 1970

London

Imperial College London

25 February 1970

Bristol

University of Bristol

27 February 1970

Leeds

Polytechnic

28 February 1970

Liverpool

Philharmonic Hall

4 March 1970

Zürich

Switzerland

Volkshaus

6 March 1970

Bern

Tanzdiele Matte

7 March 1970

Lucerne

Verkehrshaus

13 March 1970

Blackpool

England

Winter Gardens

14 March 1970

Weston-super-Mare

Winter Gardens

15 March 1970

Epping

Wake Arms

17 March 1970

Exeter

University of Exeter

20 March 1970

Edinburgh

Scotland

Odeon

21 March 1970

Dundee

Caird Hall

22 March 1970

Dunfermline

Kinema Ballroom

23 March 1970

Aberdeen

Music Hall

24 March 1970

Glasgow

Electric Garden

25 March 1970

Hamilton

Hamilton Townhouse

28 March 1970

Dagenham

England

Dagenham Roundhouse

29 March 1970

Hamburg

West Germany

Ernst-Merck Hall

30 March 1970

West Berlin

Berlin Sportpalast

4 April 1970

Cologne

Mulheim Sporthalle

6 April 1970

Vienna

Austria

Konzerthaus

11 April 1970

Chatham

England

Central Hall

18 April 1970

Ewell

Technical College

24 April 1970

Stoke

King's Hall

25 April 1970

Bath

1 May 1970

Art College

9 May 1970

Dagenham

Roundhouse Dagenham

11 May 1970

Leicester

De Montfort Hall

15 May 1970

Chelmsford

16 May 1970

Birmingham

Birmingham Town Hall

17 May 1970

Bristol

Colston Hall

18 May 1970

Dunstable

Dunstable Civic Hall

22 May 1970

Brighton

Brighton Dome

25 May 1970

London

Queen Elizabeth Hall

28 May 1970

Kiel

West Germany

Ostseehalle

29 May 1970

West Berlin

Neue Welt

31 May 1970

Mannheim

Rosengarten

1 June 1970

Düsseldorf

Rheinhalle

2 June 1970

Hamburg

Musikhalle

4 June 1970

Bedford

England

Bedford Town FC

6 June 1970

Cologne

West Germany

Sartory-Saal

7 June 1970

Munich

Eisstadion

8 June 1970

Basel

Switzerland

St Jakob Sportalle

9 June 1970

Offenbach

West Germany

Stadthalle

10 June 1970

Hanover

Niedersachsenhalle

12 June 1970

Twickenham

England

Eel Pie Island

14 June 1970

Croydon

Fairfield Halls

16 June 1970

Cambridge

Jesus College

19 June 1970

Manchester

John Dalton College

20 June 1970

Oxford

University College

21 June 1970

Frankfurt

West Germany

Radstadion

Setlist

During the tour, half of the setlist included MKI hits with the other half consisting of new MKII songs. "Speed King", "Child in Time" and "Into the Fire" were premiered on the tour, before being released on the In Rock album.

  1. "And the Address" {opening bars only}
  2. "Kneel and Pray" (early version of "Speed King" with different lyrics)
  3. "Into the Fire"
  4. "Kentucky Woman" (only occasionally)
  5. "Child in Time"
  6. "Mandrake Root"
  7. "Wring That Neck" aka "Hard Road"
  8. "Ritchie's Blues"
  9. "Paint It Black", instrumental (The Rolling Stones cover)
  10. ~Drum solo

Tour diary and notable live dates

Deep Purple MKII kicked off their first tour at the London Speakeasy Club. In an interview, Ian Gillan named this show to be favourite live performance of his career, as it was his first show with Deep Purple.

After a few United Kingdom dates, the band headed to Belgium, where they headlined Jazz Bilzen, and then again returned to the United Kingdom.

On 24 September, the band played at London's Royal Albert Hall, with the London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Malcolm Arnold. This was one of the earliest examples of a rock band collaborating with an orchestra. The show was called Concerto for Group and Orchestra and was later officially released. The Concerto and album itself was influential, with many rock bands following in Deep Purple's steps and playing with orchestras. Rock band Metallica made their orchestral debut in 2000 and named Purple's 1969 show as the main influence. The orchestral parts were written by Jon Lord and included three movements.

  • Opening set – first part (without Orchestra):
  1. Hush"
  2. "Wring That Neck"
  3. ~"Jingle Bells" instrumental
  4. "Child In Time"
  • Concerto For Group And Orchestra (second part)
  1. First Movement – Allegro moderato
  2. Second Movement – Andante
  3. Third Movement – Vivace presto
  4. ~Drum solo
  • Encore:
  1. Third Movement (2nd half)
  2. ~Drum solo

In April 1969, Deep Purple headlined the Montreux Jazz Festival in Switzerland as well as the Pop & Blues festival in West Germany. Other festival acts included Pink Floyd and The Nice. Ritchie Blackmore jammed with The Nice's Keith Emerson

On 19 February, they performed at the BBC's Studios, with the show later being released on CD. They then returned to West Germany, Switzerland and Austria, before again returning to the UK. The tour ended at Frankfurt's Radstadion on 21 June 1970.

Live albums and DVDs

Several live albums from the tour were later released.

  1. Concerto for Group and Orchestra CD/DVD
  2. Gemini Suite Live CD
  3. Kneel & Pray CD
  4. Live in Montreux 69 CD
  5. Scandinavian Nights CD/DVD
  6. Deep Purple in Concert CD/DVD
  7. Live in Stockholm CD/DVD
  8. Space Vol 1 & 2
  9. Doing Their Thing DVD
  10. Heavy Metal Pioneers (Tour documentary)

Line up

  • Ian Gillan – vocals
  • Ritchie Blackmore – lead guitar
  • Jon Lord – keyboard, hammond organ
  • Roger Glover – bass guitar
  • Ian Paice – drums