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    Deep Purple - Who Do We Think We Are (1973)

    Posted By: v3122
    Deep Purple - Who Do We Think We Are (1973)

    Deep Purple - Who Do We Think We Are (1973)
    EAC | Flac(Image) + Cue + Log & iPod M4A(Tracks) & MP3 CBR 320Kbp's
    2000 | EMI, 7243 5 21607 2 3 | ~ 521 or 524 or 171 Mb | Scans(jpg) -> 157 Mb
    Hard Rock | Bonus Tracks | Remastered

    Deep Purple had kicked off the '70s with a new lineup and a string of brilliant albums that quickly established them (along with fellow British giants Led Zeppelin and Black Sabbath) as a major force in the popularization of hard rock and heavy metal. All the while, their reputation as one of the decade's fiercest live units complemented this body of work and earned them almost instant legendary status. But with 1973's disappointing Who Do We Think We Are – the fourth and final studio outing by the original run of Purple's classic Mark II lineup – all the fire and inspiration that had made the previous year's Machine Head their greatest triumph mysteriously vanished from sight. Vastly inferior to all three of its famous predecessors, the album revealed an exhausted band clearly splintering at the seams. Except for opener "Woman From Tokyo," which hinted at glories past with its signature Ritchie Blackmore riff, the album's remaining cuts are wildly inconsistent and find the band simply going through the motions. In fact, many of these don't so much resemble songs as loose jam sessions quickly thrown together in the studio with varying degrees of enthusiasm. "Mary Long" and "Super Trouper" are prime examples, featuring generic solos from Blackmore and organist Jon Lord, and uncharacteristically inane lyrics from soon-to-be former singer Ian Gillan. With its start-stop rhythm and Gillan's fine scat singing, the energetic "Rat Bat Blue" is a memorable exception to the rule, but the yawn-inducing blues of "Place in the Line" and the gospel mediocrity of "Our Lady" bring the album to a close with a whimper rather than a shout. [A painfully revealing display of a legendary band grinding to a halt, Who Do We Think We Are was reissued in 2000 with the added incentive of seven bonus tracks and new liner notes by bassist Roger Glover].

    by Eduardo Rivadavia, AMG

    The evolution of heavy metal, Black Sabbath and Deep Purple crafted most of what would later become the oficial morphemas of the mother genre. Sabbath gave birth to the first heavy metal songs, while DP made, with "Deep Purple in Rock", the first wholly metal album.

    But, anyway, getting away from all those historic conventions, what about this album, which is like the watershed of a lively period in which Deep Purple was the most revered and powerful band in the world?

    The thing is, probably and debatably, as follows: after the coincidence achieved with "Hush", a top 5 single in North America and respectable sales of Deep Purple's debut album, the first mark of the band, with the progressive and psychodelic sounds under the elbow, attempted to reproduce the brief sucess achieved by the band, but without reaching it. In Europe, moreover, they were well unknown. The thing was going bad and Blackmore decided to shake off everything and led the band to a different direction.

    A long struggle took place between the second semester of 1969 and the first semester of 1972, when DP Mk II reached its peak of popularity.

    Gillan and Glover replaced Evans and Simper and, as well, the band left away the ancient sounds of progressive psychedelia for the pumping power of the guitars, bass and drums. The result of all this, as said before, was the birth of the first heavy metal album in the history: Deep Purple in Rock (this can be debated, certainly) and it was a huge seller in Europe and Japan, well followed by Fireball, created swiftly to maximize sells, but a great and kinda forgotten album. This two releases resurrected DP's image worldwide and with "Machine Head", the american market finally plunged at Deep Purple's feet. Made in Japan was the confirmation of this (and many more things). No other band was more powerful than DP.

    But, what was it, then? Well, it goes like this. Gillan and Blackmore couldn't stand together anymore and the band, far from producing new and mighty metal ideas, was a constant ego battlefield. After a long tribulation, Gillan decided to leave but before that, they released this "Who do We Think We Are".

    What can we say about the album? Well, first of all, the monetary impulse and idea of it can be felt everywhere. With huge sellers in US, like Machine Head or Made in Japan, this one came for sucking til the last drop of milk from the tit before the thing blows off. The guys quickly made a song for matching Smoke on the Water's hitting and there you got "Woman from Tokyo", the only slightly remarkable track here. The rest is pure and total filler.

    It's still, in any case, a total mistery to figure out how, from such a tremendous blaster forces like the albums cited above, the band could have fall into this American Friendly Rock kind of stuff?? That's a deep enigma, maybe there will be no answer ever. But the thing is that "Who do We Think We Are" sold millions and, at least commercially, worked out (only for its time, because now its probably the minor seller in Deep Purple's 70s catalogue). Nevertheless, there was to be a dead end for MK II.

    Certainly, in the hands of Foghat, Lynrd Skynrd or a band such as, this would have been a total masterpiece. But we are talking about Deep Purple, the freakin' crafters of early speed, power and melodic metal!! You know, Super Trouper, Place in Line, those are american style rock songs, AOR if you like. Robert Plant and Jimmy Page could have, probably, made of this things mainstream classics, but with Blackmore without doing wizard technicalities in the guitar, with Mr. Lord without magic and Gillan shouting like a pop singer this album can't work for DP.

    Mary Long is NOT a blood brother of Pictures of Home. Rat Rat Blue is far away from Hard Lovin' Man. Smooth Dancer has nothing to do with Fools. And that's it. This album is made with easy light rockers which are flickers of easy beat radio station songs and not the brain eater metal monsters of the early MK II days. This tracks are a kinda return to the MK I roots, but without the psychedelia and with Mr. Lord far asleep doing ear friendly sounds with his keyboards, not the intrincate and dark solos of the late 60s.

    So, for finishing, "Who do We Think We Are" is not a worthy descendant of the majestic productions made before by Blackmore, Gillan, Glover, Lord and Paice. It was made for profitting, for making easy money and for leaving away with a solvent bank account and not for creating new sounds, not for amazing with blaster solos, ruthless singing or solid and aggressive bass/drums lines. This thing is a forgettable moneymaker, only worthy for having the latent talent of the creators of the album and the name that carries the band. Nothing more. As an historical piece, you can totally have this. As a lover of early AOR, give it a try. But as a heavy metal definer, this album is a wreck. And that's all, folks.

    by Ritchie Black Iommi, metal-archives
    Deep Purple - Who Do We Think We Are (1973):

    Deep Purple - Who Do We Think We Are (1973)

    Tracklist:

    01. Woman From Tokyo 5:52
    02. Mary Long 4:26
    03. Super Trouper 2:57
    04. Smooth Dancer 4:14
    05. Rat Bat Blue 5:27
    06. Place In Line 6:32
    07. Our Lady 5:21
    08. Woman From Tokyo (1999 Remix) 6:37
    09. Woman From Tokyo (Alternate Bridge) 1:26
    10. Painted Horse (Studio Out-Take) 5:21
    11. Our Lady (1999 Remix) 6:06
    12. Rat Bat Blue (Writing Session) 0:56
    13. Rat Bat Blue (1999 Remix) 5:50
    14. First Day Jam (Instrumental) 11:27

    Exact Audio Copy V1.0 beta 3 from 29. August 2011

    EAC extraction logfile from 23. April 2013, 23:35

    Deep Purple / Who Do We Think We Are (7243 5 21607 2 3)

    Used drive : PLEXTOR DVDR PX-891SA Adapter: 1 ID: 0

    Read mode : Secure
    Utilize accurate stream : Yes
    Defeat audio cache : Yes
    Make use of C2 pointers : No

    Read offset correction : 6
    Overread into Lead-In and Lead-Out : No
    Fill up missing offset samples with silence : Yes
    Delete leading and trailing silent blocks : No
    Null samples used in CRC calculations : Yes
    Used interface : Native Win32 interface for Win NT & 2000

    Used output format : User Defined Encoder
    Selected bitrate : 1024 kBit/s
    Quality : High
    Add ID3 tag : No
    Command line compressor : C:\Program Files\Exact Audio Copy\Flac\flac.exe
    Additional command line options : -V -8 -T "Genre=%genre%" -T "Artist=%artist%" -T "Title=%title%" -T "Album=%albumtitle%" -T "Date=%year%" -T "Tracknumber=%tracknr%" -T "Comment=%comment%" %source%


    TOC of the extracted CD

    Track | Start | Length | Start sector | End sector
    ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––-
    1 | 0:00.00 | 5:51.52 | 0 | 26376
    2 | 5:51.52 | 4:26.10 | 26377 | 46336
    3 | 10:17.62 | 2:56.43 | 46337 | 59579
    4 | 13:14.30 | 4:13.47 | 59580 | 78601
    5 | 17:28.02 | 5:26.68 | 78602 | 103119
    6 | 22:54.70 | 6:31.70 | 103120 | 132514
    7 | 29:26.65 | 5:20.45 | 132515 | 156559
    8 | 34:47.35 | 6:37.30 | 156560 | 186364
    9 | 41:24.65 | 1:26.02 | 186365 | 192816
    10 | 42:50.67 | 5:21.30 | 192817 | 216921
    11 | 48:12.22 | 6:06.35 | 216922 | 244406
    12 | 54:18.57 | 0:56.30 | 244407 | 248636
    13 | 55:15.12 | 5:49.48 | 248637 | 274859
    14 | 61:04.60 | 11:26.60 | 274860 | 326369


    Range status and errors

    Selected range

    Filename H:\dafnaplus\1973 Who Do We Think We Are\Deep Purple - Who Do We Think We Are (7243 5 21607 2 3).wav

    Peak level 99.2 %
    Extraction speed 8.7 X
    Range quality 100.0 %
    Test CRC 27D9F29D
    Copy CRC 27D9F29D
    Copy OK

    No errors occurred


    AccurateRip summary

    Track 1 accurately ripped (confidence 8) [8550196C] (AR v2)
    Track 2 accurately ripped (confidence 8) [5DACDC3F] (AR v2)
    Track 3 accurately ripped (confidence 8) [25310101] (AR v2)
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    Track 7 accurately ripped (confidence 8) [594F2A37] (AR v2)
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    Track 9 accurately ripped (confidence 7) [1CC1387E] (AR v2)
    Track 10 accurately ripped (confidence 8) [184DED83] (AR v2)
    Track 11 accurately ripped (confidence 7) [370E9CFA] (AR v2)
    Track 12 accurately ripped (confidence 7) [EA9E0042] (AR v2)
    Track 13 accurately ripped (confidence 7) [80F50460] (AR v2)
    Track 14 accurately ripped (confidence 7) [07D13341] (AR v2)

    All tracks accurately ripped

    End of status report

    foobar2000 1.2.9 / Dynamic Range Meter 1.1.1
    log date: 2013-08-14 17:03:28

    ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
    Analyzed: Deep Purple / Who Do We Think We Are (7243 5 21607 2 3)
    ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

    DR Peak RMS Duration Track
    ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
    DR7 -0.72 dB -9.51 dB 5:52 01-Woman From Tokyo
    DR5 -0.72 dB -7.47 dB 4:26 02-Mary Long
    DR6 -0.69 dB -8.24 dB 2:57 03-Super Trouper
    DR6 -1.05 dB -8.74 dB 4:14 04-Smooth Dancer
    DR7 -0.99 dB -9.21 dB 5:27 05-Rat Bat Blue
    DR8 -1.11 dB -10.96 dB 6:32 06-Place In Line
    DR5 -0.83 dB -8.09 dB 5:21 07-Our Lady
    DR9 -0.37 dB -11.37 dB 6:37 08-Woman From Tokyo (1999 Remix)
    DR10 -1.16 dB -16.26 dB 1:26 09-Woman From Tokyo (Alternate Bridge)
    DR10 -0.78 dB -11.70 dB 5:21 10-Painted Horse (Studio Out-Take)
    DR9 -0.37 dB -10.83 dB 6:06 11-Our Lady (1999 Remix)
    DR8 -0.46 dB -13.06 dB 0:56 12-Rat Bat Blue (Writing Session)
    DR8 -0.45 dB -9.48 dB 5:50 13-Rat Bat Blue (1999 Remix)
    DR10 -0.07 dB -12.59 dB 11:27 14-First Day Jam (Instrumental)
    ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

    Number of tracks: 14
    Official DR value: DR8

    Samplerate: 44100 Hz
    Channels: 2
    Bits per sample: 16
    Bitrate: 947 kbps
    Codec: FLAC

    Deep Purple - Who Do We Think We Are (1973)

    Musicians:

    Ritchie Blackmore - guitar
    Ian Gillan - lead vocals
    Roger Glover - bass
    Jon Lord - keyboards, organ
    Ian Paice - drums, percussion

    Deep Purple - Who Do We Think We Are (1973)

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