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Highway Star (song)


FieldValue
nameHighway Star
coverHighway Star-Lazy.png
caption1972 Japanese single sleeve
typesingle
B-sideHighway Star (long version)
artistDeep Purple
albumMachine Head
releasedJuly 1972 (Japan)
September 1972 (US)
recorded6–21 December 1971
Montreux, Switzerland
genre
length6:09 (album version)
2:58 (single version)
6:39 (The 1997 Remixes version)
labelWarner Bros.
writer
producerDeep Purple
misc

| B-side = Highway Star (long version) September 1972 (US) Montreux, Switzerland 2:58 (single version) 6:39 (The 1997 Remixes version) "Highway Star" is a song by the English rock band Deep Purple. It is the opening track on the band's sixth studio album Machine Head (1972) and is the fastest tempo song on the album. It is characterised by long, classically inspired guitar and organ solos.

History

This song was born on a tour bus going to Portsmouth in 1971 when a reporter asked the band how they wrote songs. To demonstrate, guitarist Ritchie Blackmore grabbed an acoustic guitar and began playing a riff consisting of a single "G" repeated over and over, while vocalist Ian Gillan improvised lyrics over the top. The song was refined and was performed that same night. The song first appeared on the 1972 LP Machine Head and remained one of the band's live concert staples, being the set opener even before it was released on any album.

Record World said of the U.S. single release, "This mover has a Led Zeppelin tint to it, and that could bring the group back to the top of the pops."

The first live version released, recorded live for German TV program Beat-Club in September 1971, is featured on the History, Hits & Highlights '68–'76 DVD. It is the opening track on the live albums Nobody's Perfect (1988), Come Hell or High Water (1994), and From the Setting Sun… (In Wacken) (2015). The most famous live version is featured on the 1972 live album Made in Japan. The Guardian said, "Blackmore’s playing is like a force of nature on the Made in Japan version; those slashing chords in the intro, and that amazing solo featuring the distinctive neo-classical descending runs, combining the spirits of Bach and Jimi Hendrix."

Structure

The structure of the song consists of a 35-second bass/guitar introduction, before the band launches into the thumping opening riff, which soon leads into the first vocals section (0:55). The first two verses are sung, then Jon Lord begins his Hammond organ solo (2:14). This part consists mostly of fast, arpeggiated notes with a late Baroque/Early Classical influenced feel and makes use of the harmonic minor scale. The organ solo lasts for about a minute, then Ian Gillan sings the third verse of the song (3:24). At the conclusion of the third verse, the guitar solo starts (4:04), and lasts for just under a minute and twenty seconds. Blackmore wanted a very Bach-like sound and worked out the solo note by note over the chord progression Dm, Gm, C, A which itself was borrowed from Bach. Then, the fourth and final verse, which in the original recording is simply a repetition of the first verse, is sung, finishing around 6:10. Depending on the version, there may be a 15-second-long exit section before the end of the song. When the song is played live, Gillan has been known to improvise its lyrics, as seen in the official video for the song.

The guitar solo gained recognition in 2015, when readers of Guitar World voted it No. 15 in their list of the "100 Greatest Guitar Solos".

Personnel

Deep Purple

  • Ian Gillan – vocals
  • Ritchie Blackmore – guitars
  • Roger Glover – bass
  • Jon Lord – Hammond organ
  • Ian Paice – drums

Production

  • Martin Birch – engineer, mixing
  • Jeremy "Bear" Gee – assistant engineer
  • Nick Watterton – technician, Rolling Stones Mobile Studio operator

Cover versions

The song was covered by the Gwar side project X-Cops on their 1995 album You Have the Right to Remain Silent....

In 2012, a tribute album featuring cover songs from Deep Purple's Machine Head was released, titled Re-Machined: A Tribute to Deep Purple's Machine Head. On this album, a live recording of "Highway Star" was performed by rock supergroup Chickenfoot, as well as a version recorded by Glenn Hughes, Steve Vai, and Chad Smith.

In 2018, a cover by Cory Todd was used in the science fiction television series The Expanse, in the episode "Delta-V" of season 3. The lyrics of the song were rewritten in a mix of English and Belter Creole, a constructed language made for the TV series by Nick Farmer, that was used in the show by Belters, the inhabitants of the asteroid belt and outer planets. The lyrics were additionally adjusted to fit the in-universe setting, with the references to the car in the song being replaced with the spaceship. The full version of the song was later placed on The Collector's Edition version of the TV series soundtrack that was released on 13 December 2019.

Other bands to record the song include Dream Theater, Point Blank, Stryper, Metal Church, Buckcherry, Type O Negative, and Faith No More. Buckcherry's cover was used as the theme music for TNT's coverage of NASCAR in 2009.

References

References

  1. "The Deep Purple (Vinyl) Singles Bar".
  2. (2016). "The Deep Purple Family". Wymer Publishing.
  3. Vinny Cecolini. (20 June 2015). "Shootin' the Sh*t – Volume One: Conversations with Rock Anti- Heroes, Icons & Metal Gods". BearManor E.
  4. Martin Popoff. (2003). "The Top 500 Heavy Metal Songs of All Time". ECW Press.
  5. (27 December 2011). "Metal Rules the Globe: Heavy Metal Music Around the World". Duke University Press.
  6. "Roger Glover – the official website".
  7. "Roger Glover Interview".
  8. (23 September 1972). "Single Picks".
  9. "From the Setting Sun... (In Wacken) by Deep Purple on Apple Music".
  10. Tim Hall. (23 July 2015). "Ritchie Blackmore – 10 of the best". The Guardian.
  11. April 2015. "100 Greatest Guitar Solos: No. 15 "Highway Star" (Ritchie Blackmore)".
  12. (2010-05-10). "Deep Purple – Highway Star-German TV".
  13. (13 April 2015). "100 Greatest Guitar Solos: No. 15 "Highway Star" (Ritchie Blackmore)". Guitar World.
  14. (1987-09-15). "Death Piggy Spews and GWAR Too". Commonwealth Times.
  15. "Re-Machined: A Tribute to Deep Purple's Machine Head – Various Artists – Songs, Reviews, Credits". AllMusic.
  16. "The Expanse – The Collector's Edition". Amazon.
  17. "That Cool Dialect on The Expanse Mashes Up 6 Languages".
  18. Cory Todd. (12 December 2019). "Highway Star (Belter Version)".
  19. Steve Huey. "Who Cares a Lot: Greatest Hits – Faith No More – Songs, Reviews, Credits, Awards". AllMusic.
  20. Graff, Gary. (15 September 2009). "Buckcherry Preps Live Album, Secret Project As Kiss Tour Kicks Off".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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