Product Description
Rare 1974 Japanese Pressing Still In Immaculate Condition! Heavy Grade Gatefold Cover Includes Insert With Lyrics In English & Greetings From Deep Purple. Forget About Deluxe Box Sets And Remastered Reissues ~ This Is The Real Deal And The Only Version You Need!
‘Live In Japan’ was originally released only in Japan! After it became a smash success by being exported to other countries, the greatest live album ever was renamed ‘Made in Japan’ and released worldwide.
Condition – Vinyl: NEAR MINT! Amazing condition for records that are over 50 years old!
Condition – Cover: NEAR MINT! Beautifully preserved!
Japanese vinyl pressings are highly sought after by audiophiles and collectors, due to their premium sound quality and beautifully presented packaging. The sonic quality of Japanese records is regarded as the best in the world. No wonder all the original Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab records were pressed in Japan! The covers are printed on better quality heavy stock paper too. Near Mint condition original Japanese pressings are becoming scarcer ~ and therefore more collectable and valuable every year.
Side 1:
Highway Star (6:47)
Child In Time (12:19)
Side 2:
Smoke On The Water (7:27)
The Mule (9:43)
Side 3:
Strange Kind Of Woman (9:30)
Lazy (10:39)
Side 4:
Space Truckin’ (19:50)
AMG –
A fierce live recording which remains a landmark in the history of heavy rock music! Recorded over three nights in August 1972, Deep Purple's Made in Japan was the record that brought the band to headliner status in the U.S. and elsewhere, and it remains a landmark in the history of heavy rock music. Since reorganizing with singer Ian Gillan and bassist Roger Glover in 1969, Deep Purple had recorded three important albums -- Deep Purple in Rock, Fireball, and Machine Head -- and used the material to build a fierce live show. Made in Japan, its selections drawn from those albums, documented that show, in which songs were drawn out to ten and even nearly 20 minutes with no less intensity, as guitarist Ritchie Blackmore and organist Jon Lord soloed extensively and Gillan sang in a screech that became the envy of all metal bands to follow. The signature song, of course, was "Smoke on the Water," with its memorable riff, which went on to become an American hit single. But those extended workouts, particularly the moody "Child in Time," with Gillan's haunting falsetto wail and Blackmore's amazingly fast playing, and "Space Truckin'," with Lord's organ effects, maintained the onslaught, making this a definitive treatment of the band's catalog and its most impressive album. By stretching out and going to extremes, Deep Purple pushed its music into the kind of deliberate excess that made heavy metal what it became, and their audience recognized the breakthrough, propelling the original double LP into the U.S. Top Ten and sales over a million copies.