Shades of Deep Purple

Shades of Deep Purple
UK album cover
Studio album by
Released17 July 1968
September 1968 (UK)
Recorded11–13 May 1968
StudioPye Studios, London
Genre
Length43:33
LabelTetragrammaton (US)
Parlophone (UK)
ProducerDerek Lawrence
Deep Purple chronology
Shades of Deep Purple
(1968)
The Book of Taliesyn
(1968)
Singles from Shades of Deep Purple
  1. "Hush"
    Released: 21 June 1968

Shades of Deep Purple is the debut album by the English rock band Deep Purple, released in July 1968 on Tetragrammaton in the United States and in September 1968 on Parlophone in the United Kingdom. The band, initially called Roundabout, was the idea of former Searchers drummer Chris Curtis, who recruited Jon Lord and Ritchie Blackmore before leaving the project. The Mk. I line-up of the band was completed by vocalist/frontman Rod Evans, along with bassist Nick Simper and drummer Ian Paice, in March 1968.

After about two months of rehearsals, Shades of Deep Purple was recorded in only three days in May 1968 and contains four original songs and four covers, thoroughly rearranged to include classical interludes and sound more psychedelic. Stylistically, the music is close to psychedelic rock and progressive rock, two genres with an ever-growing audience in the late 1960s.

The album was not well received in the UK, where it sold very few copies and did not chart. In the US, on the other hand, it was a success and the single "Hush", an energetic rock track written by Joe South and originally recorded by Billy Joe Royal, became very popular at the time, reaching number 4 on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart.[1] The good sales of the album and the intense radio play of the single contributed largely to the attention Deep Purple would get in their early US tours and also during the 1970s. Modern reviews of the album are generally positive and consider Shades of Deep Purple an important piece in the history of Deep Purple.

  1. ^ "Shades of Deep Purple Billboard Singles". Allmusic. Rovi Corporation. Archived from the original on 30 July 2012. Retrieved 25 December 2013.