Rainbow - Catch the Rainbow live in Munich 1977 HD, FULL VERSION, Remastered. (2018)
RIP DIO! Catch the Rainbow live in Munich Olympiahalle 1977
Fantastic Performance!
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The original publication took place on May 6, 2010, my birthday.
Rainbow first world tour and initial success (1975–1978)
Rainbow performing in Munich, Germany, in 1977
Blackmore was unhappy about carrying the Elf line-up along for live performances, and so he fired everybody except Dio shortly after the album was recorded, due to Driscoll’s style of drumming and the funky bass playing of Gruber. Blackmore would continue to dictate personnel for the remainder of the band’s lifetime, with drummer and former bandmate Ricky Munro remarking “he was very difficult to get on with because you never knew when he would turn around and say ’You’re sacked’. ’’Blackmore recruited bassist Jimmy Bain, American keyboard player Tony Carey and drummer Cozy Powell, who had previously worked with Jeff Beck and had some solo success. Powell also greatly appealed to Blackmore in their mutual fondness for practical jokes.
This line-up also commenced the first world tour for the band, with the first date in Montreal on 10 November 1975. The centrepiece of the band’s live performance was a computer-controlled rainbow including 3,000 lightbulbs, which stretched 40 feet across the stage. A second album, Rising, was recorded in February at Musicland. By the time of the European dates in the summer of 1976, Rainbow’s reputation as a blistering live act had been established. The band added Deep Purple’s “Mistreated“ to their setlist, and song lengths were stretched to include improvisation. Carey recalls rehearsing the material was fairly straightforward, saying “We didn’t work anything out, except the structure, the ending ... very free-form, really progressive rock. The album art was designed by American fantasy artist Ken Kelly, who had drawn Tarzan and Conan the Barbarian.
In August 1976, following a gig at Newcastle City Hall, Blackmore decided to fire Carey, believing his playing style to be too complicated for the band. Unable to find a suitable replacement quickly, Carey was quickly reinstated, but as the world tour progressed onto Japan, he found himself regularly being the recipient of Blackmore’s pranks and humour. Blackmore subsequently decided that Bain was substandard and fired him in January 1977. The same fate befell Carey shortly after. Blackmore, however, had difficulty finding replacements he liked. On keyboards, after auditioning several high-profile artists, including Vanilla Fudge’s Mark Stein, Procol Harum’s Matthew Fisher and ex-Curved Air and Roxy Music man Eddie Jobson, Blackmore finally selected Canadian David Stone, from the little-known band Symphonic Slam. For a bass player, Blackmore originally chose Mark Clarke, formerly of Jon Hiseman’s Colosseum, Uriah Heep and Tempest, but once in the studio for the next album, Long Live Rock ’n’ Roll, Blackmore disliked Clarke’s fingerstyle method of playing so much that he fired him on the spot and played bass himself on all but four songs: the album’s title track, “Gates of Babylon“, “Kill the King“, and “Sensitive to Light“. Former Widowmaker bassist Bob Daisley was hired to record these tracks, completing the band’s next line-up.
After the release and extensive world tour in 1977–78, Blackmore decided that he wanted to take the band in a new commercial direction away from the “sword and sorcery“ theme. Dio did not agree with this change and left Rainbow.
From: Wikipédia, Rainbow (rock band)
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