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Side one
1. "Comin' Home" (David Coverdale, Tommy Bolin, Ian Paice) – 3:55
2. "Lady Luck" (Coverdale, Jeff Cook) – 2:48
3. "Gettin' Tighter" (Bolin, Glenn Hughes) – 3:37
4. "Dealer" (Coverdale, Bolin) – 3:50
5. "I Need Love" (Coverdale, Bolin) – 4:23
Side two
1. "Drifter" (Coverdale, Bolin) – 4:02
2. "Love Child" (Coverdale, Bolin) – 3:08
3. "This Time Around" (Jon Lord, Hughes)/ "Owed to 'G'" (instrumental) (Bolin) – 6:10
4. "You Keep on Moving" (Coverdale, Hughes) – 5:19
Come Taste the Band is the tenth studio album by the English rock band Deep Purple originally released in October 1975. The album was co-produced and engineered by the band and longtime associate Martin Birch. It is the only Deep Purple studio record featuring Tommy Bolin, who replaced Ritchie Blackmore on guitar. When Blackmore left the band, many observers and critics assumed that Deep Purple would not continue. It was David Coverdale who asked Jon Lord to keep the band together, and Tommy Bolin was asked to take the guitar slot.
Musically, the album is more commercial than previous Deep Purple releases, leaning toward a conventional hard rock focus with overtones of soul and funk. The album shows the strong funk influence from Glenn Hughes at this point, who had formed a bond with the equally funk and jazz influenced Bolin, but the direction tended to be more like Burn, released one and a half year earlier, with a heavier focus on hard rock. The recording with Bolin also allowed the band to take many creative liberties, as Ritchie Blackmore had been somewhat stray to work with at this point in the band's career. Generally the record is considered one of Deep Purple's lesser efforts, although it did sell reasonably well on release (#19 in the UK charts, and #43 in the US). The album was certified Silver on November 1, 1975 by the BPI, selling 60,000 copies in the UK.[1]
After tours for this album concluded in March of 1976, Deep Purple broke up for eight years. Tommy Bolin died of an accidental heroin overdose in December, 1976. In recent years the album has received some critical reassessment, primarily due to Bolin's contributions to the album.
In 1990, the album was remastered and re-released in the US by Metal Blade Records with distribution by Warner Bros. It was then re-released again by the Friday Music label on July 31, 2007 (along with Made in Europe and Stormbringer). While the label's website claims that the album has been digitally remastered, it is unclear which tapes were used as a source for this remastering, but is was very likely not the original master tapes. This is especially significant since EMI has claimed that the master tapes of this album are missing. However in December 2009, the Deep Purple Appreciation Society announced that the original multi-track masters had recently surfaced and that an official remastered version with bonus tracks (including remixes by Glenn Hughes and Kevin Shirley) would see a possible late-spring 2010 release.
On January 6, 2010 it was announced at the DPAS' website that there were two extra tracks from the Come Taste The Band sessions. One is a five minute jam with Ian Paice and Tommy Bolin, the other a proper three minute track that was taken out from the final release in 1975. It was also stated on the website that the remastering was still in an early state, but that it moved forwards. Two days later it was reported that Glenn Hughes had finished his involvement with the remixes at Stateside at the very end of December 2009. Kevin Shirley also stated that David Coverdale had been involved with some of the remixing. This 2-CD Deluxe 35th Anniversary edition will include the original album plus rare single edits on the first disc; and the remixes plus two unissued tracks on the second disc.
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