The lyrics of the song tell a true story: on 4 December 1971 Deep - TopicsExpress



          

The lyrics of the song tell a true story: on 4 December 1971 Deep Purple were in Montreux, Switzerland, where they had set up camp to record an album using a mobile recording studio (rented from the Rolling Stones and known as the Rolling Stones Mobile Studio—referred to as the Rolling truck Stones thing and a mobile in the song lyrics) at the entertainment complex that was part of the Montreux Casino (referred to as the gambling house in the song lyric). On the eve of the recording session a Frank Zappa and The Mothers of Invention concert was held in the casinos theatre. In the middle of Don Prestons synthesizer solo on King Kong, the place suddenly caught fire when somebody in the audience fired a flare gun into the rattan covered ceiling, as mentioned in the some stupid with a flare gun line.[9][10] The resulting fire destroyed the entire casino complex, along with all the Mothers equipment. The smoke on the water that became the title of the song (credited to bass guitarist Roger Glover, who related how the title occurred to him when he suddenly woke from a dream a few days later) referred to the smoke from the fire spreading over Lake Geneva from the burning casino as the members of Deep Purple watched the fire from their hotel. The Funky Claude running in and out is referring to Claude Nobs, the director of the Montreux Jazz Festival who helped some of the audience escape the fire. Claude Nobs (2006), the Funky Claude mentioned in the song Left with an expensive mobile recording unit and no place to record, the band was forced to scout the town for another place to set up. One promising venue (found by Nobs) was a local theatre called The Pavilion, but soon after the band had loaded in and started working/recording, the nearby neighbours took offence at the noise, and the band was only able to lay down backing tracks for one song (based on Blackmores riff and temporarily named Title n°1), before the local police shut them down. Finally, after about a week of searching, the band rented the nearly-empty Montreux Grand Hotel and converted its hallways and stairwells into a makeshift recording studio, where they laid down most of the tracks for what would become their most commercially successful album, Machine Head (which is dedicated to Claude Nobs). The only song from Machine Head not recorded entirely in the Grand Hotel was Smoke on the Water itself, which had been partly recorded during the abortive Pavilion session. The lyrics of Smoke on the Water were composed later, and the vocals were recorded in the Grand Hotel. The song is honoured in Montreux by a sculpture along the lake shore (right next to the statue of Queen frontman Freddie Mercury) with the bands name, the song title, and the riff in musical notes. (en.wikipedia) https://youtube/watch?v=arpZ3fCwDEw
Posted on: Wed, 10 Dec 2014 01:29:45 +0000

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