Vinyl Record
Deep Purple - Burn
Deep Purple - Burn on LP vinyl. A 1974 record available from Kilmorna Collection in Listowel, Ireland.
LP · 1974
Available from Kilmorna Collection in Listowel.
Buyer notes: 1974 LP, currently available from the Kilmorna Collection vinyl shelf. Pay for pickup in Listowel or ship within Ireland for EUR 5.50.
Burn is Deep Purple remade under pressure and somehow sounding newly combustible. Released in 1974, it introduced the Mark III lineup, with David Coverdale and Glenn Hughes joining Ritchie Blackmore, Jon Lord, and Ian Paice. The change could have fractured the band's identity after the Ian Gillan and Roger Glover era, but the album uses that uncertainty as fuel. The title track announces the new chemistry immediately: Blackmore's riffing is fast and severe, Lord's organ surges like a second lead instrument, Paice drives with surgical force, and the twin vocal presence gives the music a rougher, bluesier, more heated personality. Mistreated stretches into slow-burn drama, Sail Away adds a sleek groove, and You Fool No One shows how the band could still turn precision into danger. Burn is not merely a continuation of Machine Head's hard-rock authority. It is a different animal: sweatier, more soulful, more openly tied to blues and funk impulses, and charged by the feeling that everyone involved had something to prove.
Burn matters because it proves Deep Purple's power was not confined to one famous lineup. The album preserves the band's heavy core while opening space for Coverdale's blues bite and Hughes's vocal and bass presence. It is the gateway to the Mark III period and one of the clearest examples of a major hard-rock band surviving a dramatic personnel change through sheer musical force.
For collectors, Burn is the necessary next chapter after the Mark II classics. It belongs beside In Rock, Machine Head, and Made in Japan, not as a lesser appendix but as the record where Deep Purple's identity bends without breaking. Anyone tracing British hard rock through the early 1970s needs this album for its mix of virtuosity, instability, and renewed appetite.
Hard rock with blues-rock heat, organ-guitar combat, and a more soulful vocal attack than the earlier Mark II records. Fast, riff-heavy passages sit beside slower dramatic pieces, giving the album a charged, muscular, slightly looser feel.
Recommended for: Deep Purple collectors following the Mark III lineup; fans of 1970s hard rock with blues and soul edges; listeners who want the bridge beyond the Machine Head era.
What year is Deep Purple's Burn from? Burn was originally released in 1974. Why is Burn important in Deep Purple's catalogue? It introduced the Mark III lineup and showed that the band could remain forceful after major changes in vocalist and bassist. Which songs define Burn? Burn, Mistreated, Sail Away, Might Just Take Your Life, and You Fool No One give the strongest picture of its speed, blues weight, and renewed band chemistry.