![]() ![]() Even the first single I played on, Hallelujah, was a cover.”īy 1970, Deep Purple were making strides with their own songs, most notably Black Night, but Hush remained a key part of their live set. We were doing a lot of covers in those early days: Hush, Kentucky Woman, Help!, Hey Joe. “Then six months or a year later I was playing it with Purple. “I’d first heard Hush on the radio by an English guy called Kris Ife,” recalls Glover, who joined Purple, along with singer Ian Gillan, from Episode Six in 1969. ![]() Oddly, the UK proved resistant to Hush’s charms, but the song immediately became a highlight of Purple’s set-list. ![]() Built around a surging rhythm (likened by Lord to a samba) and irresistible ‘ Na-nana-na’ vocal spurts, the song peaked at No.4 on the US Billboard chart and also charted high in neighbouring Canada and in parts of Europe. It was a move that paid off, at least overseas. The band pushed Parlophone to release their cover of The Beatles’ Help as a debut single, but their paymasters were instead intent on issuing Hush. The album completed, Deep Purple still weren’t convinced. It was left to Simper to hastily phone his friend Rod Freeman, who’d recently been singing Hush with a band.įreeman fetched up with his guitar and dutifully wrote down the chords and lyrics. ![]() The song had been earmarked for the final tracklist, but nobody had thought to bring along a copy of Royal’s recording as a guide. Recorded at London’s Pye studio in the spring of 1968, during sessions for their debut album Shades Of Deep Purple, Hush very nearly didn’t happen at all. ![]()
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