There isn't one, I'm afraid. Ian Gillan had just been to the pub and scribbled down whatever sounded good to him with the music. The track was very much an afterthought, written because the record company wanted a single. Amazing it did as well as it did.
Deep Purple ended in 1976.
The song "Deep Purple Hush" was recorded by Deep Purple in 1968 for their first album "Shades of Deep Purple". It was based on the song "Hush" by Billy Joe Royal in November 1967.
None of the singers of Deep Purple are gay.
The Gypsy - Deep Purple song - was created in 1974.
no, deep purple is not in the ock hall of fame. srry. :(
It is a black tulip, but black tulips do not exist. So the black tulips are a deep dark shade of purple, in which stands for Queen of the Night.
Iodine is a purple-black non metal that changes to a deep purple gas when heated.
i think pink looks good with deep purple I tend to wear black with it; black long-sleeved t-shirt, deep purple short-sleeved one and black trousers. It works.
There are some beautiful black roses. (But they are actually shades of deep purple). I stand corrected and retract my answer. I guess what I was looking at were not black roses but deep purple instead. Sorry.
The Beatles - Let It Be Black Sabbath - Paranoid Deep Purple - Black Night Derek & the Dominoes (Eric Clapton) - Layla Free - All Right Now Kinks - Lola
they are usually black or purple because these are very deep colors and famous people are deep into themselves
Deep Purple never performed on the Saturday Night Live TV program in the US, to the best of my knowledge. However, they DID perform on the Australian program "Hey Hey It's Saturday Night", in 1999, as can be seen on their "A Band Down Under" DVD release.
You get a shade of black, or a very deep violet depending on the mixture.How about maroon or dark purple.
Deep Purple was created in 1968.
Deep Purple ended in 1976.
The Romans had no colors with a particular meaning except for the color purple. The senators and aristocrats wore a purple stripe on their tunic and toga. However this Roman "purple" was more like a red-violet, not a deep purple. The imperial purple was a true purple, a Tyrian purple. It, by law, was only worn by emperors and triumphing generals.The Romans had no colors with a particular meaning except for the color purple. The senators and aristocrats wore a purple stripe on their tunic and toga. However this Roman "purple" was more like a red-violet, not a deep purple. The imperial purple was a true purple, a Tyrian purple. It, by law, was only worn by emperors and triumphing generals.The Romans had no colors with a particular meaning except for the color purple. The senators and aristocrats wore a purple stripe on their tunic and toga. However this Roman "purple" was more like a red-violet, not a deep purple. The imperial purple was a true purple, a Tyrian purple. It, by law, was only worn by emperors and triumphing generals.The Romans had no colors with a particular meaning except for the color purple. The senators and aristocrats wore a purple stripe on their tunic and toga. However this Roman "purple" was more like a red-violet, not a deep purple. The imperial purple was a true purple, a Tyrian purple. It, by law, was only worn by emperors and triumphing generals.The Romans had no colors with a particular meaning except for the color purple. The senators and aristocrats wore a purple stripe on their tunic and toga. However this Roman "purple" was more like a red-violet, not a deep purple. The imperial purple was a true purple, a Tyrian purple. It, by law, was only worn by emperors and triumphing generals.The Romans had no colors with a particular meaning except for the color purple. The senators and aristocrats wore a purple stripe on their tunic and toga. However this Roman "purple" was more like a red-violet, not a deep purple. The imperial purple was a true purple, a Tyrian purple. It, by law, was only worn by emperors and triumphing generals.The Romans had no colors with a particular meaning except for the color purple. The senators and aristocrats wore a purple stripe on their tunic and toga. However this Roman "purple" was more like a red-violet, not a deep purple. The imperial purple was a true purple, a Tyrian purple. It, by law, was only worn by emperors and triumphing generals.The Romans had no colors with a particular meaning except for the color purple. The senators and aristocrats wore a purple stripe on their tunic and toga. However this Roman "purple" was more like a red-violet, not a deep purple. The imperial purple was a true purple, a Tyrian purple. It, by law, was only worn by emperors and triumphing generals.The Romans had no colors with a particular meaning except for the color purple. The senators and aristocrats wore a purple stripe on their tunic and toga. However this Roman "purple" was more like a red-violet, not a deep purple. The imperial purple was a true purple, a Tyrian purple. It, by law, was only worn by emperors and triumphing generals.
The plant develops deep, slender, black roots