Episode Six
Love, Hate, Revenge (2005)
Label:   
Length:  0:00
    Track Listing:
      CD1:
      1.  
      Put Yourself in My Place    
      2.  
      That's All I Want    
      3.  
      I Hear Trumpets Blow    
      4.  
      True Love Is Funny That Way    
      5.  
      Here There & Everywhere    
      6.  
      Midnight Morris Ten    
      7.  
      Love, Hate, Revenge    
      8.  
      Baby Baby Baby    
      9.  
      Morning Dew    
      10.  
      Sunshine Girl    
      11.  
      I Can See Through You    
      12.  
      When I Fall in Love    
      13.  
      Little Ones    
      14.  
      Wide Smiles    
      15.  
      Lucky Sunday    
      16.  
      Mr Universe    
      17.  
      Mozart Versus the Rest    
      18.  
      Jak D'Or    
      19.  
      I Will Warm Your Heart - Carter, Sheila & Episode Six    
      20.  
      Incense - Carter, Sheila & Episode Six    
      21.  
      I Won't Hurt You - Neo Maya    
      22.  
      UFO - Neo Maya    
      CD2:
      1.  
      Love, Hate, Revenge (US version)    2:33
      2.  
      The Way You Look Tonight (outtake)    2:19
      3.  
      My Little Red Book (outtake)    2:30
      4.  
      PLastic Love (outtake)    2:30
      5.  
      Time and Motion Man (outtake)    2:35
      6.  
      Only Lonely People (outtake)    3:16
      7.  
      Zip A Dee Doo Dah (demo)    2:49
      8.  
      Cottonfields (demo)    1:57
      9.  
      My Babe (demo)    2:51
      10.  
      Love Is A Swinging Thing (demo)    2:43
      11.  
      Steal Your Heart Away (demo)    3:14
      12.  
      Walking to New Orleans (demo)    3:01
      13.  
      Let the Four Winds Blow (demo)    1:44
      14.  
      Mozart Versus the Rest (live)    2:49
      15.  
      Him or Met (live)    3:02
      16.  
      Hazy Shade of Winter (live)    3:00
      17.  
      Monster in Paradise (live)    2:27
      18.  
      Orange Air (live)    2:47
      19.  
      Castle (live)    3:17
      20.  
      Slow Down (live)    2:30
      21.  
      I Am the Boss (live)    2:42
      22.  
      Morning Dew (live)    3:20
    Additional info: | top
      "Most famous for including bassist Roger Glover and singer Ian Gillan before they joined Deep Purple, Episode Six managed to release no less than nine British singles between 1966 and 1969 without coming close to a hit record or establishing a solid identity."


      "Anyone arriving from another planet who saw this and the other various collections out on Episode Six could be forgiven for thinking that the band was a major part of the 1960s British rock & roll scene -- they could even be forgiven, after hearing a lot of the contents of this double-CD set, for again assuming that the band was a fixture on the charts, radio, and television. And even this reviewer is at a loss to explain how Episode Six never managed to chart a record, even in England, based on the contents of the first disc in this double-CD set, which contains their single A- and B-sides from 1964 through 1968. But the fact is that they didn't, and that the raison d'etre for this and the other CDs of their work is explained in the big, violet-hued sticker on the jewel case that advises, "File Under 'Deep Purple'." This is all solidly commercial and eminently listenable British pop/rock of its era, and very nicely done, whether they were belatedly emulating a Merseybeat sound ("Put Yourself in My Place") or trying to sound like the Beach Boys ("Mighty Morris Ten" -- a sort of U.K. answer to "409"). The title track is a cool piece of psychedelic pop/rock, complete with a jangling fuzz tone-laden lead guitar part and exquisite choruses adjacent to Ian Gillan's lead vocals. Most of what's here has been out before somewhere else, but that doesn't make this fascinating for fans of the period of music in which this band worked, or devotees of Deep Purple's history -- everything here is at least as relevant (and perhaps easier to take on its own musical terms) as, say, Ritchie Blackmore's work with the British instrumental outfit the Outlaws or Jon Lord's work as part of Santa Barbara Machinehead; the fact is, this is the one precursor unit to Deep Purple that should have charted records in the middle/late '60s. Disc two, designated "Rarities, Demos, and Live Recordings" is even better and more interesting, showing some of the rougher and more intriguing edges of their sound that got smoothed down in the process of completing their singles. Certainly, no first-tier U.K. band of the time ranked below, say, the Hollies or the Move would feel defensive about anything on this disc, with the possible exception of the one digression here to harmony pop, "The Way You Look Tonight.""
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