Guitar & Bass Tabs
Deep Purple
About Deep Purple
Deep Purple emerged in 1968 as part of Britain's vibrant late-60s hard rock surge. The band would become synonymous with heavy riffs, soaring organ solos, and a fearless willingness to push boundaries. Their early work culminated in the Mark II lineup—Ritchie Blackmore, Jon Lord, Ian Gillan, Roger Glover, and Ian Paice—whose chemistry defined a sound that bridged blues, classical motifs, and metal-forward energy. Their breakthrough came with Machine Head (1972), and with enduring anthems like Smoke on the Water, they helped shape hard rock and heavy metal for a generation of players.
With Gillan's powerhouse vocals, Lord's thunderous Hammond organ, Blackmore's blues-infused riffs, and Paice's versatile drumming, Deep Purple crafted a punchy, road-ready sonic identity. The band's playing style centers on tight, riff-first arrangements, powerful palm muting, and bold dynamic contrasts that swing from restrained verses to explosive choruses. While the lineup shifted over the years, the core guitar/keyboard interplay remains a defining hallmark that new players study for groove, tone, and melodic hooks across tracks like Smoke on the Water, Burn, and Perfect Strangers.
Deep Purple's influence on hard rock and early heavy metal is immeasurable: they fused classical textures with roaring riffs and a fearless live energy that inspired countless bands. The Mark II era seeded a long, storied career that spawned later lineups and side projects like Rainbow; the band has sold well over 100 million records and was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2016. Today, their catalog continues to motivate players to explore tone, phrasing, and fearless performance.
🎸 Want to know what gear Deep Purple used, their playing style, and fun facts? Scroll below the lessons!
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Nobody's Home
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Perfect Strangers
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Hush
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Smoke On The Water
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Speed King
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Bloodsucker
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Into The Fire
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Living Wreck
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Hard Lovin Man
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Fireball
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No No No
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Strange Kind Of Woman
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Maybe I'm A Leo
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Highway Star
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Pictures Of Home
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Never Before
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Lazy
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Space Truckin
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Super Trouper
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My Woman From Tokyo
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Smooth Dancer
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Rat Bat Blue
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Place In Line
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Burn
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Might Just Take Your Life
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Sail Away
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You Fool No One
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What's Going On Here
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Mistreated
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Stormbringer
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Lady Double Dealer
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You Can't Do It Right
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The Gypsy
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Gettin' Tighter
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Knocking At Your Back Door
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Strange Kind Of Woman
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Highway Star
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Pictures Of Home
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Never Before
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Woman From Tokyo
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Burn
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Perfect Strangers
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Nobody's Home
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Smoke On The Water
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Into The Fire
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Living Wreck
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Rat Bat Blue
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View Tab →Playing Style
Deep Purple's playing voice is built on riff-driven power and blues-rock backbone. Ritchie Blackmore's guitar work blends fiery blues licks with occasional neoclassical touches, delivered with crisp attack and memorable, singable riffs; the rhythm section locks in with Roger Glover's punchy bass and Ian Paice's versatile drumming to create a relentless, driving backbone. Common techniques you can study in their songs include power chords, precise palm muting, bold alternate picking, dynamic shifts between verse and chorus, and dramatic builds that rise from tight verses to explosive refrains. The signature sound also relies on Jon Lord's Hammond organ as a melodic counterpoint that layers through the guitar parts, giving the music a thick yet clear texture that remains instantly recognizable.
🎸 Gear & Equipment
Iconic gear includes Ritchie Blackmore's Fender Stratocaster paired with loud Marshall amps, which helped forge Deep Purple's signature crunchy, cutting tone; Roger Glover's Fender Jazz Bass delivering a tight, fat low end; and Jon Lord's Hammond organ through a Leslie speaker for those unmistakable, swirling organ textures. Over the years the band experimented with various gain stages and pedals, but the core tone—blazing riffs with a solid, mid-forward punch—remains the benchmark for classic hard rock guitar guitar timbre.
Why Learn Deep Purple Songs?
Learning Deep Purple tunes builds essential rock fundamentals: tight riffing, groove-heavy timing, and tone shaping that translate across much of hard rock and metal. You’ll develop confidence with power-chord progressions, palm muting, and precise picking, while also exploring melodic hooks and dynamic contrasts that keep the music exciting. With 51 lessons spanning multiple eras, these songs provide a clear ladder from accessible blues-infused riffs to more ambitious, high-energy pieces, reinforcing rhythm, phrasing, and endurance essential for any rock guitarist.
Did You Know?
- 1Smoke on the Water features one of the most famous guitar riffs in rock history, born after a fire at Montreux Casino in 1971.
- 2The classic Mark II lineup (Blackmore, Lord, Gillan, Glover, Paice) is considered the band's definitive era and produced many of their best-known songs.
- 3Machine Head (1972) is one of hard rock's best-selling albums and includes hits like Smoke on the Water and Highway Star.
- 4Deep Purple was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2016.
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