Deep Purple cover Huey ‘Piano’ Smith’s ‘Rockin’ Pneumonia And The Boogie Woogie Flu’, release music video

Author Jad - 23.11.2021

Deep Purple‘s next studio effort will be an album of covers, entitled “Turning To Crime”. Due on November 26, 2021 via earMUSIC, the LP will contain Deep Purple‘s versions of great rock classics and musical jewels — including songs originally recorded by Bob DylanFleetwood MacBob SegerCream and The Yardbirds — carefully chosen by each member of the band.

Produced by Bob Ezrin, “Turning To Crime” arrives only 15 months after “Whoosh!”, Deep Purple‘s 21st studio album, which received acclaim by critics who praised the creative strength of a band that continues evolving with every release, and prestigious chart achievements (third consecutive No. 1 in Germany, No. 4 in the U.K., and topped the U.S. Independent Album and Hard Music Albums charts).

The official music video for the latest single, “Rockin’ Pneumonia And The Boogie Woogie Flu” — originally written and recorded by Huey “Piano” Smith — can be seen below:

Deep Purple keyboardist Don Airey commented:

I’m supposed to say it’s a song I always wanted to do since I was a child, but at the same time it was quite new to me. I didn’t know the original very well, but I knew Professor Longhair’s version, which is the one that inspired my arrangement. I just love the whole thing, that style of piano playing… Very, very hard to replicate. It was a bit of a challenge. And when it came back from the other members of the band with all this other music on it, I just thought: ‘Wow, that worked out. What an insane arrangement.

Don Airey, keyboardist of Deep Purple

“Turning To Crime” track listing:

01. “7 And 7 Is (LOVE)”
02. “Rockin’ Pneumonia And The Boogie Woogie Flu (Huey “Piano” Smith)”
03. “Oh Well (FLEETWOOD MAC)”
04. “Jenny Take A Ride! (MITCH RYDER & THE DETROIT WHEELS)”
05. “Watching The River Flow (Bob Dylan)”
06. “Let The Good Times Roll (Ray Charles & Quincy Jones)”
07. “Dixie Chicken (LITTLE FEAT)”
08. “Shapes Of Things (THE YARDBIRDS)”
09. “The Battle Of New Orleans (Lonnie Donegan/Johnny Horton)”
10. “Lucifer (BOB SEGER SYSTEM)”
11. “White Room (CREAM)”
12. “Caught In The Act [Medley: Going Down / Green Onions / Hot ‘Lanta / Dazed And Confused / Gimme Some Lovin’]

Last December, Deep Purple bassist Roger Glover revealed during a virtual meet-and-greet with Finnish fan Anssi Herkkola that the band was planning to enter the studio in 2021 to begin work on another album. Speaking about how he and the other members of Deep Purple have been spending their coronavirus downtime, Roger said:

All this COVID situation has meant that we can’t tour. We’re twiddling our thumbs, really, for over a year, and the idea was to possibly go back in and do another album. And so we’re just working towards that. It’s so quick after we’d done the last album, [and] maybe that will spoil things, but we’re gonna try and do another album at some point next year. We’re experimenting with stuff.

Deep Purple bassist Roger Glover

Deep Purple‘s latest album, “Whoosh!”, was released in August 2020 via earMUSIC. The LP was once again helmed by Canadian producer Bob Ezrin (KissPink FloydAlice Cooper), who also worked on the band’s previous two studio albums, 2017’s “Infinite” and 2013’s “Now What?!”

Glover told Den Of Geek about the Deep Purple songwriting process: “All our songs come from jamming. We don’t actually write songs, they just evolve as we play. The first writing session is usually a lot of fun. We just explore different rhythms and riffs and whatever, and then take a break to listen to them, and figure out which ones we really want to work on, and that’s the second writing session. And then we go to the studio and record them, but at this point, we rarely have finished vocals or lyrics. It’s usually when the album has been all recorded instrumentally that [singer] Ian Gillan and I go off on our own somewhere for a couple of weeks and we write the words. Sometimes he writes on his own, sometimes I write my own. Sometimes we write together. And that’s how it comes out. You don’t go to a Deep Purple session with anything like a finished song. You go with an idea, and we all work on it together. It’s got to be a collective. That’s the point of the band — it’s a collective. So, one person couldn’t write a Deep Purple song. It takes five of us. We’ve always done it that way. It’s a strange way to write songs, I know. Most people write the songs before they go in the studio, we write them after we’ve been in the studio. But it was like that in ’69 when I joined the band. It’s been the same ever since. Deep Purple has always been a democratic group. It was right from when I first joined the band. We decided that whoever writes any particular idea, we all share, because we all contribute. The way we play is almost as much a part of the writing process as what the riff or the lyrics are. So we all shared everything. It didn’t last that way. When I left the band, and Gillan left the band, it changed. It changed up until when Steve Morse joined. When Steve Morse joined, we said, ‘Right, let’s share everything.’ It takes away stress, it takes away ego, it takes away jealousy, it takes away bad vibes. And I think we all share and we all write for it. We all work our bits. So that’s the way we do it, and it is a democratic band.”