Child in Time

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“Child in Time”
Song by Deep Purple
Album Deep Purple in Rock
Released September 1970
Recorded 19691970 at IBC, De Lane Lea & Abbey Road Studios
Genre Hard rock
Heavy Metal
Progressive rock
Length 10:17
Label Harvest Records (UK)
Warner Bros. (US)
Writer Ian Gillan
Ritchie Blackmore
Roger Glover
Jon Lord
Ian Paice
Producer Deep Purple
Deep Purple in Rock track listing
"Bloodsucker"
(2)
Child in Time
(3)
"Flight of the Rat"
(4)


"Child in Time" is a song by British hard rock band Deep Purple. Featured on their 1970 album Deep Purple in Rock, the song is 10 minutes and 17 seconds long.

Contents

[edit] History and characteristics

Written by the band in 1969, it is said by the band members themselves to have been inspired by a riff featured in a song by Purple contemporaries It's a Beautiful Day, called "Bombay Calling"[1]. The riff was played on violins and very much faster in tempo.

"Child in Time" is an essentially simple composition, featuring an organ intro, three power chords, and a two minute long solo. Lyrically dark, it is set around the theme of Cold War.[2] Vocalist Ian Gillan utilises his full vocal range and goes from quiet singing to loud, high-pitched, banshee-esque screaming. Guitarist Ritchie Blackmore comes in with a slow solo, which builds to a fast-pace and then ends abruptly, with the whole song cycle starting over again.

A staple of the Mk II live concerts 1970–73, the song has not featured regularly at concerts since the reunion of the line up in 1993. Gillan cites many personal reasons for leaving the song out, but it is likely that given his advancing years, the song is increasingly difficult to perform without sampled vocal backings.[citation needed] Its last appearance in Deep Purple's live set was at Harrogate in 2002. In that performance, high-pitched guitar was used to cover up Gillan's now-limited vocal range during the "screaming" parts. A similar technique is used on current live performances of "Space Truckin'".

[edit] Covers and references in popular culture

  • Former Deep Purple guitarist Ritchie Blackmore's current band, Blackmore's Night, featured a new truncated version on their 2006 studio album The Village Lanterne, titled "Mond Tanz / Child in Time".
  • The song became an unofficial anthem of the underground democratic movement in the Eastern bloc during the 1980s.
  • Brazilian Catholic Church used its introduction as the theme for the Fraternity Campaign in 1992.
  • The song is used in the 1999 documentary One Day in September, which is about the 1972 Munich Olympics hostage crisis. It plays during a rapid montage of the violent aftermath of the concluding airport shootout.
  • This song was stolen by Bollywood composer Anu Malik for the song "Aisa Zakhm Diya Hai". Anu Malik simply picked the entire song and added Hindi lyrics.[dubious ]
  • The song was covered by the polish progressive rock band Quidam on their live album "Live at Baja Prog, Mexico, 2006". The cover features flute parts and female vocals, since the singer is a woman.

Sweet child in time, you'll see the line; The line that's drawn between the good and the bad. See the blind man- he's shooting at the world. Bullets flying; taking toll.

If you've been bad, (oh) Lord, I bet you have And you've not been hit, oh, you've not been hit by flying lead You'd better close your eyes. O-oh,you'd better bow your head. Waiting for the ricochet.

oo-oo-oo

I wanna leave you ???? (Thinking?) Deep Purple - Child in Time текст песни

[edit] Trivia

  • Some fans have suggested that the grammar in the lyrics is incorrect, and that the first line is in fact 'Sweet child, in time' rather than the line given by the CD, missing the comma.

[edit] References

Kusnur, Narendra. "Ian Gillan, Mumbai, India. 3 May 2002", Mid-Day Newspaper, 2002-05-03. Retrieved on 2006-12-30.