#3 - JRL 2008-130 - JRL Home
Medvedev's favorites Deep Purple to roll across Russia
this fall
MOSCOW, July 10 (RIA Novosti) - The ageing British rockers Deep Purple, one
of the favorite bands of the current Russian president, are set for a tour of
Russia this fall, a spokesman for the tour's promotion company said on Thursday.
Vladimir Zubitsky said the band, with a collective age of 297, would give
performances in Russia's 12 largest cities, playing mostly old hits, with their
final concert to come at the Olympiisky Stadium in Moscow.
"The tour will finish on October 27 with a grand concert at the Olympiisky
Stadium - tickets have already gone on sale," he said, adding that the price for
the concert tickets varied between 2,000 rubles ($86) and 10,000 rubles ($430).
One of the group's more high-profile fans is Russian President Dmitry
Medvedev.
In an interview last year with the Russian magazine Itogi, Medvedev boasted
of his collection of Deep Purple LPs, saying that he had searched for the vinyl
albums for many years.
"Not reissues, but the original albums," he said.
Last year, Deep Purple gave a private performance at Russian energy giant
Gazprom's 15th anniversary celebrations. Medvedev, who was sworn in as president
this May, was the company's board chairman at the time.
Many ageing British groups enjoy great success in Russia and ex-Soviet
states. The most remarkable story of all is perhaps that of the northern English
rock band Smokie. All but forgotten in their homeland, the group regularly fills
stadiums across the former Soviet Union, and was even invited to play at this
year's inauguration of Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili.
Many rock groups were banned by Soviet authorities. However, an official
'blacklist' handed out to the leaders of Soviet youth groups in 1985 did not
include Deep Purple. Many other famous rock groups were listed though, such as
AC/DC (Neo-fascism), Alice Cooper (Vandalism), Black Sabbath (Religious
obscurantism), and the Talking Heads (Propagation of the myth of the Soviet
military threat).
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