
Deep Purple guitarist says Smoke on the Water is a “challenging” song to play: “It is easy technically, but it’s not easy to play”
It’s bread and butter for Guitar Center goers, and the kryptonite of employees who work at those same stores. As far as all-time ubiquitous riffs go, Deep Purple’s Smoke on the Water is right up there with Sweet Child O’ Mine, Seven Nation Army and Enter Sandman.
But while it may seem like one of the easier riffs you could bust out to impress – or infuriate – your fellow shoppers, Deep Purple guitarist Simon McBride says it’s actually deceptively difficult to get right.
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In a new interview with the dopeYEAH talk podcast, McBride – who joined the legendary rock outfit in 2022, replacing Steve Morse – explains why Smoke on the Water isn’t quite as simple as many deem it to be.
“Generally, the most challenging ones are the simple ones, like Smoke on the Water,” he says [via Blabbermouth].
“People always say, ‘Ah, it’s easy.’ It is easy technically, but it’s not easy to play. It’s like any of this stuff. It’s the delivery, it’s the force of how you play it, it’s your timing. It’s what not to play. A lot of guitar players, when they play the riff of Smoke on the Water, they play it like a guitarist. They wanna add stuff to it. They wanna vibrato it. They wanna do this.
“But the beauty of the riff of Smoke on the Water is its simplicity… So being disciplined enough just to – don’t play anything else, just what’s there. ‘Cause when you’re standing there, and I start the riff, and then Don joins me, then Roger joins me, this explosion of power comes out, which you would not get if I was fiddling around with it, or Don was. It’s the four of us just doing this riff, and it’s like, ‘Oh, God, here we go.’”
Elsewhere in the interview, McBride reflects on how the simplicity of a lot of Deep Purple’s most timeless songs has contributed to their success.
“The thing is with the Purple stuff, it’s not overly complicated, but that’s the beauty of it, and that’s why it was so successful,” he says. “Smoke on the Water is three chords, really. And all the great songs, even Perfect Strangers, it’s two or three chords. So it is quite simple.”
Smoke on the Water remains one of the top riffs heard in Guitar Center stores, as was recently revealed by CEO Gabe Dalporto in an interview with Rolling Stone. He revealed Metallica’s Master of Puppets also gets a large degree of sonic real estate, as does Nirvana’s Smells Like Teen Spirit, and even Tool’s Schism.
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