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PHOTO: Brian Rasic | Getty Images Way back in May 2016, we sat down with Ritchie Blackmore to talk about his then-upcoming Rainbow gigs...
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PHOTO: Brian Rasic | Getty Images

Way back in May 2016, we sat down with Ritchie Blackmore to talk about his then-upcoming Rainbow gigs in Europe, where the British guitar icon made his long-awaited return to rock music.

In our interview, we talked with Blackmore about the upcoming gigs as well as his guitar technique, greatest riffs, gear, guitar modifications—including his self-scalloped fretboards—musical inspirations, and of course Deep Purple, Rainbow Blackmore’s Night.

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In this excerpt from the issue, Blackmore tells us the stories behind three of his greatest Deep Purple riffs. Along the way, he reveals the right way to play “Smoke on the Water.”

Could you please detail what you remember about recording some of your famous Deep Purple riffs? The obvious one is, of course, “Smoke on the Water.”
I wrote the riff during a jam while we were recording Machine Head at a theater in Montreux, Switzerland. I asked [Deep Purple drummer] Ian Paice to come up with something new—a rhythm we haven’t played before—and I basically played along. It wasn’t worked out. But I was aware—mentally—of trying to write something very, very simple and straightforward.

We were in this big ballroom, and Paice and I started playing the riff and a chord progression. Then, the police arrived to tell us to stop, because we were playing so loud that there were complaints. We kept the door locked so that we could keep recording that particular take. The police were hammering on the door during the final take in the last three minutes of the recording session. Had the Montreux police had their way, we never would’ve recorded “Smoke on the Water—so, no thanks to them!

As iconic as the “Smoke on the Water” riff is, most

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