A founding member of heavy metal institution
Deep Purple, keyboardist/composer
Jon Lord was born June 9, 1941, in Leicester, England. He began playing piano at age nine, later forgoing his classical studies to play rock, jazz, and blues. Around 1960, he relocated to London, following a stint with
the Bill Ashton Combo by joining Red Bludd's Bluesicians. In 1964,
Lord played on
the Kinks' eponymous debut LP (retitled
You Really Got Me for American consumption); around the same time, his group
the Artwoods released their first single "Sweet Mary," issuing several more singles prior to the 1966 full-length
Art Gallery. After the 1967
Jazz in Jeans appeared to little response, the band re-christened itself St Valentine's Day Massacre, adopting a gangster-influenced image for their lone single, "Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?"
Lord next surfaced in the short-lived
Santa Barbara Machinehead, and in early 1968 joined
Roundabout; after a brief tour of Scandinavia, the group -- also including vocalist
Rod Evans, guitarist
Ritchie Blackmore, bassist
Nick Simper, and drummer
Ian Paice -- changed its name to
Deep Purple. Originally favoring a classically inspired rock sound dominated by
Lord's keyboard flourishes, the group's debut LP
Shades of Deep Purple generated the Top Five smash "Hush," while the 1969 follow-up
The Book of Taliesyn featured a Top 40 cover of
Neil Diamond's "Kentucky Woman." However, in mid-1969.
Evans and
Simper left
Deep Purple, and the arrivals of singer
Ian Gillan and bassist
Roger Glover heralded a more aggressive, thunderously heavy approach over the course of albums including 1970's
Deep Purple in Rock and 1971's
Fireball. Although 1972's
Machine Head cracked the U.S. Top Ten on the strength of the AOR staple "Smoke on the Water," personality conflicts between
Gillan and
Blackmore precipitated the singer's departure from the group in mid-1973. Despite the subsequent additions of singer
David Coverdale and guitarist
Tommy Bolin,
Deep Purple never again regained its peak popularity.
In 1974,
Lord cut the solo album
Gemini Suite, based on a concerto he'd written for the BBC four years earlier;
Sarabande followed in 1975, and in the wake of
Deep Purple's demise he joined
Coverdale's new band,
Whitesnake.
Lord's next solo album,
Before I Forget, appeared in 1982; two years later, he reunited with
Gillan,
Blackmore,
Glover, and
Paice to re-form
Deep Purple, issuing the album
Perfect Strangers. The re-formed group toured to great success, and in 1987 released
The House of Blue Light before frictions again forced
Gillan from the group. Roster changes consistently plagued the group throughout the years to come, but as before
Lord remained a constant of the lineup. The solo
Pictured Within followed in the autumn of 1998. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide