On Stage (Rainbow album)
On Stage is a double live album originally released by the British hard rock band Rainbow in 1977. It was recorded live over several German and Japanese dates in late 1976 during the Rising world tour.
Recording
The recording features the customary introduction to a Rainbow show – the classic quote from The Wizard of Oz, "Toto: I have a feeling we're not in Kansas anymore. We must be over the rainbow!" with the last word repeated as an echo, then the actual band plays a musical phrase from the song "Over the Rainbow" before breaking into "Kill the King".Many of the tracks were spliced together from different dates by producer Martin Birch, and the running order was changed to more easily fit four sides of vinyl.
Recording Sources:
Introduction/Kill The King
Nuremberg 28 September 1976
Munich 29 September 1976
Man On The Silver Mountain
Tokyo 16 December 1976
Blues
Tokyo 16 December 1976
Starstruck
Tokyo 16 December 1976
Man On The Silver Mountain
Tokyo 16 December 1976
Catch The Rainbow
Osaka 9 December 1976
Mistreated
Cologne 25 September 1976
Sixteenth Century Greensleeves
Tokyo 16 December 1976
Still I'm Sad
Nuremberg 28 September 1976
Release and reception
Geoff Ginsberg of AllMusic writes: "On Stage is full of great songs and playing, but somehow it lacks some of the excitement that existed at those early Ritchie Blackmore concerts. The production is just kind of flat. That doesn't change the fact that there is some great stuff to be found here and nowhere else, such as the side-long version of "Mistreated," from Deep Purple's Burn."The song "Kill the King" appeared on this album before it was recorded for a studio album. A studio version appears on the follow-up release, 1978's Long Live Rock 'n' Roll.
The single "Kill the King/Man on the Silver Mountain/Mistreated" was released in the UK in September 1977. This was Rainbow's debut in the UK Singles Chart, peaking at No. 44. After the commercial success of "Since You Been Gone", "All Night Long" and "I Surrender", "Kill the King" was re-released in 1981 this time climbing to No. 41. Songwriter and lead singer Ronnie James Dio claimed that the violent imagery in the song is actually about a chess game.
A more representative example of a Rainbow concert of the time was the 1991 release Live in Germany 1976, which featured unedited concert performances and includes both tour staple "Stargazer" and the usual encore "Do You Close Your Eyes".
The deluxe edition was released on November 13, 2012 in Europe. The second disc was originally planned to contain tracks from the concert hall at the "Orix Theater" in Osaka, Japan. Instead the second disc contains tracks from the final Rainbow gig in Tokyo, Japan at the "Nippon Budokan Hall" on December 16, 1976.
Track listing
Personnel
;Rainbow- Ritchie Blackmore – guitar
- Ronnie James Dio – vocals
- Tony Carey – keyboards, Orchestron
- Jimmy Bain – bass
- Cozy Powell – drums
Charts
Year | Chart | Position |
1977 | UK Albums Chart | 7 |
1977 | Austrian Albums Chart | 15 |
1977 | GfK Dutch Chart | 17 |
1977 | Swedish Albums Chart | 25 |
1977 | German Albums Chart | 28 |
1977 | New Zealand Albums Chart | 29 |
1977 | Billboard 200 | 65 |
2013 | Oricon Japanese Albums Chart | 69 |
;Singles
Year | Title | Chart | Position |
1977 | "Kill the King" | UK Singles Chart | 44 |