I have always considered this song as belonging in the "Masterpeice" category. Led Zeppelin had numerous "Masterpeice" records. I can't even to begin to fathom Rock-n-roll without Led Zeppelin. I feel so fortunate to have grown up with this music.....makes me feel sorry for those who did not. Great reaction.
Ramble On is right up there in probably my top 5 fave Led Zep tracks. The way it wonderfully blends folk & rock, acoustic & electric and light & heavy is a perfect example of how they brought different elements together and perfectly fused them together to make magic!
At least the people just discovering it have much better sounding equipment to listen to it on than we had back in the day... unless you or your parents spent alot on a nice stereo system...
you know what's amazing is I've been listening to Led Zeppelin since i was 11 in 1979 and still bob my head along every time i hear a song today.and i'm 52...
The thing is everything that wasn’t drums or guitar was JPJ, that includes string arrangements, mandolin, keys, mfer the real MVP of Zeppelin no denying that
I grew up on Zep, as it happened (born in '66 and I have 2 older sisters and a cool mom who influenced me hugely}. We used to blast Zep, Janis, BTO, Steppenwolf, Chicago, Three Dog Night, and so on, when we would do the weekly house cleaning on Saturdays. They made getting the chores done all possible and forged priceless memories in my cells that still reverberate between me and my mom and sisters. I have most of their catalog on vinyl, but not all. I wore out and spliced together many a cassette tape of them (OMG, and we had hours long reel-to-reel tapes of their albums and live stuff). I think my favorite album overall is Physical Graffiti, which I received as a Christmas gift (along with a cassette tape of The Clash, Combat Rock when I was a Sophomore in HS) in the cassette version, but I have had in vinyl for decades now. I couldn't pick one song as the top of the tops. They're my all time favorite band, no matter how many greats come and go. And there have been a lot of greats, especially live … Stevie Ray Vaughan, Johnny Cash, Dizzie GIllespie, Ministry, David Bowie, Blondie, The Ramones, The Who, Taj Mahal, Aurora, Steppenwolf, and the list goes on … and then there's the gazillion punk/hardcore bands and classical performers (for the classical, I would have to think a bit harder, but I had season tickets to the SF Symphony for 2 years, '88-90, and I saw some great shows) … These guys have always been number one. I never got to see them live. I was in middle school when John Bonham passed, but I did see Jimmy Page with The Firm and Robert Plant with the Honeydrippers in the '80s. Yes, at the same time I was going to shows with Black Flag, The Dead Kennedys, MDC, Social Distortion, The Exploited, Ministry, D.O.A., The Angry Samoans, The Circle Jerks, and so many more, not to mention my hometown band, Tales of Terror. It was a rich time, musically, and I usually saw half a dozen bands every week. LIVE! Blood, Sweat, and Tears … Sex, Drugs, and Rock 'N Roll … It was a lifestyle that some could manage, and others not. Sadly, we lost a lot of beautiful souls … But they're never forgotten …
I am thoroughly enjoying watching these reaction videos of many songs and bands I grew up listening to from the late 60s through the 1970's. I've never lost appreciation for this music and I'm happy to see new a generation of people keeping them alive.
Good on you, Biz- having the taste and the stones to really get to KNOW the mighty Zep. Start out with the blues and take the Blues-Rock Xpress through funk, hard rock, folk, and epic Tolkien fantasies to the edge of metal. And of course Zep had the taste and brains to tap-dance on the edge. Can't wait til you get to "In the Evening"- but don't let me tempt you off the straight and narrow path- you know: I, II, III, IV... forget if Houses of the Holy or Physical Graffiti next- clearly getting old... which beats the alternative by a long chalk. Greetings from Canada- be safe, man.
It's actually "Gollum AND The Evil One"... so it's a question of who "The Evil One" is referring to... Sauron? Morgoth? A Balrog? Nobody in particular, it just sounded good?
Robert Plant once said that the purpose of music was to make people happy. Mr. Plant , you and your bandmates have succeeded beyond our wildest dreams and we are eternally grateful.
That is one of my favorite albums of all time. Led Zeppelin was the first to have that “ surround sound” I remember having my first quad stereo system. 4 speakers, and the music went around to each speaker. Those 4 guys could rock! Jimmy Page, John Paul Jones, John Bonham, RIP, and of coarse Robert Plant. My very first concert when I ad 14..
Singles were small records containing one song on each side (an A side and a B side) played at 45rpm. Albums were records that had many more songs on each side and were larger and played at 33 rpm. The oldest type of record was before the 1950s and they were large but had only one song per side. They were called 78s as they were played at 78 rpm but they were brittle and easier to break.
When I was young...this was my favorite Zeppelin song. Although, I love them all. Listen to all of everything! Vocals, lead, base and drums. It's like a feast for your soul. Like you're going on a fantastic trip. Love what you're doing. You do it so well.😏
This just kills me every time man. There's a reason why it's one of the greatest songs of all time. That perfect combination of just hardcore blistering Funk Rock underneath and then plant up there doing his sexy bluesy whatever it is saying man. He just lets it Loose they all just let it loose. It's so cool you're calling attention to this stuff and putting a spotlight on it, really appreciate it man.
In the movie "It's Going To Be Loud" Jimmy Page talks about how he used a THEREMIN to make some of the unusual sounds in this song. Look up on UA-cam to hear what a Theremin is and what it sounds like!🙂
Dear Mister Know-it-all... I just said Some of the sounds. Watch the movie like I suggested and see Jimmy demonstrate how he used the Theremin in Ramble On....
@@doughaviland1729 I saw the movie in the theater when it was released. He's playing Ramble On on his Les Paul. The only video online I can find of him using the theremin is Whole Lotta Love type stuff, and it says that was a deleted scene. So unless you can provide a link to a video of him doing something related to Ramble On on the theremin, I'd say you're mistaken. No sounds in Ramble On sound like a theremin. I just looked it up on Wikipedia and it says that the violin type sound in Ramble On is done with the neck pickup of his Les Paul with a sustainer effects unit built by Roger Mayer.
"T was in the darkest depths of Mordor I met a girl so fair But Gollum, and the evil one Crept up and slipped away with her Her, her, yeah" Do those lyrics sounds familiar to you? Mordor? Gollum? That's right, they were into "Lord Of The Rings" way back in the early 70's!
Fun Fact: they did the same technique in concert, Robert's voice would ping off the four walls and so would the instrument, the sound was incredible, gave me chills every time🤟😜
Led Zeppelin "Immigrant Song" is a must react :) this song was also featured in the Thor:Ragnarok movie. I'm sure you'll recognize it. Awesome reaction, keep up the good work. Love Music.
One of my top 3 favorites!! This is a feel good song...Robert Plants voice will always rival anyone else!!🎶🎧🎶💜 If you know anything about Lord Of The Rings, you probably caught the reference..."Just in the darkest depths of Mordor, I met a girl so fair, but Gollum and the evil one, crept up and slipped away with her"💜 Love that!!
OMG!!!😂😂😂Loved it when you let it run to the last possible second. It’s SO TRUE; Led Zeppelin songs you need to let run ALL THE WAY out. Especially this one. You should hear how it actually ends out in the studio; they have a version of that too. This song is timeless 🔥🔥🔥.
"Ramble On"and" Over the Hill and Far Away" my two favs and "Whole Lotta Love " running in 3rd place. Led Zeppelin is just on another level. Todays music has nothing on these musicians!
I discovered Quadraphonic Sound about the same time I discovered weed. So I bought an 8 track Quadraphonic system and put a speaker in each corner of my room. Led Zepplin II and Dark side of the Moon By Pink Floyd were the 1st 2 tapes I got ....Now Pink Floyd was super trippy on that system but Zep was even more crazy .., I would sit on a bean bag in the middle of the room and the sounds were coming from all sorts of directions ....amazing!
Technically panning is a signal filtering technique that uses potentiometers (or a single one, depending on the design) to turn down one speaker or another to make the sound seem like it's moving...all that's actually happening is the resistance to one speaker is being modulated. Movie theaters do the same thing to "move" sound, thats what surround sound is (2 speakers is called "stereo"). This is one of the last things you do before driving the speakers (the signal is already cleaned and amplified, effects added etc), and you can do it by hand (which is almost certainly what you hear on this album) or you can tie it to the signal: say you're playing Thunderstruck ACDC and you want the front facing speakers to get a boost when you sing "THUNDER!", you could set your signal to bias in favor of the front speakers with amplitude modulation (AM, yes, as in AM radio...though not antennas...that's a whole other can of worms) which just means when the signal gets loud (high amplitude) give outputs x,y,z more power (or current, depending on how you want to look at it and which country your amplifier was built in)
Love Robert Plant,i heard him with other bands after LZ stopped he is unik..ur reaction gave me big smile when you talked about bass line,so freaking awesome
When I first heard LZ, there were no "albums" or "bands". In the 60s/70s, there were "groups" who released "LPs" or singles. e.g. The Who was a group that put out LPs. "Album" started to be used in the early 70s as a name by pretentious groups like the Moody Blues, et al.
@@CharlieMcowan yes, the term “group”, I remember was used most often, but I regularly used the term Album. I remember my first “Album” being The Grass Roots Greatest Hits. And shortly thereafter Chicago’s Double Album and of course ThE White Album. Maybe it was a regional thing. Even Wolfman Jack used the term.
Don't let nit pickers bother you some people just don't have anything better to do, You do You and everything will be alright it's to hard to try and please everyone.
I have always considered this song as belonging in the "Masterpeice" category. Led Zeppelin had numerous "Masterpeice" records. I can't even to begin to fathom Rock-n-roll without Led Zeppelin. I feel so fortunate to have grown up with this music.....makes me feel sorry for those who did not. Great reaction.
Ramble On is right up there in probably my top 5 fave Led Zep tracks. The way it wonderfully blends folk & rock, acoustic & electric and light & heavy is a perfect example of how they brought different elements together and perfectly fused them together to make magic!
At least the people just discovering it have much better sounding equipment to listen to it on than we had back in the day... unless you or your parents spent alot on a nice stereo system...
I grew up with Zeppelin, but I'm hearing with new ears watching you guys discovering them
@@williamcabell142 You nailed it!! Although, aging sucks..... The wisdom that comes with it is priceless!!!
you know what's amazing is I've been listening to Led Zeppelin since i was 11 in 1979 and still bob my head along every time i hear a song today.and i'm 52...
"The Rain Song" most beautiful guitar I've ever heard and I've been listening 57 years😳✌️♥️
yet another GLORIOUS bassline from jpj
🎸💯🤯 "Ramble On"‼🔥🤟
You're so right! That bass grabs you!
Simply one of the greatest bass lines in the history of Rock music. AMAZING !
JPJ on bass is key to their sound. He holds a lot of the groove down so Jimmy Page and John Bonham can go crazy
John Paul Jones was and is the glue.love this
The thing is everything that wasn’t drums or guitar was JPJ, that includes string arrangements, mandolin, keys, mfer the real MVP of Zeppelin no denying that
I'm a bass player, and boy, JPJ has got it going on! This is one of his best, for sure.
Bass line is out of this world...I play bass and I haven't been able to master the chorus...yet
@@mreloo Stick with it! For me it's the bass part on the bridge that's tough. It's hard to hear exactly what's going on.
@@paxonearth yes the bridge is even harder to sort out !
The bass throughout is phenomenal
I grew up on Zep, as it happened (born in '66 and I have 2 older sisters and a cool mom who influenced me hugely}. We used to blast Zep, Janis, BTO, Steppenwolf, Chicago, Three Dog Night, and so on, when we would do the weekly house cleaning on Saturdays. They made getting the chores done all possible and forged priceless memories in my cells that still reverberate between me and my mom and sisters. I have most of their catalog on vinyl, but not all. I wore out and spliced together many a cassette tape of them (OMG, and we had hours long reel-to-reel tapes of their albums and live stuff). I think my favorite album overall is Physical Graffiti, which I received as a Christmas gift (along with a cassette tape of The Clash, Combat Rock when I was a Sophomore in HS) in the cassette version, but I have had in vinyl for decades now. I couldn't pick one song as the top of the tops. They're my all time favorite band, no matter how many greats come and go. And there have been a lot of greats, especially live … Stevie Ray Vaughan, Johnny Cash, Dizzie GIllespie, Ministry, David Bowie, Blondie, The Ramones, The Who, Taj Mahal, Aurora, Steppenwolf, and the list goes on … and then there's the gazillion punk/hardcore bands and classical performers (for the classical, I would have to think a bit harder, but I had season tickets to the SF Symphony for 2 years, '88-90, and I saw some great shows) … These guys have always been number one. I never got to see them live. I was in middle school when John Bonham passed, but I did see Jimmy Page with The Firm and Robert Plant with the Honeydrippers in the '80s. Yes, at the same time I was going to shows with Black Flag, The Dead Kennedys, MDC, Social Distortion, The Exploited, Ministry, D.O.A., The Angry Samoans, The Circle Jerks, and so many more, not to mention my hometown band, Tales of Terror. It was a rich time, musically, and I usually saw half a dozen bands every week. LIVE! Blood, Sweat, and Tears … Sex, Drugs, and Rock 'N Roll … It was a lifestyle that some could manage, and others not. Sadly, we lost a lot of beautiful souls … But they're never forgotten …
“What is and what should never be” is 🔥 also!
The greatest band to ever grace the stage
Exactly!
Facts!!👊🏻
This has got to be one of my all time favorite songs
John Paul Jones is the man this is one of my favs
Theres an isolated bass track on youtube
He is a musical genius
This might actually be my favorite Zep tune. Love it!
I am thoroughly enjoying watching these reaction videos of many songs and bands I grew up listening to from the late 60s through the 1970's. I've never lost appreciation for this music and I'm happy to see new a generation of people keeping them alive.
Great song and my fave zeppelin song. Actually based the song around the novel 'the hobbit'
The Hobbit song. Heard this after reading the trilogy back in the early seventies.
Good on you, Biz- having the taste and the stones to really get to KNOW the mighty Zep. Start out with the blues and take the Blues-Rock Xpress through funk, hard rock, folk, and epic Tolkien fantasies to the edge of metal. And of course Zep had the taste and brains to tap-dance on the edge. Can't wait til you get to "In the Evening"- but don't let me tempt you off the straight and narrow path- you know: I, II, III, IV... forget if Houses of the Holy or Physical Graffiti next- clearly getting old... which beats the alternative by a long chalk. Greetings from Canada- be safe, man.
One of my favorite Zeppelin songs.
The funny thing about the bass on this song, it's so subtle, yet it's the entire foundation of the song.
It was glorious to grow up with Led. Parents weren't too thrilled... Haha!
Gollum, the evil one, crept up and slipped away with her. I love that line.
It's actually "Gollum AND The Evil One"... so it's a question of who "The Evil One" is referring to... Sauron? Morgoth? A Balrog? Nobody in particular, it just sounded good?
@@mr.knowitall6440 I always thought he meant the One Ring
@@sergiofilippoandreis2994
Could be that...
🤯 I was reading the books when this song came out. 🤦🏿♀️ I feel old.... 😏🐰
That deserves many thumbs up!
This and Thank You, are my two favorite Zeppelin songs!
I agree!! Cant pick just one. In the evening, Thank you, black dog.. so so many. Cant pick just one or two.. lol
Can't go wrong with any Zep! This song is raw and full of great performances from each of them. Thanks for your post! BTW just subscribed!
Good move, Andy. He is one of my favorite reactors on here... enjoy! :)
Robert Plant once said that the purpose of music was to make people happy. Mr. Plant , you and your bandmates have succeeded beyond our wildest dreams and we are eternally grateful.
Well, the old records did have a "flip side" and some of those were even better! 🥰
One of the best baselines of all time!!
One of the best Led Zeppelin songs ever
The thing is, it's not often, but some songs have been known to suprisingly fade back in before the song actually ends.
Over the Hills and Far Away comes to mind.
Funky little rock song from all those years ago. We loved it..
One of the best base lines every composed
One of my top 5 Zeppelin tunes. Love pretty much everything they did but this is one of the special ones.
That is one of my favorite albums of all time. Led Zeppelin was the first to have that “ surround sound” I remember having my first quad stereo system. 4 speakers, and the music went around to each speaker. Those 4 guys could rock! Jimmy Page, John Paul Jones, John Bonham, RIP, and of coarse Robert Plant. My very first concert when I ad 14..
An amazingly good song!
This is a killer tune! Thanks
Singles were small records containing one song on each side (an A side and a B side) played at 45rpm. Albums were records that had many more songs on each side and were larger and played at 33 rpm. The oldest type of record was before the 1950s and they were large but had only one song per side. They were called 78s as they were played at 78 rpm but they were brittle and easier to break.
One of my favorite Zeppelin songs. There is a version of this with just the music, no vocals, which I enjoy listening to.
You need to do some Steppenwolf, Magic Carpet Ride for a "panning" song.
Another rabbit hole. Lots of holes late 60's to mid 70's.
The bass line is ALL I hear when I listen to this song. It's so in your face, it's hard to miss that bass.
Yes! My favorite.
Masterpiece.
When I was young...this was my favorite Zeppelin song. Although, I love them all. Listen to all of everything! Vocals, lead, base and drums. It's like a feast for your soul. Like you're going on a fantastic trip. Love what you're doing. You do it so well.😏
In my top 5 favorite songs, period by any band ♥️🎶🎸🎤♥️ John Paul Jones was their secret weapon 🎸🎶🎸
John Paul Jones is the Bass player, and keyboards when needed. "John Paul Jones is the glue of this Band." That was from Robert Plant.
JPJ Bass sounds is unbelievable
Yes, the bass is awesome
I love your reactions to LZ. They are the GOATS
This just kills me every time man. There's a reason why it's one of the greatest songs of all time. That perfect combination of just hardcore blistering Funk Rock underneath and then plant up there doing his sexy bluesy whatever it is saying man. He just lets it Loose they all just let it loose. It's so cool you're calling attention to this stuff and putting a spotlight on it, really appreciate it man.
Love this one! Ignore the distracting video. JPJ killing it on the bass.
In the movie "It's Going To Be Loud" Jimmy Page talks about how he used a THEREMIN to make some of the unusual sounds in this song. Look up on UA-cam to hear what a Theremin is and what it sounds like!🙂
it might get loud, i didnt think he used the theremin here? i know he does on whole lotta love
Actually, the "sounds" in this song are a pedal steel guitar I believe... using a volume pedal for effect... definitely not the Theremin.
Dear Mister Know-it-all...
I just said Some of the sounds. Watch the movie like I suggested and see Jimmy demonstrate how he used the Theremin in Ramble On....
@@doughaviland1729
I saw the movie in the theater when it was released.
He's playing Ramble On on his Les Paul.
The only video online I can find of him using the theremin is Whole Lotta Love type stuff, and it says that was a deleted scene.
So unless you can provide a link to a video of him doing something related to Ramble On on the theremin, I'd say you're mistaken.
No sounds in Ramble On sound like a theremin.
I just looked it up on Wikipedia and it says that the violin type sound in Ramble On is done with the neck pickup of his Les Paul with a sustainer effects unit built by Roger Mayer.
@@doughaviland1729 i think youre miss remembering, can you find the part in the film where it shows theramin in ramble on?
Tengo 66 años, y me sigue gustando como cuando tenía 14........y me alegra !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
"T was in the darkest depths of Mordor
I met a girl so fair
But Gollum, and the evil one
Crept up and slipped away with her
Her, her, yeah"
Do those lyrics sounds familiar to you? Mordor? Gollum? That's right, they were into "Lord Of The Rings" way back in the early 70's!
"The Battle of Evermore" from Zeppelin IV, also has several Tolkien references...
People have been into the LOTRs since the 1930s.
"Do you hear that bass line?" LOLOLOL Welcome to the party mate. Heavenly groove, just heavenly
Fun Fact: they did the same technique in concert, Robert's voice would ping off the four walls and so would the instrument, the sound was incredible, gave me chills every time🤟😜
Great great great bass line..and the lyrics are perfect
Your facial expressions & visible joy reminds me of 15 year old me in 1977 discovering them. And yes, I got to see them live. Enjoy
The vocals and guitar are both Super Amazing. .. but that drummer and bassist. ..yeah they're both out of this world special.
Led Zeppelin "Immigrant Song" is a must react :) this song was also featured in the Thor:Ragnarok movie. I'm sure you'll recognize it. Awesome reaction, keep up the good work. Love Music.
This is one of my FAVORITE Zeppelin songs
Dig your joy!
🙌🏾🙌🏾
One of my favorite LZ songs. I’ve instructed my children to play this one at my funeral/Homegoing Celebration.
John Paul Jones..... bassline is historic.. Been listening to this song for 35 years and it never gets old....
Dude!!!! 8 love your reactions...zep will take you there brother
artistry... thanks for your appreciation .. as I.. for 50 years 🎸🙏
One of my top 3 favorites!! This is a feel good song...Robert Plants voice will always rival anyone else!!🎶🎧🎶💜 If you know anything about Lord Of The Rings, you probably caught the reference..."Just in the darkest depths of Mordor, I met a girl so fair, but Gollum and the evil one, crept up and slipped away with her"💜 Love that!!
OMG!!!😂😂😂Loved it when you let it run to the last possible second. It’s SO TRUE; Led Zeppelin songs you need to let run ALL THE WAY out. Especially this one. You should hear how it actually ends out in the studio; they have a version of that too. This song is timeless 🔥🔥🔥.
"Ramble On"and" Over the Hill and Far Away" my two favs and "Whole Lotta Love " running in 3rd place. Led Zeppelin is just on another level. Todays music has nothing on these musicians!
first band not release singles in the time of singles They fully embraced the Long Playing album
My all time favorite song!
That bass just draws you in........
Bring It On Home
Great song! Great reaction!
Music of the Gods
The bass is the glue to the song I’m convinced
LOVE this reaction!!! 👍👍
You're not almost done with Zeppelin if you missed - Since I've Been Loving You.
No, he’s just almost done with Zeppelin II 😉 he’s doing them all, in order ... entire albums 💞
John Paul Jones is to the bass what Jimmy is to the guitar - he's brilliant 👏 great reaction!
Maybe my favorite Led Zeppelin song.
For this one it’s pretty cool to check out the isolated bass track
One of my favorit songs!
😍😍😍😍😍 that 🎸 Bass line tho'!
I discovered Quadraphonic Sound about the same time I discovered weed. So I bought an 8 track Quadraphonic system and put a speaker in each corner of my room. Led Zepplin II and Dark side of the Moon By Pink Floyd were the 1st 2 tapes I got ....Now Pink Floyd was super trippy on that system but Zep was even more crazy .., I would sit on a bean bag in the middle of the room and the sounds were coming from all sorts of directions ....amazing!
Yes it's my, this comes to mind every time I'm with someone talking to much and saying nothing...
Led zep rules!
Next: CREAM-BATTLE OF BRAVE ULYSES
ALICE COOPER- 18
BAD CO.-ROCK AND ROLL FANTASY
I PICKED THESE CLASSIC SUPER HITS FOR U 👍
Zep = COOL AS F*CK
Their influence is off the charts
Technically panning is a signal filtering technique that uses potentiometers (or a single one, depending on the design) to turn down one speaker or another to make the sound seem like it's moving...all that's actually happening is the resistance to one speaker is being modulated. Movie theaters do the same thing to "move" sound, thats what surround sound is (2 speakers is called "stereo"). This is one of the last things you do before driving the speakers (the signal is already cleaned and amplified, effects added etc), and you can do it by hand (which is almost certainly what you hear on this album) or you can tie it to the signal: say you're playing Thunderstruck ACDC and you want the front facing speakers to get a boost when you sing "THUNDER!", you could set your signal to bias in favor of the front speakers with amplitude modulation (AM, yes, as in AM radio...though not antennas...that's a whole other can of worms) which just means when the signal gets loud (high amplitude) give outputs x,y,z more power (or current, depending on how you want to look at it and which country your amplifier was built in)
Love Robert Plant,i heard him with other bands after LZ stopped he is unik..ur reaction gave me big smile when you talked about bass line,so freaking awesome
Hey! JPJ's bassllines ARE the sexy stuff!
Robert Plant is a huge Lord If The Rings fan and his lyrical writing is proof.
Your right brother. An album is an album. A record is a record. From those of sold enough to knw
When I first heard LZ, there were no "albums" or "bands".
In the 60s/70s, there were "groups" who released "LPs" or singles.
e.g. The Who was a group that put out LPs.
"Album" started to be used in the early 70s as a name by pretentious groups like the Moody Blues, et al.
@@CharlieMcowan yes, the term “group”, I remember was used most often, but I regularly used the term Album. I remember my first “Album” being The Grass Roots Greatest Hits. And shortly thereafter Chicago’s Double Album and of course ThE White Album. Maybe it was a regional thing. Even Wolfman Jack used the term.
I like to see the smile when music is goooood
To me Zep IS the bass and drums. All the way.
A different time and world back then.... those energies will return one day soon but it will different.
John Paul Jones bass is amazing especially during the chorus!!!
Yeah, this is my fav off this album!!! Great review 🔥🔥🔥🔥 I’m trying to work on my Rambling issues ... soooo ... I’m out 🤷♀️😜😂
💞
😂😂😂
Don't let nit pickers bother you some people just don't have anything better to do, You do You and everything will be alright it's to hard to try and please everyone.
Enjoying the ride, carry-on.
The backbeat is solid.