This song is one of the greatest examples as to why John Paul Jones was Led Zeppelin's secret weapon. His arranging and orchestration are all over this. Jimmy Page is exceptional as well.
Wow, you nailed it.. First comment outta the box was exactly what I was dropping into the comments to say. Once I saw some doc on the bands and learned all the instruments he plays, and the arrangements he had his hand in, JPJ has rocketed to my personal favorite member of Led Zeppelin and I never would’ve guessed I’d think that in a million years. Not to mention that after watching some interviews with him, he’s really one of the nicest guys walking the planet.. what more could you want from a super cool rock star?
@@jimarmstrong5820 Led Zeppelin were a genuine group of incredibly talented musicians with a wonderful lyricist.........the Beatles were just a glorified boy band that were picked up and promoted by a talented producer. They wouldn't have been famous if it weren't for George Martin, EMI and the engineers at Abbey Road. It's like comparing a manufactured pop group like Take That with a real band like the Stone Roses......or a jug of organic orange juice with a plastic bottle of Sunny Delight!
@@bgaona I always appreciated the gifts she gave me, one of the greatest gifts my mom ever gave me was the gift of music appreciation, from about the age of 6 or 7 years old she introduced me to the genres of Motown to Rock to Country, Im 55 now and I still have all of the albums and 45s she gave me, including the first album she ever gave me, which was 'Goodbye Yellow Brick Road', and I understand the value of music even more now that she's gone
Very smart choice for me it'd either be this or Thank you also by zeppelin, but this song just sums up what a ballad is supposed to be and it would be a most appropriate pick for a funeral I'm sure your mother would be happy to know that you'd honor her with such a powerful song like this
Perhaps one of the most beautiful in the last century. Their musical genius is second to none. You have Kashmir, Stairway, Black Dog and a bunch of heavy tunes, ripping guitar and then this. Written beautifully. By the first heavy metal band ever…genius!
Zeppelin was such a complete band. There really wasn't anything they couldn't do, and do it well. 90% of their catalog would have been the best song most bands would have ever done.
I always get a bit of a chill when I hear Plant sing this song. When he says “upon us all, a little rain must fall…..just a little rain”….and I remember that in a few years he would lose his little boy. He’s had more than his share of “rain” in his life.
And this is what pisses me off about Plant and Page not giving John Paul Jones his credit. Check out when they got inducted into the rock and roll hall of fame. Didn’t even let the man speak.
One of the most beautiful chord progressions ever. This song was a tribute to George Harrison who was a fan and friend to the band. Page even quotes Something in the first two chords.
I remember playing this song over the phone to a girl because I was so excited to have learned this whole song with the weird open tuning. Back in the days before Zoom and whatnot. It got her attention, that's for sure!
On a separate note please be careful guys with the upcoming hurricane. If you have to evacuate please do. You have your whole lives ahead of you with still so much to experience. God speed!
John Paul Jones the bass player is a multi-instrumentalist who did most of the arrangements for the group, including the orchestral score for this song. While Page and Bonham were top tier on their respective instruments, the really great musician in the band was John.
I smiled when Lex said "light to dark, light to dark," because Jimmy Page (who literally produced all of Zeppelin's albums) often professed his belief in the principle of "light and shade" when it came to his unique approach to creating music.
The orchestration sound Lex mentioned was bass player John Paul Jones playing the Mellotron, which was the first "sampler" ever made. Each key of the keyboard engaged a tape head to a length of tape of a recorded instrument- in this case it was a recording of orchestral strings being played. It gives a signature sound that is recognizable in other songs of the era such as Bowie's "Space Oddity" and The Moody Blues "Knights in White Satin".
Well said, John Paul Jones' arrangement and playing skills can get overshadowed because they often take a supporting role to the rest of the band, but are so crucial to either the groove or the atmosphere. I'd liken it to if you watched a scene from a movie and saw it with a score and then without it, and compared the emotional experience, you'd appreciate how much of an important element it was. Without Jones' previous session playing and wide studio experience Led Zeppelin may not, as they progressed, have been able to experiment so successfully, and with such diverse styles, and still keep it all within the band.
@@mjt11860 The Mellotron was necessitated out of need. There was a desire shared among musicians, to be able to bring to their deserving audiences the authentic sounds of a range of recorded acoustic (& other) instruments, essentially being performed "live" by a keyboardist.
My favorite song by Led Zeppelin and Jimmy Page the guitarist wrote it after George Harrison suggested to them that they needed to include a ballad in their repertoire and boy did he write a masterpiece, John Paul Jones did a brilliant job with the orchestration as well
This isn't a song a "rock band" does. This is what a group of musicians create. They are so above all other bands, and this just drives that point home even more.
Gotta hear the live version from the song remains the same album it's tuned higher and sounds even better than the studio. This is my favorite song of all time I just got the zeppelin symbols tatood on my arm. Greatest band ever!
And the simplicity at the end of the song when it reveals why it's called the Rain song. They've posted you this picture of all this drama and storm. But at the end it's very simple in our lives every once in awhile a little Rain Must Fall
Brad and Lex, you're right on target. It's about growing older with your love and experiencing life as if it were seasons. When winter comes you look back and understand that in order to appreciate the earlier seasons "in every life a little rain must fall" 🥺😥❤️
I was beginning to wonder if anyone but me knew it was a Mellotron.. I had a friend fo 37 years, who had a Mellotron and I goto play it often. He passed in 2015, and I wish I could have bought it!!
@@Hartlor_Tayley They were the great Tech for mid 1960's however, Walter Carlos (now Wendy Carlos) sprung a new album on the public called Switched On Bach. This Album introduced the world to Synthesizers.. Carlos really had his/her Masterpiece with the Soundtrack for the movie "A Clockwork Orange " ..
This is just another example of that Led Zeppelin magic. Lex, if only you had grown up with all us older rockers back then. Man you would have fit right little darlin'. Brad baby, you done got the right woman. 3 cheers and a tiger for you. Keep it coming you two. You bring great joy and warmth to and old rock and rollers heart. I just had my 63rd b day in August. Thanks for keeping on! Sincerely, Jeff.
It's extremely encouraging to see the younger generation appreciate this, gives hope that these legendary musical artists of yesteryear will live on for generations, their music will never get stale and forgotten.
Are you talking about the one with Page and Plant with the orchestra? That is indeed flawless. Killer how Plant nods to Page at the end saying “we just killed it!”
This song was the result of a challenge by George Harrison of The Beatles, who asked Jimmy Page the guitar player from Led Zeppelin why they never did a ballad. GREAT song!!!
Finally my favorite Zep song ..... I'm all about the rain, literally & metaphorically. Rain is LIFE. Rain comes & haunts you. Rain comes & soothes you. The fellas captured it all in one solid moment of grandiose. A classic rock song if ever there was one. Thank you for this reaction, you guys are still a big part of my day.
I was in high school when Led Zeppelin burst onto the scene and I was an instant fan of the first Album. Then the second album came out and I liked it just as much as the first. But then the third album debuted and I was like - what happened? It took me a while to appreciate the different types of music Led Zeppelin could write and play - but after a while I thought it was their biggest strength and what differentiated them from most other superstar bands. The Rain Song is a prime example of something totally different from them but still a really great song - if Plant's distinctive voice wasn't on this song it would be hard to know this was a Led Zeppelin song. I hope you keep going down the LZ rabbit hole.
The story I heard on this song is that it was a reaction to George Harrison making a comment after one Zepp concert saying "The problem with you guys is you don't do any ballads." To which Jimmy Page replied "I'll write you a ballad" , and then he wrote The Rain Song, and Robert Plant added the lyrics. John Paul Jones did the arrangement for the tune.
The "orchestral " sound was a mellotron, a vintage keyboard instrument, and one of the earliest "sampling" devices, played by John Paul Jones, who also played piano and bass on the track. The mellotron used tape loops triggered by the notes of a keyboard, so to get the sound of "strings" you were actually playing tapes of recorded strings in whatever arrangement you chose. It produced an eery sound which you can't quite duplicate using modern synths. Paul McCartney played the intro to "Strawberry Fields Forever" on a mellotron using a "Flutes" sound.
John Paul Jones is the hidden weapon in Zeppelin..His arrangements are the glue that keeps a lot Zeps songs together..And yes they would've brought in a live string section for a song like this..Peace from the Northeast..
Haha this is awesome to watch, a new generation discover the best rock band ever, Led Zeppelin means heavy/light, or light/dark as Lex noticed, supposedly a term coined by The Who's drummer Keith Moon, who was possibly the first choice for Zep drummer, he said it would go down like a Lead Zeppelin. That story may be fiction as they rarely gave interviews and so media and fans may have made some things up, and the band was ok with that.
I think of my first love when I hear this song. He sang along to this and to me many times. It takes me right back to so long ago. It makes me cry. He's the one who got away. I love him still. ❤️
You nailed it Lex! 🎉🥳 When you said "the music always goes from light to dark to light to dark"... Jimmy Page always described his musical style, or what he was trying to achieve, as "Light and Shadow". He actually went to art school to be a painter, and he relates the light and shadow aspect of that to music. 😎
They mention all four seasons in this song. John Paul Jones still does music for movies and such from what I hear. He was actually the most talented one in the band. He played several instruments.
Aloha guys, good morning...I've been waiting for this one for awhile...love it... the answer you seek is John Paul Jones... Most talented multi-instrumentist I've ever seen..Mahalo nui loa...a hui hou
The live song from the movie "The Song That Remains The Same" is so much better plus the visuals are spectacular, but this is still a great choice. I'm 58 years old and I cry almost every time I hear it.
Whenever I am feeling totally stressed or anxious I pop this on and it just reminds me of rain which I have no control over but eventually it will pass.
You have to do the live version from Madison square garden 1973 just don't try to figure out the fantasy scenes that are from the movie the song remains the same It's truly is one of their masterpieces
Lex would love the live MSG performance of this song. In 1976 I saw The Song Remains The Same at the Century Cinedome Orange County Ca which had a big airy theater. It was packed with teens and smoke from weed was thick in the light from the projector. I got the chills when I experienced them play this song live (no youtube then) it became one of my favorites Live…Better than the studio IMO.. I agree about the fantasy scenes, unlike their music, didn’t age well. You can tell Bonham told them to “Sod off” when they asked him to do one!
The beautiful "string" section you're referring to is a keyboard instrument called a mellotron played by bassist/keyboardist John Paul Jones. A lot of progressive bands like Genesis and King Crimson used it in the 70s. It certainly is responsible for some achingly beautiful passages in the past.
Also, it's one of my (if not THE) favourite LZ songs to play on guitar. The CGCGCD tuning makes the notes just POP, and the æthereal, otherworldly feelings tied to the song just emote like a mofo. This truly is a song that transcends time and space, and fills me with both melancholy and unbound joy.
An absolute masterpiece.. Best zeppelin album and one of the many 10/10 iconic songs off of it. Just stunning. The 'musical score' aspect of the music was the mellotron filling the space with the symphonic sounds. That was played by John Paul Jones.
The orchestra is John Paul Jones...bassist, keyboards, early synthesizer music boards, etc. He often carried all base line with the foot pedals while playing keyboards and was a very under rated bass player by too many. All four were the tops of their fields...ALL FOUR. How did I miss you guys doing this one? Hope all is well with little one. Hugs. Mark
I have personally been listening to Led Zeppelin for 45 years. And I have heard them all multiple times every last one. I don't have the whole list figured out. But as far as Zeppelin Perfect songs, musically and lyrically. It's in my top five
Congrats on the baby you two! My wife and I played this song on our trip to the hospital when we had our twins. I remember it well. The year was 2016.🎉
Lex, just watching your appreciation for music, it's infectious. Brad, your pragmatic take, perfect. Love you guys. And of course, Zeppelin is one of the most influential and exceptional artists we as a civilization have ever been exposed to.
Hey guys!! Again, Congratulations!!!! This song was one of those that I would put on in my family's living room on the big stereo (my Dad's) and just CHILL. I listened to it by myself since it wasn't a jam song, but I love it so much to this day. ❤
So glad you guys give the time to see just how versatile Led Zeppelin is! No album sounds the same, so many different styles just equals complete geniuses!!!
THANK YOU! I've been waiting for this one for a while. Such a mellow song, but so powerful. Perfect song to put the headphones on, close your eyes, and lay back and listen to.
This song is one of the greatest examples as to why John Paul Jones was Led Zeppelin's secret weapon. His arranging and orchestration are all over this. Jimmy Page is exceptional as well.
JPJ also wrote many of the famous Zeppelin guitar riffs like the one in Black Dog. Jones, not Page, wrote that riff.
He is the most underrated musician... even as highly rated as he is
I second that ☝🏼☝🏼☝🏼☝🏼🤙🏼🤙🏼✌🏼✌🏼❤️❤️
Listen to Automatic For The People by REM for further evidence of how aweome he is.
Wow, you nailed it..
First comment outta the box was exactly what I was dropping into the comments to say.
Once I saw some doc on the bands and learned all the instruments he plays, and the arrangements he had his hand in, JPJ has rocketed to my personal favorite member of Led Zeppelin and I never would’ve guessed I’d think that in a million years.
Not to mention that after watching some interviews with him, he’s really one of the nicest guys walking the planet.. what more could you want from a super cool rock star?
Zeppelin is so diverse. Some people can't understand us led heads. No one can ever tell me that they aren't the goats. Music perfection 🥰.
That's good too.
I feel sorry for those who didn’t have Zep in their teenage years
Beatles versus Led Zep is a fascinating discussion
@@jimarmstrong5820 Led Zeppelin were a genuine group of incredibly talented musicians with a wonderful lyricist.........the Beatles were just a glorified boy band that were picked up and promoted by a talented producer. They wouldn't have been famous if it weren't for George Martin, EMI and the engineers at Abbey Road.
It's like comparing a manufactured pop group like Take That with a real band like the Stone Roses......or a jug of organic orange juice with a plastic bottle of Sunny Delight!
Pink Floyd was the best....but Led is 1A
When my mom passed last November, the 4 of us kids were asked if there were any songs we'd like played at the funeral home, this is the song I wanted
So sorry for your loss.
That's a great choice. I'm a musician, and I will remember your comment.
@@marymargaretmoore9034 thank you
@@bgaona I always appreciated the gifts she gave me, one of the greatest gifts my mom ever gave me was the gift of music appreciation, from about the age of 6 or 7 years old she introduced me to the genres of Motown to Rock to Country, Im 55 now and I still have all of the albums and 45s she gave me, including the first album she ever gave me, which was 'Goodbye Yellow Brick Road', and I understand the value of music even more now that she's gone
Very smart choice for me it'd either be this or Thank you also by zeppelin, but this song just sums up what a ballad is supposed to be and it would be a most appropriate pick for a funeral I'm sure your mother would be happy to know that you'd honor her with such a powerful song like this
This song is so hauntingly beautiful. No matter how many times you’ve listened to it, it always evokes that feeling.
Perhaps one of the most beautiful in the last century. Their musical genius is second to none. You have Kashmir, Stairway, Black Dog and a bunch of heavy tunes, ripping guitar and then this. Written beautifully.
By the first heavy metal band ever…genius!
Zeppelin was such a complete band. There really wasn't anything they couldn't do, and do it well. 90% of their catalog would have been the best song most bands would have ever done.
One of the most beautiful songs EVER written. Those violins go on for days along with the guitar work.
Simply AMAZING
Strings produced by a Mellotron...
@@michaelakkerman407 Thank you. Lol
@@michaelakkerman407 Thanks bro👍
John Paul Jones on the keys. No actual violins needed. It was many years before I learned that they were "played" by him.
@@michaelakkerman407 JPJ is a genius. My fave member next to Bonzo
The UK certainly has given the world a disproportionately high number of fantastic bands and the music they made for us.
American Blues was a major influence on the band.
@ScaryTerry-xu4vz no
I always get a bit of a chill when I hear Plant sing this song. When he says “upon us all, a little rain must fall…..just a little rain”….and I remember that in a few years he would lose his little boy. He’s had more than his share of “rain” in his life.
Same here!! Beautiful song !!
This isn't just a song. It's an orchestral composition. John Paul Jones is the man. His work here complements Page's guitars perfectly.
Top 5 you say - then maybe top 2!??? Keep listening/reacting. There is nobody quite like The Mighty Led Zeppelin! Levels above the rest.
Houses of the Holy is my favorite Led Zeppelin album. John Paul Jones knew how to arrange the hell out of a song.
And this is what pisses me off about Plant and Page not giving John Paul Jones his credit. Check out when they got inducted into the rock and roll hall of fame. Didn’t even let the man speak.
That's 4 sure!!!
John Paul Jones doesn't like the attention like the other two. For him to get on stage is a miracle in itself.
His scoring on R.E.M's Automatic for the People is top class!
💥Greatest Fucking Love Song Ever 💥
🕊 Led Zeppelin 🕊
Led Zeppelin is on a lot of people's top five bands list . . .
One of the most beautiful chord progressions ever. This song was a tribute to George Harrison who was a fan and friend to the band. Page even quotes Something in the first two chords.
Dont think it was a tribute. George commented that Zeppelin never wrote a ballad. Jimmy took up the challenge, and This was the result.
Yeah, those first two chords are pretty iconic. They're really simple, but when you know how to use them...🌈🔥🌌
@@w.geoffreyspaulding6588 Page’s own words.
I remember playing this song over the phone to a girl because I was so excited to have learned this whole song with the weird open tuning. Back in the days before Zoom and whatnot. It got her attention, that's for sure!
@@johnr.8275 Agree. If you don't have the right tuning you just can't do this song worth a damn.
When it comes to Led Zep, John Paul Jones is the orchestra.
On a separate note please be careful guys with the upcoming hurricane. If you have to evacuate please do. You have your whole lives ahead of you with still so much to experience. God speed!
John Paul Jones the bass player is a multi-instrumentalist who did most of the arrangements for the group, including the orchestral score for this song. While Page and Bonham were top tier on their respective instruments, the really great musician in the band was John.
Absolutely right! JPJ is brilliant.
No orchestral, Jones is playing a Mellotron.
I agree, JPJ is absolutely brilliant. But all three instrumentalists were phenomenal musicians.
I smiled when Lex said "light to dark, light to dark," because Jimmy Page (who literally produced all of Zeppelin's albums) often professed his belief in the principle of "light and shade" when it came to his unique approach to creating music.
Jimmy Page wanted him in the band for a reason.
The orchestration sound Lex mentioned was bass player John Paul Jones playing the Mellotron, which was the first "sampler" ever made. Each key of the keyboard engaged a tape head to a length of tape of a recorded instrument- in this case it was a recording of orchestral strings being played. It gives a signature sound that is recognizable in other songs of the era such as Bowie's "Space Oddity" and The Moody Blues "Knights in White Satin".
Well said, John Paul Jones' arrangement and playing skills can get overshadowed because they often take a supporting role to the rest of the band, but are so crucial to either the groove or the atmosphere. I'd liken it to if you watched a scene from a movie and saw it with a score and then without it, and compared the emotional experience, you'd appreciate how much of an important element it was. Without Jones' previous session playing and wide studio experience Led Zeppelin may not, as they progressed, have been able to experiment so successfully, and with such diverse styles, and still keep it all within the band.
@@MrDiddyDee No doubt, Jones was the most underrated element of the band and crucial to it.
Nights in white satin uses a real orchestra
@@mjt11860 Yes, it uses both I believe, You can definitely tell the Mellotron parts.
@@mjt11860 The Mellotron was necessitated out of need. There was a desire shared among musicians, to be able to bring to their deserving audiences the authentic sounds of a range of recorded acoustic (& other) instruments, essentially being performed "live" by a keyboardist.
One of the best songs by Led Zeppelin, in my opinion!🥁🎸🔥💣
One of the finest songs written by anyone period. Beautifully constructed, orchestrated, played. They are all genius musicians.
My favorite song by Led Zeppelin and Jimmy Page the guitarist wrote it after George Harrison suggested to them that they needed to include a ballad in their repertoire and boy did he write a masterpiece, John Paul Jones did a brilliant job with the orchestration as well
JPJ to George Harrison...hold my beer!
@@andmour1 indeed👌
This is my favorite of all "rock" songs - the music (including jazz chords), the musicianship, the theme, the dramatic build-up... it has everything.
I think this is one of their best songs and I also think that it's one of the best pieces of music ever written.
That's it.
💯
This isn't a song a "rock band" does. This is what a group of musicians create. They are so above all other bands, and this just drives that point home even more.
So glad to see you enjoying this as much as I do,
Gotta hear the live version from the song remains the same album it's tuned higher and sounds even better than the studio. This is my favorite song of all time I just got the zeppelin symbols tatood on my arm. Greatest band ever!
Definitely sounds even better on the song remains the same version
I prefer this song & Since I’ve Been Loving You live at MSG compared to the studio version. Both great though.
My first tattoo, almost 25 years ago, is of the 4 symbols, also on my arm. Welcome to a rather small club, I reckon!
And the simplicity at the end of the song when it reveals why it's called the Rain song. They've posted you this picture of all this drama and storm. But at the end it's very simple in our lives every once in awhile a little Rain Must Fall
Thank you Brad & Lex
Brad and Lex, you're right on target. It's about growing older with your love and experiencing life as if it were seasons. When winter comes you look back and understand that in order to appreciate the earlier seasons "in every life a little rain must fall" 🥺😥❤️
John Paul Jones is responsible for the middle, mellotron magic. He's Zeppelin's secret sauce.
Love watching Brad (just past the 8-minute mark) when the lyrics hit him and he smiles with a "Ok, I get it" face.
There's parts of this song that are so beautiful I almost want to cry.
That orchestral sound was an instrument called a Mellotron. An incredible invention
I was beginning to wonder if anyone but me knew it was a Mellotron..
I had a friend fo 37 years, who had a Mellotron and I goto play it often. He passed in 2015, and I wish I could have bought it!!
@@RonF-q3l you are lucky to have played one. I have only seen one
@@Hartlor_Tayley They were the great Tech for mid 1960's however, Walter Carlos (now Wendy Carlos) sprung a new album on the public called Switched On Bach. This Album introduced the world to Synthesizers..
Carlos really had his/her Masterpiece with the Soundtrack for the movie "A Clockwork Orange " ..
@@RonF-q3l check out Oscillations by the Silver Apples
This is just another example of that Led Zeppelin magic. Lex, if only you had grown up with all us older rockers back then. Man you would have fit right little darlin'. Brad baby, you done got the right woman. 3 cheers and a tiger for you. Keep it coming you two. You bring great joy and warmth to and old rock and rollers heart. I just had my 63rd b day in August. Thanks for keeping on! Sincerely,
Jeff.
It's extremely encouraging to see the younger generation appreciate this, gives hope that these legendary musical artists of yesteryear will live on for generations, their music will never get stale and forgotten.
The live, unleaded version with Page and Plant, mid 90’s is perhaps the most beautiful acoustic guitar playing I have ever heard. It is flawless.
That whole performance is just fantastic
Are you talking about the one with Page and Plant with the orchestra? That is indeed flawless. Killer how Plant nods to Page at the end saying “we just killed it!”
'Upon us a little rain must fall'.
Love that lyric so much.
I love that Lex loves Led Zeppelin! (nice alliteration huh?) They have been and always will be my favorite!!
I agree with Cadinho... Zep could never create this kind of orchestral bliss without the talent of John Paul Jones.... great reaction guys, thumbs up!
It’s about the seasons, the changes, the emotions, the highs and lows of a life lived
My favorite Zeppelin song by far!!! The guitar work is unparalleled. One of the most beautiful songs ever written...
This song was the result of a challenge by George Harrison of The Beatles, who asked Jimmy Page the guitar player from Led Zeppelin why they never did a ballad. GREAT song!!!
Finally my favorite Zep song ..... I'm all about the rain, literally & metaphorically. Rain is LIFE. Rain comes & haunts you. Rain comes & soothes you. The fellas captured it all in one solid moment of grandiose. A classic rock song if ever there was one. Thank you for this reaction, you guys are still a big part of my day.
I was in high school when Led Zeppelin burst onto the scene and I was an instant fan of the first Album. Then the second album came out and I liked it just as much as the first. But then the third album debuted and I was like - what happened? It took me a while to appreciate the different types of music Led Zeppelin could write and play - but after a while I thought it was their biggest strength and what differentiated them from most other superstar bands. The Rain Song is a prime example of something totally different from them but still a really great song - if Plant's distinctive voice wasn't on this song it would be hard to know this was a Led Zeppelin song.
I hope you keep going down the LZ rabbit hole.
One of their most beautifully constructed songs. Brilliance.
"Upon us all, just a little rain must fall..."
Congratulations you too. You're going to rock fatherhood Brad
The story I heard on this song is that it was a reaction to George Harrison making a comment after one Zepp concert saying "The problem with you guys is you don't do any ballads." To which Jimmy Page replied "I'll write you a ballad" , and then he wrote The Rain Song, and Robert Plant added the lyrics. John Paul Jones did the arrangement for the tune.
Now listen to it again, Lex, and pay attention to the words. Pure poetry….full of metaphor.
The "orchestral " sound was a mellotron, a vintage keyboard instrument, and one of the earliest "sampling" devices, played by John Paul Jones, who also played piano and bass on the track. The mellotron used tape loops triggered by the notes of a keyboard, so to get the sound of "strings" you were actually playing tapes of recorded strings in whatever arrangement you chose. It produced an eery sound which you can't quite duplicate using modern synths. Paul McCartney played the intro to "Strawberry Fields Forever" on a mellotron using a "Flutes" sound.
John Paul Jones is the hidden weapon in Zeppelin..His arrangements are the glue that keeps a lot Zeps songs together..And yes they would've brought in a live string section for a song like this..Peace from the Northeast..
This has always been one of those songs that can take me out of stress or anxiety. Great choice.
Haha this is awesome to watch, a new generation discover the best rock band ever, Led Zeppelin means heavy/light, or light/dark as Lex noticed, supposedly a term coined by The Who's drummer Keith Moon, who was possibly the first choice for Zep drummer, he said it would go down like a Lead Zeppelin. That story may be fiction as they rarely gave interviews and so media and fans may have made some things up, and the band was ok with that.
"I don't know how it works, but it is beautiful!" Spot on!
this song just has a habit of sticking around. in my head all the time
Finally The Rain Song 🌧♥️🌧♥️🌧
You guys are doing the best reaction videos on YT by far, hands down.
I think of my first love when I hear this song. He sang along to this and to me many times. It takes me right back to so long ago. It makes me cry. He's the one who got away. I love him still. ❤️
You guys should do "Good times bad times" and also, "When the levee breaks" both are Led Zeppelin
You nailed it Lex! 🎉🥳
When you said "the music always goes from light to dark to light to dark"...
Jimmy Page always described his musical style, or what he was trying to achieve, as "Light and Shadow".
He actually went to art school to be a painter, and he relates the light and shadow aspect of that to music. 😎
Light and shade…whisper to the thunder
Jimmy rules 😀
It shows great taste to like Led Zeppelin because they are maybe the greatest bands in rock history.
They mention all four seasons in this song. John Paul Jones still does music for movies and such from what I hear. He was actually the most talented one in the band. He played several instruments.
It’s always good to see young music fans latch on to Classic Rock’s great compositions.
Aloha guys, good morning...I've been waiting for this one for awhile...love it... the answer you seek is John Paul Jones... Most talented multi-instrumentist I've ever seen..Mahalo nui loa...a hui hou
🤙
Zeppelin.. there is no other like them.. Fave songs change dialy.. "In my Time of Dying".. "How many more Times".. too many
The live song from the movie "The Song That Remains The Same" is so much better plus the visuals are spectacular, but this is still a great choice. I'm 58 years old and I cry almost every time I hear it.
The song is about the stages of a loving relationship.
Brings a tear to my eye every time I hear it. Excellent choice guys!
Whenever I am feeling totally stressed or anxious I pop this on and it just reminds me of rain which I have no control over but eventually it will pass.
This song always makes me feel good
Man, oh man… That was pretty!
Congratulations on the baby!
this song is life ... whatever you are facing, put some headphones on and get lost in this beautiful piece of music.
You have to do the live version from Madison square garden 1973 just don't try to figure out the fantasy scenes that are from the movie the song remains the same It's truly is one of their masterpieces
Lex would love the live MSG performance of this song.
In 1976 I saw The Song Remains The Same at the Century Cinedome Orange County Ca which had a big airy theater. It was packed with teens and smoke from weed was thick in the light from the projector. I got the chills when I experienced them play this song live (no youtube then) it became one of my favorites Live…Better than the studio IMO..
I agree about the fantasy scenes, unlike their music, didn’t age well. You can tell Bonham told them to “Sod off” when they asked him to do one!
You both remind me everyday how privileged i was to grow up in the most AMAZING time of musical awakening😈🤘
The beautiful "string" section you're referring to is a keyboard instrument called a mellotron played by bassist/keyboardist John Paul Jones. A lot of progressive bands like Genesis and King Crimson used it in the 70s. It certainly is responsible for some achingly beautiful passages in the past.
This one was a little different. Had this overseas in military. Seasons and emotions and the lessons of life: "upon us all, a little rain must fall."
Also, it's one of my (if not THE) favourite LZ songs to play on guitar.
The CGCGCD tuning makes the notes just POP, and the æthereal, otherworldly feelings tied to the song just emote like a mofo.
This truly is a song that transcends time and space, and fills me with both melancholy and unbound joy.
This was written by Page on a dare by George Harrison. Harrison said Zeppelin didn't know to compose a ballad. Well, this is the result.
An absolute masterpiece.. Best zeppelin album and one of the many 10/10 iconic songs off of it. Just stunning. The 'musical score' aspect of the music was the mellotron filling the space with the symphonic sounds. That was played by John Paul Jones.
Finally!! ❤🥳
That's our girl...Lex and all her LZ feels!!
Isn't this the best?? 🤩
The orchestra is John Paul Jones...bassist, keyboards, early synthesizer music boards, etc. He often carried all base line with the foot pedals while playing keyboards and was a very under rated bass player by too many. All four were the tops of their fields...ALL FOUR. How did I miss you guys doing this one? Hope all is well with little one. Hugs. Mark
I love how the open tuning in this song sounds. The ringing, open strings sound so laid back and warm. One of my favorite Zep tunes.
John Paul Jones is a music genius, he helped Page compose a lot their music
One of the very few bands who's entire catalog is MUST HEAR, no "filler" songs...PERIOD❗️
I see your period... But that is debatable lol. ITTOD was meh. A few killer tracks but kinda lame otherwise
@@justaguy2365 yeah ok dude, get back to listening to Coldplay😅
The Crunge is at best filler and more accurately a clunker
@@seansho "....where's that confounded bridge"
@@seansho the 4 of them are incapable of producing a clunker, come on now😋
That song is a masterpiece it's hard to describe the feeling I get when I hear the rain song.
MY FAVORITE SONG OF ALL TIME
Thanks!
The live version of this from the MSG concert is phenomenal. It's "The Song Remains The Same/Rain Song" and should be on your bucket list.
I have personally been listening to Led Zeppelin for 45 years. And I have heard them all multiple times every last one. I don't have the whole list figured out. But as far as Zeppelin Perfect songs, musically and lyrically. It's in my top five
One of my absolute favorite LZ songs! Glad you liked it, guys, and congrats on the incoming bambino!
Congrats on the baby you two! My wife and I played this song on our trip to the hospital when we had our twins. I remember it well. The year was 2016.🎉
Good timing for The Rain Song. Stay safe.
Yeah, I actually came here to check.
This is one where the live version might even be better, especially following The Song Remains The Same. Together about 15 minutes of bliss.
Simply...in another words...PERFECT.
Lex, just watching your appreciation for music, it's infectious. Brad, your pragmatic take, perfect. Love you guys. And of course, Zeppelin is one of the most influential and exceptional artists we as a civilization have ever been exposed to.
Hey guys!! Again, Congratulations!!!!
This song was one of those that I would put on in my family's living room on the big stereo (my Dad's) and just CHILL. I listened to it by myself since it wasn't a jam song, but I love it so much to this day. ❤
This song is a masterpiece!
So glad you guys give the time to see just how versatile Led Zeppelin is! No album sounds the same, so many different styles just equals complete geniuses!!!
Beautiful amazing song from the legendary Zeps
THANK YOU! I've been waiting for this one for a while. Such a mellow song, but so powerful. Perfect song to put the headphones on, close your eyes, and lay back and listen to.
Beautiful ballad! This live in 1973 was fabulous!
Songs like this are the reason I wanted to be a studio musician growing up