Jimmy formed the band and produced all their albums. He also remastered their entire catalogue. Zeppelin was/is his baby and he has devoted a good chunk of his life to keeping the Zeppelin flame going
As a session player before the Yardbirds and Led Zeppelin Jimmy learned all the silks to produce music in the recording industry. Jimmy and Peter Grant took control of Zeppelins future path in all forms. They where the first band to not let a record label take the majority of the earnings created from the band.
@@6ffrey958 indeed. You should put this info in the general chain instead of this side chain…..More people will see it……I know theses facts, but others do not.
Physical Graffiti was the first ever album to "ship Platinum", meaning 1,000,000 copies were sent out before its release date. Soon after its release, all five previous LZ albums reentered the Billboard charts. In my opinion, Physical Graffiti is Led Zeppelin at their best and most dangerous. Raw energy, raw emotion, technically and sonically perfect. Some songs are meant to be played in arenas, some are meant to be played in stadiums, much of this album would sound best played in a dark and smokey bar. Imagine watching them performing The Rover in a small club; this is not a band you want to mess around with. Their previous releases proved they could do and excel at whatever they wanted; this one proved they could do it best. This is Zeppelin at its creative peak. Even Rolling Stone Magazine called it "Tommy, Beggar's Banquet, and Sgt. Pepper rolled into one" (those are considered the most creative albums from The Who, The Rolling Stones, and The Beatles). Yet surprisingly, on RSM's list of Zeppelin's greatest songs, only 1 song from this album cracks the Top 25. It might not be as radio-friendly as previous releases. But if I was stuck on a desert island for the rest of my life with only one album, this would be it.
@@nellgwenn The album is so good that you don't need electricity, it has it's own conducive elements inside, just pull one vinyl or the other out of the sleeve and it begins playing on it's own !
When it segues into track 2 “The Rover” you realize this album is going to be intense and different once again. “Physical Graffiti” a stunning masterpiece 🍃
Jimmy Page is the Architect and Visionary behind Led Zeppelin. Although each band member was among the very best at what they did, and all contributed equally from a musical point of view, make no mistake:. Jimmy was the leader and vision that created Led Zep. Get ready for a journey you'll never forget....this album is fire.
I agree absolutely. Jimmy Page master minded the guitar timing and precision to create amazing blend of tunes to harmonize with the strengths of each band member. And he had charisma as well.
As a 60+ year old that absolutely grew up on this and dare I say take it for granted, so much good music in the 70’s, it does my heart good to see the younger generation appreciate real musical talent, next level raw pure talent
Take it from someone who was 16 at the time this album was released. No internet, no MTV, no music sharing sites, really not much radio play as Zeppelin didn't release singles. If you were a fan of theirs you bought the record, if you were lucky enough to get tickets to their concerts, more power to you. I was a fan already so plopping down my hard earned $16 was a no brainer.
This is an excellent song that has a gritty growl to it. This is a combination of several blues songs, notably Sleepy John Estes and Bukka White. The notes being played that you enjoyed, are from John Paul Jones playing an electric clavinet, if I'm not mistaken.
At 11:2 you said you liked that redreda sound. Thats the bass player, JPJones, playing clavinet. its a keyboard associated with funk. Think Stevie Wonder Supersition or Wonders You Havent Done Nothing. Zep uses it extensively on trampled Under Foot, off of this album.
The amazing thing about Jimmy Page, at it still amazes me, is that, as a guitar player myself, I can play the exact same notes as he did, but still, there's just something missing there. He has a certain sound, and I've never heard anyone who can EXACTLY coin it. It's not all about technical skills. The style has to be magnetic. JP had super magic. ha ha
If I knew of someone that didn't know anything of Led Zeppelin this is the album I would have them listen to first. It contains a lot of new stuff, but also songs recorded for other albums that just didn't make it onto those albums, so you get a taste of EVERYTHING.I still remember dropping the needle on side 1, record 1, Custard Pie. Guitar solo in this track is incendiary!
This song is a mix of rock, blues and funk. It's got "feel" for sure. It's also dripping with sex. I believe you can see and hear this live with Page playing with the Black Crows.Not Zeppelin, but the next best thing!
They peaked as a live unit in '72, and this is their peak as a studio band. Although several of the tracks are leftover from previous albums. This is a masterpiece, the total Led Zeppelin package!
The rock media and rock critics were not lovers of Zeppelin back in the day. They've all had to bite their tongues in more recent times due to the bands lasting massive success.
4 of my favorite songs come from this album... best album by any band ever! Ten Years Gone - all time favorite song Night Flight Down by the Seaside In the Light .... they are all good but for me these stand above the rest!
The bonus disc also known as a companion disc are studio rough cuts and different versions of the songs on this album and also have songs that are not on the album Jimmy Page released all their category with companion disc later
The interesting thing about Jimmy Page as producer is that he never produced any other band, except his later post-Zeppelin work (Clarksdale being the notable exception). He was a studio wizard, and was revolutionary in ambient microphone placement, especially with drums.
WICKED SICK!!!! That sums up Physical Graffiti. There are 15 amazing tracks on this album & if you follow suit with checking out live performances after studio versions, there are some live clips for about 6 tracks on PG. Like how you have caught onto Rolling Stone Magazine!!! Peace ☮️
I cut my Zeppelin teeth on this album when I was about 10 years old in 1980, I pretty much worshipped Led throughout the 80s and they're definitely still one of my favorite bands
LZ never performed Custard Pie in concert. The lyrics are based on several old American blues songs, and, as you might suspect, are heavy with sexual innuendo, as is much of that genre. Regarding critical reviews -- you have to remember that you are looking at this nearly 50 years after the song/album was originally released. Music critics at the time had mixed opinions of Led Zeppelin; the mainstream writers were often confused and surprised by the band's musical selections, and their refusal to stick to a predictable genre and style. Later reviewers had the benefit of the hindsight of history and comparison with other contemporary music; it's difficult to negatively review a 16x platinum album.
One of the really underrated Zep tracks, even among fans. Along with I would say The Crunge and Four Sticks - but all Zeppelin fans will have their own list :-)
One of their most underrated songs! The band in their entirety never performed this song live but Page and Plant performed it a few times after the band broke up.
The 8 tracks they recorded for this album ended up being 3 album sides long in playing time so they added previously unreleased tracks to extend it to 4 sides, or a double album. It was released in 1975 and the extended version, released in 2015, added alternative arrangements of some of the songs on the original album. I believe the instrument you heard that caused you to pause was Jones on an electric keyboard called the Clavinet, which can create electric guitar sounds. Sadly, I don't think they ever performed Custard Pie live.
Wow, am i ever glad youve arrived at this double-header of diverse diamonds. (NO "rough" here!) custard pie is funky and sleazy and groovy AF. The next track, The Rover, is groovier still. The solo's magic, the lyrics superb. The third and last track on side one? I'm flashing on that scene in "Twister," where one of the characters asks the tornado expert (Bill Paxton) what the final stage on the scale of tornado damage, "F5," means. A pause, and a hush forms. "Finger of God," Paxton says quietly, a look of growing awe on his face. Yup, "In My Time of Dying" may just be that for you here. (Jimmy Page's fingers ARE guitar-godly...) I think it's one of their best songs, it's soooo sustained and intense and its 10+ minutes grab you by the throat, the heart, the brain, the balls, and then it comes for your ears, which, if properly played (LOUDLY) should be ringing afterwards. Starts out slowly, a menacing , hypnotically honey-dripping blues bit (It was based on what they call an old "Negro Spiritual" by Blind Willie Johnson, whom Page and Plant especially revered) , then erupts into a thunderous frenzy of pulse-pounding power, led by Bonham, beating the drums like they owed him money. JPJ's bassline, though a bit hard to hear, is worth straining for. Intricate yet perfectly matched to the rhythm. Page is conducting alchemy with his slide geetar wizardry, and Plant's pleading vocals directed to Jesus and Heaven's Saints would cause an atheist to make a bee-line to "Chuch." OK, cheesy: now you know why I never became a rock critic, lol! But, dude: Physical Grafitti, Side One. Three of the coolest and hottest songs in this miraculous band's catalog. "Flip it over," (Yeah, I'm old, lol!) there's more! Trampled Under Foot, for one...And then Disc 2, which is just as good in its way, but i'll STFU about it now! It's kinda like The Beatles "White Album," a masterpiece just showing off all the different things they could do. But Disc 1 is just bone-crunching rock at its finest, full effing stop. Enjoy!
That’s JPJ on the Clavinet weaving under and throughout this track. That’s how you begin a platinum album. How many times platinum? Don’t know, but I’m sure it’s plenty. 🤘😎
I don't take music critics seriously or rely on them....I am the expert on Books......Music........TV.....and Films......and I don't rely or support music critics......in many ways they wrong and bias....When this record came out i heard Kashmir and I went out and bought the whole double album and was Thoroughly Impressed.😉😉😉😉😉😉
"Ten Years Gone" is the best track on this release by far! Heard it called sophisticated by others from a lyrical view and have to agree, you need to have had time to experience a point in your life that mirrors what Robert is talking about to love it.
And that’s just one of a few, that for me make side 3, the hidden gem of Physical Graffiti. In The Light, The Wanton Song, Down By The Seaside… perhaps because we all wore out sides 1 & 2 when released. Ten Years Gone is just the most haunting lament. They really outdid themselves with this one. 🤘😎
Think I would like a piece of custard pie right about now. Its funny but when this came out I never heard the term custard pie. Now I just think its so clever.
It depends what you mean by 'good'. If something pleases most people it will get good reviews but there are quirky things that fewer people enjoy but they aren't necessarily bad - maybe just harder work or takes more than one listening or viewing to appreciate. After all when Led Zeppelin first launched their music the music press seemed to hate them and their records got bad reviews. Probably a lot of people didn't get Pink Floyd's early music at first. The same happened to classic musicians. People walked out of Stravinsky's 'Rite of Spring' because it was so innovative and unexpected they didn't appreciate it.
LOL, never listened to any critics then or now! I have a mind of my own and no one is going to influence what I see or listen to. You are allowing thought control into your life but I'm not surprised, it's a sad state that your generation is controlled by others feeding you their opinions. Think for yourself! We (the youth of that time) certainly did, questioned everything the "establishment" told us and chose our own path.
Not my favorite Zeppelin album. Yet it has 3 strong contenders for my favorite Zeppelin song. It's been over 30 years since I first listened to this entire album and I think I'm still processing it.
You finally made it! To me, this is the weakest song on the first album and it's anything but weak. Here how raspy Plant's voice is? How funky the overall tone of the song is? How Bonham's drums are so powerful? The soft, almost hidden guitar parts you have to strain to hear. These are common themes of the first album. Thats part of what made Jimmy Page so great. He was an innovative and amazing producer as well. Comes from all those years as a studio musician before he ever joined a band. I am sure you can figure out what "Custard Pie " is if you think of a woman's anatomy. LOL. The album cover is a tenement building in Manhattan in the East village thats still there today. Just north of Houston Street. Known as Alphabet City. The map actually says Ukraine Village, which is news to me but sort of relevant these days.
Jimmy Paige owned what was ònce known as Fallen Angel Recordings. Changed to SWAN SONG RECORDS. That is why the emblem is a falling angel on the records. NO! THEY WERE NOT SATANIST!
Jimmy formed the band and produced all their albums. He also remastered their entire catalogue. Zeppelin was/is his baby and he has devoted a good chunk of his life to keeping the Zeppelin flame going
As a session player before the Yardbirds and Led Zeppelin Jimmy learned all the silks to produce music in the recording industry. Jimmy and Peter Grant took control of Zeppelins future path in all forms. They where the first band to not let a record label take the majority of the earnings created from the band.
@@6ffrey958 indeed. You should put this info in the general chain instead of this side chain…..More people will see it……I know theses facts, but others do not.
Physical Graffiti was the first ever album to "ship Platinum", meaning 1,000,000 copies were sent out before its release date. Soon after its release, all five previous LZ albums reentered the Billboard charts.
In my opinion, Physical Graffiti is Led Zeppelin at their best and most dangerous. Raw energy, raw emotion, technically and sonically perfect. Some songs are meant to be played in arenas, some are meant to be played in stadiums, much of this album would sound best played in a dark and smokey bar. Imagine watching them performing The Rover in a small club; this is not a band you want to mess around with. Their previous releases proved they could do and excel at whatever they wanted; this one proved they could do it best.
This is Zeppelin at its creative peak. Even Rolling Stone Magazine called it "Tommy, Beggar's Banquet, and Sgt. Pepper rolled into one" (those are considered the most creative albums from The Who, The Rolling Stones, and The Beatles). Yet surprisingly, on RSM's list of Zeppelin's greatest songs, only 1 song from this album cracks the Top 25.
It might not be as radio-friendly as previous releases. But if I was stuck on a desert island for the rest of my life with only one album, this would be it.
I totally agree, for one reason, it has twice as much music, but I'd sure miss the rest of their catalog lol
How would you generate electricity? Mary Ann is no longer available. Sadly she passed on.
@@nellgwenn The album is so good that you don't need electricity, it has it's own conducive elements inside, just pull one vinyl or the other out of the sleeve and it begins playing on it's own !
...and the least derivative
Physical Graffiti is one hell of an album, this is their masterpiece
When it segues into track 2 “The Rover” you realize this album is going to be intense and different once again. “Physical Graffiti” a stunning masterpiece 🍃
ya man the rover is like designed to get you moving and bouncing
Fasten your safety belt for a wild ride.Wait until In My Time of Dying.lol
Jimmy Page is the Architect and Visionary behind Led Zeppelin. Although each band member was among the very best at what they did, and all contributed equally from a musical point of view, make no mistake:. Jimmy was the leader and vision that created Led Zep.
Get ready for a journey you'll never forget....this album is fire.
I agree absolutely. Jimmy Page master minded the guitar timing and precision to create amazing blend of tunes to harmonize with the strengths of each band member. And he had charisma as well.
The best way to try to sum Page in one word: Genius!!
As a 60+ year old that absolutely grew up on this and dare I say take it for granted, so much good music in the 70’s, it does my heart good to see the younger generation appreciate real musical talent, next level raw pure talent
You always get something different with Led Zeppelin
The very first album I ever bought when I was in the 5th grade.
The whole album is genius and full of surprises.
Take it from someone who was 16 at the time this album was released.
No internet, no MTV, no music sharing sites, really not much radio play as Zeppelin didn't release singles. If you were a fan of theirs you bought the record, if you were lucky enough to get tickets to their concerts, more power to you.
I was a fan already so plopping down my hard earned $16 was a no brainer.
I'm sure I've worn out this album on vinyl, cassette, and cd...now my sound card!
This is an excellent song that has a gritty growl to it. This is a combination of several blues songs, notably Sleepy John Estes and Bukka White. The notes being played that you enjoyed, are from John Paul Jones playing an electric clavinet, if I'm not mistaken.
Congratulations 🎊 You have officially heard my personal favorite Led Zeppelin song...
The Rover…Rock and Roll defined!
At 11:2 you said you liked that redreda sound. Thats the bass player, JPJones, playing clavinet. its a keyboard associated with funk. Think Stevie Wonder Supersition or Wonders You Havent Done Nothing. Zep uses it extensively on trampled Under Foot, off of this album.
And The Rover is fabulous!
That tune is a Killer rock tune. They do it all so well! 😎👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
This is an excellent album! As always! Jimmy produced ALL their albums!
I'm looking forward to the rest of the album. my fav songs off it: in the light, down by the seaside, ten years gone
an album with every genre of music ,
picking one zep album over any other is tuff
but this is top tier
The amazing thing about Jimmy Page, at it still amazes me, is that, as a guitar player myself, I can play the exact same notes as he did, but still, there's just something missing there. He has a certain sound, and I've never heard anyone who can EXACTLY coin it. It's not all about technical skills. The style has to be magnetic. JP had super magic. ha ha
If I knew of someone that didn't know anything of Led Zeppelin this is the album I would have them listen to first. It contains a lot of new stuff, but also songs recorded for other albums that just didn't make it onto those albums, so you get a taste of EVERYTHING.I still remember dropping the needle on side 1, record 1, Custard Pie. Guitar solo in this track is incendiary!
I would recommend the first one first. To me… that one epitomized the band sound right off the bat. But PG is nevertheless, a great place to start.
I think this album is too hard and advanced for beginners. They shall start from I in my opinion
Incendiary., where have I heard that before.
This song is a mix of rock, blues and funk. It's got "feel" for sure. It's also dripping with sex.
I believe you can see and hear this live with Page playing with the Black Crows.Not Zeppelin, but the next best thing!
Why Antarctic orb?
For sure. The crowed and jimmy page were a great fit.
@@garysteinert8040 because he asked.
That change.. is the great John Paul Jones Bass licks.
They peaked as a live unit in '72, and this is their peak as a studio band. Although several of the tracks are leftover from previous albums. This is a masterpiece, the total Led Zeppelin package!
The rock media and rock critics were not lovers of Zeppelin back in the day. They've all had to bite their tongues in more recent times due to the bands lasting massive success.
That sound you keep talking about is JPJ on some type of keyboard. And Jimmy is a guitar wizard!
4 of my favorite songs come from this album... best album by any band ever!
Ten Years Gone - all time favorite song
Night Flight
Down by the Seaside
In the Light
.... they are all good but for me these stand above the rest!
That noise you're hearing is the bass. JPJ is a genius.
Worth noting that the first two tunes on the album are Funk Rock... peace from Canada.
The bonus disc also known as a companion disc are studio rough cuts and different versions of the songs on this album and also have songs that are not on the album Jimmy Page released all their category with companion disc later
The interesting thing about Jimmy Page as producer is that he never produced any other band, except his later post-Zeppelin work (Clarksdale being the notable exception). He was a studio wizard, and was revolutionary in ambient microphone placement, especially with drums.
WICKED SICK!!!!
That sums up Physical Graffiti. There are 15 amazing tracks on this album & if you follow suit with checking out live performances after studio versions, there are some live clips for about 6 tracks on PG. Like how you have caught onto Rolling Stone Magazine!!! Peace ☮️
I cut my Zeppelin teeth on this album when I was about 10 years old in 1980, I pretty much worshipped Led throughout the 80s and they're definitely still one of my favorite bands
LZ never performed Custard Pie in concert. The lyrics are based on several old American blues songs, and, as you might suspect, are heavy with sexual innuendo, as is much of that genre.
Regarding critical reviews -- you have to remember that you are looking at this nearly 50 years after the song/album was originally released. Music critics at the time had mixed opinions of Led Zeppelin; the mainstream writers were often confused and surprised by the band's musical selections, and their refusal to stick to a predictable genre and style. Later reviewers had the benefit of the hindsight of history and comparison with other contemporary music; it's difficult to negatively review a 16x platinum album.
Well said :)
There’s speculation they performed it at Rotterdam ‘75, but there is no recording of that available
Heavenly- I never trust critics-let’s make our own minds up.
Sweet and nice 🙂🤣🤣🤣
One of the really underrated Zep tracks, even among fans. Along with I would say The Crunge and Four Sticks - but all Zeppelin fans will have their own list :-)
The Crunge I’m not buying entirely, but Four Sticks is one hell of a fucking song
❤❤❤Robert ❤❤❤
Thanks to my dad who bought loadsa stuff from an auction me nosing through it all I found some l ps ..he got me into led zep I guess
I love that everytime 😊you listen to led zep there something different in each song that you ve forgotten about from last listening to them
The beginning of my favorite Zep album. Enjoy
Is it good? Its 1 of the best rock albums ever made
One of their most underrated songs! The band in their entirety never performed this song live but Page and Plant performed it a few times after the band broke up.
The 8 tracks they recorded for this album ended up being 3 album sides long in playing time so they added previously unreleased tracks to extend it to 4 sides, or a double album. It was released in 1975 and the extended version, released in 2015, added alternative arrangements of some of the songs on the original album.
I believe the instrument you heard that caused you to pause was Jones on an electric keyboard called the Clavinet, which can create electric guitar sounds.
Sadly, I don't think they ever performed Custard Pie live.
It was
@@juliemanarin4127 It was, what?
@@jmar7631 where?
@@antarcticorb9197 Was your question meant for me or for Julie?
everybody should have a copy of physical graffiti one of the greatest albums ever made
I LOVE the rover! 1 of my favourites
Wow, am i ever glad youve arrived at this double-header of diverse diamonds. (NO "rough" here!) custard pie is funky and sleazy and groovy AF. The next track, The Rover, is groovier still. The solo's magic, the lyrics superb. The third and last track on side one? I'm flashing on that scene in "Twister," where one of the characters asks the tornado expert (Bill Paxton) what the final stage on the scale of tornado damage, "F5," means. A pause, and a hush forms. "Finger of God," Paxton says quietly, a look of growing awe on his face. Yup, "In My Time of Dying" may just be that for you here. (Jimmy Page's fingers ARE guitar-godly...) I think it's one of their best songs, it's soooo sustained and intense and its 10+ minutes grab you by the throat, the heart, the brain, the balls, and then it comes for your ears, which, if properly played (LOUDLY) should be ringing afterwards. Starts out slowly, a menacing , hypnotically honey-dripping blues bit (It was based on what they call an old "Negro Spiritual" by Blind Willie Johnson, whom Page and Plant especially revered) , then erupts into a thunderous frenzy of pulse-pounding power, led by Bonham, beating the drums like they owed him money. JPJ's bassline, though a bit hard to hear, is worth straining for. Intricate yet perfectly matched to the rhythm. Page is conducting alchemy with his slide geetar wizardry, and Plant's pleading vocals directed to Jesus and Heaven's Saints would cause an atheist to make a bee-line to "Chuch." OK, cheesy: now you know why I never became a rock critic, lol! But, dude: Physical Grafitti, Side One. Three of the coolest and hottest songs in this miraculous band's catalog. "Flip it over," (Yeah, I'm old, lol!) there's more! Trampled Under Foot, for one...And then Disc 2, which is just as good in its way, but i'll STFU about it now! It's kinda like The Beatles "White Album," a masterpiece just showing off all the different things they could do. But Disc 1 is just bone-crunching rock at its finest, full effing stop. Enjoy!
That sound you like is coming from the electric Bass by Paul Jones!!!!
That’s JPJ on the Clavinet weaving under and throughout this track. That’s how you begin a platinum album. How many times platinum? Don’t know, but I’m sure it’s plenty. 🤘😎
I hope you love this album as much as I do
You are in for one helluva ride
I don't take music critics seriously or rely on them....I am the expert on Books......Music........TV.....and Films......and I don't rely or support music critics......in many ways they wrong and bias....When this record came out i heard Kashmir and I went out and bought the whole double album and was Thoroughly Impressed.😉😉😉😉😉😉
Page, and Jones did the production!
It may be a strong start but many tracks supercede this. Ten years gone is my favourite song ever.
"Ten Years Gone" is the best track on this release by far! Heard it called sophisticated by others from a lyrical view and have to agree, you need to have had time to experience a point in your life that mirrors what Robert is talking about to love it.
And that’s just one of a few, that for me make side 3, the hidden gem of Physical Graffiti. In The Light, The Wanton Song, Down By The Seaside… perhaps because we all wore out sides 1 & 2 when released. Ten Years Gone is just the most haunting lament. They really outdid themselves with this one. 🤘😎
Think I would like a piece of custard pie right about now. Its funny but when this came out I never heard the term custard pie. Now I just think its so clever.
Walk past those two buildings in the album cover at least over 100 times
Love them x🎉
that sound you heard in the beginning was JPJ on the keyboards, which particular synth I dont know
Fu#k yeah brother ,good tune! Chew on a piece of your custard pie!
It depends what you mean by 'good'. If something pleases most people it will get good reviews but there are quirky things that fewer people enjoy but they aren't necessarily bad - maybe just harder work or takes more than one listening or viewing to appreciate. After all when Led Zeppelin first launched their music the music press seemed to hate them and their records got bad reviews. Probably a lot of people didn't get Pink Floyd's early music at first. The same happened to classic musicians. People walked out of Stravinsky's 'Rite of Spring' because it was so innovative and unexpected they didn't appreciate it.
Custard Pie is a synonym for down below lady-parts.
What happened to Presence?
Just found out, after decades that Physical Graffiti is indeed next. Thanks to a quick reply.
Came after Physical Graffiti
@Ruth Johnson PG was released July 1975 & Presence was released March 1976 so it will be up next.
@@bernardpoma2872 Forever I thought Presence was before. I do stand corrected. 🤭
Presence is the next album.
Don't think I've ever enjoyed a movie that the critics raved about. Or movies that have won academy awards
I certainly never sought out any critical review or went to see a movie or stayed away from one based on any review!
…mama that ain’t no sh*#👍
Keep in mind ALL Zeppelin albums were PANNED by the critics when they came out.
Guitar sounds like a cat fight
the bonus songs were not on the original release
The new cd set is 3
start with a shotgun blast of FUNK...because they can... this album was whack, they go where all fear to tread...cuz they're GOATs and can
there are very few albums i think are better than Physical .....my favorite ever (rolling stone had something against Zep)
LOL, never listened to any critics then or now! I have a mind of my own and no one is going to influence what I see or listen to. You are allowing thought control into your life but I'm not surprised, it's a sad state that your generation is controlled by others feeding you their opinions. Think for yourself! We (the youth of that time) certainly did, questioned everything the "establishment" told us and chose our own path.
Not my favorite Zeppelin album. Yet it has 3 strong contenders for my favorite Zeppelin song. It's been over 30 years since I first listened to this entire album and I think I'm still processing it.
Nor sure why my sister has never liked these she’s older than I am , she’s strange haha
All talk no music. See ya
Very close to the ultimate sex rock.
Jeez...you waffle for hours
Simple riff..right? . Only LZ can make it interesting with a wonderful drum beat, worn vocals and a nasty guitar solo. This is street blues.
You finally made it! To me, this is the weakest song on the first album and it's anything but weak. Here how raspy Plant's voice is? How funky the overall tone of the song is? How Bonham's drums are so powerful? The soft, almost hidden guitar parts you have to strain to hear. These are common themes of the first album. Thats part of what made Jimmy Page so great. He was an innovative and amazing producer as well. Comes from all those years as a studio musician before he ever joined a band. I am sure you can figure out what "Custard Pie " is if you think of a woman's anatomy. LOL. The album cover is a tenement building in Manhattan in the East village thats still there today. Just north of Houston Street. Known as Alphabet City. The map actually says Ukraine Village, which is news to me but sort of relevant these days.
The building both inside and out is featured in the Rolling Stones video for Waiting On A Friend.
Jimmy Paige owned what was ònce known as Fallen Angel Recordings.
Changed to SWAN SONG RECORDS.
That is why the emblem is a falling angel on the records.
NO! THEY WERE NOT SATANIST!
You go to a LOT of Girl Buddies Movies because they say they're Good ? I Don't LOL. JMO
This has to be one of the most boring reaction videos ever made.
OMG STOP TALKING!!!
Dude you can't wait 8 minutes to get into the song don't do that again free advice
You just ruin this with all your interuptions.