Saw his son, Jason ,play drums for Foreigner at an open air concert back in about 2015. Jason is a force too! Just like his Dad. His drumming in the Zeppelin Celebration concert proved that. Heh.
I remember the day my Dad said "So you've gotta pick an instrument for school" back in middle school. We were listening to Led Zeppelin "whole lotta love" in the car and I said "can I play drums?" and he looked at me and said "you wanna rock like Bonham?" and I said "yeah..I think so"..A week later was my birthday and my Mom took me out in the morning to "run a quick errand". When I got home I walked into my bedroom to a brand new black Tama 5 piece rockstar drum set with a bow on it, I lost my shit and my whole life changed. I've spent the past 24 years playing every day, met a ton of amazing people, toured around for 5 years with my friends, and now I'm teaching my 3 year old son how to play and he loves it. Music is a real power gang, and it all started with a little Zep and my Dad. Appreciate you Dad, thanks for always fueling my dreams. Guess it's my turn now
John Bonham. There will never be another like him. Such a master of acoustics. Back then there wasn’t so much technology but he just made his own unique sound. And what a talent! RIP Bonzo. We miss you 😢
Saw this concert series in 1973 when they were performing at the LA Forum, sat 3 rows from front of the stage, and they played for 4 hours that night, awesome!
I was at this concert and as always Zeppelin delivered. You are correct that this was the beginning of metal. This song was written as a tribute to Chuck Berry. The Beatles, Stones and the Who were around from the mid sixties but Led Zeppelin, Black Sabbath and Deep Purple opened the door to Metal.
This is heavy Rock and Roll music in its purest form! No auto tune,clictracs ,backing tapes,or prerecorded horseshit! These were young very talented musicians giving a 110%! They used huge drums,Amps and a very loud & live stage mix to get that type of vibe onstage that translates directly to the fan’s excitement level.
In person it was just them and there standard instruments, true. However, anything that was made to consume after the recording is littered with various overdubs. Including "live performance" footage from various performances what you hear is not as true to live as one might think.(not all cases) More that the standard overdub of a guitar solo. Page had a heavy hand when it came to post production. Making it not a whole lot different than the stuff you mentioned.
The fill at the end is, to me, the most amazing blast of drumming power I've EVER heard. I've asked numerous drummers, all better than me, to teach me that break, and none have ever gotten it exactly right.
John "Bonzo" Bonham is considered the best drummer in R&R to this day. I saw them in '77 in Madison "Round" Garden twice in one week. I was 16. Led Zeppelin is my everything. They were better live than in the studio....
I grew up in this music and saw them Led Zep live after every album. It was a time where it was just you and your instruments playing your hearts out to everyone who would listen. No theatrics. All the bands at that time had fun. Since you're a drummer, you should watch, Black Sabath live in Paris 1970 War Pigs. Another band that gave you 150 % every time they played.
Bonzo is amazing on the drums. Great groove and amazing, recognizable sound. Check out Bill Ward with Black Sabbath, especially live. War Pigs live in Paris is a great look at his mastery.
I saw Led Zeppelin at Madison Square Garden on September 19, 1970 I was 13 years old It was my cousin’s 20th birthday I don’t remember much only that it was really good I saw Led Zeppelin again on April 30, 1977 at the Pontiac Silverdome in Pontiac Michigan That concert is in the Guinness book of world records for attendance. I believe it’s 76,229 people in attendance it’s in the Guinness book world record for attendance. I was one in attendance so I’m in the Guinness book of world records. What you watch on the video there it was really cool, but to see him in person. It is something else fortunate enough to have seen them twice. ☮️💜🥳🥳🥳
The "guitar player' is Jimmy Page -- one of the greatest electric guitarists ever, as well as a terrific composer. LZ took the hard rock of the sixties and amplified it even more. List to some Yardbirds, which is the group Clapton, Beck, and Page were in, and it evolved into Zeppelin.
I didn't get to attend my first concert until I was 18. The first concert I saw was Led Zeppelin 1973 at the Atlanta Fulton County Stadium. 86,000 people. What a concert.
@@davexvs back then it was a different time. The '73 show at Madison Square Garden I was 14, parents didn't let their kids go off to NYC that easy back then. They played there later in the seventies but I was in the Marine Corps and not in town the last couple times they played there.
Zeppelin , Deep Purple , Black Sabbath , Status Quo , Queen , Jethro Tull , The Who , Pink Floyd , Sweet , Animals , Nazareth , David Bowie . Rolling Stones and many many more were bands you saw when i was a teenager and an era you mentioned , free from all samples and other things that are used today , and most of them were genuine musicians , most of them from the UK and the lower middle class of the tough times there was . You mentioned the clothes they wore. The seventies was a time when no one talked about styles fashion , what was in etc , long hair was nothing special at all and belonged to the era . What was missing and sad were female bands and artists but thankfully changed over time , we in Sweden were proud of our own ABBA of course. I can really recommend , The song remains the same / rain song from the same concert 1973 at the Garden , and Highway Star with Deep Purple Made in Japan 1972 my favorite band.
You need to listen to this drummer more . His foot will blow you away with only one bass drum . The triplet man . His father was a mason as was he and he had arms and hands of steel . He also plays with his bare hands on his kit .
Imagine having a large group of high energy songs that your huge fan base wants to hear night after night everywhere you play. In one tour you will have to do it a hundred times and each time to perfection. Because YOU are Led Zepplin and THAT is what your audience is paying to see and expects to hear. This is where you begin to really understand to complex nature of a successful rock n' roll band and really what it takes to make the magic happen. In short, it's a job and it's one where you and everyone who supports you must excel in every time and everywhere you are doing it. That is the true reality of being a rock and roll star and why if you wish to continue doing it for a living you cannot fail in doing it. Period!
My thoughts?- These guys were Rock Gods for over a decade. Just about every woman into rock wanted to be with them and the men wished they could be them. Truths. ✌🏼❤️
I saw them live in 1977 (twice in a week). The rock you hear today has evolved some of it have gotten a lot heavier and some a lot more pop. I have found that today's blues is very close to the rock I grew up with with you, it's blues rock to be more premise. I also kind of like that rock is not real popular now as it's back to being more raw. I still find good rock bands but you won't see or hear them on mainstream outlets and not just heavy metal which we all know continues to flourish.
This was a favourite track of my Higher Computing class circa 2006. It drove the geography teacher in the room above crazy, as his class would tap out the beat coming up through the floor. It was fascinating when 16 year old students would come up and ask me if I had ever heard of the likes of Cream or Jethro Tull. One lad said he had been listening to his granddad's records. Old age is the price we pay for being there when this music was first laid down.
Can't go wrong with John Bonham (Bonzo) and a must mention track "When the Levee Breaks" best drum sound ever recorded (some say) And we also had a Yin to the Yang Pink Floyd "Echoes" (Part 1) live at Pompeii 1972 No Audience, No Lights, No Pyrotechnics Gods playing in the ancient Roman Amphitheatre to Gods
First gig I went to was Hawkwind , ten shillings in , stamp on the hand , great show , 72 , next gig was a band called Budgie , sand so it went on Dr Feelgood , Reading festival , right through the 70s .
When i was drummin' in my teens & 20's and going around jamming and trying out with any garage band i could find, somebody would always ask what tune we wanted to start with. Without warning, this drum intro would always be my ice-breaker. If the rest of band knew what to do with it, that's how i knew i wanted to keep playing with them.
No one will ever beat John Bonham! Self taught left handed played by ear and FEEL-they all did that’s why they connect to your emotions and your very soul and can improvise constantly! Rock on Led Zeppelin Forever!
Jimmy Page (guitar) & John Paul Jones played at the Glastonbury Festival in July. Jimmy is 80 and JPJ is 78. Always wonder if they would still be performing if John Bonham (drummer) hadn't died. Robert Plant still has his voice and he's 78. Part of my growing up. Still love 'em.
The 1970's When Rock-n-Roll ruled the world The guitar player is....... Mr. Jimmy Page 🙂🎸 This is Rock-n-Roll history, so all of you youngsters, please take note ! Just please tell us you know the song.... Stairway to Heaven
You don't see this rock anymore because it do not exist anymore. A recommendation, another great British, Jethro Tull performing Thick as a brick in MSG. 1978. It is some 12 minutes long, but worth every second!
Love Led zeppelin, have a look at Heart's stairway to heaven (live at Kennedy Centre Honours) Full Version This was Infront of remaining members Led zeppelin and John's son played the drums
@ColbyFultonDrums if I break down Moby dick into 10 second pieces, I can play it. To put it together for a live 30 minute show, I can't. Your reaction to it would be nice, and probably different than my coworkers who said, " but there's no vocals so how can you like it?" They don't understand that vocals are just an instrument no different than the other one's. It's sad they can't enjoy it.
Try some music by YES one of the greatest progressive rock groups of all time. You haven't reacted to them at all. They have many long songs that are masterpieces. Not your usual music. Some good ones include "Roundabout", "Close to the Edge", "The Gates of Delirium". "Awaken", "Turn of the Century"... Loads of good ones.
You are right there are no rock bands today like them maybe Greta van fleet but there instrumentals are not as good as zepp. They were just so tight. 😊
Got to see Zep twice, once in Tampa for 3 songs, and then Knebworth in 1979. Bonzo did part of moby dick with his bare hands. Awesome, totally awesome!
John Henry Bonham. Regarded as one of the greatest and most influential drummers of all time! How could you never have heard of him? As for Jimmy Page, he is ranked no. 3 of best guitarists of all time by Rolling Stone magazine.
It’s the imperfection that makes this so good…the on the fly improv. This is not oversampled, overdubbed, overenhanced. Today’s generation would mostly hate this because of style but also because they’re so overexposed to fake music, real music wouldn’t sound right. The group Aha was so oversampled that when they tried performing live they were booed because they couldn’t sing for real. We are heading for more fake when AI takes over music.
Bonham...the greatest there ever was! Zeppelin...greatest band to ever grace the planet!
Saw Pink Floyd a couple months after Zeppelin. All do respect to Zep but there's nothing like Floyd.
My missus lived by John.
In the early days.
They had a party
And John was drumming on old beer cans.
The days of Double dimond & watney ale.
Ha Ha.
❤❤
Saw his son, Jason ,play drums for Foreigner at an open air concert back in about 2015. Jason is a force too! Just like his Dad. His drumming in the Zeppelin Celebration concert proved that. Heh.
I was there all 3 night's 1973 first time was 1969 70 Fillmore East N.Y
I remember the day my Dad said "So you've gotta pick an instrument for school" back in middle school. We were listening to Led Zeppelin "whole lotta love" in the car and I said "can I play drums?" and he looked at me and said "you wanna rock like Bonham?" and I said "yeah..I think so"..A week later was my birthday and my Mom took me out in the morning to "run a quick errand". When I got home I walked into my bedroom to a brand new black Tama 5 piece rockstar drum set with a bow on it, I lost my shit and my whole life changed. I've spent the past 24 years playing every day, met a ton of amazing people, toured around for 5 years with my friends, and now I'm teaching my 3 year old son how to play and he loves it. Music is a real power gang, and it all started with a little Zep and my Dad. Appreciate you Dad, thanks for always fueling my dreams. Guess it's my turn now
An awesome life story! ty
John Bonham. There will never be another like him. Such a master of acoustics. Back then there wasn’t so much technology but he just made his own unique sound. And what a talent! RIP Bonzo. We miss you 😢
Saw this concert series in 1973 when they were performing at the LA Forum, sat 3 rows from front of the stage, and they played for 4 hours that night, awesome!
Sooo.....jealous!
Oh! ¡What a honor! I,m jealous to
I was at this concert also, in the 10th row, it was my 16th birthday and first ever concert, I'll never forget it!
Nice!
Then m TV came along and ruined it all
I was at this concert and as always Zeppelin delivered. You are correct that this was the beginning of metal. This song was written as a tribute to Chuck Berry. The Beatles, Stones and the Who were around from the mid sixties but Led Zeppelin, Black Sabbath and Deep Purple opened the door to Metal.
Me too. The intensity of a Zep show cannot be described.
This is heavy Rock and Roll music in its purest form! No auto tune,clictracs ,backing tapes,or prerecorded horseshit! These were young very talented musicians giving a 110%! They used huge drums,Amps and a very loud & live stage mix to get that type of vibe onstage that translates directly to the fan’s excitement level.
In person it was just them and there standard instruments, true. However, anything that was made to consume after the recording is littered with various overdubs. Including "live performance" footage from various performances what you hear is not as true to live as one might think.(not all cases) More that the standard overdub of a guitar solo. Page had a heavy hand when it came to post production. Making it not a whole lot different than the stuff you mentioned.
Bonzo the legend 💯 RIP. Tight, tight, tight and live! Magnificent musicians 🎶
Yes 🙌🏻
I'm 63! Loved Zeppelin all my life! I subbed...MORE ZEPPELIN!! Especially live performances!!
🤘🏻🤘🏻
The fill at the end is, to me, the most amazing blast of drumming power I've EVER heard.
I've asked numerous drummers, all better than me, to teach me that break, and none have ever gotten it exactly right.
Possibly the greatest classic blues-based rock band of all time!
Or just the best band of all time
Greatest live band in history!
"I feel like this is what started what is rock today."
Bingo, these are the gods of rock and roll.
You had to actually be a musician back then. No faking it. Saw Led Zep about 4 times. They always opened up with this song. Epic.
John "Bonzo" Bonham is considered the best drummer in R&R to this day. I saw them in '77 in Madison "Round" Garden twice in one week. I was 16. Led Zeppelin is my everything. They were better live than in the studio....
I grew up in this music and saw them Led Zep live after every album. It was a time where it was just you and your instruments playing your hearts out to everyone who would listen. No theatrics. All the bands at that time had fun. Since you're a drummer, you should watch, Black Sabath live in Paris 1970 War Pigs. Another band that gave you 150 % every time they played.
I’ll check it out!
Bonzo's little drum bit at the end is powerhouse stuff.Makes my hair stand on end !!
No auto tune,just plain good old TALENT 😊
Greatest Rock & Roll band ever.
The Beatles showed the world how to do Pop. Led Zeppelin showed it how to rock & roll.
“Guitar player’s killing it!”
That’s er…Jimmy Page.
Wow. This guy needs to do some homework. In order to be great at what you do, you need to know and study the greats that came before you.
My first like concert was Zeppelin 1977 at Oakland, Calif., which turned out to be their last USA live tour. Saw them just in time.
As a drummer, you can totally enjoy the in-the-pocket drums of John Bonham in "When the Levee Breaks".
The last time they were here we got seats just off the floor at eye level 20 feet away for 3 1/2 hours. Once in a lifetime kind of night.
The low end in this live mix is fucking heavy as shit.
Bonzo is amazing on the drums. Great groove and amazing, recognizable sound. Check out Bill Ward with Black Sabbath, especially live. War Pigs live in Paris is a great look at his mastery.
This is one of the reasons why we are the coolest generation. ❤️✌️
If you're going to play more zeppelin I'm in. Check out I can't quit you baby live at the royal Albert hall 1970
Definitely will be bringing back more classics!
@@ColbyFultonDrums That whole Royal Albert Hall 1970 show was the 💣🧨🔥
Yeah- people always overlook Robert's wicked harmonica skills!
The Who. "Wont get fooled again" deserves your reaction Colby
WHAT! "The drummer is killing it". Bonzo kills it, marinades it, slow cooks, and devours it with one bite.
I saw Led Zeppelin at Madison Square Garden on September 19, 1970 I was 13 years old
It was my cousin’s 20th birthday
I don’t remember much only that it was really good
I saw Led Zeppelin again on April 30, 1977 at the Pontiac Silverdome in Pontiac Michigan
That concert is in the Guinness book of world records for attendance. I believe it’s 76,229 people in attendance it’s in the Guinness book world record for attendance. I was one in attendance so I’m in the Guinness book of world records.
What you watch on the video there it was really cool, but to see him in person. It is something else fortunate enough to have seen them twice. ☮️💜🥳🥳🥳
The "guitar player' is Jimmy Page -- one of the greatest electric guitarists ever, as well as a terrific composer. LZ took the hard rock of the sixties and amplified it even more. List to some Yardbirds, which is the group Clapton, Beck, and Page were in, and it evolved into Zeppelin.
Don’t forget, one of the greatest acoustic player’s and writer too!
✌️😎🎸🎶🎵🎶🎵
page is amazing acoustic too.
You sir just witnessed rock royalty at its finest
I didn't get to attend my first concert until I was 18. The first concert I saw was Led Zeppelin 1973 at the Atlanta Fulton County Stadium. 86,000 people. What a concert.
This is their opening number!!!
I'm old enough to remember when this was just called rock. 😂
🤘🏻🤘🏻🤘🏻
@@ColbyFultonDrums the one band I never got to see live and wished I did.
@@vernhoke7730 you missed out big time then
every time i saw them
they never disappointed
{:-) PAV UK
@@ColbyFultonDrums I am! I'm 63...do more live Zeppelin!!
@@davexvs back then it was a different time. The '73 show at Madison Square Garden I was 14, parents didn't let their kids go off to NYC that easy back then.
They played there later in the seventies but I was in the Marine Corps and not in town the last couple times they played there.
Zeppelin , Deep Purple , Black Sabbath , Status Quo , Queen , Jethro Tull , The Who , Pink Floyd , Sweet , Animals , Nazareth , David Bowie . Rolling Stones and many many more were bands you saw when i was a teenager and an era you mentioned , free from all samples and other things that are used today , and most of them were genuine musicians , most of them from the UK and the lower middle class of the tough times there was . You mentioned the clothes they wore. The seventies was a time when no one talked about styles fashion , what was in etc , long hair was nothing special at all and belonged to the era . What was missing and sad were female bands and artists but thankfully changed over time , we in Sweden were proud of our own ABBA of course.
I can really recommend , The song remains the same / rain song from the same concert 1973 at the Garden , and Highway Star with Deep Purple Made in Japan 1972 my favorite band.
Ian Stewart (Rolling Stones road manager/sessions guy) is on piano on the studio version. RIP Stu!
You need to listen to this drummer more . His foot will blow you away with only one bass drum . The triplet man . His father was a mason as was he and he had arms and hands of steel . He also plays with his bare hands on his kit .
Not to mention, LZ broke up when he passed. When does that ever happen ? An irreplaceable member of a tight foursome...
The GOATS!😎🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
🐐🔥
I was 13 in 1970. What a freakin decade for music!!!! So many incredible artists. I used to get in trouble for cranking Zep. lol
Imagine having a large group of high energy songs that your huge fan base wants to hear night after night everywhere you play. In one tour you will have to do it a hundred times and each time to perfection. Because YOU are Led Zepplin and THAT is what your audience is paying to see and expects to hear.
This is where you begin to really understand to complex nature of a successful rock n' roll band and really what it takes to make the magic happen. In short, it's a job and it's one where you and everyone who supports you must excel in every time and everywhere you are doing it. That is the true reality of being a rock and roll star and why if you wish to continue doing it for a living you cannot fail in doing it. Period!
More Zep and Bonham please... Kashmir 1979 live at Knebworth
My thoughts?- These guys were Rock Gods for over a decade. Just about every woman into rock wanted to be with them and the men wished they could be them. Truths. ✌🏼❤️
You’re for sure a cop on your free time… even borrowing your precincts ear gear! Lol
I saw them live in 1977 (twice in a week). The rock you hear today has evolved some of it have gotten a lot heavier and some a lot more pop. I have found that today's blues is very close to the rock I grew up with with you, it's blues rock to be more premise. I also kind of like that rock is not real popular now as it's back to being more raw. I still find good rock bands but you won't see or hear them on mainstream outlets and not just heavy metal which we all know continues to flourish.
I grew up with this when music was real music.
This is what rock SHOULD be today! Not even close.
This was a favourite track of my Higher Computing class circa 2006. It drove the geography teacher in the room above crazy, as his class would tap out the beat coming up through the floor. It was fascinating when 16 year old students would come up and ask me if I had ever heard of the likes of Cream or Jethro Tull. One lad said he had been listening to his granddad's records. Old age is the price we pay for being there when this music was first laid down.
So much raw talent in one band
There will never be another Zeppelin
At least we have their gifts to us!
2:14 “that guitar player is killing it”…
Sir, that’s Jimmy Page…. Should probably know him and Robert Plant at least, if you’re reviewing a LZ video
This is the Rock. Exactly this. Zeppelin are Rock's Gods. Please more reaction a MSG Concert. They are great
Can't go wrong with John Bonham (Bonzo) and a must mention track "When the Levee Breaks" best drum sound ever recorded (some say)
And we also had a Yin to the Yang
Pink Floyd "Echoes" (Part 1) live at Pompeii 1972
No Audience, No Lights, No Pyrotechnics Gods playing in the ancient Roman Amphitheatre to Gods
Agree!!
You got that right !
They absolutely made Rock what it is today 💪🏼🤙🏼💪🏼
They were , and still are ...Rock Gods 🌟⭐️🌟
First gig I went to was Hawkwind , ten shillings in , stamp on the hand , great show , 72 , next gig was a band called Budgie , sand so it went on Dr Feelgood , Reading festival , right through the 70s .
There’s a band I haven’t seen live but would absolutely love too!
May need to take a trip to New Jersey or Connecticut this summer 😊
Yes 👏🏻
When i was drummin' in my teens & 20's and going around jamming and trying out with any garage band i could find, somebody would always ask what tune we wanted to start with. Without warning, this drum intro would always be my ice-breaker. If the rest of band knew what to do with it, that's how i knew i wanted to keep playing with them.
Plenty more Led Zeppelin to explore...enjoy the journey!!
Moby Dick live at Royal Albert Hall
I’ll check it out!
Zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz.
No one will ever beat John Bonham! Self taught left handed played by ear and FEEL-they all did that’s why they connect to your emotions and your very soul and can improvise constantly! Rock on Led Zeppelin Forever!
i was there every night and NO CELL PHONES!!!!!!!!!!!!
Jimmy Page (guitar) & John Paul Jones played at the Glastonbury Festival in July. Jimmy is 80 and JPJ is 78. Always wonder if they would still be performing if John Bonham (drummer) hadn't died. Robert Plant still has his voice and he's 78. Part of my growing up. Still love 'em.
This is just a warm up-check out the rest of this concert and be prepared to have your head blown off.
É BONHAM CARA, SIMPLESMENTE O MAIOR DE TODOS.
They are gods of rock and roll. My first taste was 1977.
Jon Bonham on drums. Legend had it he used whittled down tree trunks for sticks! Damn near invented cool!
Led Zeppelin - Moby Dick (Live at The Royal Albert Hall 1970) official video. It's 15 minutes of Bonzo on the drums.
Led Zeppelin are the greatest Rock in Roll band ever 🎸🎸🎸🥁🥁🥁🥁🥁🎷🎷🎤🎤🎤🎤🎤🎤🎤🎹🎹🎹
The 1970's
When Rock-n-Roll ruled the world
The guitar player is.......
Mr. Jimmy Page 🙂🎸
This is Rock-n-Roll history, so all of you youngsters, please take note !
Just please tell us you know the song....
Stairway to Heaven
You don't see this rock anymore because it do not exist anymore. A recommendation, another great British, Jethro Tull performing Thick as a brick in MSG. 1978. It is some 12 minutes long, but worth every second!
The Hammer of the Gods!
50 years ago all the musical genres were rollin' and tumblin' all night long..
I love watching the Mistro at work. JP !
The Orange Vista Lights...nice...advertised as the loudest drums in the world..hahaha...nice
short simple and to the point
nice vid dude
I'll second that!.
Love Led zeppelin, have a look at Heart's stairway to heaven (live at Kennedy Centre Honours) Full Version
This was Infront of remaining members Led zeppelin and John's son played the drums
welcome to the music of my generation Zeppelin ,Dio, Lemmy , Lynyrd Skynyrd n more
This wasn’t the start of rock and roll. It was the pinnacle. It’s been mostly downhill since then.
You REALLY need to listen to "In My Time of Dying " and " Achilles Last Stand". And of course "Moby Dick".
The late great John "bonzo" Bonham on drums 😊
I loved them then and I still love Led Zeppelin ! OOOOOH YEAH peace out man ✌️
Love Page’s tricked-out Elvis outfit!!
Thank you John Henry Bonham.
Zeppelins second album had the greatest song ever, Moby Dick.
🤘🏻🤘🏻🤘🏻
@ColbyFultonDrums if I break down Moby dick into 10 second pieces, I can play it. To put it together for a live 30 minute show, I can't. Your reaction to it would be nice, and probably different than my coworkers who said, " but there's no vocals so how can you like it?"
They don't understand that vocals are just an instrument no different than the other one's. It's sad they can't enjoy it.
My first concert. Zeppelin 1973. I was 13. No adult supervision.
So bad ass how they hung tight together in their little garage on the stage of Madison Square Garden. Pure Rock and Roll, uh yeah, ew yeah!
Different and better. Real.
Try some music by YES one of the greatest progressive rock groups of all time. You haven't reacted to them at all. They have many long songs that are masterpieces. Not your usual music. Some good ones include "Roundabout", "Close to the Edge", "The Gates of Delirium". "Awaken", "Turn of the Century"... Loads of good ones.
You are right there are no rock bands today like them maybe Greta van fleet but there instrumentals are not as good as zepp. They were just so tight. 😊
I agree! Great band!
John Bonham, often imitated, NEVER EQUALED!
I loved ‘look at what they’re wearing!’ ❤️❤️🥰
rock and roll royalty!
Got to see Zep twice, once in Tampa for 3 songs, and then Knebworth in 1979. Bonzo did part of moby dick with his bare hands. Awesome, totally awesome!
John Henry Bonham. Regarded as one of the greatest and most influential drummers of all time! How could you never have heard of him? As for Jimmy Page, he is ranked no. 3 of best guitarists of all time by Rolling Stone magazine.
Saw them in 1974 and I went away thinking “now that’s the best $12.00 I ever spent”.
It’s the imperfection that makes this so good…the on the fly improv. This is not oversampled, overdubbed, overenhanced. Today’s generation would mostly hate this because of style but also because they’re so overexposed to fake music, real music wouldn’t sound right. The group Aha was so oversampled that when they tried performing live they were booed because they couldn’t sing for real. We are heading for more fake when AI takes over music.
Robert Plant is touring 2023 with Alison Krauss.
Wow!!! The best!!!! Love it!!!
Take Zeppelin out of the equation and you would never had the music we had back then, Who knows what it would be like.
Espero que estes preparado para Moby Dick live in Dallas, Texas 6 de march of 1975!!!! @colby fulton Drums
Have you checked out Lynyrd Skynyrd's one armed drummer Rick 'The Thunder God' Allen? 'Pour some sugar on me' is Fire!!!!
REAL MUSICIANS REAL FAST REAL GOOD