@@tonyterryjohnson8603yes it is, an amazing movie, loved seeing it at the theater when it first came out. I’ve watched it twice on RUclips, as well as the other 3 concerts. Greatest Band Ever!
Keep in mind this was from their first album, our first introduction to LED Zeppelin. And they changed the music scene right out of the gate. Starts with Good Times Bad Times and just keeps getting better. Also, no comment on John Bonham's drums? Really? He was going off all through the track and props need to be given to one of the best drummers around.
They were unique. Every song is so much different than their next one. They weren't afraid to try things. They didn't care about the critics. They played their music their way. Best band ever! 🙂
This is an absolutely fantastic song by Led Zeppelin from their debut album in 1969. Fabulous riff, great guitar from Jimmy Page, love the trippy bit in the middle where he uses a cello bow on that guitar, what a great sound! Robert Plant, John Paul Jones, Jimmy Page and John Bonham, they were all so young when they did this, Plant And Bonham were only 20 and Plant's voice is just awesome. 😊😊
Ah that s a beautiful compliment to the best band of our era. We were in awe and humbled by them too. Greatest feeling if all time when music can transcend you. Zeppelin will still be relevant in 100 yrs. it’s timeless.
This is what could be considered Rock Blues! Led Zeppelin was so grooving into the blues throughout their career with many examples. Zeppelin is THE premier rock band, and I know there will be those who don't agree, and that's fine, but facts area facts! This was released in 1969, if you can believe that! I can't because I was 16 when it came out! Holy crap! lol
1973 MSG live. Great performance. It is long, but worth it. They extend the song significantly. Well worth your time. I love your comments on this classic. The creativity that Led Zeppelin brings to their music is off the charts.
Dazed and Confused 1973 MSG Live is a must. Warning - Prepare Yourself. It will take you places and it will blow you away. Be sure to find the 28 minute full version. There are shortened versions out there. Don't do that to yourself. Also, don't let other's tell you the 1970 Royal Albert Hall version is better. Yes, it's great. But if you're only going to spend a half hour of your life on one Dazed and Confused live version, it must be MSG live 1973. It's the one. It's the magical version.
..."Class of 76"...Zeppelin is in my top 5 and this is in my top 3 Zeppelin songs... Although I'm Tom now I was Tommy then and had a light blue 70 Chevelle just like in the movie...was shocked when the movie came out because all the silly kidding around and just stuff was about the same as what we did...so with that I will say...Allright, Allright, Alllllriiight...
I sit here listening with my son .. realizing you're just hearing this. Where I gave him a huge dose of classic rock and classic country. I used to test his knowledge when we drove.
I personally think that the album versions of these songs are the best to discover Led Zeppelin songs. Thats the way it was for me and this sounds the best.
@@nicholasmaiale8497 I'm so glad someone else feels this way as well! As much as I loved " The Song Remains the Same"🤔 the " streaming " generation as I like to call it, doesn't know what saving your pennies for months to buy an album so you could hear the songs somewhere other than the radio... Which played them in The order that they wanted... My goodness the excitement of coming home to throw the LP on the HI FI and play whichever song over and over before moving on to The next one!!
Time to get the Led out 😎 Please please check out Since I've been loving you live MSG 1973 . You won't be disappointed. Great reaction and Peace out 🙏 ☮️ ✌️ BTW yes to the live version MSG performance 1973 😊 My son told me Robert is the only man who's allowed to moan in his ear 😅He's a reactor too and he sent me to your channel a year ago 😉
The mighty Led Zep! Love them from the 1st album i bought ,this album over 50 yrs ago and still listen and LOVE them! Laying on the floor between two speakers to get the " panning" back and forth in my head...very trippy ,very cool ! Nothing like it at the time!!
Welcome to my 9th-grade listening pleasure. We were blessed with original artists who could make music and sing and they took us along their musical journey. It continues to be a fantastic lifetime trip!
This song, like a lot of Led Zeppelin songs, was actually not written by them as you read. Zeppelin did write a lot of their own songs, but a big staple of their recording was repurposing and reimagining old folk and blues songs with a gritty or modern rock edge. They loved the blues and folk music and they made a lot of otherwise-obscure or forgotten songs from the 30s and 40s into huge rock hits. As well, Zeppelin was a very experimental and jam-focused band, so with songs like this they would spend plenty of time on stage ad-libbing and experimenting with sounds and playing to create new experiences.
I blessed to see at least Robert Plant live as a solo artist in the 80s at 14yrs old. I listened to Led Zepplin every day getting ready for school my freshmen year so to see Plant was a worship moment ❤😊
This was, in my opinion, Jimmy Page's Magnus Opus- Great Work. He started work on this before Led Zeppelin, when he was in the Yard Birds. There are a few videos from back then of him playing it, it is interesting to see how the song progressed and evolved over time. If you watched a live version of this (I suggest Madison Square Garden 1973), then watch the live version of the Yard Birds to compare how he grew in style over time.
Also, the Jake Holmes thing - yes, Jimmy Page did borrow from his song. But Zeppelin's song is really another beast entirely. A new song, different lyrics, entirely different genre, different composition, on a completely different level.
The Denmark studio live version from '69 of this is mind blowing and you should see it. That whole Denmark event, only half an hour, was a taste for what was yet to come and trust Zep fans: that half hour is filling.
You should do When the Levee Breaks written in 1929 by Memphis Minnie and Kansas Joe McCoy . Then the Playing for change version with John Paul Jones on bass.
It has always fascinated my that these British musicians loved the American Blues. On the other side of the Atlantic. They had a ferociously dangerous manager named Peter Grant. Imagine Shug Night, but much scarier. He refused to credit the original blues musicians that inspired Page, but really Led Zeppelin probably would of won on the merits. But they did cave in the end. They truly loved these blues legends. And honestly their interpretations of American blues classics ultimately secured the legacys and some blues pioneers that might have been lost to time. Just one chicks opinion. Peace
It’s because we are an island and American music came in via the ports especially Liverpool. Also young white people embraced the black music that America ignored due to segregation,The Beatles,Stones, Animals, Cream,Zeppelin modified it and sold it back to you.
American people didn't ignore black musicians. They were loved. At least from the 50s on. I get that segregation made it difficult, but that wonderful music couldn't be held down. Elvis was deeply inspired by the Blues music as was Jerry Lee Lewis. As a young girl in the 50s and 60s, I had many Blues favorites. Billie Holliday was a favorite from an earlier eta. Our Rock and Roll was based on that sound. Then, in the 60s when the Britts had their day, so did Motown. I'm grateful for the Brittish bands, too!
@marylebeck2477 you are absolutely right, of course. But growing up during the 60s in th South, I was aware that there was a white radio station and a black radio statio. We only heard a few black musicians on our top forty stations until the 70s. I was really focusing on the Mississippi Delta Blues in this comment. Robert Johnson, Muddy Waters, Howling Wolf, Blind Willie Johnson, and Memphis Minnie (who wrote When the Levee Breaks). These depression era blues guys were a huge influence on Jimmie Paige. He certainly never heard these songs on the radio. I always wondered how a white guy from England knew what a Levee was, The lyric came from a black blues singer and was written in 1929.
17:12 That’s the best way to listen to an album. You should try. You can spread out the releases over a few months. The thrill of listening to an entire album in one sitting seems to be lost now that we have digital versions.
The Song Remains The Same - is the movie you need to watch. Live concert pro shots, backstage shots, scenes from inside their minds shots and music. When I was a kid (late 70's - mid 80's) the midnight movies were always Rocky Horror Picture Show and then they would alternate The Song Remains The Same by Led Zeppelin with If You Want Blood by AC/DC. Awesome movies!!
Love your Future vision bro! You can deff see why so many classic rock songs are sampled left, right, and center. I personally love when a song picks up a familiar beat and flips it on it's head. I think lots of folk do look at the popularity of Ice Ice Baby! Hey man just for yourself listen to the track 'Business' off Biohazards 'Urban Discipline' album. It is about the music industry, I think you will enjoy it more than just about anyone else I know.
Man those drum fills!!! As good as the drumming on The Who's, Amazing Journey, from the Tommy album where Keith Moon goes absolutely ham when the drums kick in.
live version at Madison Square Garden , Jimmy Page goes off on a improvised solo , you can see John Paul Jones (bass) and Jon Bonham (drums) look at each other when he does it and laugh , It's around the middle of the song.
The 'problem' for Robert, as a singer /frontman who doesn't play an instrument, apart from some occasional harmonica, is 'what to do during the instrumental passages. That's particularly the case during live performance. He could just stand aside quietly, he could go crazy like Steven Tyler, or vocalize 'sounds' which are sympathetic to the track.
Zep was far and away the juggernaut of hard rock in the 70s. Undeniable. There's a great movie called Dazed and Confused about the 70s that i would recommend. 😂
Jimmy page was playing a version of this song when he was in the Yardbirds as a tribute to holmes. Holmes did nothing. But as soon as Led Zeppelin the world's most popular #1 band in the world played it, holmes could see the money and sued. The song literally uses 4 notes from the song.
At 62 years of age , I seam to be living my life to sound track like this, as most of the time I am dazed and confused, and I seam to have momentary laps of reasons ( pink Floyd)
Imagine being a young guy hearing this debut album from these young guys that just came on the scene. It was magical and mystical and intense. They are the goats for sure.
If you listen to old blues from the 30's and 40s, these singers would pull from each others songs and create new ones. Nobody was making millions so no one cared. 20 year old Plant did a lot of this on the first few albums before he started writing himself. Without Led Zeppelin, many of these old songs would have never been known worldwide in 2024. But it's good they got paid too. Others have sued Led Zeppelin even when they didn't have a case like the Stairway to Heaven lawsuit.
I think Robert Plant was 20 years old when he laid down the vocal for this track. Dude sounds like a jaded, world weary 50 year old who spent all those years being used and abused while working on his vocal range. The man's got a set of pipes.
He’s 20, he turned 20 the day after their first rehearsal, he’s Birthday is on August 20th. The band was only together about 2 months when this album was recorded.
This song is one of my top 5 Zeppelin songs. Everything just works together effortlessly. If you get to see a live version, Jimmy Page plays the guitar with a violin bow.
Kashmir will always be my favorite Led Zeppelin song. I consider Led Zeppelin's genre Psychedelic Heavy Metal Blues Led Zeppelin (and Pink Floyd) was music that changed everything. I was 8 years old when this song came out and had Brothers 9 and 11 years older than me so it's always been there for me.
Jimmy Page (guitar) used to cover 'Dazed and confused' - a song by Jake Holmes in 1967, w/ the band The Yardbirds... He improvised the arrangement and lyrics w/ the band... After The Yardbirds broke up in 1968 and Page formed Led Zeppelin, the new band was short on original songs and opted to record a few covers for their debut album... 'Dazed and confused' was one of them; because they changed some lyrics and arrangements, and did not give Jake Holmes songwriting credit, they were later sued in court and settled, giving Jake Holmes credit.
You’re really getting around to all the old groups I love and all the old music, it’s great! I’m not sure if you’ve done any Supertramp yet? Another great 70s band (watching your eyes go wide was so funny lol, thanks for the laugh!)
You need to check out Led Zeppelin live From Madison Square Garden 1973 Since I’ve been loving you You will love it I promise you that Thank you, brother peace
A lot of people recommend the 1973 performance from MSG, but it is 35 minutes, and that can be short or long depending on your level of devotion to the band. There are a couple of early clips that are more concise, but still expand on the original recording: 1) the Danish TV clip from 1969; and 2) the Supershow clip, also from 1969 (and in colour). In addition, I think it's worth checking out The Yardbirds' version from the French TV show Bouton Rouge in 1968. It uses the original lyrics by Jake Holmes, and it pretty much follows the structure of the Led Zep 1 studio version, with a few minor differences.
Robert Plant’s call & response with Page’s guitar is unbelievable. Bonham’s drumming is mesmerizing.
And that baseline!
Plus the call and response of the bass and drums is hypnotic.
Why do everyone leave out the soul of the band . Give John Paul Jones his due too
YOU SHOOK ME, is a must listen. Guaranteee it will blow you away. for me, one of their best.
Hell yeah
Me too.
Good to see Zeppelin back!
The live version at Madison Square Garden. Pretty Epic.
Indeed, although 25 minutes tests a lot of people's gold fish attention span these days!
Yes! Best thing you will ever see!
Oh yes this live at MSG.......Epic
The Song Remains the Same entire movie view could be great.
@@tonyterryjohnson8603yes it is, an amazing movie, loved seeing it at the theater when it first came out. I’ve watched it twice on RUclips, as well as the other 3 concerts. Greatest Band Ever!
Also, I would recommend listening to a whole Led Zeppelin album at a time. It is a mood...just how Pink Floyd should be taken in.
Exactly!👍
Zeppelin is so awesome! Even after all these years, it just doesn't get much better!
Keep in mind this was from their first album, our first introduction to LED Zeppelin. And they changed the music scene right out of the gate. Starts with Good Times Bad Times and just keeps getting better.
Also, no comment on John Bonham's drums? Really? He was going off all through the track and props need to be given to one of the best drummers around.
They were unique. Every song is so much different than their next one. They weren't afraid to try things. They didn't care about the critics. They played their music their way. Best band ever! 🙂
This is an absolutely fantastic song by Led Zeppelin from their debut album in 1969. Fabulous riff, great guitar from Jimmy Page, love the trippy bit in the middle where he uses a cello bow on that guitar, what a great sound! Robert Plant, John Paul Jones, Jimmy Page and John Bonham, they were all so young when they did this, Plant And Bonham were only 20 and Plant's voice is just awesome. 😊😊
You have the tools put the live version on
Led Zeppelin was the soundtrack of my late teens, early twenties and I still think no one can out rock them to this day!
Ah that s a beautiful compliment to the best band of our era. We were in awe and humbled by them too. Greatest feeling if all time when music can transcend you. Zeppelin will still be relevant in 100 yrs. it’s timeless.
When the Levee Breaks and Nobody's Fault But Mine are 2 more that you NEED to react to!
This is what could be considered Rock Blues! Led Zeppelin was so grooving into the blues throughout their career with many examples. Zeppelin is THE premier rock band, and I know there will be those who don't agree, and that's fine, but facts area facts! This was released in 1969, if you can believe that! I can't because I was 16 when it came out! Holy crap! lol
They were indeed!
Some early Zeppelin. Time to do When the Levee Breaks.
The thing about Led Zeppelin is that no one song sounds like another.
1973 MSG live. Great performance. It is long, but worth it. They extend the song significantly. Well worth your time. I love your comments on this classic. The creativity that Led Zeppelin brings to their music is off the charts.
Was at that concert...glad I got to see them before they were no more...
@Cchan53 so jealous!
Since I’ve been loving you and Kashmir are two of my favorite Led Zeppelin songs
along with whole lotta love also jimmy paige's favorites
“We’ve now entered the future “ yes, but this was half a century ago and it was their debut album!
One of the handful of songs that must be heard at unspeakable volume at least once in life
Now you’re talking! One of the richest veins of musical gold you could ever mine.
Dazed and Confused 1973 MSG Live is a must. Warning - Prepare Yourself. It will take you places and it will blow you away. Be sure to find the 28 minute full version. There are shortened versions out there. Don't do that to yourself. Also, don't let other's tell you the 1970 Royal Albert Hall version is better. Yes, it's great. But if you're only going to spend a half hour of your life on one Dazed and Confused live version, it must be MSG live 1973. It's the one. It's the magical version.
Pretty please do "Since I've Been Loving You" Madison Square Garden.
Yes!
Thanks for requesting that! It's one of their best!
It's amazing, most of their songs are best from live at Madison Square Garden in 1973❤
..."Class of 76"...Zeppelin is in my top 5 and this is in my top 3 Zeppelin songs...
Although I'm Tom now I was Tommy then and had a light blue 70 Chevelle just like in the movie...was shocked when the movie came out because all the silly kidding around and just stuff was about the same as what we did...so with that I will say...Allright, Allright, Alllllriiight...
I was class of 78! I have had dozens of classic cars...still have my 68 SS Camaro!!
Yep great movie as I was 16 in 76! We were just like that! 😊
Great way to start my day! Great reaction from one of my favorite reactor's. Next reaction suggestion; "Since I've been loving you" Rock on B.P! 🎉
An all time masterpiece of a performance. Not an original Led Zepp song, but it is THEIR song.
I sit here listening with my son .. realizing you're just hearing this. Where I gave him a huge dose of classic rock and classic country. I used to test his knowledge when we drove.
I personally think that the album versions of these songs are the best to discover Led Zeppelin songs. Thats the way it was for me and this sounds the best.
@@nicholasmaiale8497
I'm so glad someone else feels this way as well! As much as I loved " The Song Remains the Same"🤔 the " streaming " generation as I like to call it, doesn't know what saving your pennies for months to buy an album so you could hear the songs somewhere other than the radio... Which played them in The order that they wanted... My goodness the excitement of coming home to throw the LP on the HI FI and play whichever song over and over before moving on to The next one!!
@@Heather-x3m I distinctly remember buying KISS Destroyer from Sam Goody (Tri City Mall in Mesa AZ) with change. No bills, all change.
Performance video of this song? Madison Square Garden 1973 live.
Please do Fool in the Rain!! It's one of my favs!! 🙏🫶
I love this one. Bonzo is Amazing on drums. ❤
Hell to the YES!!!!
Time to get the Led out 😎 Please please check out Since I've been loving you live MSG 1973 . You won't be disappointed. Great reaction and Peace out 🙏 ☮️ ✌️ BTW yes to the live version MSG performance 1973 😊 My son told me Robert is the only man who's allowed to moan in his ear 😅He's a reactor too and he sent me to your channel a year ago 😉
The mighty Led Zep! Love them from the 1st album i bought ,this album over 50 yrs ago and still listen and LOVE them! Laying on the floor between two speakers to get the " panning" back and forth in my head...very trippy ,very cool ! Nothing like it at the time!!
Welcome to my 9th-grade listening pleasure. We were blessed with original artists who could make music and sing and they took us along their musical journey. It continues to be a fantastic lifetime trip!
This is the perfect sit-back-on-the-couch-with-the-lights-out kind of song. Just let the groove carry you away.
This song, like a lot of Led Zeppelin songs, was actually not written by them as you read. Zeppelin did write a lot of their own songs, but a big staple of their recording was repurposing and reimagining old folk and blues songs with a gritty or modern rock edge. They loved the blues and folk music and they made a lot of otherwise-obscure or forgotten songs from the 30s and 40s into huge rock hits. As well, Zeppelin was a very experimental and jam-focused band, so with songs like this they would spend plenty of time on stage ad-libbing and experimenting with sounds and playing to create new experiences.
The BP Stink face and an Air guitar in one reaction, You know it's a GOAT track
I blessed to see at least Robert Plant live as a solo artist in the 80s at 14yrs old. I listened to Led Zepplin every day getting ready for school my freshmen year so to see Plant was a worship moment ❤😊
Me too. Alannah Myles open for him which was kind of weird.
Absolutely right. This was the future of rock.
This is why Zeppelin is one of the main pillars of rock and metal.
Definitely do the 30 min live version from The Song Remains The Same. Crazy work.
God yes!!
This was, in my opinion, Jimmy Page's Magnus Opus- Great Work. He started work on this before Led Zeppelin, when he was in the Yard Birds. There are a few videos from back then of him playing it, it is interesting to see how the song progressed and evolved over time. If you watched a live version of this (I suggest Madison Square Garden 1973), then watch the live version of the Yard Birds to compare how he grew in style over time.
Great idea
I’m early in this video, but the face is you’re making says this is the coolest thing I’ve ever heard
Also, the Jake Holmes thing - yes, Jimmy Page did borrow from his song. But Zeppelin's song is really another beast entirely. A new song, different lyrics, entirely different genre, different composition, on a completely different level.
RAIN SONG ❤
The Denmark studio live version from '69 of this is mind blowing and you should see it. That whole Denmark event, only half an hour, was a taste for what was yet to come and trust Zep fans: that half hour is filling.
Led Zeppelin was in a league all their own and we've been mourning their breakup ever since. There's not one GenXer who didn't pray for a reunion.
Or a boomer like myself!
"OVER THE HILLS AND FAR AWAY!"❤
It's one thing to listen to this one on headphones, but if you have a great sound system in your car, it's freakin' amazing.
You should do When the Levee Breaks written in 1929 by Memphis Minnie and Kansas Joe McCoy . Then the Playing for change version with John Paul Jones on bass.
It has always fascinated my that these British musicians loved the American Blues. On the other side of the Atlantic. They had a ferociously dangerous manager named Peter Grant. Imagine Shug Night, but much scarier. He refused to credit the original blues musicians that inspired Page, but really Led Zeppelin probably would of won on the merits. But they did cave in the end. They truly loved these blues legends. And honestly their interpretations of American blues classics ultimately secured the legacys and some blues pioneers that might have been lost to time. Just one chicks opinion. Peace
It’s because we are an island and American music came in via the ports especially Liverpool. Also young white people embraced the black music that America ignored due to segregation,The Beatles,Stones, Animals, Cream,Zeppelin modified it and sold it back to you.
American people didn't ignore black musicians. They were loved. At least from the 50s on. I get that segregation made it difficult, but that wonderful music couldn't be held down. Elvis was deeply inspired by the Blues music as was Jerry Lee Lewis. As a young girl in the 50s and 60s, I had many Blues favorites. Billie Holliday was a favorite from an earlier eta. Our Rock and Roll was based on that sound. Then, in the 60s when the Britts had their day, so did Motown. I'm grateful for the Brittish bands, too!
@marylebeck2477 you are absolutely right, of course. But growing up during the 60s in th South, I was aware that there was a white radio station and a black radio statio. We only heard a few black musicians on our top forty stations until the 70s.
I was really focusing on the Mississippi Delta Blues in this comment. Robert Johnson, Muddy Waters, Howling Wolf, Blind Willie Johnson, and Memphis Minnie (who wrote When the Levee Breaks). These depression era blues guys were a huge influence on Jimmie Paige. He certainly never heard these songs on the radio. I always wondered how a white guy from England knew what a Levee was, The lyric came from a black blues singer and was written in 1929.
I am probably wrong about this stuff. My memory fades as I grow older, but I always seem to remember lyrics. LOL peace to you.
@@cmoplay1 Peace ☮️ to you too, looking forward to the Zeppelin film “Becoming Led Zeppelin” in February 2025.
Their first, my favorite. I was 13 when this hit and I still listen to them almost daily. Best band ever. ❤😊
17:12 That’s the best way to listen to an album. You should try. You can spread out the releases over a few months. The thrill of listening to an entire album in one sitting seems to be lost now that we have digital versions.
You have earned every single subscriber. Well done.
The Song Remains The Same - is the movie you need to watch. Live concert pro shots, backstage shots, scenes from inside their minds shots and music.
When I was a kid (late 70's - mid 80's) the midnight movies were always Rocky Horror Picture Show and then they would alternate The Song Remains The Same by Led Zeppelin with If You Want Blood by AC/DC.
Awesome movies!!
As you continue down the Zeppelin tunnel, keep in mind, they created all this music in only 12 years!! I think i would need a few lifetimes.
This, this track right here, is what caused me to fall in love with Led Zeppelin.
Love your Future vision bro! You can deff see why so many classic rock songs are sampled left, right, and center. I personally love when a song picks up a familiar beat and flips it on it's head. I think lots of folk do look at the popularity of Ice Ice Baby! Hey man just for yourself listen to the track 'Business' off Biohazards 'Urban Discipline' album. It is about the music industry, I think you will enjoy it more than just about anyone else I know.
Man those drum fills!!! As good as the drumming on The Who's, Amazing Journey, from the Tommy album where Keith Moon goes absolutely ham when the drums kick in.
So glad your reacting to recorded version before the live!!!💞✌️
live version at Madison Square Garden , Jimmy Page goes off on a improvised solo , you can see John Paul Jones (bass) and Jon Bonham (drums) look at each other when he does it and laugh , It's around the middle of the song.
It hit me like a ton of bricks when I first heard it, as a 14-year-old, in 1969.
The 'problem' for Robert, as a singer /frontman who doesn't play an instrument, apart from some occasional harmonica, is 'what to do during the instrumental passages. That's particularly the case during live performance. He could just stand aside quietly, he could go crazy like Steven Tyler, or vocalize 'sounds' which are sympathetic to the track.
Yep agree with others the live msg version simply has to be done . Be prepared to be blown away ❤❤
Zep was far and away the juggernaut of hard rock in the 70s. Undeniable. There's a great movie called Dazed and Confused about the 70s that i would recommend. 😂
That eerie sound in the middle is Jimmy using a cello bow on the guitar!
Jimmy page was playing a version of this song when he was in the Yardbirds as a tribute to holmes. Holmes did nothing. But as soon as Led Zeppelin the world's most popular #1 band in the world played it, holmes could see the money and sued. The song literally uses 4 notes from the song.
You should wach the live version al MSG
One of the very best!!! Every musician gets to shine...and Bonzo's drum fills? Devastating!!!
Great SONG to start this MONDAY ✔️
Good times bad times, heartbreaker, out on the tiles, the ocean, fool in the rain and so so many more great songs from them
At 62 years of age , I seam to be living my life to sound track like this, as most of the time I am dazed and confused, and I seam to have momentary laps of reasons ( pink Floyd)
Imagine being a young guy hearing this debut album from these young guys that just came on the scene. It was magical and mystical and intense. They are the goats for sure.
A hallmark of "progressive rock" is how the time signature, tempo, changes. I.e. Rush, Pink Floyd, Yes, this song. Welcome to Prog Rock! Enjoy.
If you listen to old blues from the 30's and 40s, these singers would pull from each others songs and create new ones. Nobody was making millions so no one cared. 20 year old Plant did a lot of this on the first few albums before he started writing himself. Without Led Zeppelin, many of these old songs would have never been known worldwide in 2024. But it's good they got paid too. Others have sued Led Zeppelin even when they didn't have a case like the Stairway to Heaven lawsuit.
The bass line is off the charts....and Bonham is in a class by himself.
BP, as you go, you'll see what a diverse band they are...🙂
I think Robert Plant was 20 years old when he laid down the vocal for this track. Dude sounds like a jaded, world weary 50 year old who spent all those years being used and abused while working on his vocal range. The man's got a set of pipes.
I used to love listening this song when I was on an acid trip along with Riders on the Storm
Timeless!! 🤘🏼
Robert Plant is 19 years old.
I know… mind blowing!
Bonham was too
@@juliemanarin4127actually bonham was 20 his birthday was in may.
He’s 20, he turned 20 the day after their first rehearsal, he’s Birthday is on August 20th. The band was only together about 2 months when this album was recorded.
I know Zeppelin is not a metal band, but this is one of the most metal songs ever. Also rock, blues, and jazz fusion all at the same time.
This song is one of my top 5 Zeppelin songs. Everything just works together effortlessly. If you get to see a live version, Jimmy Page plays the guitar with a violin bow.
Fondly known as "Head Music".
Kashmir will always be my favorite Led Zeppelin song.
I consider Led Zeppelin's genre Psychedelic Heavy Metal Blues
Led Zeppelin (and Pink Floyd) was music that changed everything. I was 8 years old when this song came out and had Brothers 9 and 11 years older than me so it's always been there for me.
Rock and Roll will never die.
Hout long album reactions
1968 it was recorded on 8 tracks. They were coming out of the gate hard with this album. Jimmy page is a great producer.
You can hear the Woman as Demon in that call and response
Jimmy Page (guitar) used to cover 'Dazed and confused' - a song by Jake Holmes in 1967, w/ the band The Yardbirds... He improvised the arrangement and lyrics w/ the band... After The Yardbirds broke up in 1968 and Page formed Led Zeppelin, the new band was short on original songs and opted to record a few covers for their debut album... 'Dazed and confused' was one of them; because they changed some lyrics and arrangements, and did not give Jake Holmes songwriting credit, they were later sued in court and settled, giving Jake Holmes credit.
Lots of Led Zep songs are old blues tunes revamped and some folk adapted. They are often considered the greatest cover band. Lol
You Have to listen to" Since I've been loving you!!" Call and response is what it is called when he moans after thge music
Live 1973 MSG is freaking Amazing
Zeppelins'' THE SONG REMAINS THE SAME is a must see concert movie .
Thanx fer droppin thus jam
BP🥊🎸Im cruisinin my 71 Merc Marquis with this 8 track in dawg!!!!HELL YEAH!!!🔥🔥🧑🏻🎄Pass that joint bro!!!🎸🎸🎸🤶🏽🧑🏻🎄🤠
Oh….. now we’re talking 🎸 your gonna like this one, epic (classic) long live Zep 🤘🏼
I believe that the music created between 1966 and 1972, the hippie era it is timeless because comes from the soul of the musicians.
I think the most appt classification for, Led Zeppelin is, Progressive Blues. 🔥🤘🏽🔥🤘🏽🔥🤘🏽🔥🤘🏽
You’re really getting around to all the old groups I love and all the old music, it’s great! I’m not sure if you’ve done any Supertramp yet? Another great 70s band (watching your eyes go wide was so funny lol, thanks for the laugh!)
Must watch Dazed & Confused live at MSG, If you have a spare 23minutes.
Also try, You Shook Me.
You need to check out Led Zeppelin live
From Madison Square Garden 1973
Since I’ve been loving you
You will love it I promise you that
Thank you, brother peace
A lot of people recommend the 1973 performance from MSG, but it is 35 minutes, and that can be short or long depending on your level of devotion to the band. There are a couple of early clips that are more concise, but still expand on the original recording: 1) the Danish TV clip from 1969; and 2) the Supershow clip, also from 1969 (and in colour). In addition, I think it's worth checking out The Yardbirds' version from the French TV show Bouton Rouge in 1968. It uses the original lyrics by Jake Holmes, and it pretty much follows the structure of the Led Zep 1 studio version, with a few minor differences.