Its my favorite too. Right along with Presence. Physical is definitely their most diverse. That's what sets them apart from all others and makes them the greatest band of all time. Bar none. Not just technical abilities but the songs they wrote.
In my opinion there is no band past or present that can touch Led Zepplin. They were so far ahead of their time and their talent was and is unparalleled.
@@puromichoacan8339 What about Kanye? Not even people who love Kanye would argue he has had the musical impact Led Zeppelin had, if they have listened to both. It's easy to win arguments you make up for yourself
Together they were insanely good/great. Randy "Macho Man" Savage simmed it up as welll as I've ever heard, " These guys were just on another level", the more I thought about it the more sense that statement makes. There are a lot of really good bands, but when you try to put their music in with Zeppelin's, it don't fit. There just is another level that these guys played in, it would be like comparing your 8th grade science teacher to Tesla or Einstein. Nope, uh-uh, not happening....
When I grew up in Kansas City in the 60's nearly every other block had a garage band practicing in the summer night air. You could ride your bicycle around and hear them all trying to emulate their rock heroes. Great eclectic music was on every radio station. You just don't hear that today. It is a lost time.
Yeah, but the weed made music like this a lovely ride. The good old days when you could smoke a little bit and it was okay. Maybe not, but all my friends grew up to be fine. Sigh.
My dad was telling me that in the 70's and part of the 80's him and his friends rarely watched TV but instead listened to music. Now I know why. 6:14 eargasm
I'd get out of school go work, go home, eat ,shower and head out. Cruising, getting stoned, gathering on back roads and hanging out. And Zep. Throughout. Ah, the 70s!
Damn im 54 I grew up loving so many bands led zeppelin i seen them rush 7 tims ,black sabbath with ozzie ,and Ronie jame dio. journey, Ratt,white snake so i could go on and on.god bless the great neil peart RIP.AND OTHERS LIKE DIO RIP.😪.
I love how you younger folks are responding and appreciating music I grew up with. It makes me happy. It also makes me happy to see my 16 year old son wear Zeppelin shirts, and that he wants me to teach him the songs on guitar. I was seriously worried that instruments were going to go the way of cursive. But there's been a resurgence of young people loving classic 70's and 80's rock, and they want to learn how to play it.
That's YOUR heritage, young man, that you and all of us are benefitting from. Led Zep mined old blues songs straight out of the Delta and brought back gold. This is a gospel song from the 20s. You may hear western, I don't know about that, but this shit is as black as black can be. These brilliant musicians were lucky to have it to work with and, from what I understand, were grateful. Love your show.
very true, I know these videos have a subtext of 'blacks listening to white music' but for me its more about the generational thing. I LOVE to see younger folks getting turned on to 70s era music and start to quest the stuff on the radio now, and hopefully understand the true roots of the music of that time
Facts🎯 John.💯 There would be no Zep, Beatles, Stones, Elvis, etc., without artists like Willie Dixon, Muddy, Chuck, Richard, Blind Willie Johnson, Wolf, Fats, Rosetta Tharpe, Elmore James, etc. They paved the way and this is forever our heritage, legacy & contribution to music and to the world.🤘🏽
This is church music .. Some old southern church too.... I remember playing this over and over when I lost 2 in my unite 2005 ( in Iraq ).... RIP my brothers GSgt Brandon Pete & SFC Danny shoulock.
I never heard this song from them until your reaction video. Went to buy the download and it was only available if the whole album was bought. I bought the whole album, no regrets.
You hit on the thing there Alexander ... back then we bought the album (vinyl) ... and we got about 45mins of greatness ... not just one track. Enjoy :) (67yo)
Lyle Chipperson i dont think hes saying it is western US sounding i believe he is saying it evokes a feeling that reminds him of western movies as in old cowboy movies
It is great and Jamel makes me look at the songs unlike I ever have since I was 13 years old when they were actually being created. I knew so little about the world then and the lyrics have a richer meaning as an adult. When I was a kid the lyrics were mysterious.
Right?! I'm loving it. I grew up listening to Zeppelin with my Latine parents as they were growing up as young parents exploring hippie life and supporting the Civil Rights movement. Black Panthers and Brown Barets... Another lifetime ago.
it is cool ...the uniqueness of LZ is that after 35 years of hearing the same songs, you realize that they get better with age and it's impossible to tire from LZ...I could listen to In My time of dying, Lemon Song, Bring it on Home in a loop for a week and I wouldn't want to turn it off.
So I started listening to reaction videos on RUclips when the pandemic started. I got onto yours because you were reacting to a song by yes which is my favorite band :-). But I have found you to be the best person to watch react to a video because you are all about feeling the music and your reactions are so honest and pure for the music! Sometimes you may not know where a song is going but it makes me remember my reaction when I first heard the songs so many years ago. You actually make my day a little brighter everyday I watch one of your videos so I wanted to say thank you! Keep on doing what you doing!
@slarti bartfast yeah me too! It's crazy. Sometimes I spend hours a day(or night) watching Jamel & Mr Video & Half & Jai. I have to really force myself to not watch sometimes cuz I'm not getting anything done lol. My husband says I have a problem but they feel like family to me. If I'm having a bad day I come here & immediately feel better 😊
@@scarletjohnston741 - Jamel is a much loved man. These threads are so rare these days... no smack talk, no bull, just a bunch of folks groovin' on some fine tunes. I'm glad to be amongst such fine neighbors!
When John Bonham was born, God said, ' And this man shall play drums like none you have ever seen or heard, I have said this to be and it will be so'. GOD
This song really is a masterpiece. The lyrics pulls you, the music drags you back, kind of cracks open your soul some. Zep was pretty magical, they aren't legendary for tight pants and power chords. They were legit, stands the test of time. Thanks for letting me hear again for the first time, a blessing.
Stephen Murphy I mean I didn’t even grow up in that era of music I’m 17 but I grew up listening to led zeppelin and seeing their music being so enjoyed by all different types of people and all ages makes me love the music that much more. Seeing someone appreciate all the little details and aspects of their music that are overlooked makes me feel so good!
I think it's because we have found a way to connect with not the younger generation but the youngest generation! Kids today (and when I say kids I mean people up to 30) don't realize how vast the music listening experience was in our day. We had Motown, we had Funk, we had Blues, we had the beginnings of metal, we had what's now known as classic rock, we had rockabilly we had soft rock, we had country, we had Bluegrass and reggae... Today's kids seem to be stuck in one genre of music and to watch them discover this entire world of fantastic artists brings us closer to them and gives us a way to meet in the middle.
For me, it’s like recapturing some of that magic of hearing an amazing song for the first time. Because once that first time is gone, it’s gone. And for me, I also grew up on classic rock, so I don’t remember my first time hearing these songs- they were just always there. Maybe that’s why I love reactions so much- because I was just too young the first time I heard it (and I’m talking baby type of young- they really were just alway there), so I get that bit of “first time magic”.
@Stephen Murphy absolutely agree, it makes things better knowing the old classic are getting heard by the younger ones 🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸
They understood how much blues there needs to be in good rock and roll if you want that sex/swagger/danger/mayhem vibe to come through. I couldn't name my favorite LZ song because it changes with my mood, but even some of my least favorite songs I still listen to from beginning to end because they're never bad; in fact, they're always damn good.
@@edcummings2379 besides having great drums "Achilles last stand" is an incredibly boring song though and that's largely due to the fact that it's way to long
@@goldenboy140 to each his own. There are millions of fans that view Achillies Last Stand as one of Zeppelin's greatest epics. Perhaps you might research the meaning of the song, its lyrics, and the context it was created in, so you might better understand why that song is considered utterly brilliant by many millions of fans.
@@danaskin5797 you obviously don't like greatness. He was by far the most influential drummer that walked this planet. You saying that tells me you are nothing but a jackass that has to be heard cause you have no confidence in yourself. And you know nothing about music. My guess is you listen to cardi b or some dumb shit like that.
@@jayhensley7681 I won't resort to name calling, you troglodyte. You've made an ass out of u and me. It's a funny Ginger Baker quote (might be a slight paraphrase).
In the early 90's I was in High school. My best friend and I were huge Led Zeppelin fans, we promised each other that we would play this at the others funeral if anything happened when we both joined the Army. 2011 we buried him and I stayed true to my promise. RIP Chad cant believe its been 10 years.
I’m 29 and grew up on this, although I didn’t truly appreciate it as much as I do today. I guess it’s because we still had some great music growing up in the 90s like Alice In Chains, Blind Melon, Soundgarden, Counting Crows, Jeff Buckley, Black Crowes...just to name a few. But with the absolute garbage out nowadays it makes me truly appreciate the greatness of the music we had back then.
"In My Time of Dying" (also called "Jesus Make Up My Dying Bed" or a variation thereof) is a traditional gospel music song that has been recorded by numerous musicians. The title line, closing each stanza of the song, refers to a deathbed and was inspired by a passage in the Bible from Psalms 41:3 "The Lord will strengthen him upon the bed of languishing, thou wilt make all his bed in his sickness".
John Bonham attempting to pound out a passage to the center of the earth with a drum kit. Close your eyes when you listen to this. When you open them, you’re surprised your house is still standing. It is a masterpiece
They left the cough in at the end as a way to showing their detractors, this is them, live, together, in the studio killing it. The best there ever was.
Jamel I am going to make personal public statement...maybe it will help one of readers. I am an addict in recovery from opioids. CLEAN 18 MONTHS! WITH GODS HELP, LED ZEP AND YOU. I MADE IT ANOTHER DAY. THANKS FRIEND . #WEDORECOVER MERRY CHRISTMAS 🎅 YALL!!
The sheer complexity of sounds and rhythms from just 4 instruments Everywhere you listen something good going on. This is what music was before iPhones and social media. Man we were blessed!
True story here no b.s. We had a shop when I was a kid and when I was old enough to help my dad I would go in because he was already there good and early and he knew I was a teenage music hound so ...when I'd walk in the door usually well before we'd open he would have the radio blasting away. So he'd ask me....." Hey son?...who's playin' this song?" I'd say well that's led Zeppelin Black Dog. Another day I'd be there...." Hey son who's doing this song?"....that's led Zeppelin Rock n Roll...a while later...." This that Led Zeppelin again?" Yes that's called When the Levee Breaks...and not long later he'd ask and I'd say that's Going to California... Zeppelin again! Now this is over a time period of a few months so then I tell him....you know pops?.... All the songs you asked me about....and you rarely ever ask....are by the same band and actually from the same album!!! So he says " that Zeppelin guy?" I said yes.... To which he enthusiasically replies " Well then that's gotta be the best Rock n Roll album ever made then!!" P.S. ..... And that's not even counting stairway to heaven !!
Omg my face is hurting from smiling watching you get into this great song, from a band that I love so much. I'm happy that you enjoy it as much as I do. 😁🤘🏻
Imagine the first time ever hearing this song was seeing them perform it live. That's what I got to witness early in their '75 tour, before the album with this on it (Physical Graffiti) hit record stores. I bought every Zeppelin album as soon as it was released, & saw them in concert 3 times. So usually when I saw them I already knew each song. But it was a real treat that at THAT particular concert they did some songs that were brand new & unheard, including this one, "Kashmir" & "Trampled Underfoot". The album was a magnificent double album, it became available just a couple of days after that concert, & you know I ran out immediately to buy it & get it into my hot little hands.💙
@@Caseydog3 It was '75. They toured January through March. "Physical Graffiti" was released in February. We drove to St. Louis, a 4 hr drive, only to find out Robert had strep throat & that concert was postponed. So we had to drive back several days later. But, as you know, it was SO worth it! I was lucky enough to see them again on the '77 tour. And the first time was in '70. So glad you got to see them as well. They were special.
Deborah Cornell - now tell us the REAL juicy stories lady ... ha ha ha - one simply does NOT have a history like yours merely to write a straight up RUclips comment without some “Juice” wink wink ha ha ha.
"It's got a little western feel to it". More like a lot of blues feel to it, as Robert Plant and Jimmy page were heavily influenced by many blues legends (Muddy Waters, Buddy Guy, etc.). But that was true of many rock bands in the 70's like Eric Clapton (and all the bands he was in), The Doors, The Rolling Stones, ZZ Top, etc.
Those drums! That bass! Those vocals! That guitar! Those lyrics! This intense song has a strangely haunting vibe, like an ominous and otherworldly feel, dreadfully awesome.
Nothing like sitting in your garage on an old couch, with old friends and old whiskey, and a little smoke and remembering your youth of 45 years ago. Thank you for reviewing this absolute classic!
They may have gifted us the framework, but no black people put it together like modern white soulful artists... it's our gift to them... as show by his reaction to it... disbelief... it's become something else in tone and energy.... white man's blues
Dirt Rules but it was more than framework. It was the essence, core , sweat and soul inspired generations in rock and jazz. We are beholden to the blues ancestors for transforming enormous suffering into an art form and unique expression.
@@TheDivayenta Enormous suffering is not the sole proprietary of black musicians.... the suffering of unrequited love, loss of a loved one.. and a hard life are the pains, truths of the white man's experience throughout history..... for a thousand years....no black people put it together like modern white soulful artists... it's our gift to them... as show by his reaction to it... disbelief... it's become something else in tone and energy..
This is a straight up dirge, in the Delta Blues tradition, and is built on several similar earlier songs. At this point in their career, Led Zeppelin was doing very little of the traditional blues songs. They came up in that late 60s British blues revival scene, and at least half of their first album are reimagined versions of traditonal blues songs. Once they had an audience, though, they stuck mainly to originals. So when they went back to these blues roots, you knew it was going to be worth their time, and yours.
It is a (slide guitarist) Blind Willie Johnson (Beaumont, TX) cover (as is Nobody's Fault But Mine): www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-1-d&q=Jesus+make+up+my+dying+bed+blind+willie
@@balthazarblue yea they took the blues and electrified it. The White Stripes do something similar, Death Letter is my favorite from them and it's an old blues song turned up to 11. The documentary It Might Get Loud is worth the watch, just fastforward through the Edge's segments.
As always John Paul Jones is looked over...it wasnt just bonham, who is fantastic....the input of the four quarters....but the rhythm section of jpj and bonham was the magic...a session musician and a farmer who was good at drums
@@seinfeld8812 you watch Jones play a double neck instrument with mandolin and guitar, while playing bass pedals from an organ, and you know who the real ace in the band was
It's amazing how well Led Zep's music stands tall after all these years. By no means do I mean to diminish the countless talented musicians out there, many of whom I love, but there's Zeppelin and there's everyone else. These guys were so far ahead of their time and truly on an entirely different level. Loved the reaction video!
Led Zeppelin had the feel of being the adult rock band. Their songs went far beyond partying, drinking, sex, drugs, etc. I liked them as a kid but I found true appreciation for Led Zep when I became an adult and the depth of their songs was more understandable.
He's killing it for sure, there is a reason the band died with him, but honestly everyone brings their A game. JPJs bass is on fire, Page's slide guitar is a perfect delta-blues, hard rock fusion, Plant shows off great vocal range and control, plus he rocks that harmonica, and Bonham brings the thunder with some awesome fills in the latter half. This is my favorite LZ song and one of the rare times the band rises up to Bonham's level, it literally is 11 minutes of the best work from each member.
Bonham and Jonesy pushed everything that Jimmy Pages genius could manufacture to be even better, then the vocals of one of the greatest made it, well, I don't know enough adjectives except to say the best there ever was....
Now you know what all the hype was about for Led Zeppelin. And that’s just the tip of the iceberg. You want to listen to They’re hard rocking blues songs. Keep listening to him you’ll be surprised how much great great music do you have in such a good musicians. Keep rocking take care and God bless
I have recently passed my whole zeppelin collection to my girl friend son that zepp 1 all the to Coda he is 15 and a huge fan now, I also have him my turn table
Thank you, Jamel. Your face in this video is my face when i listen this incredible song in 1975; this is not rock or pop music, this is classical music. RUclips maybe it's a family; thank you very much from Italy. I think you are a good person.
Also, wait until y'all find out that delta blues was as much influenced by English folk music and chamber music (as practiced by the settlers) as it was African music (brought over by slaves). It's well documented.
In My Time of Dying "In My Time of Dying" is a traditional gospel music song that has been recorded by numerous musicians. The title line, closing each stanza of the song, refers to a deathbed and was inspired by a passage in the Bible from Psalms 41:3 "The Lord will strengthen him upon the bed of languishing, thou wilt make all his bed in his sickness".
Even though I grew up with Zep, and they are my all time favorite, down to the Zoso tattoo on my arm, watching with you and listening is like the first time all over again. Thank you again for your channel. It’s a much needed break from a world drowning in negativity.
Also Robin Trower was the guitarist in the Paramounts and Procul Harum. Please forgive me if I misspell the last name. Please check out and correct me if I'm wrong.
Go to Soul Train Bro channel. He breaks down almost all of Zeppelin songs. I see the rest of these reaction videos are of the same songs. This bands best is not the top 40 radio played songs.
The only problem with listening to Zeppelin is having to decide between playing air guitar or air drums.
Brak Yup! Sometimes I do both!!!
Sounds like you need to invite some friends round and make the band
Ha!
I allways fall for the drums
Truly a difficult choice
This is what happens when you get the best drummer. The best bassist, composer. The best guitarist and the best singer. And make a band. Led Zeppelin.
The GOAT for sure.
Yep 👍
All Jimmy Page wanted to do, was honor his contracts for live shows. He overshot by a mile. Err rather....a kilometer.
Walking into a party , song playing on a turntable, no cellphones, social media. That was how it was 😎
Yrah great party tune 🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸
Yes !!!
Oh hell yeah, great memories
Christopher Polzin Zeppelin fans keep rocking on ! This is what’s getting me thru this quarantine!💃🏼
Those were the happiest days of my life
Physical Graffiti. Possibly the best rock album ever. All killer, no filler.
Facts!!
Its my favorite too. Right along with Presence. Physical is definitely their most diverse. That's what sets them apart from all others and makes them the greatest band of all time. Bar none. Not just technical abilities but the songs they wrote.
John Pace droppin' a massive truth bomb, right here.
Very true
And let's not forget that it's a DOUBLE ALBUM. Find me a bad song. I dare you.
Back in the day we just assumed the music would always be like this. We were wrong!!!
Sad but true
Devastating
And yet we were considered the odd ones for not being into the pop music of the time....oh and how everyone assumed we were on drugs!
Portia De Vere Yep! Well, I was on drugs, actually...
We sure did didn't we?!! Blessed we were to have grown up with music that was magical
In my opinion there is no band past or present that can touch Led Zepplin. They were so far ahead of their time and their talent was and is unparalleled.
What about Kanye 😂😁😖😆
@@puromichoacan8339 What about Kanye? Not even people who love Kanye would argue he has had the musical impact Led Zeppelin had, if they have listened to both. It's easy to win arguments you make up for yourself
Amen 🙏
Together they were insanely good/great. Randy "Macho Man" Savage simmed it up as welll as I've ever heard, " These guys were just on another level", the more I thought about it the more sense that statement makes. There are a lot of really good bands, but when you try to put their music in with Zeppelin's, it don't fit. There just is another level that these guys played in, it would be like comparing your 8th grade science teacher to Tesla or Einstein. Nope, uh-uh, not happening....
Pink Floyd, King Crimson, Yes and some more ;)
All us young ones thought that music this good was normal and to be expected. We had no idea that we were very privileged to grow up with this music.
Elizabeth Kindred that's a really interesting though actually
When I grew up in Kansas City in the 60's nearly every other block had a garage band practicing in the summer night air. You could ride your bicycle around and hear them all trying to emulate their rock heroes. Great eclectic music was on every radio station. You just don't hear that today. It is a lost time.
:(
The music industry (major labels) have all become an assembly line, churning out souless garbage...
Amen
This song is NEVER loud enough...
Agree totally !!
Amen
Could not have said it better myself. 👍
What band today can play a 15 minute song that is pure gold,and features every band member 👌
Amen brotha, amen.
When I was 14 I was looking for weed in my sisters room and I found this album. This album sent me to places weed could never compete with.
Bob Donovan who needs drugs when you have there music , I feel ya , it takes me to another place !!! Love them all
This is probably the best analogy I have ever read lol. You my friend know zeppelin.
Epic comment
Cthulhu, King of Lunacy lmao I bet it was a out of this world experience
Yeah, but the weed made music like this a lovely ride. The good old days when you could smoke a little bit and it was okay. Maybe not, but all my friends grew up to be fine. Sigh.
Feel like I’m rediscovering Zeppelin through this dude’s facial expressions.
He does give the best face
Kevin Wilkes 😂 right!?!?
Can see that.
My dad was telling me that in the 70's and part of the 80's him and his friends rarely watched TV but instead listened to music.
Now I know why.
6:14 eargasm
Ned Martin we had MTV...when MTV still played music.
Not to mention the adults controlled the one TV in the house! LOL., before remotes! Damn I'm old!
Jason Blanchard sure there were remotes....we kids were the remotes.
Ya plus MTV was getting its audience. We all owned big recievers and bigger speakers.
I'd get out of school go work, go home, eat ,shower and head out. Cruising, getting stoned, gathering on back roads and hanging out.
And Zep. Throughout.
Ah, the 70s!
I love it when Zeppelin plays muddy, straight up Blues!
Yes
Me too! Love that blues in the dredge!
Well they are blues based.
Travelling Riverside Blues👍
Who else was smiling the whole time watching him reacting to this song ?
Shaun Thorton 🤘🏼
When he paused it just to say "I have my hand up like this cuz they were speaking nothin but the truth, so help me Godddd.... ooooooooo" LMAO
ROFL"the stick face maximus has arrived'
I was into watching him react...
Me , it's awesome.
Those drums needed a trauma center when Bonham was done
He beat them like they owed him money
@THE URANIUM CAFE one of their best
@THE URANIUM CAFE some has music taste, some not... and you know on which side you are...
bonham and carry... greatest of their time... and there are rally some on youtube thinking, ullrich would be better...^^^^^^^^
Lol- yup! Bill Ward was another one known for devastating his drums. I'm certain they wanted to call the police on him a time or two.
led zeppelin the best damn rock and roll band that ever was . true when I was 14 . Still is at 54 .
True for me at at 14 - that was 1971 (Stairway To Heaven released) and I'm 62 ..
58
65 here! ROCK ON BROTHER!!!!!!!!!!!!
Damn im 54 I grew up loving so many bands led zeppelin i seen them rush 7 tims ,black sabbath with ozzie ,and Ronie jame dio. journey, Ratt,white snake so i could go on and on.god bless the great neil peart RIP.AND OTHERS LIKE DIO RIP.😪.
@@vickiebarnes8114 we had the time of our lives bless you 🙏 ❤
I love how you younger folks are responding and appreciating music I grew up with. It makes me happy. It also makes me happy to see my 16 year old son wear Zeppelin shirts, and that he wants me to teach him the songs on guitar. I was seriously worried that instruments were going to go the way of cursive. But there's been a resurgence of young people loving classic 70's and 80's rock, and they want to learn how to play it.
Some. Of them know great music 🎶
That's YOUR heritage, young man, that you and all of us are benefitting from. Led Zep mined old blues songs straight out of the Delta and brought back gold. This is a gospel song from the 20s. You may hear western, I don't know about that, but this shit is as black as black can be. These brilliant musicians were lucky to have it to work with and, from what I understand, were grateful. Love your show.
Well said !
Spot on John!
very true, I know these videos have a subtext of 'blacks listening to white music' but for me its more about the generational thing. I LOVE to see younger folks getting turned on to 70s era music and start to quest the stuff on the radio now, and hopefully understand the true roots of the music of that time
So much of Zeppelin is but tben again that is where a lot of the best rock comes from
Facts🎯 John.💯 There would be no Zep, Beatles, Stones, Elvis, etc., without artists like Willie Dixon, Muddy, Chuck, Richard, Blind Willie Johnson, Wolf, Fats, Rosetta Tharpe, Elmore James, etc. They paved the way and this is forever our heritage, legacy & contribution to music and to the world.🤘🏽
I swear they don't make a bad song! Jimmy Page...best guitarist ever! You are listening to the greatest band there ever was!
They're ok. ;)
@@PeterTea ha
check out koda :(
Super great fun song to play too on guitar too, makes you feel like a God.. You can thank Blind Willie Johnson for this jam.
Uh, no. VERY overrated
You've just been treated to the greatest drummer that ever existed.
janielle Delaney. NO ARGUMENT THERE. I got KEITH MOON in there also with BONZO. exhibits 1 & 1A!!!!
Bonzo is another level.
I know, just realized how delayed that back beat is and I've heard the song a lot. Bonzo was funk before funk.
Absolutely !!
One of the greatest guitarists and vocalists ever as well. Basically just one of the greatest bands to ever exist.
This is church music ..
Some old southern church too....
I remember playing this over and over when I lost 2 in my unite 2005 ( in Iraq )....
RIP my brothers GSgt Brandon Pete & SFC Danny shoulock.
Never forgotten from 🇬🇧
I never heard this song from them until your reaction video. Went to buy the download and it was only available if the whole album was bought. I bought the whole album, no regrets.
Physical Graffiti is they're Wonderwork. The Apex, The Pinnacle.
One of the landmark albums of that era.
Hands down for me the best album. Smart choice!
You hit on the thing there Alexander ... back then we bought the album (vinyl) ... and we got about 45mins of greatness ... not just one track. Enjoy :) (67yo)
@@smc8440 agreed!
that sound is not "western" it's "southern" that's slide guitar. and its roots are in old old OLD blues music made by black people in the south.
Music from the muddy waters of the Mississippi.
I agree, not western at all
Robert Johnson, Elmore James, Howling Wolf, and so many more masterful Blues men. The Blues reach down deep in your soul.
yeah that's what I thought it sounded like old blues music from the south
Lyle Chipperson i dont think hes saying it is western US sounding i believe he is saying it evokes a feeling that reminds him of western movies as in old cowboy movies
Welcome to Zeppelin's longest song. I'm always amazed how those 11 minutes and 6 seconds fly by though. This song is an epic masterpiece.
Your right, that didn't even occur to me !
Try Dazed and Confused live at Madison Square Garden, it's about 30 minutes long and on Spotify
Masterpiece by blind willie johnson
Having grown up listening to every Zeppelin song there is, seeing someone jam out to them for the first time is pretty close to as good as it gets.
It is great and Jamel makes me look at the songs unlike I ever have since I was 13 years old when they were actually being created. I knew so little about the world then and the lyrics have a richer meaning as an adult. When I was a kid the lyrics were mysterious.
Right?! I'm loving it. I grew up listening to Zeppelin with my Latine parents as they were growing up as young parents exploring hippie life and supporting the Civil Rights movement. Black Panthers and Brown Barets... Another lifetime ago.
it is cool ...the uniqueness of LZ is that after 35 years of hearing the same songs, you realize that they get better with age and it's impossible to tire from LZ...I could listen to In My time of dying, Lemon Song, Bring it on Home in a loop for a week and I wouldn't want to turn it off.
So fun 😁
So I started listening to reaction videos on RUclips when the pandemic started. I got onto yours because you were reacting to a song by yes which is my favorite band :-). But I have found you to be the best person to watch react to a video because you are all about feeling the music and your reactions are so honest and pure for the music! Sometimes you may not know where a song is going but it makes me remember my reaction when I first heard the songs so many years ago. You actually make my day a little brighter everyday I watch one of your videos so I wanted to say thank you! Keep on doing what you doing!
Soul train bro is the best for me !
Well put!
I could have written what you wrote....my experience exactly.
@slarti bartfast yeah me too! It's crazy. Sometimes I spend hours a day(or night) watching Jamel & Mr Video & Half & Jai. I have to really force myself to not watch sometimes cuz I'm not getting anything done lol. My husband says I have a problem but they feel like family to me. If I'm having a bad day I come here & immediately feel better 😊
@slarti bartfast stay safe as well my friend 🤗❤️
@@scarletjohnston741 - Jamel is a much loved man. These threads are so rare these days... no smack talk, no bull, just a bunch of folks groovin' on some fine tunes. I'm glad to be amongst such fine neighbors!
When John Bonham was born, God said, ' And this man shall play drums like none you have ever seen or heard, I have said this to be and it will be so'. GOD
😇
Was thinking it’ll be my send off song too. Hope I’m there in spirit✌️
Imagine if he never died
We’re not even debating who’s the best ever
Zeppelin & then everyone else get in line!
And it was good
@@shaunthorton7090 🤣
damn... forgot how sick this song was.. thanks for posting and reacting :)
Same here. You hear it again and you're just like "fuck, this song is amazing."
Me too. Get used to only the songs they play on the radio
This song really is a masterpiece. The lyrics pulls you, the music drags you back, kind of cracks open your soul some. Zep was pretty magical, they aren't legendary for tight pants and power chords. They were legit, stands the test of time. Thanks for letting me hear again for the first time, a blessing.
✨🙏🏽🥰
you forgot to mention their hardcore crowley/ satanic edge
Its a cover. Blind Willie Johnson
Why do I get so happy watching these and enjoy the song even more when I see other people loving it it’s freaking awesome
JAKEtheGR8P absolutely the same for me 🎸🎤🎶
Stephen Murphy I mean I didn’t even grow up in that era of music I’m 17 but I grew up listening to led zeppelin and seeing their music being so enjoyed by all different types of people and all ages makes me love the music that much more. Seeing someone appreciate all the little details and aspects of their music that are overlooked makes me feel so good!
I think it's because we have found a way to connect with not the younger generation but the youngest generation!
Kids today (and when I say kids I mean people up to 30) don't realize how vast the music listening experience was in our day.
We had Motown, we had Funk, we had Blues, we had the beginnings of metal, we had what's now known as classic rock, we had rockabilly we had soft rock, we had country, we had Bluegrass and reggae... Today's kids seem to be stuck in one genre of music and to watch them discover this entire world of fantastic artists brings us closer to them and gives us a way to meet in the middle.
For me, it’s like recapturing some of that magic of hearing an amazing song for the first time. Because once that first time is gone, it’s gone.
And for me, I also grew up on classic rock, so I don’t remember my first time hearing these songs- they were just always there. Maybe that’s why I love reactions so much- because I was just too young the first time I heard it (and I’m talking baby type of young- they really were just alway there), so I get that bit of “first time magic”.
@Stephen Murphy absolutely agree, it makes things better knowing the old classic are getting heard by the younger ones 🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸
When speaking of the single greatest rock and roll band EVER there's only 2 words: Led Zeppelin
They understood how much blues there needs to be in good rock and roll if you want that sex/swagger/danger/mayhem vibe to come through. I couldn't name my favorite LZ song because it changes with my mood, but even some of my least favorite songs I still listen to from beginning to end because they're never bad; in fact, they're always damn good.
Absolutely!
Hey Led Zeppelin.. hold my beer!
(Pink Floyd)
@@imnotagoldenoldie39 floyd couldnt do this song justice in 10 thousand lifetimes
@Large Moving Box barely anyone today even remembers the yardbirds. They had one good song; for your love. Please
Shit is fire when its 11 minutes long and you're sad to see it end.
100% true shit right there
The best comment I've ever read!!!
"I don't know what to call it." It's called the Blues, my friend :)
Yep all blues scales thank you Lead Belly and Robert Johnson only taken to the next level.
@@espada9 ON Steroids!
Brilliance. One of John Bonham's greatest drum tracks, and that is saying something.
Agreed 'Achilles last stand" is another amazing Bonham drum track
@@edcummings2379 besides having great drums "Achilles last stand" is an incredibly boring song though and that's largely due to the fact that it's way to long
@@goldenboy140 to each his own. There are millions of fans that view Achillies Last Stand as one of Zeppelin's greatest epics. Perhaps you might research the meaning of the song, its lyrics, and the context it was created in, so you might better understand why that song is considered utterly brilliant by many millions of fans.
Agreed
@@goldenboy140 Boring is an issue of the boring mind, they have medication for that.
It is a friggin pleasure experiencing Jamal's experiences with great songs.
Physical Graffiti is a masterpiece of an album.
Masterpiece
Yes it is brother
Such a powerful force
You're right I love his reactions to Zeppelin songs
For me, Bonham is still the greatest drummer ever. Get in deep and you'll learn.
Paice, Ward, Bruford and Palmer aren't far behind.
Look up Buddy Rich
jon bonham was a good drummer, but he couldn't swing a sack of shit
@@danaskin5797 you obviously don't like greatness. He was by far the most influential drummer that walked this planet. You saying that tells me you are nothing but a jackass that has to be heard cause you have no confidence in yourself. And you know nothing about music. My guess is you listen to cardi b or some dumb shit like that.
@@jayhensley7681 I won't resort to name calling, you troglodyte. You've made an ass out of u and me. It's a funny Ginger Baker quote (might be a slight paraphrase).
I've listened to this song 100 times and I still say "wow" at the end every time.
You , " this is a masterpiece !"
Me , " They haven't even gotten to the break yet !"
At 4:40 "this is a masterpiece" and I'm like, dude, they haven't even hit you yet
Achille's Last Stand or Ten Years Gone are a must
Ten Years Gone has been my favorite Zep song for almost ten years lol
Achilles Last Stand doesn't mess around
@@jasonpotts5042 Live version is the best one. Simply amazing
And some custard pie, you know for desert 😁
Here Here 👌🏾
In the early 90's I was in High school. My best friend and I were huge Led Zeppelin fans, we promised each other that we would play this at the others funeral if anything happened when we both joined the Army. 2011 we buried him and I stayed true to my promise. RIP Chad cant believe its been 10 years.
Excellent choice, and I like to believe your dear friend knows you honored him this way. 🙏 So sorry for your loss ❤️
Lets we forget, RIP
Sorry brother
This is on my funeral playlist as well
Young folks tend to roll their eyes when us old fogies talk about the good old days, but you have to admit, we knew how to rock!
Indeed. Envy you!!
Respect your roots!
The soundtrack of my youth.
Absolutely
I’m 29 and grew up on this, although I didn’t truly appreciate it as much as I do today. I guess it’s because we still had some great music growing up in the 90s like Alice In Chains, Blind Melon, Soundgarden, Counting Crows, Jeff Buckley, Black Crowes...just to name a few. But with the absolute garbage out nowadays it makes me truly appreciate the greatness of the music we had back then.
I’ve been listening to Zeppelin my entire life. Seeing you get all amped up gives me goosebumps ! 🍻
I was 5 in 1975 & I remember hearing Black Dog & it has been my favorite Led Zeppelin song since then & my favorite band since.
I was playing this yesterday. When page hit his first solo, my 5 yr old stopped what he was doing said "daamn".
Good kid, there.
Roger Pieronski Made u proud didnt it
@@bobwoww8384 hell yea! Little dude loves listening to the metal I play and throwing his hands up 🤘🤘
Learnin' him good
Musta had a good dad to get a boy with that taste that quick
Man, Bonzo's work on the kick drum here is just otherworldly. Soooo good!
"In My Time of Dying" (also called "Jesus Make Up My Dying Bed" or a variation thereof) is a traditional gospel music song that has been recorded by numerous musicians. The title line, closing each stanza of the song, refers to a deathbed and was inspired by a passage in the Bible from Psalms 41:3 "The Lord will strengthen him upon the bed of languishing, thou wilt make all his bed in his sickness".
So much there I didn't know and I bought every LZ off the press. Thank you for your contribution
raxxtango yes, thank you. I’m die hard Zeppelin to the core and that’s news to me. Awesome!
The most well-known and probable source of Zeppelin's *cough* *cough* "inspiration" is Blind Willie Johnson, recorded around 1928 or so.
Nobody does it like Zeppelin though! Page, Plant, Bonham, Jones = Hammer of The gods
Thanks for postibg this.
It’s hard to listen to this and then turn on the radio.
Now that a fact.
Thank you Lou.
That says it all brother.....
"Video killed the radio star"
Agreed 💯
John Bonham attempting to pound out a passage to the center of the earth with a drum kit. Close your eyes when you listen to this. When you open them, you’re surprised your house is still standing. It is a masterpiece
Absolutely!!
JPJ and Bonham holding down the song like a brick s**thouse while Page plays all around it and Plant wails those bluesy lyrics. Masterpiece, indeed!
They left the cough in at the end as a way to showing their detractors, this is them, live, together, in the studio killing it. The best there ever was.
@M 40 Jimmy had the first quote as he was recording it.
amen
@Raymond Rocha That's how you knew they were keeping it real. Man we were so lucky to grow up with this.
Jamal "it's got a country feel"
Bonzo Here's some drums for your face!
LMAO!!
love it! haha 😁
Lol brilliant
I think what I am hearing is a mystic vibe that seems to take you into the West
This was played at my mates funeral years ago...so moving. RIP Noel Kippax
Sorry for your loss , but this had to be moving .
more then 10 years now and I am still sold on having Macy Grays The Letter at mine, song has the same meaning. I should tell my relatives
RIP Noel Kippax
Your memory lives on
❤️
Rock On Noel Kippax
Jamel I am going to make personal public statement...maybe it will help one of readers. I am an addict in recovery from opioids. CLEAN 18 MONTHS! WITH GODS HELP, LED ZEP AND YOU. I MADE IT ANOTHER DAY. THANKS FRIEND . #WEDORECOVER MERRY CHRISTMAS 🎅 YALL!!
The sheer complexity of sounds and rhythms from just 4 instruments Everywhere you listen something good going on. This is what music was before iPhones and social media. Man we were blessed!
I swear John Bonham was drumming with the fat end of a pool que, instead of a drum stick!! That man was the BEST!!
Those snare runs... He was just too fucking good.
Oh yes he was
He used the fattest available sticks (fact).
The first three sides of Physical Graffiti is a John Bonham showcase. He was SO good on it.
Friggin a he was and is the best of the best!!!@@@.🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸
True story here no b.s.
We had a shop when I was a kid and when I was old enough to help my dad I would go in because he was already there good and early and he knew I was a teenage music hound so ...when I'd walk in the door usually well before we'd open he would have the radio blasting away.
So he'd ask me....." Hey son?...who's playin' this song?" I'd say well that's led Zeppelin Black Dog.
Another day I'd be there...." Hey son who's doing this song?"....that's led Zeppelin Rock n Roll...a while later...." This that Led Zeppelin again?" Yes that's called When the Levee Breaks...and not long later he'd ask and I'd say that's Going to California... Zeppelin again!
Now this is over a time period of a few months so then I tell him....you know pops?.... All the songs you asked me about....and you rarely ever ask....are by the same band and actually from the same album!!!
So he says " that Zeppelin guy?" I said yes....
To which he enthusiasically replies
" Well then that's gotta be the best Rock n Roll album ever made then!!"
P.S. ..... And that's not even counting stairway to heaven !!
Pops knows best!
Nice. Thanks for sharing
Awesome story!!
Omg my face is hurting from smiling watching you get into this great song, from a band that I love so much. I'm happy that you enjoy it as much as I do. 😁🤘🏻
Seriously man, I envy you. I grew up on this music. I can only imagine, what it must be like, to be older and listen to this music for the first time.
Yeah I only heard the jam I didn't get the whole picture. I still love it though.
Say it bro
Thats why we watch these videos to re live it & share in the joy
RosgarTheFrog I’m not envious, I got to listen to this for the past 50 yrs, still do and till I die
Imagine the first time ever hearing this song was seeing them perform it live. That's what I got to witness early in their '75 tour, before the album with this on it (Physical Graffiti) hit record stores.
I bought every Zeppelin album as soon as it was released, & saw them in concert 3 times. So usually when I saw them I already knew each song. But it was a real treat that at THAT particular concert they did some songs that were brand new & unheard, including this one, "Kashmir" & "Trampled Underfoot".
The album was a magnificent double album, it became available just a couple of days after that concert, & you know I ran out immediately to buy it & get it into my hot little hands.💙
Check out over the hills and far away by zeppelin.. it's great
Deborah Cornell yep I saw the physical graffiti tour I don’t know if it was 76 or 77 I’m leaning 76
@@Caseydog3
It was '75. They toured January through March. "Physical Graffiti" was released in February.
We drove to St. Louis, a 4 hr drive, only to find out Robert had strep throat & that concert was postponed. So we had to drive back several days later. But, as you know, it was SO worth it!
I was lucky enough to see them again on the '77 tour. And the first time was in '70. So glad you got to see them as well. They were special.
Deborah Cornell you have a better memory than me!😂 too much weed taking a toll on my older self🥳
Deborah Cornell - now tell us the REAL juicy stories lady ... ha ha ha - one simply does NOT have a history like yours merely to write a straight up RUclips comment without some “Juice” wink wink ha ha ha.
"It's got a little western feel to it". More like a lot of blues feel to it, as Robert Plant and Jimmy page were heavily influenced by many blues legends (Muddy Waters, Buddy Guy, etc.). But that was true of many rock bands in the 70's like Eric Clapton (and all the bands he was in), The Doors, The Rolling Stones, ZZ Top, etc.
Those drums! That bass! Those vocals! That guitar! Those lyrics! This intense song has a strangely haunting vibe, like an ominous and otherworldly feel, dreadfully awesome.
Starts as a dirge, appropriate to the title.
It contains the inevitability of death, for better or worse!
Nothing like sitting in your garage on an old couch, with old friends and old whiskey, and a little smoke and remembering your youth of 45 years ago. Thank you for reviewing this absolute classic!
I'd join ya, and I'm 18. Lol.
Enjoy
I just discovered Led Zeppelin this year 🤦♂️ music ahead of its time
Many blues rock bands in that era. Classic Rock .
enjoy
Welcome to the rabbit hole.
Nope. It is music IN its time. Nothing has risen to that level since that time.
So that means you are spoiled forever for that rap-grape
You’re hearing that Delta Blues vibe, son! The black people’s literal gift to us all.
They may have gifted us the framework, but no black people put it together like modern white soulful artists... it's our gift to them... as show by his reaction to it... disbelief... it's become something else in tone and energy.... white man's blues
Dirt Rules but it was more than framework. It was the essence, core , sweat and soul inspired generations in rock and jazz. We are beholden to the blues ancestors for transforming enormous suffering into an art form and unique expression.
Karen Nyere True! I have been playing blues on the harmonica for over 35 yrs.
Jim Chumley I guess Dirt Rules never heard of Jimi Hendrix, B.B., Buddy Guy, etc etc
@@TheDivayenta Enormous suffering is not the sole proprietary of black musicians.... the suffering of unrequited love, loss of a loved one.. and a hard life are the pains, truths of the white man's experience throughout history..... for a thousand years....no black people put it together like modern white soulful artists... it's our gift to them... as show by his reaction to it... disbelief... it's become something else in tone and energy..
JPJ's fretless bass line is the hidden gem in this masterpiece!
I don’t think that there wasn’t an instrument JPJ couldn’t manipulate in any song! Play some “NO QUARTER”
The hip hop groove isJohn Bohnam’s double pound brilliance lay down that total heavy backbeat. Masterpiece is right!!
This is a straight up dirge, in the Delta Blues tradition, and is built on several similar earlier songs. At this point in their career, Led Zeppelin was doing very little of the traditional blues songs. They came up in that late 60s British blues revival scene, and at least half of their first album are reimagined versions of traditonal blues songs. Once they had an audience, though, they stuck mainly to originals. So when they went back to these blues roots, you knew it was going to be worth their time, and yours.
It is a (slide guitarist) Blind Willie Johnson (Beaumont, TX) cover (as is Nobody's Fault But Mine):
www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-1-d&q=Jesus+make+up+my+dying+bed+blind+willie
I remember some TV documentary saying that deep down, they were a blues band, but that "they played the blues like it had never been played before".
Agree. And This to Led Zep is what Beggars Banquet is to the Stones.
Zep made their own brand of the blues
@@balthazarblue yea they took the blues and electrified it. The White Stripes do something similar, Death Letter is my favorite from them and it's an old blues song turned up to 11.
The documentary It Might Get Loud is worth the watch, just fastforward through the Edge's segments.
the ace in the hole that Zep had on any other band of their time was John Bonham
He was the greatest rock drummer ever imo.
...and John Paul Jones, Robert Plant, Jimmy Page. All were and remain unmatched.
John Paul Jones was Zeps Secret Weapon, he could play any instrument
As always John Paul Jones is looked over...it wasnt just bonham, who is fantastic....the input of the four quarters....but the rhythm section of jpj and bonham was the magic...a session musician and a farmer who was good at drums
@@seinfeld8812 you watch Jones play a double neck instrument with mandolin and guitar, while playing bass pedals from an organ, and you know who the real ace in the band was
It's amazing how well Led Zep's music stands tall after all these years. By no means do I mean to diminish the countless talented musicians out there, many of whom I love, but there's Zeppelin and there's everyone else. These guys were so far ahead of their time and truly on an entirely different level. Loved the reaction video!
And Black Sabbath, equally awawesome.
@@michaelbruns449Don't be ridiculous. To compare Sabbath to Zeppelin? Lol. They were both British bands...that's about it.
There not ahead of there time they where inspired by blues musicians that played 40 years before them.
This was a gospel song first recorded in 1928 by Blind Willie Johnson. Amazing what you can do with a different arrangement!
Led Zeppelin at their best. Nothing like Zeppelin blues.
always and forever
One of the most complex sounds in music, Led Zeppelin. I grew up in a glorious time in music.
Billsfan2012 I did also & I’m so thankful for that 🎸🎶🎤💙
Bonzo was extra beastly toward the end of this one.
You bring me joy watching your genuine appreciation of music.
This is 1 reason Bonham is the best drummer ever!!
Yes.
@@andrewkeller4846 yes
his drumming just drove the entire song and let everybody shake the body
He’s up there. Still Danny Carey is the 🐐
@@vcgchuco Carey got nothing on bonzo
Bonham's beatin'them drums like they owed him money,and Jimmy's slide daring them to call the cops!!
With John Paul taunting them while Robert mocks them.
Oh, I am keepin' that. In return, you may have - 'Imma count to seven, and I'm starting at four!'!!
Led Zeppelin had the feel of being the adult rock band. Their songs went far beyond partying, drinking, sex, drugs, etc. I liked them as a kid but I found true appreciation for Led Zep when I became an adult and the depth of their songs was more understandable.
Page and Bonhams chemistry was once in a millennia.
Rich Diana And none of it could have happened without JPJ’s incredible bass
That of Bonham and John Paul Jones too
Jpj was the glue
It was the backbone of Zeppelin. Few people realize it.
Andrew Trotter John Paul Jones one of the best bass guitarists of all times. A whole different level
The star/hero of this song/arrangement is JOHN BONHAM. He is the glue holding this together.
Good point . He pushed em !
He's killing it for sure, there is a reason the band died with him, but honestly everyone brings their A game. JPJs bass is on fire, Page's slide guitar is a perfect delta-blues, hard rock fusion, Plant shows off great vocal range and control, plus he rocks that harmonica, and Bonham brings the thunder with some awesome fills in the latter half.
This is my favorite LZ song and one of the rare times the band rises up to Bonham's level, it literally is 11 minutes of the best work from each member.
Bonham and Jonesy pushed everything that Jimmy Pages genius could manufacture to be even better, then the vocals of one of the greatest made it, well, I don't know enough adjectives except to say
the best there ever was....
The drumming on this piece is absolutely insane.
Must be a drummer 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Zep. Rules!
Physical Graffiti to me always was the definition of the perfect rock album. Not a single weak song on it. With Kashmir as the pinnacle.
Now you know what all the hype was about for Led Zeppelin. And that’s just the tip of the iceberg. You want to listen to They’re hard rocking blues songs. Keep listening to him you’ll be surprised how much great great music do you have in such a good musicians. Keep rocking take care and God bless
That sound was not Western twang, it was classic Delta blues.
It is from Beaumont, TX
Check out Nobody's Fault But Mine, a bit underrated imo
U said it bro lmao
Frkn exlnt song!
Yup.
Agreed 👍💯
Nobody's Fault But Mine has arguably the most powerful harmonica solo in any rock tune.
I have recently passed my whole zeppelin collection to my girl friend son that zepp 1 all the to Coda he is 15 and a huge fan now, I also have him my turn table
Awesome!!!
Your generosity is to be commended!
you sir are a scholar and a gentleman
Very good thing.
You have to pass it on! I do the same with my 12 yr old son! I don't want him to turn 16 and ride around listening to crap!
Led Zepplin has melted many faces over the years. You are now a member of the club.
Sickest, heaviest, bluesiest tune ever
No Auto tuning, no sampling, true musicians. All analog, not digital.
They talented guys but couldn’t help stealing from other artists of their time.
Just stolen music and lyrics 🤣
@@luthierjustin1 rubbish, one of the best tracks of all time , pure rock.
Wayne Dome too bad it’s stolen directly from old blues songs
Wayne Dome ruclips.net/video/t5HaHVKRouo/видео.html
Care to explain this?
You need to check out "Nobody's Fault But Mine" by Zeppelin..
I was going to suggest that!
Been listening to Zeppelin since I was 10 yrs old collected all the cassette tapes I could, still 🔥🤘🤯
"Western" feel? no! BLUES! Most of Zep's hard rock n roll dripped Rythym & Blues!
Mississippi Blues.....deep in the swamps..... beautiful....
The arrangements do give it an epic, cinematic feel that is, I believe, the reason why Westerns get a mention
Totally agree!
But I understand what he’s talking about. That “twang” in the guitar.
When the levee breaks or dazed and confused are zeps best songs, you would love them!
I think he has done them already? I could be wrong though haha
So many other great songs, even songs better written then those 2. Dazed and confused is actualy kinda of a cover too
Les Strato the rain song, since I've been loving you, Bron yr aur stomp, no quarter, ten years gone.... And so many more
levee breaks.....we agree there!
He's done Dazed and Confused already. Not sure about When The Levee Breaks.
You need to hear the Battle of Evermore and No Quarter I'm requesting it!
Achilles Last Stand.
Battle of Evermore and No Quarter, SECOND THAT
Madame you got some fine taste
Thank you, Jamel. Your face in this video is my face when i listen this incredible song in 1975; this is not rock or pop music, this is classical music. RUclips maybe it's a family; thank you very much from Italy. I think you are a good person.
Think about this: a bunch of Brits just wanting to emulate delta blues. Their take on it is not too bad, eh?
swamp funeral blues...
Also, wait until y'all find out that delta blues was as much influenced by English folk music and chamber music (as practiced by the settlers) as it was African music (brought over by slaves). It's well documented.
@@joebryant8500 so?
@@alexh1355 That's not an argument or even a question. If you need some help, do shout.
In My Time of Dying
"In My Time of Dying" is a traditional gospel music song that has been recorded by numerous musicians. The title line, closing each stanza of the song, refers to a deathbed and was inspired by a passage in the Bible from Psalms 41:3 "The Lord will strengthen him upon the bed of languishing, thou wilt make all his bed in his sickness".
Even though I grew up with Zep, and they are my all time favorite, down to the Zoso tattoo on my arm, watching with you and listening is like the first time all over again. Thank you again for your channel. It’s a much needed break from a world drowning in negativity.
Best band that ever was and ever will be. 40 odd years of absolute musical joy these guys have brought me.
Please look up Robin Trower. Why this guitarist doesn't get his just do is unbelievable.
Indeed! Bridge Of Sighs is in my top 10 albums.
The very first album I brought was Robin Trower live. Been a fan ever since.
@@robertlee4254 That's my other favorite, fantastic!
Also Robin Trower was the guitarist in the Paramounts and Procul Harum. Please forgive me if I misspell the last name. Please check out and correct me if I'm wrong.
Every. Single. Tune on Bridge of Sighs. Beyond words.
I've never heard this before and this is BADASS!..
I know -- where's it been all my life
I've been waiting for years for someone to review this song. One of Zepp's best and apparently not well known.
My absolute favorite Zeppelin song. Probably not as well known because it's 11 minutes long and didn't get a lot of airplay in its day.
THIS is Led Zeppelin in my opinion. If I had one song to sit someone down to introduce them to the band, it would be this one.
Go to Soul Train Bro channel. He breaks down almost all of Zeppelin songs. I see the rest of these reaction videos are of the same songs. This bands best is not the top 40 radio played songs.
I love watching your reactions I'm 69 years old so these songs are what I grew up listening to,and I was fortunate to see them do this live.