I never get sick of this song. Yeah, they did a couple overdubs, but the main body of the song is the band live in the studio. Now you guys cut that out. You know what it means to have your lemon squeezed! Lol. Also big shout out to Howlin Wolf and his guitarist Hubert Sumlin who inspired this jam(Killin' Floor). They were huge to the white kids in England! Thats how white kids here discovered them! That is how fucked up segrigation was back in the 50s and 60s. Look at Hendrix! He had to go to England before anyone in his own country would give him a chance. Just embarrassing.
That bass & drum groove to me is the highlight of this song. Of course everybody was on top of their game for this jam! But DAMN that John Paul Jones solo!
These guys were all like 19-22 years old when they recorded their first album. That much confidence and talent out of four English dudes barely out of school is insane.
You know all they did was practice their instruments non-stop 24/7/365 for years to get to this level at such a young age. I know Jimmy was a child prodigy and on English tv when he was a kid.
Lyrics fron this taken fron black blues artist Howling Wolf 1964) ) They are notorious for lifting lyrics. They were hugely influenced by black blues but give credit where due. Were royalties paid?
The part about "Killing Floor" is from a song by the same name recorded by Howlin' Wolf. The double time section is what they used to call a "rave up" back in the day and was used to get the audience up and moving. Jimmy had played plenty of those with The Yardbirds. Jonesy said one of the things he was very proud of was Zep's music could get their audience to dance and groove, unlike some of their contemporaries. Zep's music was often very nuanced and they really made you listen.
@@andyirons7162 In early musical history, it was more often called "borrowing" or "reworking", etc., and *everybody* did it - long before Zeppelin. I'm not arguing right/wrong - It's a fact. For example, Blues artists borrowed, reworked, re-recorded their contemporaries' songs all the time and no one paid attention to copyrights/credit. It wasn't until an artist got big enough that some enterprising corporate suits realized there was money to be made. And make no mistake; it wasn't for any altruistic reason of ensuring proper royalties/credit went to the artist since the majority of them had been bamboozled long ago by manager/labels into signing away their rights anyway. Zeppelin's reworked songs made them their own.
When they featured JPJ on bass in a song, he never disappointed. Though, there are many songs of theirs where the bass isn't that pronounced in the mix, but if you removed it, you'd damned sure notice. He was amazing. Not to mention all the other instruments he played.
"Squeeze me baby, 'til the juice runs down my leg. The way you squeeze my lemon, I'm gonna fall right out of bed." It's a do-me-wrong song, as many blues songs are, but apparently all that lemon squeezing has kept him around way too long. For me, this is a top Zep song showing off their playing skills at the highest level. As a guitar player, I was drawn to Page because he didn't just noodle about during solos. HIs solos always had a voice and a direction. They always go somewhere, nary a wasted note. Then there's JPJ and Bonzo killing the bass and drums while Percy does his banshee thing. What's not to like?
Lyrics fron this taken fron black blues artist Howling Wolf 1964) ) They are notorious for lifting lyrics. They were hugely influenced by black blues but give credit where due. Were royalties paid?
Jazz disguised inside a Rock and Roll blanket and suit of Blues. My favorite Led Zeppelin song hands down. The level of musicianship here is unmatched. They leave each other individually, but are always in the room and groove together. It's amazing.
They were so good. Four guys that could probably " feel " exactly what the others wanted and/or were going to do. Not one piece of the Led Zeppelin puzzle could have ever been replaced.
JPJ at his best. Glues this masterpiece together. If you aren't head rocking to the bass you are not alive. That take down at 4:13 is earth shattering.
I am impressed how you two catch fine details in the instrumentation with such an acute attention to detail. There is nothing not to love in this song. Impossible to say who was the highlight of this work, the vocal, the bass, the lead guitar, or John Bonham.....IMPOSSIBLE! It was all so, so, so very good. Great reaction guys, thanks.
I lived in the moment of Led Zeppelin… how lucky am I… The GOAT! Please do the 1973 Madison Square Garden live version of Since I’ve been loving you… that performance is Zeppelin at their finest…
Lyrics fron this taken fron black blues artist Howling Wolf 1964) ) They are notorious for lifting lyrics. They were hugely influenced by black blues but give credit where due. Were royalties paid?
Bass line is so good it’s worth a listen unto itself….. This is a rendition of “ Killing Floor” by Howlin Wolf… Blues standard turned on its head….. “Squeeze my Lemon till the juice runs down my leg”…. Only one interpretation of that lyric…. Lol… Zeppelin sometimes requires multiple listenings because there like colors of an artists palette… they each have their own contributions that warrant all your attention…. Then you have the collective work….. there layered like any masterpiece…. Now they shift gears again and give you “ Thank You” …. A love song for the ages….. In the right moment it can bring tears … beautiful art is a powerful seduction….. enjoy… look forward to your next….
Also check out Jimi Hendrix version from 1967 Monterey Pop Festival…… its his rendition of “Howlin’s “Killing Floor” it will stick with you forever…. The King may be gone but he’s not forgotten… RIP Mr. Jimi
Love your reactions and I put you up there with Soul Train Brother who was serious and actually listened to the music, Jimmy used a small amp with lots of distortion to create that wonderful sound from his guitar, I might be wrong but I get the feeling you two chaps play music because your attention to details is just brilliant, wonderful reaction like always, I would love for you to do the live version of The Ocean from MSG in 1973 because i was there for that show and you can witness how much fun they had doing that song and Plant has mentioned that playing that song live was one of his favorites and also in bands usually the guitarist always follows the rhythm section of bass and drums but with LZ being Pagey's band they usually followed him and in the video you will see Pagey turn around and clue in Bonzo the drummer when he was about to switch things up....the GOATs
The Rain Song by them is totally different when the Beatles said they couldn't write a ballad ......they took it as a challenge and showed they could do anything
It's a love making pace. Starts slow, gets intense, slows again, speeds up again. Squeeze my lemon? You gotta know what that means. Leave my children down on this killing floor. She squeezed his lemon until he fell out of bed and finished on the floor.
That's what I know I'm with Jeff Shit I'm 68 was a professional drummer in the 70s no big stadiums alot of small venues We got this covered Jeff 🥃🥃cheers
JP Jones' bass line in this song wrecked me as a teenager. I HAD to learn bass after hearing this song. Still can't play like that! Literal perfection.
This is my favorite Led Zeppelin song. The Bass, Drums are the best of all time. They are the best band ever to breathe oxygen. Ever. Tempo changes, and come back and groove like that. You know how hard that is?
One of the special things about Led Zeppelin is that the drummer rhythms along with the lead guitarist and the Bass. Sometimes even a 3rd drum timing for the vocalist as well. --His children are his seeds, squeezed out of his lemon, which ran down his leg, according to the song.
This song is called "Killing Floor". It's an old Howlin' Wolf blues standard. Covering this is the rough equilivant of a jazz band doing Giant Steps or Autumn Leaves. They renamed it the Lemon Song because of Plant's improvisational lyrics about "squeeze my lemon, 'till the juice runs down my leg". That is a lyrical motif shows up in Zeppelin music more than once, check out the 1970 Royal Albert Hall concert's version of "How Many More Times" as an example.
Great review. I really enjoy your reactions because they were much like mine all those years ago. Another example of Zeppelin's ability to mash up various blues and jazz motifs into a sonic rock masterpiece. And every time you hear one of these numbers, it has an immediacy as if they are in the room right at the moment. Production quality was like the fifth element with them, and Jimmy Page was the producer.
This is all delta and Chicago blues, which Led. Zep built on so well. Thanks for commenting on this great tune. Check out Willie Dixon, Howlin Wolf, Robert Johnson, etc. Killing Floor is an old blues song, written by Howlin Wolf.
"Killing Floor: was where they killed the cows and pigs, in those old school Slaughterhouses, back in the day. Had drains on the floor for the blood and all. The floor was made of ceramic tiles, to be easily hosed down with water and cleaned up. I am not sure about the lemon thing, probably just hard to think of a song title, so they just went with the part of the song where Plant was talking about the lemon innuendo stuff.
From AI Overview on the internet: "In Howlin' Wolf's song 'Killing Floor', the killing floor is a metaphor for male-female relationships. The killing floor is the area of a slaughterhouse where animals are killed. According to blues guitarist Hubert Sumlin, who was a long-time associate of Wolf, 'Down on the killing floor - that means a woman has you down, she went out of her way to try to kill you'. Sumlin explained that the song is about being treated so badly that you'd rather be dead."
Man, you fellas must be on the east coast, lol. It's pretty early out here! The Mighty Led Zeppelin nail it AGAIN! Another great reaction! Thank You guys for starting my day out right. Merry Christmas & A Happy New Year to you and yours!!
Great reaction. There are definitely documentaries out there that talk about Zep's recording techniques. They would record in castles with crazy acoustics!
Man I’m really digging your guys reactions so far! You’ve done 2 of my favorites from Zeppelin but my 3rd is “fool in the rain” it’s off their last album and Page and Bonzo were pretty much in fool addiction and Jones wrote almost the whole album musically! I think you will dig it!
The first album is raw because that's a way they recorded it. 15 hours recording time. 14 hours of mixing. Very few over dubs. After only 2 or 3 weeks of practice as a band. The second album was recorded on a road and different studios with lots of time to mix it.
Glad you guys are diggin' on Led Zeppelin. Led Zep was unique among really any other rock band in that each of the 4 main members (lead singer, lead guitar, bass, drummer) is still regarded in a perpetual "Top-5 Greatest" in their particular position. For example, guaranteed if you type in "greatest rock drummers ever" that in the majority of legit links/polls, John Bonham's name will be #1. Rolling Stone magazine named Robert Plant as rock's greatest front man ever. Similar sentiments about Jimmy Page on lead guitar, to John Paul Jones on bass. And to add to their superior individual talents, as Plant once said, "We really get off playing together." So it was superior talent combined with incredible passion and respect for each other is what made Zeppelin the colossus they forever became.
love you guys keep it up lookin at you listening to these songs ,makes me feel like im hearing these songs for the first time,you both bringing it all back
This song scared me as a young female in the late 70's. I thought I wasn't safe at a LZ concert after this. But then I learned how to appreciate the blues and no more fear, just pure appreciation for the roots and rocknroll soul this band of truly prolific writers is all about.
I normally find “reaction” channels vain and cringeworthy but you two have helped me rediscover my love of artists that I first listened to long ago. Not only are you both musically sophisticated and make excellent observations, but you always put the artists first and don’t make the videos about yourselves. I am super curious how the two of you developed such advanced musical taste without ever listening to certain classics. Whatever the reason, I’m glad you didn’t :-)Keep it up. You guys are a breath of fresh air.
Thanks so much reacting to that track, really... Bass guitar is my favorite instrument, this song is my number one... When I see people never hearing the bass, they should listen to "the lemon song", then they will recognize it ! What a beautiful bass line, JPJ was a god. After this song, I love listening to Red Hot Chili Peppers, the Blood Sugar Sex Magik album with the phenomenal bass guitar player Flea 🎸💋. Very nice reaction. Love from France 🇫🇷😘
Check out politician and I'm so glad live in11968 Albert hall some of the best bass playing and singing the camera work is not the best Eric Clapton is only 23 Jack is 25
Songs like this are probably why so many t-shirts…..and albums…..and views,likes,shares- all that 😎❤️🎶❤️ They just hit RnB highway and took a left on …..it’s our song now- boulevard….fun ride.🔥
Well, she squeezes his "lemon" till the juice runs down his leg, & there are his "children", on the "killin' floor". NASTY tune, all the way around! Thanks for your reaction.
"Killing Floor" is a 1964 song by American blues singer-songwriter and guitarist Howlin' Wolf. Called "one of the defining classics of Chicago electric blues",[1] "Killing Floor" became a blues standard with recordings by various artists. It has been acknowledged by the Blues Foundation Hall of Fame, which noted its popularity among rock as well as blues musicians. English rock group Led Zeppelin adapted the song for their "The Lemon Song", for which Howlin' Wolf is named as a co-author.
And, I love the Blues, my favorite guitarist for over 45 years is Roy Buchanan, SECOND ALBUM is my best piece of music, FIVE STRING BLUES my favorite song, but he made 3 great albums in the late 80's. dig
Aside from Going to California due to sentimental reasons; The Lemon Song is my favorite. What a filthy track. Probably the perfect display of each talent on here
Jimmy did overdubs on every song in the studio. Every song. Some he has 3 or 4 guitars playing side by side on the different tracks. He improvised the parts on stage to cover the highlights.
Love love love bluesy rock to death. Remember when this album came out, many parents of young teens were cringing at these lyrics. LoL This tune is a masterpiece. Robert Plant's voice was like nothing I'd ever heard before. Some voices were just born for rock n roll. Did he have a microphone in his throat? ☮️
I'm sure someone said this below, but Plant sings at one point, "The way you squeeze my lemon, I'm gonna fall right out of bed", so the title is referencing that. Also, "killing floor" is an old blues term, and it's actually the title of a tune by Howlin' Wolf. Not sure what it means, exactly.
One of the best bass lines ever recorded!
#Facts 🤗
John Paul Jones gets low down on this one. What feel!!
JPJ shines; filthy bass lines
@@johnwdaley4727 Yeah, I just said the same thing, it's like, damn, the man can walk a mean bass line, ha ha 😎
I never get sick of this song. Yeah, they did a couple overdubs, but the main body of the song is the band live in the studio. Now you guys cut that out. You know what it means to have your lemon squeezed! Lol. Also big shout out to Howlin Wolf and his guitarist Hubert Sumlin who inspired this jam(Killin' Floor). They were huge to the white kids in England! Thats how white kids here discovered them! That is how fucked up segrigation was back in the 50s and 60s. Look at Hendrix! He had to go to England before anyone in his own country would give him a chance. Just embarrassing.
We lived in a time when Giants walked the Earth. And what a time it was. Zeppelin forever.🤘🖤❤️
It feels so good to see younger folks finding their music and grooving to it the way we did way back then.
John.Paul.Fuckin'.Jones.
That bass & drum groove to me is the highlight of this song. Of course everybody was on top of their game for this jam! But DAMN that John Paul Jones solo!
JPJ is an amazing talent!!
Agreed 100%
Fact!
YES!!!!!!!
This is one of my all time favorite songs, all four of these guys are absolutely firing on all cylinders
JPJ plays the gold standard of bass lines on this. IMHO, cementing his position as one of the all time greatest musical talents.
Definitely
A synthesis of blues & jazz & raw rock energy. We were teenagers when we discovered this music. Weren't we the lucky ones?😊
These guys were all like 19-22 years old when they recorded their first album. That much confidence and talent out of four English dudes barely out of school is insane.
Robert & Bonzo 20, JPJ 22, Jimmy 24.
You know all they did was practice their instruments non-stop 24/7/365 for years to get to this level at such a young age. I know Jimmy was a child prodigy and on English tv when he was a kid.
Jimmy was self taught
Lyrics fron this taken fron black blues artist Howling Wolf 1964) ) They are notorious for lifting lyrics. They were hugely influenced by black blues but give credit where due. Were royalties paid?
@@fredfreddy2338 Why are you insulting Led Zeppelin unintentionally?
Led Zeppelin is for the ADVANCED music listener,,,,💥💥💥👍😎
True! I quit them after LZ3. Am just finding out now what I missed🤘🤘🤘.
Zeppelin Rules!!🤩🤩🤩🤩
The part about "Killing Floor" is from a song by the same name recorded by Howlin' Wolf. The double time section is what they used to call a "rave up" back in the day and was used to get the audience up and moving. Jimmy had played plenty of those with The Yardbirds. Jonesy said one of the things he was very proud of was Zep's music could get their audience to dance and groove, unlike some of their contemporaries. Zep's music was often very nuanced and they really made you listen.
Howlin Wolf, I was just gonna look up Killing Floor on wikipedia
i cant stop listening... jimmy wtf
@@andyirons7162 In early musical history, it was more often called "borrowing" or "reworking", etc., and *everybody* did it - long before Zeppelin. I'm not arguing right/wrong - It's a fact. For example, Blues artists borrowed, reworked, re-recorded their contemporaries' songs all the time and no one paid attention to copyrights/credit. It wasn't until an artist got big enough that some enterprising corporate suits realized there was money to be made. And make no mistake; it wasn't for any altruistic reason of ensuring proper royalties/credit went to the artist since the majority of them had been bamboozled long ago by manager/labels into signing away their rights anyway. Zeppelin's reworked songs made them their own.
In my humble opinion they are the greatest band of any generation. Funk, blues, rock. Just very pleasing to the ear
No filters, just pure talent! Best rock band ever!
When they featured JPJ on bass in a song, he never disappointed. Though, there are many songs of theirs where the bass isn't that pronounced in the mix, but if you removed it, you'd damned sure notice. He was amazing. Not to mention all the other instruments he played.
Masters of their craft...all four of them!!🎶 There will never be another Led Zeppelin!!🎶🎸🎶🎸
"Squeeze me baby, 'til the juice runs down my leg. The way you squeeze my lemon, I'm gonna fall right out of bed." It's a do-me-wrong song, as many blues songs are, but apparently all that lemon squeezing has kept him around way too long. For me, this is a top Zep song showing off their playing skills at the highest level. As a guitar player, I was drawn to Page because he didn't just noodle about during solos. HIs solos always had a voice and a direction. They always go somewhere, nary a wasted note. Then there's JPJ and Bonzo killing the bass and drums while Percy does his banshee thing. What's not to like?
As a guitar player myself, I couldn't agree more about Page. Pure genius songwriter and player.
'Squeeze my lemon ...' taken directly from Robert Johnson's Traveling Riverside Blues.
@@5after4am A song which Zep later covered.
@@ZEPnALEa song they make absolutely sizzle! That slide is everything and Jimmy kills it! Helluva remake!
Lyrics fron this taken fron black blues artist Howling Wolf 1964) ) They are notorious for lifting lyrics. They were hugely influenced by black blues but give credit where due. Were royalties paid?
Plant is absolutely INCREDIBLE on this song! Thanks for checking it out.
Jazz disguised inside a Rock and Roll blanket and suit of Blues. My favorite Led Zeppelin song hands down. The level of musicianship here is unmatched. They leave each other individually, but are always in the room and groove together. It's amazing.
Lyrics fron this taken from black blues artist Howling Wolf 1964) ) They are notorious for lifting lyrics. They were hugely influenced by black blues.
@@jgsrhythm100nobody ask
@looking_33 In other words oblivious
@@jgsrhythm100 in other words your crusade to spread this information is common sense and nobody cares, ok?
@@looking_33 If it were common sense how are so few aware?
They were so good. Four guys that could probably " feel " exactly what the others wanted and/or were going to do. Not one piece of the Led Zeppelin puzzle could have ever been replaced.
JPJ at his best. Glues this masterpiece together. If you aren't head rocking to the bass you are not alive.
That take down at 4:13 is earth shattering.
These people are listening to absolute Master musicians plying there trade and they make it seem so effortless! 😎🎸🎹🥁🎤🎼🎧
Yes I am 62 so it is so awesome to see these guys hearing this incredible song for the first time
I am impressed how you two catch fine details in the instrumentation with such an acute attention to detail. There is nothing not to love in this song. Impossible to say who was the highlight of this work, the vocal, the bass, the lead guitar, or John Bonham.....IMPOSSIBLE! It was all so, so, so very good. Great reaction guys, thanks.
Watching reactions by people who really appreciate and understand music is such a joy. Merry Christmas!!!! You chose a very naughty song 😉
Merry Christmas!!
Exactly and seeing their respectful appreciation and at times awe of their musical genius.
Finding a naughty song by LZ isn't hard, haha!
that groove is everything.............to me JPJ is the goat!
JPJ killed it on this one.
@@AirplayBeats damn straight the quiet killer!
It’s tough to pick a favorite LZ song but this one is definitely up their in my list. A clinic in bass playing by JPJ. Great commentary guys. 👏
Some of the funkiest bass you'll ever hear from JPJ - blues goes into rockabilly and back - so much in this song not just risque lyrics.
Page and Plant are sooo good, that we sometimes forget how important THAT rhythm section is..
I lived in the moment of Led Zeppelin… how lucky am I… The GOAT! Please do the 1973 Madison Square Garden live version of Since I’ve been loving you… that performance is Zeppelin at their finest…
Me too! I was a teen in the 70s!
The finest to ever walk the stage
Lyrics fron this taken fron black blues artist Howling Wolf 1964) ) They are notorious for lifting lyrics. They were hugely influenced by black blues but give credit where due. Were royalties paid?
Studio version is infinitely better and should ALWAYS be the way people first hear the song
Bass line is so good it’s worth a listen unto itself….. This is a rendition of “ Killing Floor” by Howlin Wolf… Blues standard turned on its head…..
“Squeeze my Lemon till the juice runs down my leg”…. Only one interpretation of that lyric…. Lol…
Zeppelin sometimes requires multiple listenings because there like colors of an artists palette… they each have their own contributions that warrant all your attention…. Then you have the collective work….. there layered like any masterpiece….
Now they shift gears again and give you “ Thank You” …. A love song for the ages….. In the right moment it can bring tears … beautiful art is a powerful seduction….. enjoy… look forward to your next….
Also check out Jimi Hendrix version from 1967 Monterey Pop Festival…… its his rendition of “Howlin’s “Killing Floor” it will stick with you forever…. The King may be gone but he’s not forgotten… RIP Mr. Jimi
Spot on. And anyone who has had their heart toyed with knows what the killing floor is.
Thank you was my wedding song. ❤
Jimmy Page is a genius producer too. They are all on fire but the bass line is so so good.
you two are making me appreciate Zeppelin all over again...keep those reactions coming
Love your reactions and I put you up there with Soul Train Brother who was serious and actually listened to the music, Jimmy used a small amp with lots of distortion to create that wonderful sound from his guitar, I might be wrong but I get the feeling you two chaps play music because your attention to details is just brilliant, wonderful reaction like always, I would love for you to do the live version of The Ocean from MSG in 1973 because i was there for that show and you can witness how much fun they had doing that song and Plant has mentioned that playing that song live was one of his favorites and also in bands usually the guitarist always follows the rhythm section of bass and drums but with LZ being Pagey's band they usually followed him and in the video you will see Pagey turn around and clue in Bonzo the drummer when he was about to switch things up....the GOATs
I miss Soul Train Brother!
Just 4 supremely gifted musicians. There is no weak link.
The Rain Song by them is totally different when the Beatles said they couldn't write a ballad ......they took it as a challenge and showed they could do anything
LED ZEPPELIN! The G O A T of Rock and Roll bands! Merry Christmas men…well done reaction!
Merry Christmas!!
@@AirplayBeats Blessed Christmas!
LZ II was a total tribute to the Blues. I had this on 8-Track (Yeah... I'm that old...LOL!) and played it to death!!
Rock on, i bought this record album when i was in H.S. in 1970! Zep never gets old!
Yeah me to, an I’m still playing it 👍
It's a love making pace. Starts slow, gets intense, slows again, speeds up again. Squeeze my lemon? You gotta know what that means. Leave my children down on this killing floor. She squeezed his lemon until he fell out of bed and finished on the floor.
^^that^^
That's what I know I'm with Jeff
Shit I'm 68 was a professional drummer in the 70s no big stadiums alot of small venues
We got this covered Jeff 🥃🥃cheers
THESE ARE SOME BAD DUDES! Nuff said! PEACE LOVE LED ZEPPELIN
The BLUES pumped up on steroids!!!
JP Jones' bass line in this song wrecked me as a teenager. I HAD to learn bass after hearing this song.
Still can't play like that!
Literal perfection.
No filters back in the day! In his prime, Robert Plant had an incredible range. This entire band is comprised of GOATs!
BTW, I'm AMAZED by how many Blacks of all ages love these boys!
Blows my mind.
Led Zeppelin really was unique then. They were the top band for rockers. Love y'all musician's reaction and insights.
Merry Christmas Looking forward to your Led Zeppelin journey.
Merry Christmas!!
This is my favorite Led Zeppelin song. The Bass, Drums are the best of all time. They are the best band ever to breathe oxygen. Ever. Tempo changes, and come back and groove like that. You know how hard that is?
One of the special things about Led Zeppelin is that the drummer rhythms along with the lead guitarist and the Bass. Sometimes even a 3rd drum timing for the vocalist as well.
--His children are his seeds, squeezed out of his lemon, which ran down his leg, according to the song.
Greatest bass groove of all time. Thanks for doing this. Love watching you guys fall in love with stuff I did long ago. Very cool!
Killer tune. Merry Christmas!
Merry Christmas!!
This song is called "Killing Floor". It's an old Howlin' Wolf blues standard. Covering this is the rough equilivant of a jazz band doing Giant Steps or Autumn Leaves. They renamed it the Lemon Song because of Plant's improvisational lyrics about "squeeze my lemon, 'till the juice runs down my leg". That is a lyrical motif shows up in Zeppelin music more than once, check out the 1970 Royal Albert Hall concert's version of "How Many More Times" as an example.
Lemon is a man’s sugar. I listened to these guys in the ‘70s and ‘80s, and you’re giving me a newfound appreciation for the music. Thnx
Fantastic song! Love Zeppelin!!
YES!!!!!!!!!! 💙💙💙💙💙... another great reaction, too!!!!!!!!!!!!
Great review. I really enjoy your reactions because they were much like mine all those years ago. Another example of Zeppelin's ability to mash up various blues and jazz motifs into a sonic rock masterpiece. And every time you hear one of these numbers, it has an immediacy as if they are in the room right at the moment. Production quality was like the fifth element with them, and Jimmy Page was the producer.
This is all delta and Chicago blues, which Led. Zep built on so well. Thanks for commenting on this great tune. Check out Willie Dixon, Howlin Wolf, Robert Johnson, etc. Killing Floor is an old blues song, written by Howlin Wolf.
"Killing Floor: was where they killed the cows and pigs, in those old school Slaughterhouses, back in the day. Had drains on the floor for the blood and all. The floor was made of ceramic tiles, to be easily hosed down with water and cleaned up. I am not sure about the lemon thing, probably just hard to think of a song title, so they just went with the part of the song where Plant was talking about the lemon innuendo stuff.
Nothing to do with killing cows it's all about the male orgasm that's clear
From AI Overview on the internet: "In Howlin' Wolf's song 'Killing Floor', the killing floor is a metaphor for male-female relationships. The killing floor is the area of a slaughterhouse where animals are killed. According to blues guitarist Hubert Sumlin, who was a long-time associate of Wolf, 'Down on the killing floor - that means a woman has you down, she went out of her way to try to kill you'. Sumlin explained that the song is about being treated so badly that you'd rather be dead."
Man, you fellas must be on the east coast, lol. It's pretty early out here! The Mighty Led Zeppelin nail it AGAIN! Another great reaction! Thank You guys for starting my day out right. Merry Christmas & A Happy New Year to you and yours!!
😂 we are in the west coast. Thanks for watching us. Hope you had a Merry Christmas and Have a happy safe new year!!
Great reaction. There are definitely documentaries out there that talk about Zep's recording techniques. They would record in castles with crazy acoustics!
Blues-rock ... Led Zepplin style!
This song is ALL about ATTITUDE!
This is the funkiest song of all time. Zep even out funked themselves.
Man I’m really digging your guys reactions so far! You’ve done 2 of my favorites from Zeppelin but my 3rd is “fool in the rain” it’s off their last album and Page and Bonzo were pretty much in fool addiction and Jones wrote almost the whole album musically! I think you will dig it!
Thanks for checking us out. We are just finishing up the second album. How many albums do they have total?
@@AirplayBeats they have 8 studio albums
"Squeeze my lemon till the juice runs down my leg". Ya get it, right? 😆, oh and Killing Floor reference by Blues Classic Howling Wolf tune
7:55: "I'm gonna leave my children down on this killing floor".
Absolutely EVERYTHING is working overtime on this song. Best band EVER !!
The first album is raw because that's a way they recorded it. 15 hours recording time. 14 hours of mixing. Very few over dubs. After only 2 or 3 weeks of practice as a band. The second album was recorded on a road and different studios with lots of time to mix it.
Glad you guys are diggin' on Led Zeppelin. Led Zep was unique among really any other rock band in that each of the 4 main members (lead singer, lead guitar, bass, drummer) is still regarded in a perpetual "Top-5 Greatest" in their particular position. For example, guaranteed if you type in "greatest rock drummers ever" that in the majority of legit links/polls, John Bonham's name will be #1. Rolling Stone magazine named Robert Plant as rock's greatest front man ever. Similar sentiments about Jimmy Page on lead guitar, to John Paul Jones on bass. And to add to their superior individual talents, as Plant once said, "We really get off playing together." So it was superior talent combined with incredible passion and respect for each other is what made Zeppelin the colossus they forever became.
So much of the Zepp's music was influenced and was based on blues. They just added their own character to it.
Nice song, You two has the best songs.
What an amazing video to watch! Seeing people hearing this amazing song for the first time! Great genuine reaction!
You guys are a phenomenal reaction duo. I love the depth you delve into.
Thank you!!
exactly ...they take the time to research groups and songs... 👍
love you guys keep it up
lookin at you listening to these songs ,makes me feel like im hearing these songs for the first time,you both bringing it all back
The mighty Zep, Elvis, Steely Dan......love this reaction channel. You two fellas ROCK! I'm looking forward to your reaction to The Who!
This song scared me as a young female in the late 70's. I thought I wasn't safe at a LZ concert after this. But then I learned how to appreciate the blues and no more fear, just pure appreciation for the roots and rocknroll soul this band of truly prolific writers is all about.
Vibe dudes. I’m 73. Still listening. Blow out your mind.
When I was a little kid, I didn’t know what blues was, but I heard this and I knew I liked it.
I normally find “reaction” channels vain and cringeworthy but you two have helped me rediscover my love of artists that I first listened to long ago.
Not only are you both musically sophisticated and make excellent observations, but you always put the artists first and don’t make the videos about yourselves.
I am super curious how the two of you developed such advanced musical taste without ever listening to certain classics. Whatever the reason, I’m glad you didn’t :-)Keep it up. You guys are a breath of fresh air.
Sorry (not sorry) i get locked in with you guys. 500k lets goooo!🔥🙌
@@brandonboucher7090 my guy!!
that is one hell of a groove!
Thanks so much reacting to that track, really...
Bass guitar is my favorite instrument, this song is my number one... When I see people never hearing the bass, they should listen to "the lemon song", then they will recognize it ! What a beautiful bass line, JPJ was a god. After this song, I love listening to Red Hot Chili Peppers, the Blood Sugar Sex Magik album with the phenomenal bass guitar player Flea 🎸💋.
Very nice reaction. Love from France 🇫🇷😘
Check out Jack Bruce from cream he was one of the best bass players ever Scotland's magician
@@jjm2308 thanks, I will 😉
Check out politician and I'm so glad live in11968 Albert hall some of the best bass playing and singing the camera work is not the best Eric Clapton is only 23 Jack is 25
Take care of yourself and Keep on smiling and loving the music 🎶❤️
@@jjm2308 thanks... I just watched a video with him and Clapton... Waouh... It's so easy for him, on his fret less bass... Take care too 😘
Decades later I discovered that the song was originally by Howlin' Wolf, a Gem everyone should listen to.
Led Zeppelin. My favourite jazz band.
Still feel lucky that I had the privilege of seeing Zep three times, 73, 74, 75.
Damn. I’ve listened to Zeppelin all my life and you just schooled me 😂
Songs like this are probably why so many t-shirts…..and albums…..and views,likes,shares- all that 😎❤️🎶❤️ They just hit RnB highway and took a left on …..it’s our song now- boulevard….fun ride.🔥
Well, she squeezes his "lemon" till the juice runs down his leg, & there are his "children", on the "killin' floor". NASTY tune, all the way around! Thanks for your reaction.
"Killing Floor" is a 1964 song by American blues singer-songwriter and guitarist Howlin' Wolf. Called "one of the defining classics of Chicago electric blues",[1] "Killing Floor" became a blues standard with recordings by various artists. It has been acknowledged by the Blues Foundation Hall of Fame, which noted its popularity among rock as well as blues musicians. English rock group Led Zeppelin adapted the song for their "The Lemon Song", for which Howlin' Wolf is named as a co-author.
Howlin’ Wolf - Killing Floor (REACTION) #reaction #trending #howlinwolf
ruclips.net/video/w9-lYQccRds/видео.html
No one ever comments on the Gong hit to open the song!! It wouldn't sound the same without it?
Word. Sets business.
And, I love the Blues, my favorite guitarist for over 45 years is Roy Buchanan, SECOND ALBUM is my best piece of music, FIVE STRING BLUES my favorite song, but he made 3 great albums in the late 80's. dig
This is the first LZ song I remember listening to. I actually listened to LZ2 before I listened to the first album.
Ty I haven't heard this song in a long time..amazing groove
Aside from Going to California due to sentimental reasons; The Lemon Song is my favorite. What a filthy track. Probably the perfect display of each talent on here
Jimmy did overdubs on every song in the studio. Every song. Some he has 3 or 4 guitars playing side by side on the different tracks. He improvised the parts on stage to cover the highlights.
To me, all the best of Zeppelin in one song
Love love love bluesy rock to death. Remember when this album came out, many parents of young teens were cringing at these lyrics. LoL
This tune is a masterpiece. Robert Plant's voice was like nothing I'd ever heard before. Some voices were just born for rock n roll. Did he have a microphone in his throat? ☮️
I'm sure someone said this below, but Plant sings at one point, "The way you squeeze my lemon, I'm gonna fall right out of bed", so the title is referencing that. Also, "killing floor" is an old blues term, and it's actually the title of a tune by Howlin' Wolf. Not sure what it means, exactly.
You talked through the best line
my band used to play this one so it's special to me. love your reactions
Another song that showcase Page's guitar talent is White Summer/Black Mountainside. There is a live version and it's pretty badass.
😂 You were distracted talking about how they're in the pocket while his lemon was being squeezed! 😂
The line is:
I wouldn't be here, my children
Down on this killing floor