I find that statement more or less ridiculous. Yes he was a fine and great drummer and no one will be exactly like him, which is a statement you can say for many, many drummers. However, they have gone on to play Led Zeppelin songs with his son, Jason. While I'm not always crazy about everything he does, I do think overall, he does a pretty fine job. Sometimes he just needs to lay it down with the game plan his father put before him and quit trying to interject his own quirky little ideas and rhythms which in my opinion take away from the Integrity of Led Zeppelin. But it's a long way from shabby and it's great to still be able to have enjoyed their songs with him being in the middle of it Perry most of the reason they did not continue were other reasons than just the loss of John Bonham
@@v.stanleisenring8882 Yes, there are drummers that could play Bonzo's pieces, including his son, however, that's just basically a cover or a rendition. The difference and his impact lies on composition. Bonzo's pieces has always been the vital point of any Led Zeppelin song, along with JPJ. It is Bonzo's drumming that has truly glued any LZ's song, it's like a glue, he and JPJ is the reason for their coherence and on rhythm stand point. Bonzo didn't have always played flashy nor he isn't the most technical, but he truly knows what to play and provides what's needed into a song. It's also like a gasoline/electricity, a car won't run without it.
Recorded in 1969 and still sounds better than every other isolated drum track I've heard. His timing and feel are so good I can feel my brain lighting up in approval.
Yes you are right ... Sounds better than AI ever will 😊 The answer is easy. This is a Multitrack Submix of the Drums. All other Instruments are mutet on the console. But you can hear them still very quiet due the Crosstalk into the Drum Microphones. That will not be hearable If you work with Filters. The Artefacts will be louder than the Crosstalk here. The reason for that outstanding legendary good Sound is the Magic of analogue tape recording, the mics, the Ludwig Set and John Bonham himself !!!!!
As a non-drummer, I always loved his feel and pocket. And the sound of his hi hat does something special. He had a perfect sounding kit and it makes me wish that I had played drums.
As a drummer who is more was more influenced by Peart, I agree with you that his hi hat was special. The things he could do with his left foot, and right foot for that matter are stll incredible. He hit so hard and got a sound out of his drums that most can't replicate.
Bonjour de France, merci à vous. Je n'avais jamais écouté ce morceau comme cela. En1969 j'avais 15 ans et je découvrais led et deep. Je découvrais le blues rock et le hard rock. Amicalement
I’ve played drums for 37 years and listened to a wide range of music. John Bonham was a one of kind drummer with groove feel and aggression.. It’s easy to see why Zep broke up after his passing. Bonham was one of a kind power drummer. Very difficult to replace or copy to get that feel and sound. I don’t believe even a more technical or talented drummer could quite sound the same.
John Bonham was a great drummer but I don't think that Led Zeppelin broke up because they couldn't get another drummer. I read an interview with Jimmy Page (who never gave interviews) where he said that they didn't want to continue as a band because Bonzo was a dear friend and they didn't WANT to replace him.
@@barrygreenstein8383 I'm sure your right about Zep missing J. Bonham. as a friend. But when you listen to John's isolated drum tracks you hear this steady hard rock beat, mixed with a swingy jazzy groove. It sounds good and energizes the bands songs. The remaining 3......RP, JP and JPJ said they sounded better as a group with JB.
I agree with you 100% !!! Bonzo most diffenitly was a "ONE OF A KIND". I saw Zeppelin 3 times live and no other band could light it up like he could. And, I saw the best of the best at one time or another back in the day !!!
@@tustincaoc I agree with you my man. Led Zeppelin played a festival after his passing. It was a one time deal. The drummer on that gig was Jason Bonham, John's son.
It’s very important that these vids have been saved……today’s kids have no idea what they missed and will probably never be done again…the 60’s…..the 70’s will never happen again just be glad what’s been saved for our future kids !!!
Hummmm… of course bonham is influential. But I’ve been to rush concerts and it’s a sea of people air drumming. Most people who don’t even know rush will recognize Tom Sawyer in a split second!
His hands, his wrists, his feet were in perfect sync with each other. Top that off with his sense of timing, phrasing, the sound of his drums, his knowledge of what to do in a song, when to do it, how to do it and you have a perfect drummer. He was a once in a lifetime..and a few more I'm sure.
Jesus wept I have listened to this track since I was 12 and the pull and push on this are sublime. The interplay in that shuffle and the foot. This is awesome you can hear the snare vibrate with the ambient and bonzo feeling it hurt as you drive through....fabulous the arrrghs at around 3.40 onwards....driving it home to hit the pocket...brilliant
Can't be replicated. Been playing drums for almost 40 years. JB is still my absolute favorite. You can play with the precision of peart, or play the fastest shit possible, but you'll never be able to have the unique slightly under the beat, but intentional voice that Bonham's playing has.
@@mgnz88 You are correct Sir Almost like an epileptic retardation that was ingrained into a machine that somehow always worked out; even today. With all respect.
He really "Controls" the drums. Some drummer's get in their own way and ahead of themselves. He plays with complete conviction and never waivers. The sound he gets from his set is another "layer" of his playing. His tuning gives his sound a very steady "driving" force and whats amazing is he's not being fancy at all and competing with the the bass or the guitar or the vocals. Like most drummer's, I've listened to this song hundreds of times but I've never heard just the isolated drums. His playing is more than just amazing, it's BRILLIANT !!!
Inimitabile... Unico al mondo e particolare. Aveva una tecnica tutta sua che per i tempi in cui ha vissuto lo ha reso un batterista da osservare con riverenza e umiltà...
I absolutely love this song and have heard it millions of times. Listening to this isolated track is like listening to it for the first time. His groove is just killer and makes me move!
I saw Zeppelin live at the Grande Ballroom in Detroit in the 60's, and the wall of sound from them was unforgettable. No one could match them in the intensity of their sound. No one at the Grande that I saw, and all the iconic groups played there. Promoter Russ Gibb seemed to have a connection with them all.
I always loved the power of Bonzos drums in this song. With this isolated track, you hear a little nuisances of his shuffle that gets washed out. His drum sound is fantastic.
Had the sublime pleasure of watching this incredible being play live Earl's Court '75! Ever so slightly behind the beat which gave Page room, it gave for an almost languid style but had enormous power and drive. I love the way you can hear the effort of his groaning and moaning whilst playing. A friend of mine saw Zeppelin from the side of the stage and there were splintered drumsticks under Bonzo's snare, such was his power. We sussed-out the mixing desk pre gig and the mikes for his kit were ridiculous! Top snare, under snare the number of channels for the kit were incredible. I still to this day think he could've played unamplified to the Earls Court crowd and we would still have been deafened!! Truly one of a kind! An absolute monster of the drums with mind- boggling technique!!! Thanks for posting such a phenomenal tribute to a total legend!!
This sounds right. Even to this day, especially in the studio, nobody, and I mean no body sounded like John. In the 70’s there were all these great drummers, but they were all playing with little matchsticks on their kits(John P. Weathers of Gentle Giant got a pretty big sound. And still, not John’s sound.), while John seemed to bang on his set with the boles of Giant Sequoia. No one has ever sounded like John Bonham, or could ever match the immensity of that sound. You do the comparisons. His sound and his ability and his passion. These are the things that seperated him from any other drummer, ever. There may have been, probably were and are, the more technically proficient. Yet there are none who surpass him. It’s going to be some time before anyone does.
He's the foundation of the Led Zeppelin sound. John Bonham and Eddie Van Halen are the two musicians I love listening to in isolated tracks. Both have a really unique and weird sense of timing that is difficult to describe. Their exceptional timing and feel are what make the music come alive.
Not drum related, but at 4:30 you can hear Robert Plant's scratch vocal in the distant background, and he hits a crazy high note on "love" that didn't make it into his final vocal take. Amazing!
Brutal. Such a Master. The texture in the sound and that tempo, God almighty, he does whatever he wants with that drum kit! and still, organized harmonies, like vocals more that drum beat; powerfully raw and also elegant, almost respectful, to the overall tune...the real Master of Masters of rock and roll and drumming! The heart of Led Zeppelin. Thanks for uploading such a homage to the man who is now the legend that lives forever through his music. Hail Bonzo!!!
People always talk about Levee and Rock and Roll but somehow forget about Poor Tom. Bonham for over 3 minutes keeps the beat. No loops, no faults. That to me is the epitome of rhythm and timing.
As much as I like Bonham, I have to give credit to Page and Jones for also having solid grooves. This song has a great pocket before the drums even start. Grooving is a full band effort and Zep had something special when it came to this.
I often say that the drums were the fifth member of Zepplin. John gave the drums life. That hi hat was always the breathing and the toms were the heartbeat. I'm lucky enough to have a son in law that has a studio in the house. My 12-year-old grandson is somewhat of a prodigy drummer letting me live vicariously through him.
Im 19 bonham and chad smith both are the reasons i started drumming and have been my main influences. I listened to them over and over and studied them in my earlier days of drumming. For the past few years ive been focused on learning set lists for bands and writing my own parts trying to mix my influences into one recipe. But its been a while since i heard zeppelin and closely listened to bonham and page and plant a jones. Im coming back to it now that my ear is a little more trained and the drums stick out of recordings to me, instead of having to listen closely to them. Now that its been a while since ive really heard zeppelin and have some perspective. All i can say is hooolyy shiit! Bonhams hi hat always locked right on tempo, his ghost notes sometimes fitting in with the bass making it sound as double bass and so full. And, the bass drum is harder to replicate then i remember it took me a minute. You reeeaaly have to sit back in the beat. The bass drum is damn near dragging but hi hats on time. And he bangs the shit out of the kick, thats what gives it such a heavy weight! Its a boomb putting weight on the song!! I loove it. And the funky jazzy style to it. Perfect!!!
This is why they couldn’t go on without him.
yup, the shuffle
I find that statement more or less ridiculous. Yes he was a fine and great drummer and no one will be exactly like him, which is a statement you can say for many, many drummers. However, they have gone on to play Led Zeppelin songs with his son, Jason. While I'm not always crazy about everything he does, I do think overall, he does a pretty fine job. Sometimes he just needs to lay it down with the game plan his father put before him and quit trying to interject his own quirky little ideas and rhythms which in my opinion take away from the Integrity of Led Zeppelin. But it's a long way from shabby and it's great to still be able to have enjoyed their songs with him being in the middle of it Perry most of the reason they did not continue were other reasons than just the loss of John Bonham
Perry was a typo
Amen Brother. There is no replacement.
@@v.stanleisenring8882 Yes, there are drummers that could play Bonzo's pieces, including his son, however, that's just basically a cover or a rendition. The difference and his impact lies on composition. Bonzo's pieces has always been the vital point of any Led Zeppelin song, along with JPJ. It is Bonzo's drumming that has truly glued any LZ's song, it's like a glue, he and JPJ is the reason for their coherence and on rhythm stand point. Bonzo didn't have always played flashy nor he isn't the most technical, but he truly knows what to play and provides what's needed into a song. It's also like a gasoline/electricity, a car won't run without it.
Recorded in 1969 and still sounds better than every other isolated drum track I've heard. His timing and feel are so good I can feel my brain lighting up in approval.
Yes you are right ... Sounds better than AI ever will 😊 The answer is easy. This is a Multitrack Submix of the Drums. All other Instruments are mutet on the console. But you can hear them still very quiet due the Crosstalk into the Drum Microphones. That will not be hearable If you work with Filters. The Artefacts will be louder than the Crosstalk here. The reason for that outstanding legendary good Sound is the Magic of analogue tape recording, the mics, the Ludwig Set and John Bonham himself !!!!!
So dynamic. When the drums start on this track - even without isolating them - it feels like taking off.
@@marcocancian7695 Именно что это заслуга Бонзо!
😊.@@marcocancian7695
Yep absolutely 💯. My brain does the exact same thing every time.
I love how you can hear those snares rattling before Bonzo kicks in. So organic!
100%
@@OakLawnSpeedShoplike someone breathing. It's fantastic.
His drum beat will never die.
What do I say ? I've heard this song hundreds of times but hearing this, it's like hearing it for the first time again. Thank You.
His ghost notes and feel, are so perfect....the feel, the sound, etc. He knew exactly how he would sound on tape.
As a non-drummer, I always loved his feel and pocket. And the sound of his hi hat does something special. He had a perfect sounding kit and it makes me wish that I had played drums.
As a drummer who is more was more influenced by Peart, I agree with you that his hi hat was special. The things he could do with his left foot, and right foot for that matter are stll incredible. He hit so hard and got a sound out of his drums that most can't replicate.
It’s never too late to take up the instrument
Never too late bro.
@@Filmpilot damn straight
Get your self a drum set bud. There's good used kits and electric pad sets if you want to keep things quiet.
Niesamowite umiejętności, serce się raduje kiedy słucha się Johna! Brawo!
Bonham’s drumming is like a freight train. Once it starts it’s Unstoppable!
never did occur to me, but..yes correct......
Who's gonna tell him
THE anchor of the mighty Led Zeppelin!
I'd say he's the anchor of rock'n roll as we know it.
absolutely he was
Ah, the era when bands actually performed the basic tracks live in the studio together. Pure gold.
Well, it would've been hard for them not to without the multi track recording ability we have today
@@lollipop84858 That is what he meant I think.
@@lollipop84858 Multi tracking has existed since the late 50s. Led Zeppelin 2 is multitracked all over.
This literally bought me, a 60+ year old man to tears
Kick it like Bonham
tears.... me too.
John comes from my home town of Redditch and he is easily the most famous son of ours. Only the good die young
🇬🇧❤🙏 xxx.
He may have been a ' good ' drummer , but he was an appalling human being ...
@@weehudyy
Way to shit on somebody when they’re dead. How the fuck do you know anything?
@@nickpruett8022 I obviously know a lot more than you do ... He killed himself being a pig
@@weehudyyHey, ask his wife, his sister, his children, ask them if he was an awful human being.
I thought he was from Hunt End. Ah, I digress. Hunt End is Redditch.😊
Digging the groans and yells that the mics picked up - cracks me up
Merci pour cette enregistrement incroyable
Check out some Bernard Pudy tracks too! He is another icon who was reknowned for vocal expressions while on the kit.
Bonjour de France, merci à vous. Je n'avais jamais écouté ce morceau comme cela. En1969 j'avais 15 ans et je découvrais led et deep. Je découvrais le blues rock et le hard rock. Amicalement
So dynamic. When the drums start on this track - even without isolating them - it feels like taking off.
You have to love the sound of those Ludwigs
He was such a feel/groove monster. His swing is on point!
The Master of Groove. the one and only...inimitable....
It doesn't creep up on you, it kicks the door in and smacks you straight in the mouth, now that's talent, that's John Bonham.
I’ve played drums for 37 years and listened to a wide range of music. John Bonham was a one of kind drummer with groove feel and aggression.. It’s easy to see why Zep broke up after his passing. Bonham was one of a kind power drummer. Very difficult to replace or copy to get that feel and sound. I don’t believe even a more technical or talented drummer could quite sound the same.
John Bonham was a great drummer but I don't think that Led Zeppelin broke up because they couldn't get another drummer. I read an interview with Jimmy Page (who never gave interviews) where he said that they didn't want to continue as a band because Bonzo was a dear friend and they didn't WANT to replace him.
@@barrygreenstein8383 I'm sure your right about Zep missing J. Bonham. as a friend. But when you listen to John's isolated drum tracks you hear this steady hard rock beat, mixed with a swingy jazzy groove. It sounds good and energizes the bands songs. The remaining 3......RP, JP and JPJ said they sounded better as a group with JB.
I agree with you 100% !!! Bonzo most diffenitly was a "ONE OF A KIND". I saw Zeppelin 3 times live and no other band could light it up like he could. And, I saw the best of the best at one time or another back in the day !!!
@@tustincaoc I agree with you my man. Led Zeppelin played a festival after his passing. It was a one time deal. The drummer on that gig was Jason Bonham, John's son.
Ginger baker had more technique and a swingier sound but wasn’t as experimental.
IDK… that is some pretty wicked beats that I could never duplicate.
Does anyone hear Bonham yell at 3:38 and 4:44 during the fills?
It gives me chills just listening to it.
;) classic at best !
yep! You can hear it on the album too, if ya listen close enough!
He did that a lot
Very perceptive. Dude was the band.
THATS ROBERT
It’s very important that these vids have been saved……today’s kids have no idea what they missed and will probably never be done again…the 60’s…..the 70’s will never happen again just be glad what’s been saved for our future kids !!!
He had those little hesitations and fills in his playing that made it feel so alive.
He was a dynamic player
Like a vocal
That's swing, baby!
Thats what a jazz influence is doing for you.
Syncopation. He was a master at it.
He played with so much power. It sounds angry and crazy. I love it.
Hands down the most influential hard rock drummer ever. Cited by later top notch drummers as such as well.
Bill Ward
Neil Peart
Hummmm… of course bonham is influential. But I’ve been to rush concerts and it’s a sea of people air drumming. Most people who don’t even know rush will recognize Tom Sawyer in a split second!
All that syncopated bass drum... So amazing... The best drummer.
That snare! without any doubt, the best tone, best sound, and attack ever recorded!
Yeah, it's the ambience on the snare that makes it for me.
John was magnificent. He produced so many beats that you don't hear these days..or at least copied. He was a legend....hats off to John
His hands, his wrists, his feet were in perfect sync with each other.
Top that off with his sense of timing, phrasing, the sound of his drums, his knowledge of what to do in a song, when to do it, how to do it and you have a perfect drummer.
He was a once in a lifetime..and a few more I'm sure.
What a force of nature. Love the parts where he's yelling
th-cam.com/video/hDNxXluEYOY/w-d-xo.htmlsi=uaX2aBpAqO1K_VBz
Jesus wept I have listened to this track since I was 12 and the pull and push on this are sublime. The interplay in that shuffle and the foot. This is awesome you can hear the snare vibrate with the ambient and bonzo feeling it hurt as you drive through....fabulous the arrrghs at around 3.40 onwards....driving it home to hit the pocket...brilliant
If you like that sort of thing, try listening to some Elvin Jones
@@Acemechanicalservicesisn't JB noted saying him or Tony Williams are his favorite drummers?
Led Zeppelin's music is timeless
What made him unique was he played right behind the actual beat but would then end on time, no drum machine can do that.
Can't be replicated. Been playing drums for almost 40 years. JB is still my absolute favorite. You can play with the precision of peart, or play the fastest shit possible, but you'll never be able to have the unique slightly under the beat, but intentional voice that Bonham's playing has.
@@mgnz88
You are correct Sir
Almost like an epileptic retardation that was ingrained into a machine that somehow always worked out; even today.
With all respect.
The Hammer of the God's
How i wish he was still here.
He really "Controls" the drums. Some drummer's get in their own way and ahead of themselves. He plays with complete conviction and never waivers.
The sound he gets from his set is another "layer" of his playing. His tuning gives his sound a very steady "driving" force and whats amazing is he's not being fancy at all and competing with the the bass or the guitar or the vocals.
Like most drummer's, I've listened to this song hundreds of times but I've never heard just the isolated drums. His playing is more than just amazing, it's BRILLIANT !!!
Led Zeppelin And Rush Drummers two of the best in the world 🌎.
@@James-o7s8g With Christian Vander
Inimitabile... Unico al mondo e particolare. Aveva una tecnica tutta sua che per i tempi in cui ha vissuto lo ha reso un batterista da osservare con riverenza e umiltà...
He is a craftsman. Artisan.
Greatness , glad to live in the good music era
God Speed Bonzo. Thank you for blessing us with your talent.
Pure magic. Bonham was such a key member of LZ. They were all super talented.
I absolutely love this song and have heard it millions of times. Listening to this isolated track is like listening to it for the first time. His groove is just killer and makes me move!
To me, he was to drums and drummers, as Jimi Hendrix was to guitars and guitarists!!
A trailblazer, a trend setter, and a master!!!!👍🥁👍
Imagine Hendrix and Bonham starting a band 😱
@@MW-3002
Hell yeah!! With Anthony Jackson or Bootsy Collins on Bass, and Brian Culbertson or Dexter Wansell on keyboards!!👍🥁🎸👍
And what about Bill Ward of BS ?
Can you imagine Hendrix and Bonham playing machine gun
The power of this band :
BONHAM.!
Truly a handful of 3 of the best musicians and king of front runners in the world
I saw Zeppelin live at the Grande Ballroom in Detroit in the 60's, and the wall of sound from them was unforgettable. No one could match them in the intensity of their sound. No one at the Grande that I saw, and all the iconic groups played there. Promoter Russ Gibb seemed to have a connection with them all.
1969! 👍
I'm so jealous!
I always loved the power of Bonzos drums in this song. With this isolated track, you hear a little nuisances of his shuffle that gets washed out. His drum sound is fantastic.
John Bonham is just incredible!
To this day the man is still way ahead of time amazing to listen to his isolated drum tracks.."wear ear buds for full effect!"
To hell with ear buds. You need over-the-ear full cans hooked up to a powerful system to get the true effect.
Ear buds will never do that for us.
Had the sublime pleasure of watching this incredible being play live Earl's Court '75!
Ever so slightly behind the beat which gave Page room, it gave for an almost languid
style but had enormous power and drive.
I love the way you can hear the effort of his groaning and moaning whilst playing.
A friend of mine saw Zeppelin from the side of the stage and there were splintered drumsticks under
Bonzo's snare, such was his power.
We sussed-out the mixing desk pre gig and the mikes for his kit were ridiculous!
Top snare, under snare the number of channels for the kit were incredible.
I still to this day think he could've played unamplified to the Earls Court crowd and we would still have been deafened!!
Truly one of a kind!
An absolute monster of the drums with mind- boggling technique!!!
Thanks for posting such a phenomenal tribute to a total legend!!
Oh, yeah? How many mics were on Bonzo's kit?
This sounds right.
Even to this day, especially in the studio, nobody, and I mean no body sounded like John. In the 70’s there were all these great drummers, but they were all playing with little matchsticks on their kits(John P. Weathers of Gentle Giant got a pretty big sound. And still, not John’s sound.), while John seemed to bang on his set with the boles of Giant Sequoia.
No one has ever sounded like John Bonham, or could ever match the immensity of that sound.
You do the comparisons. His sound and his ability and his passion. These are the things that seperated him from any other drummer, ever.
There may have been, probably were and are, the more technically proficient. Yet there are none who surpass him.
It’s going to be some time before anyone does.
I miss Bonham, Moon and Peart so much!
only real drummers will understand..and even wanna be drummers..greatness
Moon is a complete beast!
So much physical energy in his playing, he wasn’t just keeping time, he drove the band.
Same with any good drummer
Man, what a groove...
He's the foundation of the Led Zeppelin sound. John Bonham and Eddie Van Halen are the two musicians I love listening to in isolated tracks. Both have a really unique and weird sense of timing that is difficult to describe. Their exceptional timing and feel are what make the music come alive.
Not drum related, but at 4:30 you can hear Robert Plant's scratch vocal in the distant background, and he hits a crazy high note on "love" that didn't make it into his final vocal take. Amazing!
Great song. Led Zep 2 greatest record of it's time.
My first rock lp. ❤
The man was a beast. Never get bored of hearing him play.
Just drums, still sounds like music. Genius.
Brutal. Such a Master. The texture in the sound and that tempo, God almighty, he does whatever he wants with that drum kit! and still, organized harmonies, like vocals more that drum beat; powerfully raw and also elegant, almost respectful, to the overall tune...the real Master of Masters of rock and roll and drumming! The heart of Led Zeppelin. Thanks for uploading such a homage to the man who is now the legend that lives forever through his music. Hail Bonzo!!!
Absolutely phenomenal rhythm! THE best of ALL time!!!!
I was two years old when that was recorded,,,,I played the same sized kit,,my own custom..retired now,,r.I.p. John
John Bonham baterista do LED Zeppelin é o maior e melhor baterista de rock pauleira de todos os tempos 🇧🇷🥁🔥☮️🤘🏽✌️👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽
It’s the subletly that I like, the gentleness aswell as the brutality, awesome
People always talk about Levee and Rock and Roll but somehow forget about Poor Tom. Bonham for over 3 minutes keeps the beat. No loops, no faults. That to me is the epitome of rhythm and timing.
Thank you for sending me to this song(Poor Tom). If I’ve ever heard it before it can’t be more than once, and I surely needed to hear it. ❤
Hypnotic almost. Boy could he play those drums!!
Led Zeppelin was the vehicle, and Bonzo was the driver...
Absolutely !!! The Man !!!
He was the engine
For me...the best drummer ever.. his son is pretty good too
Forza tecnica tempismo ritmo tutto eseguito ai massimi livelli il numero uno dei batteristi rock
RIP Bonzo. You are the inspiration for many a drummer.
We were blessed to witness him in his prime and mourn him in the days since as we smile everytime we hear the drums sing
Great John and great sense of rhythm.
Love you Bonzo!! You are one of the main reasons I play drums. Thanks for showing me the way. RIP drumming god!
❤❤❤❤❤ like me 🥁🥁🥁🥁🥁🥁
@ebonzo Then other drummer that influenced me is Ringo Starr.
Me too!
✌🏼I gotten "Visuals" listening to LedZeppelin Tripping lotz of timez🔥
A Strong Solid Wide Range Drummer
He Brought The Thunder!!!
IRREEMPLAZABLE !!!!!!
EL MEJOR BATERISTA DE ROCK DE TODOS LOS TIEMPOS !!!!!
Not angry, passionate!
This deserves a million likes
Thank You!! :)
As much as I like Bonham, I have to give credit to Page and Jones for also having solid grooves. This song has a great pocket before the drums even start. Grooving is a full band effort and Zep had something special when it came to this.
His right foot was legendary.
All four limbs. ❤
Nothing will ever mimic this band, this beat signature should be a forced requirement by every music teacher 😊
This is the proof - good drummer is a heart that pomps a blood within a band. The sound is incredibly out of the space...
Que baterista que led Zeppelin o melhor do mundo de todos tempos.
For him playing the most difficult groove was like having a morning coffee.
One of the best and recognizable drummers ever.
Unter den Drummern des Genre Rock einfach der Beste.
Crecí escuchando esta maravillosa música , gracias !!!!!
Simply one of the greatest of all time.
Period!
Bonzo Bonham, often imitated, never duplicated.
l'm in my 70s and there still my all time Favorite.
Omg!! This is amazing just hearing BONZO!! WHAT A MACHINE ❤❤
It gushes groove and soul. Nobody else can touch his feel.
I often say that the drums were the fifth member of Zepplin. John gave the drums life. That hi hat was always the breathing and the toms were the heartbeat. I'm lucky enough to have a son in law that has a studio in the house. My 12-year-old grandson is somewhat of a prodigy drummer letting me live vicariously through him.
What a great legendary drummer. Awesome.
Im 19 bonham and chad smith both are the reasons i started drumming and have been my main influences. I listened to them over and over and studied them in my earlier days of drumming. For the past few years ive been focused on learning set lists for bands and writing my own parts trying to mix my influences into one recipe. But its been a while since i heard zeppelin and closely listened to bonham and page and plant a jones. Im coming back to it now that my ear is a little more trained and the drums stick out of recordings to me, instead of having to listen closely to them. Now that its been a while since ive really heard zeppelin and have some perspective. All i can say is hooolyy shiit! Bonhams hi hat always locked right on tempo, his ghost notes sometimes fitting in with the bass making it sound as double bass and so full. And, the bass drum is harder to replicate then i remember it took me a minute. You reeeaaly have to sit back in the beat. The bass drum is damn near dragging but hi hats on time. And he bangs the shit out of the kick, thats what gives it such a heavy weight! Its a boomb putting weight on the song!! I loove it. And the funky jazzy style to it. Perfect!!!
Have you listened to 4 sticks. Go for it bro.
His cadence is extraordinary.
Jonhan bonhan led zeppelin ó melhor baterista do mundo até hoje bonhan eterno 🤘👏👍
Just a all time great
Sounds of perfection..🤗 One of my favorite jams also love the Ocean..🎉😍😮🤘
THE THUNDER KING BONZO.... NO ONE POUNDED SO HARD LIKE HIM, rip 🙏💎♥️💯😎👍
What a fantastic drummer. My ears are so happy. 😊
Finally someone's mixed this track properly:)
Una época inolvidable.....❤🇦🇷🫂
even though I (inexplicably) only paid passing attention to Jon's work, this isolated track points out to me the incredible groove and feel he had...
What gift he had ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤ours forever