During live performances, Led Zeppelin almost never play their songs the same way they record them in the studio. Not only are their songs different from the studio version, they are also played different from concert to concert. So if you hear your favorite Led Zeppelin song at 3 different concerts, it will have similarities, but it won't be played the same way. They play spontaneous, and play off each other. The fact they can do that and sound tight, shows their greatness. Led Zeppelin studio songs typically have a lot of rhythm and tempo changes, that broke the standard norm of making songs. So you never know what to expect, and are always surprised. I think this makes their songs so exciting.
Yes, listening to live performances for a first hearing is always a huge gamble; the studio versions will always be the "perfected" version. But people are always recommending live performances because they already know the song & they like the excitement of seeing and hearing them live. I have to cringe sometimes with some of the live performances that are recommended for first time viewers!
Jimmy liked to noodle on the guitar and he would sometimes get off key, off beat and throw in runs that don't really fit, but the 2 Johns would always keep the song and beat going until he got back in line with them to continue the song. I saw some videos where he was too high to play well. My best friend in high School worked at the venue they played in San Diego around 1972 and he got to put Jimmy's guitar on the stage so they could walk out on stage in the dark and know exactly where their instruments would be. It was all carefully measured. You would not see that today.
@@HRConsultant_Jeff I saw 3 of their early concerts, and Jimmy was great. However he had a period of serious drug addiction that affected how he played. I saw a video of him playing Stairway To Heaven with Jeff beck and Eric Clapton. They were each supposed to get a part. Jimmy started, sounded horrible, and couldn't get it right. He kept trying and ignored the others when they signaled to come in. EC kept his cool, but JB was furious. I almost totally lost respect for my all time favorite guitarist.
@@SK-lk3iu I think it depends on what the reactor likes. Also a tame studio version or a poorly played live version can both make them loose interest. It can go either way especially for a first time listener. My goal is to get them to react to my favorite bands enough times to get an impression, hopefully a good one. Therefore I recommend by what I think they would like. As good as Since I've Been Lovin You live MSG 1973 is, the studio version is better. However I think Kashmir live at Knebworth 1979 is better than the studio version and would always recommend that. Sometimes you don't get 2 tries with reactors so it's important to get it right the first time. Another thing is everyone knows it's easy to sound good in a studio.
@@SK-lk3iu Thank you so much! Damn, I thought I was the only one who understood this, lmao. I see so many people recommending live versions of songs to people who haven't even heard the studio version yet. Why would you do that?!?! Yes, there are occasions where great songs are done even better in a live performance than they originally were in the studio. But as a general rule, the studio versions sound better, and there are just too many flaws in most live performances, that people should just listen to the studio version first, as a general rule of thumb. I can't stand when someone recommends a live version to a virgin listener, the listener doesn't really dig it (quite possibly because it sounds raw and rough live), and then that virgin listener gets completely turned off from the band from now on--when, if they had just been recommended the STUDIO version, a lot of times, they really would have liked it, and actually gotten MORE interested in the band!! Live songs can be great--but usually (not always, but usually), they only sound their best "live" when they've first been heard in the studio. People need to wake up and realize this, lol.
This is a perfect example of a song which sounds easy but is actually more difficult than it sounds, due to the time signature. That's classic Page and Jones.
This is music. No autotune, no corporate sponsors. They weren't shopped for by talent scouts or put together by corporations. Just raw talent. Awesome blues feel to most of their music.
Led Zeppelin were steeped in American Blues, but they took that influence in a heavier direction than most of their peers, creating a powerful, stomping sound that also incorporated elements of British Folk, Psychedelia, Soul, Reggae, and Celtic and Arabic music. World class musicians a couple,of times over.
Led Zeppelin always improvised on stage. No song was ever played the same. Their albums are much more controlled Check out "Since I've been Loving you" from this same concert. Amazing. A great studio track is a blues called "When the Levee Breaks." It's simply remarkable. The band disbanded after the tragic death of their drummer and great friend John Bonham. I believe he died of alcohol poisoning, just days after he came out of rehab for other substances. Please don't judge these early bands too harshly. They had to be artists under a ton of pressure to produce hits. And tours back then lasted for months. This performance is from a three night gig at Madison Square Gardens. The concerts lasted at least 3 hours each night. Unfortunately, many of them turned to drugs or alcohol to handle the workload and the pressure. Most of these legends have long left their addictions behind them. Eric Clapton, Jummy Page, and Keith Richards immediately come to mind. None of this even touches on the tragedies in their personal lives. Both Robert Plant, singer for Led Zeppelin, and Eric Clapton lost children in tragic accidents while they were on tour. I love the music, but I have so much respect for these flawed, complicated artists.
Eric was on vacation in New York. Clapton was staying in a hotel nearby and was preparing to pick up Conor for a planned father-son lunch and visit to the Central Park Zoo.
John Bonham has been reincarnated as a Mexican young woman named Paulina (pau) Villeareal- Velez from Monterrey, Mexico. Best Rock Drummer Drumeo award 2023. Her and her 2 sisters comprise the warning and are the best rock trio I've ever heard. Never seen yet but they are opening in Vancouver for Evanesence in October. Please don't sell out that show until I can get the money together for a ticket. These girls are the Beatles of this Century. I really, really need to see them live.
Led Zeppelin pretty much started out already in iconic greatness and they just kept getting better. You have a very LONG and amazing musical journey ahead of you. Led Zeppelin changed everything
Led Zeppelin were the greatest rock band in history. Four amazingly gifted musicians who were creating music like no other band before or since. This is why after 40+ years after they disbanded (because of the untimely death of their drummer), their fan base continues to grow, other artists are still covering and sampling their music and they still hold the record for the highest number of album sales in the hard rock genre. If you want to do a serious dive into why that's true, start with album 1, track 1 and just keep on going. What they produced will blow your mind. Congrats on the baby!! :)
Battle of Evermore, Misty Mountain Hop, and Ramble On all have Lord of The Rings references, so if your into Lord of The Rings check those three out together
Yes this is the Story Jimmy Page related on the day of the recording, It was told that they were taking a break and had the back door to the studio open and as you said a black dog wandered past
That's almost right. When Zeppelin arrived at Headley Grange (The mansion where they recorded the album) there was a dead black dog in the front yard. Jimmy Page said, "Well hell, we should make a song called Black Dog in honor of this dead mutt." That's why the lyrics have nothing to do with a black dog. The rest is history.
This song was not just named, but inspired by a stray black dog that kept coming by and sometimes into the studio. It was a horny little bugger, and would mount and hump anything it could get to. So it inspired the song that was part of the “free love” aspect of being a hippy.
Back in the day, they broke the attendance record with about 57,000. One of the nights playing at Knebworth (1979) there was about 250,000 people. This song was named for a Black Labrador that hung around Headley Grange, when they stayed there together writing & recording in The Rolling Stones mobile studio. Headley Grange was an old estate, without heat. Bonham’s opening drumming for When The Levee Breaks, was recorded in the 3 story entrance, with mics placed just right it gave it a really great sound.
They’re switching time signatures and accents throughout which is why the rhythms sound either cool,( if you dig that), or weird/off if you don’t. It was a very popular way of exploring ideas in the 70’s and it does sound great when you use it correctly as a tool.
That thing you can't put your finger (ahem) on is 1) that it hits umami perfection of sweet-spots someplace in your lower half when that groove digs in. 2) Because it's SEXY AF. 3) Stop. Start. Maybe. Wait. The whole song is a perfect tease.
For me, the best Led is the controlled chaos Led, tipping on the rails til they nearly go off, but never do. Always able to bring it back. But they have plenty of joints to satisfy everyones taste. Just keep going.
This is classic Led Zeppelin! Other great songs are 'Dazed and Confused', 'In the Evening', 'Nobody's Fault but Mine', 'Communication Breakdown', 'The Rover', 'How Many More Times', to name but a few! Thanks so much for your reaction to one of my favourite bands! 😊😊
A chronological approach is the best method to discover Led Zep. Can you imagine, as a teenager, waiting patiently, for each album to be released, waiting for any photograph or poster to put up on your bedroom wall. What people, fail to mention, the marketing behind the band, there was only the music or a live concert to experience.
They named the song "Black Dog" because they befriended a black labrador that lived in the mansion they were recording their albumb at... they just thought it was a cool song tile :D
Robert Plant and Jimmy Page did many call and response riffs in their songs. Robert would mimic the guitar licks Jimmy would play. They were very instantaneous in their live shows
There are so many Zeppelin songs that are definitely going to be playlist material for you. Ramble on, Going to California, over the hills and far away..... I could go on and on and on.
Led Zeppelin is one of those rare bands that never put out a bad song. Every album is absolutely BRIMMING with hits, and every song they made are still played on classic rock stations world wide. The first 4 albums are just numbered I through IV , though the 4th one got the nickname "ZoSo" because one of the (meaningless) symbols they printed on the album art kind of looks like that word. Their other albums are "Houses of the Holy," "Presence," "In Through the Out Door," and "Physical Graffiti." They also have a Live record called "The Song Remains the Same" and the remaining members of the band released a remastered compilation album back in the early 2000's called "Mothership." Another famous album is "Coda," which is some recuts and unreleased stuff, put out in 1982, a few years after their drummer died and the band decided to jointly retire out of respect for his memory. Seriously, Led Zep's Discography is like a magnetic dartboard that's all bullseye: CAN'T. MISS.
The wildest thing about Led Zeppelin is that every one of those men standing on that stage is considered in the top ten greatest of all time list for their instrument. And Bonzo is 💯 the greatest Rock Drummer of all time. The talent on display is dazzling 🤩
@@Rosedach Hard Agree! My top 5 is Bonzo, Mooney, Ginger Baker, Charlie Watts and Bill Ward from Sabbath in no particular order. The GOAT for me is Neil Peart who is just astonishing but for pure Rock, those are my 5.
I first heard Led Zeppelin in the Summer of 1970. A school pal lent me Led Zeppelin 2 and I was hooked. I saved up the £2 needed to buy a copy then bought number 1 (not called that) They are amazing. No song is the same and unlike music today we appreciated the music as much as the lyrics. You need to do more to appreciate just how good they were until Bonzo died when they just couldn't continue. Kashmir and of course Stairway to Heaven are a start
Led Zeppelin - Over the Hills and Far Away - D'yer Maker - Kashmir - No Quarter - All of my Love - The Ocean - Thank You - Rock n Roll - Going to California - Misty Mountain Hop - Ramble On - The Battle of Evermore - Ten Years Gone - When the Levee Breaks - You Shook Me - Your Time is Gonna Come ...... and many more......
Nice reaction, I saw that smile when he says he will make her sting. You are better when your mind is in the gutter. With that in mind I would like to see a spontaneous reaction to Beth Hart, "Am I the One" Live at the Paradiso. First you will love the music..... and it will make you smile that smile over and over.
Way back in the early 60s the blues players over here (Freddie King, BB King, Albert King, Muddy Waters, Howling Wolf etc.) went across the “pond” and influenced the living daylights out of all of the teenage “geeks” in England and they got themselves guitars and became guitar “gods” of Rock and Roll music. Then came the second “British invasion” with The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, Herman’s Hermits, The Animals and more coming here to tour and make it big. Led Zeppelin and Cream and the other Super Groups came out about 5 years after the first wave of talent came through. When The Yardbirds split up The Jeff Beck Group, Cream (Eric Clapton) and Led Zeppelin (Jimmy Page) were formed by the guitarists of the Yardbirds. They ruled the world of Rock and Roll for many years and now they are dying off. They lied when they said that Rock and Roll would never die. It’s dying all over the place now. If people don’t start listening to this music and carry it forth it will truly die. Joe Bonamassa is doing his part in bringing it forward. I do wish you would react to some of his music. He’s doing it right. Robert Plant totally ruled the vocalist kingdom until Freddie Mercury and Queen came along in about 1974. Nobody could hold a candle to him. Not Rod Stewart, Joe Cocker or anyone else. By the time Led Zeppelin came out Elvis was history and nobody here could even compare to them. They split up when their drummer died. John Bonham died from an overdose of alcohol in 1980. That split up the band and they never reunited again except for a show in the beginning of the 21st century. The Oxygen concert was the name of the concert. Jimmy Page was messing around with the occult and it scared Plant away from rejoining the band. That’s what I think happened.
It would be wonderful to play Zeppelins The Rain Song. It is beautiful and not what they usually play. I just love it! What a great song! it has an orchestra with them. Thank you!
john Paul Jones plays the mellotron, a piano like instrument that plays all orchestral parts of Led Zeppelins music He was their quiet musical achiever working in the background.
They were super accomplished musicians and could come up with different styles of music all in one album. I ve owned them all, I think I know every change in songs, the time a drum solo lasts, I could practically mouth the guitar notes and of course new all of Plants lyrics!
Yeah, people loved their Led Zep. That's an understatement! December 16, 2009 Guinness Book of World Records, 2010 edition Led Zeppelin broke the world record for the Highest Demand for Tickets for One Music Concert when 20 million requests came through for the one-time reunion show in December 2007. Led Zeppelin’s (UK) one-off reunion show at London’s O2 Arena on 10 December 2007 attracted more than 20 million ticket requests. Such was the demand for the 9,000 pairs of tickets that were made available to the public that they were reported to be selling for up to £1,800 ($3,654) on eBay - more than 14 times their original price of £125 ($253).
My favorites are 'Since I've Been Loving You', then naturally 'Dazed And Confused' and also 'Babe I'm Gonna Leave You'. These are with epic guitar solos, very bluesy, and they have several epic concert versions. Maddening beauty and passion.
11:34 They disbanded after John Bonham died in 1980. They've appeared a couple of times in the years since. They've been involved in their own projects too.
if i remember right in a special about this record they called the song black dog.they said theres was a black dog roaming around the property the whole time they were making the album.cause they couldnt think of a title for the song.so they just called it black dog.
I recommend reacting to the studio versions of Led Zeppelin songs. Robert Plant often sang the songs a little differently live, which is fine if you know the song, but it's not always the best way to hear it for the first time.
This song was named for a black dog that was roaming the grounds of a cottage in England where Zeppelin was working on their fourth album. The song itself is supposedly one of the most difficult songs they created because of the complex timing. John Bonham (the drummer) was becoming frustrated with trying to master the rhythm, and during a break he spontaneously broke into a drum intro from the Little Richard song "Hear you knockin'". The rest of the band joined the jam and in a matter of minutes the LZ song "Rock and Roll" was born. Obviously Bonzo mastered "Black Dog" and another classic came to be.
Zeppelin live is always better than album because live they improvise and are totally free to do whatever they want! That's why their live versions are always longer than their album versions
I always loved the way the drums seem to come back on themselves, and repeat just as you said about the music, it stops, and go's! I don't know how to explain it, but it's heavenly brought music for sure. If I had just one band to listen to the rest of my life, it would be the Beatles, but a very close second would be Led Zeppelin! 😁👍😎✌🗽
I said once before they didn't always perform there best live...if you knew the the touring they did and partying ,I thing it wore on them and it showed. John Bonham the drummer died right before a scheduled tour into the early 80's ( maybe late70's) and the band didn't think it was Led Zeppelin without him in it. Story goes he tmreally did not want to go on tour anymore ,he was drinking heavily that day during rehearsals, was put to bed. I'm assuming sleeping on his back choked when he vomited and died...tragic. such a talent!
After 1975 probably closer to 1974 the fame, money, women, pressure, drugs, the starship Plants voice etc. all began to take a toll on the band and the shows show that. Add to that Page insisted on tweaking the live songs in post production, in the TSRTS Move there are overdubs etc. The B&W footage of them in Denmark (I think) playing How Many More Times and Dazed etc is some of their best work. The early Royal Albert Hall or Earls Court not sure of the venue name was all good stuff too. Early Zeppelin Performances = Best Performances.
This is when top bands cranked out an album every 6-12 months, and they were HUGE albums, black dog ead about a stray dog that came around while Zep was recording at Hedley Grange, they put Bonzos drum set in a certain part of the doorway/entryway to get the sound of when the levee breaks🫡they used Rolling Stones mobile studio at the time, Stuart Anderson (boogie with Stu!) This music changed the world. Like Elvis, Beatles, Eagles and everyone else who came before and after✌️
For blues influence (just ONE of MANY of theirs) - you should check out Since I've Been Loving You (MSG performance is EXCELLENT!!) and When The Levee Breaks - BOTH such BLUESY BANGERS!!!
chaos is a good way to describe this one... call and response is another... I would recommend you keep going with Led Zep... I would recommend Dazed and Confused next... but try the studio version first.
Such a heavy awesome song!! hahaha bro that expression on your face as the song ends says it all! Led Zeppelin is something else! Dude, HE is the Black Dog!
you NEED to watch their live perfomance from the same concert of "Since I've Been Lovin You". As a hip hop head, i think youll be surprised how blusey/soulful their core sound is/can be..one of the best performances PERIOD
The thing about Led Zeppelin shows, and this version shows it-these guys not only knew how to play, but they knew THEY knew how to play. The swagger is evident here. Plant and Page especially played with a swagger that said to the audience, “Yeah, we’re awesome and we know it. Watch this…”
The story I've heard was that when they were recording this, there was a black dog running around outside the studio. Of course, it's not about him. If i had to pick the greatest band in my lifetime, it's Zeppelin. Not my favorite band ever, but just the rock god presence. They were powerful. They were bad@$$. 🔥🔥🔥
When Zeppelin were together they were the best, the band died when the drummer-John Bonham the great died young 32 in 1980 , he was also the worlds best drummer
You should go to their first album done in 1969. Actually their first and second album were both out in 1969. You’ll find the blues, and some good rock.
😆 This came off of the great Zep IV, which I bought when I was 12, and got a really nice set of headphones 🎧 from my dad for Christmas 🎄 that year!! Hahaha 😆 😊
Jimmy page was the last member of the yard birds and when he formed the new line up he was looking for someone like Roger daltry from the who well he found Robert plant, then John Bonham and John paul Jones joined ( only band member to use a stage name) and they renamed the yard birds led zepplin, the first album is a very blues driven sound and then the next 2 albums they changed the sound literally every song then led zepplin 4 came out and the world was never the same
My generation! Way to go! This is righteous psychedelia. Keep on truckin' Black Pegasus. You a righteous dude man! Some late 1960s and early 70s slang. Found part of an article by Matthew Woods from April 24th, 2024: Robert Plant, Led Zeppelin’s lead vocalist, has stated that the song’s title was inspired by a stray black dog that had been following him around while he was driving through the English countryside. The dog’s appearance was so unexpected and startling that it left a lasting impression on Plant, who later wrote the lyrics as a metaphor.
Led Zeppelin stuff I prefer studio versions...although Robet Plant is nice to watch, there's so much more going on and "clean" performances in the studio !
70's rock is quintessential rock. "Controlled chaos" is an apt description and you're absolutely right. Those of us who grew up in the 60's and 70's came into our appreciation of hard rock one step up the ladder at a time. You might say up "The Stairway to Heaven".
Agree that the studio version is less chaotic and might be more sonically pleasing! I wish I could have seen them live because of the thrill of chaos! This is one of my favorites so thanks for doing this one 😁❤️🔥✌🏻🫶🏻
This was the first number on the fourth album. Some fans had been disappointed of the more folk style album III. Right from the get go, it’s like a smack in the face: “Hey we are back, and we play Rock n’ Roll” ❤
The title is a reference to a nameless black Labrador Retriever the band used to see wandering the Headley Grange studio grounds. The dog would disappear in the evening and return exhausted in the early morning, before resting all day and repeating his evening sojourns. You get the picture.
Before the English invasion there was the American invasion during World War Two. The black soldiers brought blues and jazz to Great Britain. All these 60 and 70 bands grew up listening and studying the old blues greats with their story telling songs.
Just a little fact, if you didn’t already know it the guy that played with Hart on the drums is the son of the drummer that’s shown in this video. I also was told that Jason Bonham the son of John Bonham was asked to come to the heart performance, buthe told them that he had a prior engagement and couldn’t do it. That’s because Hart reach out to him first the actual studio album is much better but this just gives you a live version of this song. Thank you for doing this.
The British bands that started coming out afterwards all started doing songs that were long and involved changes, sort of like long symphony type pieces but still rock. Was called progressive rock...ELP ( Emerson, Lake and Palmer ,YES to name a few...yes next reaction to Led Zep please do a studio version...Ramble On ,great song, When The LeveeBreaks another...he'll they're all good! My favorite band along with the Beatles and the Bowie...
I've heard that this song is called Black Dog because they saw a black dog by the studio while they were recording. Also, you should check out "When the Levee Breaks". And no, they're not still touring. The drummer, John Bonham, died in 1980 (I think is the year). They decided not to replace him or tour anymore after that. The last time they played together was celebration day in 2007 when John Bonham's son, Jason, played with them.
You need to try live at Earls Court MAY 25,1975, In My Time Of Dying, that’s the best version from those concerts, & it will blow your mind. Everything they do is worthy checking out, because they are that great.
You're doing great with Zep reactions-thank you! Going to California, When the Levee Breaks and Babe, I'm Gonna Leave you are a few more great ones to check out - they were just epic live, no two shows alike💞
Led Zeppelin came after the 60's more pop kind of os sounds, the Animals, the Hollies, The Turtles, The Mamasabd The Papas The Beatles( the best in my opinion) and then Zep came out wit this HEAVY shit ...no one sounded like them. They did something that always grabbed me and that was they might start off a song soft or slow and then come in with the thunder...they were good at that..
During live performances, Led Zeppelin almost never play their songs the same way they record them in the studio. Not only are their songs different from the studio version, they are also played different from concert to concert. So if you hear your favorite Led Zeppelin song at 3 different concerts, it will have similarities, but it won't be played the same way. They play spontaneous, and play off each other. The fact they can do that and sound tight, shows their greatness. Led Zeppelin studio songs typically have a lot of rhythm and tempo changes, that broke the standard norm of making songs. So you never know what to expect, and are always surprised. I think this makes their songs so exciting.
Yes, listening to live performances for a first hearing is always a huge gamble; the studio versions will always be the "perfected" version. But people are always recommending live performances because they already know the song & they like the excitement of seeing and hearing them live. I have to cringe sometimes with some of the live performances that are recommended for first time viewers!
Jimmy liked to noodle on the guitar and he would sometimes get off key, off beat and throw in runs that don't really fit, but the 2 Johns would always keep the song and beat going until he got back in line with them to continue the song. I saw some videos where he was too high to play well. My best friend in high School worked at the venue they played in San Diego around 1972 and he got to put Jimmy's guitar on the stage so they could walk out on stage in the dark and know exactly where their instruments would be. It was all carefully measured. You would not see that today.
@@HRConsultant_Jeff I saw 3 of their early concerts, and Jimmy was great. However he had a period of serious drug addiction that affected how he played. I saw a video of him playing Stairway To Heaven with Jeff beck and Eric Clapton. They were each supposed to get a part. Jimmy started, sounded horrible, and couldn't get it right. He kept trying and ignored the others when they signaled to come in. EC kept his cool, but JB was furious. I almost totally lost respect for my all time favorite guitarist.
@@SK-lk3iu I think it depends on what the reactor likes. Also a tame studio version or a poorly played live version can both make them loose interest. It can go either way especially for a first time listener. My goal is to get them to react to my favorite bands enough times to get an impression, hopefully a good one. Therefore I recommend by what I think they would like. As good as Since I've Been Lovin You live MSG 1973 is, the studio version is better. However I think Kashmir live at Knebworth 1979 is better than the studio version and would always recommend that. Sometimes you don't get 2 tries with reactors so it's important to get it right the first time. Another thing is everyone knows it's easy to sound good in a studio.
@@SK-lk3iu Thank you so much! Damn, I thought I was the only one who understood this, lmao. I see so many people recommending live versions of songs to people who haven't even heard the studio version yet. Why would you do that?!?! Yes, there are occasions where great songs are done even better in a live performance than they originally were in the studio. But as a general rule, the studio versions sound better, and there are just too many flaws in most live performances, that people should just listen to the studio version first, as a general rule of thumb.
I can't stand when someone recommends a live version to a virgin listener, the listener doesn't really dig it (quite possibly because it sounds raw and rough live), and then that virgin listener gets completely turned off from the band from now on--when, if they had just been recommended the STUDIO version, a lot of times, they really would have liked it, and actually gotten MORE interested in the band!!
Live songs can be great--but usually (not always, but usually), they only sound their best "live" when they've first been heard in the studio.
People need to wake up and realize this, lol.
This is a perfect example of a song which sounds easy but is actually more difficult than it sounds, due to the time signature. That's classic Page and Jones.
WHEN THE LEVEE BREAKS!!!!
shit will blow your mind, brother!
Amen
Yes
This is music. No autotune, no corporate sponsors. They weren't shopped for by talent scouts or put together by corporations. Just raw talent. Awesome blues feel to most of their music.
Led Zeppelin were steeped in American Blues, but they took that influence in a heavier direction than most of their peers, creating a powerful, stomping sound that also incorporated elements of British Folk, Psychedelia, Soul, Reggae, and Celtic and Arabic music.
World class musicians a couple,of times over.
This comment is completely true!!
Led Zeppelin does not
plug in to amplifiers
Led Zeppelin
plugs in to your Soul ❤
"Since I've been loving you". Same concert. It will shatter you.
Led Zeppelin always improvised on stage. No song was ever played the same. Their albums are much more controlled
Check out "Since I've been Loving you" from this same concert. Amazing. A great studio track is a blues called "When the Levee Breaks." It's simply remarkable. The band disbanded after the tragic death of their drummer and great friend John Bonham. I believe he died of alcohol poisoning, just days after he came out of rehab for other substances. Please don't judge these early bands too harshly. They had to be artists under a ton of pressure to produce hits. And tours back then lasted for months. This performance is from a three night gig at Madison Square Gardens. The concerts lasted at least 3 hours each night. Unfortunately, many of them turned to drugs or alcohol to handle the workload and the pressure. Most of these legends have long left their addictions behind them. Eric Clapton, Jummy Page, and Keith Richards immediately come to mind. None of this even touches on the tragedies in their personal lives. Both Robert Plant, singer for Led Zeppelin, and Eric Clapton lost children in tragic accidents while they were on tour. I love the music, but I have so much respect for these flawed, complicated artists.
So now it's appropriate to watch h "Since I've Been Loving You" at this same concert..MSG
Eric was on vacation in New York. Clapton was staying in a hotel nearby and was preparing to pick up Conor for a planned father-son lunch and visit to the Central Park Zoo.
John Bonham has been reincarnated as a Mexican young woman named Paulina (pau) Villeareal- Velez from Monterrey, Mexico. Best Rock Drummer Drumeo award 2023. Her and her 2 sisters comprise the warning and are the best rock trio I've ever heard. Never seen yet but they are opening in Vancouver for Evanesence in October. Please don't sell out that show until I can get the money together for a ticket. These girls are the Beatles of this Century. I really, really need to see them live.
The greatest band in history who influenced pretty much every rock band since.
Led Zeppelin pretty much started out already in iconic greatness and they just kept getting better. You have a very LONG and amazing musical journey ahead of you. Led Zeppelin changed everything
My man, keep going down the Zeppelin rabbit hole!! You're gonna love the catalog.. js...G.O.A.T 's of Rock n Roll
Led Zeppelin were the greatest rock band in history. Four amazingly gifted musicians who were creating music like no other band before or since. This is why after 40+ years after they disbanded (because of the untimely death of their drummer), their fan base continues to grow, other artists are still covering and sampling their music and they still hold the record for the highest number of album sales in the hard rock genre. If you want to do a serious dive into why that's true, start with album 1, track 1 and just keep on going. What they produced will blow your mind.
Congrats on the baby!! :)
It’s called Black Dog because they saw a black dog outside of the studio Check out my favorite Zeppelin song “The Battle of Evermore”!
Battle of Evermore, Misty Mountain Hop, and Ramble On all have Lord of The Rings references, so if your into Lord of The Rings check those three out together
Also Robert Plant's dog was named Strider (Aragorn)
Yes this is the Story Jimmy Page related on the day of the recording, It was told that they were taking a break and had the back door to the studio open and as you said a black dog wandered past
That's almost right. When Zeppelin arrived at Headley Grange (The mansion where they recorded the album) there was a dead black dog in the front yard. Jimmy Page said, "Well hell, we should make a song called Black Dog in honor of this dead mutt." That's why the lyrics have nothing to do with a black dog. The rest is history.
This song was not just named, but inspired by a stray black dog that kept coming by and sometimes into the studio. It was a horny little bugger, and would mount and hump anything it could get to. So it inspired the song that was part of the “free love” aspect of being a hippy.
Can NEVER have enuff Led Zeppelin!!! Ha For sure!!! YAY!!!
Back in the day, they broke the attendance record with about 57,000. One of the nights playing at Knebworth (1979) there was about 250,000 people. This song was named for a Black Labrador that hung around Headley Grange, when they stayed there together writing & recording in The Rolling Stones mobile studio. Headley Grange was an old estate, without heat. Bonham’s opening drumming for When The Levee Breaks, was recorded in the 3 story entrance, with mics placed just right it gave it a really great sound.
They’re switching time signatures and accents throughout which is why the rhythms sound either cool,( if you dig that), or weird/off if you don’t. It was a very popular way of exploring ideas in the 70’s and it does sound great when you use it correctly as a tool.
Ramble on is one of my big favourites from this legend band. All four band members were in a league of their own.
When I think of classic rock I think of Led Zeppelin's "Black Dog". A masterpiece.
miley cyrus does a great job of singing this masterpiece!! check her out singing it at glastonbury in 2019!
That thing you can't put your finger (ahem) on is 1) that it hits umami perfection of sweet-spots someplace in your lower half when that groove digs in. 2) Because it's SEXY AF. 3) Stop. Start. Maybe. Wait. The whole song is a perfect tease.
Music written By John Paul Jones.
jpj used to be dusty springfield's guitarist in the 60's!@@aldito7586
Love blackdog
My favourite band of ALL time. Each member was a maestro in their own right.
For me, the best Led is the controlled chaos Led, tipping on the rails til they nearly go off, but never do. Always able to bring it back. But they have plenty of joints to satisfy everyones taste. Just keep going.
Black, you’ve yet to hit Zeppelin’s Blues!
This is classic Led Zeppelin! Other great songs are 'Dazed and Confused', 'In the Evening', 'Nobody's Fault but Mine', 'Communication Breakdown', 'The Rover', 'How Many More Times', to name but a few! Thanks so much for your reaction to one of my favourite bands! 😊😊
A chronological approach is the best method to discover Led Zep. Can you imagine, as a teenager, waiting patiently, for each album to be released, waiting for any photograph or poster to put up on your bedroom wall. What people, fail to mention, the marketing behind the band, there was only the music or a live concert to experience.
They named the song "Black Dog" because they befriended a black labrador that lived in the mansion they were recording their albumb at... they just thought it was a cool song tile :D
Dazed and Confused is my favorite.
Robert Plant and Jimmy Page did many call and response riffs in their songs. Robert would mimic the guitar licks Jimmy would play. They were very instantaneous in their live shows
You should always do the studio version of Zeppelin’s songs first, then do the live version. That’s how us old guys heard it.
There are so many Zeppelin songs that are definitely going to be playlist material for you. Ramble on, Going to California, over the hills and far away..... I could go on and on and on.
"Kashmir" is great...as are all their songs...we should tell him to listen to the "Lemon Song" haha
ROCK AT IT'S FINEST
🔥🔥🔥 ❣️
Led Zeppelin is one of those rare bands that never put out a bad song. Every album is absolutely BRIMMING with hits, and every song they made are still played on classic rock stations world wide. The first 4 albums are just numbered I through IV , though the 4th one got the nickname "ZoSo" because one of the (meaningless) symbols they printed on the album art kind of looks like that word. Their other albums are "Houses of the Holy," "Presence," "In Through the Out Door," and "Physical Graffiti." They also have a Live record called "The Song Remains the Same" and the remaining members of the band released a remastered compilation album back in the early 2000's called "Mothership." Another famous album is "Coda," which is some recuts and unreleased stuff, put out in 1982, a few years after their drummer died and the band decided to jointly retire out of respect for his memory. Seriously, Led Zep's Discography is like a magnetic dartboard that's all bullseye: CAN'T. MISS.
The wildest thing about Led Zeppelin is that every one of those men standing on that stage is considered in the top ten greatest of all time list for their instrument. And Bonzo is 💯 the greatest Rock Drummer of all time. The talent on display is dazzling 🤩
Jimmy Page is on everyone's top 10 list, always.
Some rating lists interchange Keith Moon as the greatest. To me, they're both great.
@@Rosedach Hard Agree! My top 5 is Bonzo, Mooney, Ginger Baker, Charlie Watts and Bill Ward from Sabbath in no particular order. The GOAT for me is Neil Peart who is just astonishing but for pure Rock, those are my 5.
I first heard Led Zeppelin in the Summer of 1970. A school pal lent me Led Zeppelin 2 and I was hooked. I saved up the £2 needed to buy a copy then bought number 1 (not called that) They are amazing. No song is the same and unlike music today we appreciated the music as much as the lyrics. You need to do more to appreciate just how good they were until Bonzo died when they just couldn't continue. Kashmir and of course Stairway to Heaven are a start
Led Zeppelin - Over the Hills and Far Away - D'yer Maker - Kashmir - No Quarter - All of my Love - The Ocean - Thank You - Rock n Roll - Going to California - Misty Mountain Hop - Ramble On - The Battle of Evermore - Ten Years Gone - When the Levee Breaks - You Shook Me - Your Time is Gonna Come ...... and many more......
It can make your head spin trying to pick a song!
Nice reaction, I saw that smile when he says he will make her sting. You are better when your mind is in the gutter. With that in mind I would like to see a spontaneous reaction to Beth Hart, "Am I the One" Live at the Paradiso. First you will love the music..... and it will make you smile that smile over and over.
Way back in the early 60s the blues players over here (Freddie King, BB King, Albert King, Muddy Waters, Howling Wolf etc.) went across the “pond” and influenced the living daylights out of all of the teenage “geeks” in England and they got themselves guitars and became guitar “gods” of Rock and Roll music. Then came the second “British invasion” with The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, Herman’s Hermits, The Animals and more coming here to tour and make it big. Led Zeppelin and Cream and the other Super Groups came out about 5 years after the first wave of talent came through. When The Yardbirds split up The Jeff Beck Group, Cream (Eric Clapton) and Led Zeppelin (Jimmy Page) were formed by the guitarists of the Yardbirds. They ruled the world of Rock and Roll for many years and now they are dying off. They lied when they said that Rock and Roll would never die. It’s dying all over the place now. If people don’t start listening to this music and carry it forth it will truly die. Joe Bonamassa is doing his part in bringing it forward. I do wish you would react to some of his music. He’s doing it right. Robert Plant totally ruled the vocalist kingdom until Freddie Mercury and Queen came along in about 1974. Nobody could hold a candle to him. Not Rod Stewart, Joe Cocker or anyone else. By the time Led Zeppelin came out Elvis was history and nobody here could even compare to them. They split up when their drummer died. John Bonham died from an overdose of alcohol in 1980. That split up the band and they never reunited again except for a show in the beginning of the 21st century. The Oxygen concert was the name of the concert. Jimmy Page was messing around with the occult and it scared Plant away from rejoining the band. That’s what I think happened.
Music from my high school days! I still listen to them! Classic rock!!
There’s so much more you should listen to. Definitely the greatest rock band in history.
Lots of great music in the 60’s - 70’s. Good time to be growing up!
It would be wonderful to play Zeppelins The Rain Song. It is beautiful and not what they usually play. I just love it! What a great song! it has an orchestra with them. Thank you!
john Paul Jones plays the mellotron, a piano like instrument that plays all orchestral parts of Led Zeppelins music He was their quiet musical achiever working in the background.
This is the first zeppelin song i ever heard when i was like 8yrs old, Zeppelin has been my band since ever since.
Legendary band
They were super accomplished musicians and could come up with different styles of music all in one album. I ve owned them all, I think I know every change in songs, the time a drum solo lasts, I could practically mouth the guitar notes and of course new all of Plants lyrics!
Yeah, people loved their Led Zep. That's an understatement!
December 16, 2009
Guinness Book of World Records, 2010 edition
Led Zeppelin broke the world record for the Highest Demand for Tickets for One Music Concert when 20 million requests came through for the one-time reunion show in December 2007.
Led Zeppelin’s (UK) one-off reunion show at London’s O2 Arena on 10 December 2007 attracted more than 20 million ticket requests. Such was the demand for the 9,000 pairs of tickets that were made available to the public that they were reported to be selling for up to £1,800 ($3,654) on eBay - more than 14 times their original price of £125 ($253).
My favorites are 'Since I've Been Loving You', then naturally 'Dazed And Confused' and also 'Babe I'm Gonna Leave You'. These are with epic guitar solos, very bluesy, and they have several epic concert versions. Maddening beauty and passion.
They broke the mold.
11:34 They disbanded after John Bonham died in 1980. They've appeared a couple of times in the years since. They've been involved in their own projects too.
They started off great, track 1, side 1 of their first album is Good times, bad times.
Well worth a listen.
Having rhe Black Dog is also a term used for 'the blues' i e. depression, down etc.
It's incredible just how great they were. 😎
The drums keep this song right on the edge of flying apart , awesomeness
if i remember right in a special about this record they called the song black dog.they said theres was a black dog roaming around the property the whole time they were making the album.cause they couldnt think of a title for the song.so they just called it black dog.
I recommend reacting to the studio versions of Led Zeppelin songs. Robert Plant often sang the songs a little differently live, which is fine if you know the song, but it's not always the best way to hear it for the first time.
Saw them in concert in the 1970's. I recommend listening to Stairway to Heaven!
This song was named for a black dog that was roaming the grounds of a cottage in England where Zeppelin was working on their fourth album. The song itself is supposedly one of the most difficult songs they created because of the complex timing. John Bonham (the drummer) was becoming frustrated with trying to master the rhythm, and during a break he spontaneously broke into a drum intro from the Little Richard song "Hear you knockin'". The rest of the band joined the jam and in a matter of minutes the LZ song "Rock and Roll" was born. Obviously Bonzo mastered "Black Dog" and another classic came to be.
"Cottage"?
Headley Grange?
It was 4 sticks that frustrated Bonham and lead to Rock and roll.
Zeppelin live is always better than album because live they improvise and are totally free to do whatever they want! That's why their live versions are always longer than their album versions
This is taken from their film "The Song Remains the Same". You should watch it
I always loved the way the drums seem to come back on themselves, and repeat just as you said about the music, it stops, and go's! I don't know how to explain it, but it's heavenly brought music for sure. If I had just one band to listen to the rest of my life, it would be the Beatles, but a very close second would be Led Zeppelin! 😁👍😎✌🗽
I said once before they didn't always perform there best live...if you knew the the touring they did and partying ,I thing it wore on them and it showed. John Bonham the drummer died right before a scheduled tour into the early 80's ( maybe late70's) and the band didn't think it was Led Zeppelin without him in it. Story goes he tmreally did not want to go on tour anymore ,he was drinking heavily that day during rehearsals, was put to bed. I'm assuming sleeping on his back choked when he vomited and died...tragic. such a talent!
After 1975 probably closer to 1974 the fame, money, women, pressure, drugs, the starship Plants voice etc. all began to take a toll on the band and the shows show that. Add to that Page insisted on tweaking the live songs in post production, in the TSRTS Move there are overdubs etc. The B&W footage of them in Denmark (I think) playing How Many More Times and Dazed etc is some of their best work. The early Royal Albert Hall or Earls Court not sure of the venue name was all good stuff too. Early Zeppelin Performances = Best Performances.
This is when top bands cranked out an album every 6-12 months, and they were HUGE albums, black dog ead about a stray dog that came around while Zep was recording at Hedley Grange, they put Bonzos drum set in a certain part of the doorway/entryway to get the sound of when the levee breaks🫡they used Rolling Stones mobile studio at the time, Stuart Anderson (boogie with Stu!) This music changed the world. Like Elvis, Beatles, Eagles and everyone else who came before and after✌️
For blues influence (just ONE of MANY of theirs) - you should check out Since I've Been Loving You (MSG performance is EXCELLENT!!) and When The Levee Breaks - BOTH such BLUESY BANGERS!!!
Led Zeppelin has the greatest Debut album ever ❤❤
I stood in line for this show and tickets sold out faster than you could think!!
A baby on the way? You posted her picture god bless her she looks like her daddy😊
chaos is a good way to describe this one... call and response is another... I would recommend you keep going with Led Zep... I would recommend Dazed and Confused next... but try the studio version first.
Such a heavy awesome song!! hahaha bro that expression on your face as the song ends says it all! Led Zeppelin is something else! Dude, HE is the Black Dog!
Have you reacted to 'When the Levee Breaks'? Talk about a blues influence. All time classic. 🙏🇺🇲✌️😎
you NEED to watch their live perfomance from the same concert of "Since I've Been Lovin You". As a hip hop head, i think youll be surprised how blusey/soulful their core sound is/can be..one of the best performances PERIOD
The thing about Led Zeppelin shows, and this version shows it-these guys not only knew how to play, but they knew THEY knew how to play. The swagger is evident here.
Plant and Page especially played with a swagger that said to the audience, “Yeah, we’re awesome and we know it. Watch this…”
Another of their stop and go songs that will blow your mind is Nobodys Fault But Mine. Give it a listen and hang on for the ride
MY YOUTH....BOWL O'WEED AND LZ PLAYING LOUD FOR ALL THE NEIGHBORHOOD ❤❤❤
YAY!!! Yesss KickAss!!! Best Band EVER!!! Luvit!!! LUV that YOU are getting some LED OUT Black Pegasus!!! Beautiful!!!
The story I've heard was that when they were recording this, there was a black dog running around outside the studio. Of course, it's not about him.
If i had to pick the greatest band in my lifetime, it's Zeppelin. Not my favorite band ever, but just the rock god presence.
They were powerful.
They were bad@$$. 🔥🔥🔥
from what i read, they needed a title for the song. there was a black dog that hung around the place they were at, so they named it after the dog.
When Zeppelin were together they were the best, the band died when the drummer-John Bonham the great died young 32 in 1980 , he was also the worlds best drummer
You should go to their first album done in 1969. Actually their first and second album were both out in 1969. You’ll find the blues, and some good rock.
😆 This came off of the great Zep IV, which I bought when I was 12, and got a really nice set of headphones 🎧 from my dad for Christmas 🎄 that year!! Hahaha 😆 😊
Jimmy page was the last member of the yard birds and when he formed the new line up he was looking for someone like Roger daltry from the who well he found Robert plant, then John Bonham and John paul Jones joined ( only band member to use a stage name) and they renamed the yard birds led zepplin, the first album is a very blues driven sound and then the next 2 albums they changed the sound literally every song then led zepplin 4 came out and the world was never the same
From the same concert, "Since I've been loving you" is def more your bag, slower tempo, ish-load of Blues and Soul..
My generation! Way to go! This is righteous psychedelia. Keep on truckin' Black Pegasus. You a righteous dude man! Some late 1960s and early 70s slang.
Found part of an article by Matthew Woods from April 24th, 2024:
Robert Plant, Led Zeppelin’s lead vocalist, has stated that the song’s title was inspired by a stray black dog that had been following him around while he was driving through the English countryside. The dog’s appearance was so unexpected and startling that it left a lasting impression on Plant, who later wrote the lyrics as a metaphor.
Led Zeppelin stuff I prefer studio versions...although Robet Plant is nice to watch, there's so much more going on and "clean" performances in the studio !
"Black dog" among other things is an old English euphemism for being depressed or feeling sad.
Most of the music that came out in the late 60's and thru the 70's was a new thing never heard before. LZ was on the cutting edge.
70's rock is quintessential rock. "Controlled chaos" is an apt description and you're absolutely right. Those of us who grew up in the 60's and 70's came into our appreciation of hard rock one step up the ladder at a time. You might say up "The Stairway to Heaven".
Agree that the studio version is less chaotic and might be more sonically pleasing! I wish I could have seen them live because of the thrill of chaos! This is one of my favorites so thanks for doing this one 😁❤️🔥✌🏻🫶🏻
Led Zeppelin is 💯🔥🔥🔥🔥♥️
This was the first number on the fourth album. Some fans had been disappointed of the more folk style album III. Right from the get go, it’s like a smack in the face: “Hey we are back, and we play Rock n’ Roll” ❤
The title is a reference to a nameless black Labrador Retriever the band used to see wandering the Headley Grange studio grounds. The dog would disappear in the evening and return exhausted in the early morning, before resting all day and repeating his evening sojourns. You get the picture.
Before the English invasion there was the American invasion during World War Two. The black soldiers brought blues and jazz to Great Britain. All these 60 and 70 bands grew up listening and studying the old blues greats with their story telling songs.
Just a little fact, if you didn’t already know it the guy that played with Hart on the drums is the son of the drummer that’s shown in this video. I also was told that Jason Bonham the son of John Bonham was asked to come to the heart performance, buthe told them that he had a prior engagement and couldn’t do it. That’s because Hart reach out to him first the actual studio album is much better but this just gives you a live version of this song. Thank you for doing this.
The British bands that started coming out afterwards all started doing songs that were long and involved changes, sort of like long symphony type pieces but still rock. Was called progressive rock...ELP ( Emerson, Lake and Palmer ,YES to name a few...yes next reaction to Led Zep please do a studio version...Ramble On ,great song, When The LeveeBreaks another...he'll they're all good! My favorite band along with the Beatles and the Bowie...
What a vibe! Pure greatness.
I've heard that this song is called Black Dog because they saw a black dog by the studio while they were recording. Also, you should check out "When the Levee Breaks".
And no, they're not still touring. The drummer, John Bonham, died in 1980 (I think is the year). They decided not to replace him or tour anymore after that. The last time they played together was celebration day in 2007 when John Bonham's son, Jason, played with them.
Kashmir is my favorite!
One of my favorite Led Zep songs is Rock & Roll
You need to try live at Earls Court MAY 25,1975, In My Time Of Dying, that’s the best version from those concerts, & it will blow your mind. Everything they do is worthy checking out, because they are that great.
You're doing great with Zep reactions-thank you! Going to California, When the Levee Breaks and Babe, I'm Gonna Leave you are a few more great ones to check out - they were just epic live, no two shows alike💞
Doh!! Now you've done it...we're a really big family. Led Head for life. ❤😊
Led Zeppelin came after the 60's more pop kind of os sounds, the Animals, the Hollies, The Turtles, The Mamasabd The Papas The Beatles( the best in my opinion) and then Zep came out wit this HEAVY shit ...no one sounded like them. They did something that always grabbed me and that was they might start off a song soft or slow and then come in with the thunder...they were good at that..
in the evening,,,best song on the planet
Led Zep, Black Sabbath, Deep Purple & Pink Floyd all came around the same time and they all pushed the boundaries way out.