@Atheos B. Sapien yes, voted on by the same white guys who study music for a living , & who study all the great influential acts; not by just some random fangirls
I saw someone comment about Led Zeppelin & I totally agreed with them: In 200 years Led Zeppelin will be revered as Bach, Mozart & Beethovan are today.
@@mstewart109 Well, they are legends today. I just think they will still be considered masters in 200 years & still played. I can't see other bands withstanding the test of time like Led Zeppelin.
I love the way you instantly pick up on the change of beats/rhythm. That's what made led Zeppelin so great! Jon Bonham is one of the greatest drummers to live on planet earth
Yes!! Good Times Bad Times ! Like it was yesterday ! Bought it at a import records shop, opened it and played it immediately ... Sat with the owner and listened to the whole LP then saw them first US live at Flushing Meadows Buddy Guy opened for them !
Oh. This reminded of what it was like to first hear this. And how it changed my perspective on so many things and in so many ways. My favorite song by these dudes.
@@scott12xu heyo, killdozer! wisconsin native here and i would like to mention killdozer is sorely underrated despite being somewhat known in the 90s among their noise rock and later, grunge contemporaries (billy corgan and kurt cobain both enjoyed 12PB, and found butch vig thru his production of the record). great to stumble upon someone who knows em.
Millennials know how to get the Led out, dude. Stop confusing Gen Z with Millenials. Millenials all went thru a classic rock phrase in middle school from our parents’ influence.
Listening to When the Levee Breaks never gets old. On one level, it's got the most addictive groove. On another level, it's a mantra. It's hypnotic. It's almost transcendental. It's perfect.
@@giuliogrifi7739 True, but also a historically accurate oral history of the 1927 Mississippi River floods. The freakin' Mississippi flowed BACKWARDS that day!! :eek:
What exactly is it, though? It's not a hard drum part, any competent drummer could play it. But none could sound like Bonzo. Something about tone, feel, "grease" or "frudge" (his own word), but each drum hit is somehow special.
@@billholder1330 Exactly right, if you were to note down the drum pattern it would be pretty rudimentary for a competent drummer, drumming is all about feel.
- I know Robert played harmonica and was good but I've heard that it wasn't him playing on this track. I don't remember who it was. Google could provide an answer.
""" is a country blues song written and first recorded by Kansas Joe McCoy and Memphis Minnie in 1929. The lyrics reflect experiences during the upheaval caused by the Great Mississippi Flood of 1927.
Absolutely. In their top 3 ever recorded. Amazing song. Brings tears to my eyes when I hear it. PG is just such an amazing album. The Rover, Sick Again, Custard Pie, IMTOD. Amazing.
@@TheGuitarMonk the instrumtal studio rehearsal of Kashmir is my fav but have all the rehearsals of in the light. It was called "in the morning" and is awesome!!!
Amazing engineering on that song. The compression on the drums made a solid decisive punch on every beat. The echo on the blues harp (harmonica) was haunting. The passion in the vocals left a mark on my soul. I have heard it a million times but it never gets old.
I love seeing young Black Americans really feeling Led Zeppelin’s interpretations of these blues songs- it’s as if those Delta Blues muses found a way to reach across the decades to their cultural descendants through the band.
I agree Bill!!! Zeppelin even admits drawing their inspiration from delta blues! Robert Johnson was unique and his artistry was so short lived I'm a Leadbelly fan myself!
@Huck Finn Exactly right. If you were to ask them, I’m sure they’d admit it, but like you said, it totally goes without saying. Even my guy, Tony Iommi, who arguably single-handedly sparked the entire genre of heavy metal, was largely influenced by the delta blues. That first Sabbath album, from 1969, is just heavy, detuned blues. But I love ❤️ it.
@Huck Finn You know, Tony has such a fascinating story, growing up in industrial Birmingham, England he nearly didn't make it out. On his last day of work at the factory (he had accepted a gig with a band to go on tour), a machine accident took the ends of his fingers off. They told him he would never be able to play again... But he took light strings and detuned them, and then with some homemade prosthetic fingertips, he crafted that Sabbath sound which helped usher in an entire genre of music.
See if you can find a double album set called white boy blues it’s all garage sessions from London in the sixties all the the members of zeppelin the stones Jeff beck clapton etc
Totally blues, and I love how all the hard rock guitar legends were inspired by the old, black American blues guitarists like Muddy Waters, Buddy Guy, BB King, etc. Makes me proud to be American even though literally EVERY SINGLE one of my favorite bands is British. 🤣
@@josephbarr1659 the who received the Kennedy Center Honor (you should check out youtube) daltrey said it was amazing to get an american award because it was american music that brought color to his black and white, post war life. I liked that
I feel nothing but happy seeing her reactions. My favorite band..as well as my fathers and late uncles. Led Zeppelin brings me so much joy and peace, love to see it doing that for others.
I'm from Wolverhampton England, I live very close to where Plant and Bonham were from, Wolverhampton has a massive jamaican population so growing up we were surrounded by amazing music, Ska, Reggae, Blues, Rock , Rock n roll we had it all. When the levee breaks was recorded in one take in a old mansion here in England.
Me too, I agree with all that you have said. I heard them live at Sheffield University, a very savvy entertainments guy booked them before they released ‘Stairway to Heaven’, they tried to get out of the gig, but were informed that the University had a very good Law department! The turned up and the speaker stack was huge, the best place to hear them was 200 yards up the road, which is where I heard them as the tickets had sold out in minutes. Those inside the hall were deaf for days. Awesome band and have never been surpassed.
"Fun Fact" about Led Zeppelin: no other band has been sampled as much (and by a LOOOOONG shot) from the rap community than Zeppelin has been. Countless Zeppelin samples, along with famous rappers such as 2Pac, Eminem, Dr. Dre, P. Diddy, Beastie Boys, Schooly D., and hip-hop acts such as Salt n Pepa have all sampled Zeppelin's classic rifts into their own songs. To say Zeppelin was/is arguably the most influential band ever is a BIG understatement.
I see a bunch of folks here suggesting In My Time of Dyin'. They know what they're talkin' about. Take their advice. You won't be the same after hearing it.
Absolutely Jayy - loving your reactions! And if you felt carried away by Levee, please please please go find “In My Time of Dyin’ “ off of Physical Graffitti album - it will no doubt transfix and transport you away on angels’ wings.
When a Zeppelin song goes to so many places it never sounds contrived. It needs to go to that new place and then come home again. Saw them live 4 times. God's will that these 4 people came together.
Your reaction perfectly sums up how I felt my very first time listening to this song when I was 14! Who knew that British rockers could make the bluesiest song of all time?! It’s like you can feel the muddy waters of the Mississippi in between your toes. And the drum riff alone… John Bonham’s drumming in this song is so influential!
Isn't that song great? Sadly, it's a recounting of a terrible flood way back in the early 1900s that displaced a lot of folks. Great delta blues song totally Zepped up 😉
Watching a young lady get emotional about my (51 yr old guy) favorite song of all time just made my day. Music is something bigger than everything else. God bless you, and thanks for making my day. Music is the one thing that can bring us together during these difficult times.
The face you made when you heard the chorus was the same exact face I made! I’ll never forget hearing this for the first time. I was blown away. Still my favorite song
No other band compares to Led Zeppelin, their music goes to super heavy rock and roll to country, to acoustic, to reggae. An incredible group of musicians that will never be beat!
That's exactly how a Zeppelin reaction should be. Followed up with 3 days, locked away, binge listening to the album. And yes, there is a method to their madness. The repeat the riff over and over through their songs, but each sequence is more complex than the last
That song is what made me the hardcore Zeppelin fan I am. I will never forget the first time I heard that song…a rare rainy day in Southern California, sitting at home as a 13 y/o kid when I heard that song on the radio. I’m not even joking, I stopped what I was doing & was simply transfixed with the music. I had chills & I swear it felt like the most powerful spiritual 7 minutes of my life, lol. I immediately jumped on my bike (in the rain) and rode to the record store to buy that CD. One of the best musical experiences of my life!
Possibly my favorite Led Zep track - the relentless drums, the powerful vocals and the guitar that just keeps churning and grinding ... so many elements to achieve such a unique sound.
Love your face expression soooo much! Genuinly feeling of this masterpiece music. Pure emotions... Music is the most beautiful language on this planet,
This song was always one of my many Zeppelin favorites. I always felt they gave it a very "delta swamp-rock" sound. Heavy, dirty-muddy, blues-rock with lots of bottom end and plenty of wailing, crying from the guitar. The song gained more meaning for me in 2005 as I empathized with the victims of Huricane Katrina.
I really enjoy seeing someone who gives a genuine, thoughtful, and realistic reaction. It doesn't seem forced like some of the other reaction videos I've seen by other people. I appreciate what you do.
To see someone love a band at first hearing, that I've loved for so long, it warms my heart. A lot of bands were adapting the Blues into a Rock sound, and there were SO many good bands coming out of England at that time. But Zeppelin took that Blues/Rock concept, and forged it into a mighty rock-hard f-ing diamond. These guys are just such a perfect synergy of what Rock was becoming, and could be. Cheers to Jayy.
You understand 70's rock, and instrumentals beyond your peers and age group. So many reaction videos, the host gets bored during the song when there's no lyrics, but you GET IT.
I love your reactions, and especially love your description of angels falling next to each ear. Jayy, you are witnessing the greatest rock band of all time.
I know you've got a catalog of music to react to. If you're looking for a mellow song that you'll get lost in, try Van Morrison "Into The Mystic" or "Tupelo Honey". Stay blessed & keep going!!!
One of the best Mississippi blues song was done by a bunch of dudes from England.
Kansas Joe McCoy 1929.
@@brianshockledge3241 Well damn. I learned something. Thanks
WE showed you how to do it just that bit better....
@Atheos B. Sapien so called coverband with each member in the top 10 all time as far as voice & musicianship; very few coverbands can claim that
@Atheos B. Sapien yes, voted on by the same white guys who study music for a living , & who study all the great influential acts; not by just some random fangirls
Robert Plant’s vocals and harmonica skills are unbelievable.....love this band
Yes
And down the Led Zeppelin rabbit hole you go welcome aboard
Now jump straight into Immigrant Song!!! Lol
😂
Stairway to Heaven next love!!
I'll give a that's funny
I have listened to it 95000 times and still not sick of it.
Far fewer than 95000 times, but enjoy it every time.
Been listening to this for 47 years and it never, ever gets old. And this is the beat that spawned a thousand rap tracks. It's iconic.
Same here!!!!!!!!!!!!
The whole Led Zeppelin IV album is like that, it just never gets old.
I too have listened to it 95000 times (or thereabouts) and still can’t remember to keep my eyes open long enough to watch the reactors reacting!
I saw someone comment about Led Zeppelin & I totally agreed with them: In 200 years Led Zeppelin will be revered as Bach, Mozart & Beethovan are today.
Before that i hope. Lol
@@mstewart109 Well, they are legends today. I just think they will still be considered masters in 200 years & still played. I can't see other bands withstanding the test of time like Led Zeppelin.
Wish Mozart, Bach, and Beethoven could hear Led Zeppelin! That’s it, I demand a time machine!
I love Beethoven as well. 👍
Rich Diana Me too. I think he would have appreciated Zep.
The production on this song is absolutely genius. From the drum sound to the reverb on the harmonica to the slide guitar - it’s just perfect.
the producer was jimmy page
"It sounds like 2 angels fell to both sides of my face and just hugged my ears" - beautiful.
And Robert hadn't even started to preach. :)
That’s a great way to describe a song 🤓
That was one of The best comments ever. Hands down. Her soul was in their hands for the length of the song. Amazing.
that really is the perfect way to describe led zeppelin!
The best line by anyone, ever!
I love the way you instantly pick up on the change of beats/rhythm. That's what made led Zeppelin so great! Jon Bonham is one of the greatest drummers to live on planet earth
He' s dead, infortunatelly. And he isn' t one of the greatest drummers but he's the greatest drummer in history..
Oh, to be hearing Led Zeppelin for the first time again.
Yes!! Good Times Bad Times ! Like it was yesterday ! Bought it at a import records shop, opened it and played it immediately ... Sat with the owner and listened to the whole LP then saw them first US live at Flushing Meadows Buddy Guy opened for them !
First LedZep track I remember hearing was whole lotta love, on the radio when I was around 4yrs old. Still loving it 50yrs later.
What an adventure... Id love to go back and do it again!
Oh. This reminded of what it was like to first hear this. And how it changed my perspective on so many things and in so many ways. My favorite song by these dudes.
Like watching kid eat chocolate for the FIRST TIME! :)
I've been listening to Led Zeppelin for 40 plus years & they still give me goosebumps & bring me to tears. Simply the best, amazing
SAME here I'm a 57 year old male. Goosebumps tears a happening
About 41 years for me, and I only turned 40 this summer!
You are 100% right! They are the greatest band of all time! I love watching the reactions and the emotion that comes out. ✌🥲
I’m 55 and remember my mom playing them since I was about 5-years old…I have never gotten tired of their sound.
1984 I heard this first time. Just teared up again. Perfection.
There's Zeppelin and then there's everyone else.
I love zeppelin but I have a hard time putting Floyd into an everyone else category.
Jill DeGraffenried I completely agree with you. I love both Zep AND Pink Floyd. After Led Zeppelin and Pink Floyd, then there’s everyone else.
You re not kidding!
Lol. Yup
CCR can mirror Zeppelin maybe. MAYBE
When one listens to this song, the entire neighborhood must also listen to this song.
The heaviest song in the history of mankind. From the greatest rock band in the history of mankind.
Listen to the Wisconsin band Killdozer’s version of it: half the tempo, lasts nearly 10 minutes. Pure Midwest psychotic sludge rock.
The greatest of all! Never has been or ever will be!
@@rogerdaleable - Never? I think you need to rewrite that.
@@scott12xu heyo, killdozer! wisconsin native here and i would like to mention killdozer is sorely underrated despite being somewhat known in the 90s among their noise rock and later, grunge contemporaries (billy corgan and kurt cobain both enjoyed 12PB, and found butch vig thru his production of the record). great to stumble upon someone who knows em.
They are the kings- the kings of plagiarism
The greatest rock band ever......there will never be another like it.
These 4 guys coming together was a miracle....
Ladies and Gentleman of the millennial era, please let me introduce Led Zeppelin. The worlds best rock band.
Millennials know how to get the Led out, dude. Stop confusing Gen Z with Millenials. Millenials all went thru a classic rock phrase in middle school from our parents’ influence.
millennials with decent parents already did that. gen z on the other hand..
Amen to that!
Yes wireless we will never ever see the likes of this masterful band everrrr
PERIOD!!!
Listening to When the Levee Breaks never gets old. On one level, it's got the most addictive groove. On another level, it's a mantra. It's hypnotic. It's almost transcendental. It's perfect.
A true blues song !!!
@@giuliogrifi7739 True, but also a historically accurate oral history of the 1927 Mississippi River floods. The freakin' Mississippi flowed BACKWARDS that day!! :eek:
Have you heard any of the several versions with Nigel Eaton's hurdy gurdy intro? It's a fantastic old-style sound perfectly adaptable with this R'n'R!
Bro you sound so gay
I love the Beatles, I love the Rolling Stones, I love cream and Hendrix but there’s awe and a party in my heart and soul when it hears Zeppelin.
Ya got that right!
That flippin drumming is just the best. No one can drum like Bonzo
What exactly is it, though? It's not a hard drum part, any competent drummer could play it. But none could sound like Bonzo. Something about tone, feel, "grease" or "frudge" (his own word), but each drum hit is somehow special.
@@billholder1330 Exactly right, if you were to note down the drum pattern it would be pretty rudimentary for a competent drummer, drumming is all about feel.
@@chrisbanks6659 Just a wannabe percussionist, I'm more of a bass and guitar guy. But yeah, huge Bonzo fan, that man was unique.
...even GOD can't imitate it
Robert Plant's backwards harmonica and Jimmy Page's phased guitar... Priceless...
@@rickyhubbard9261 BONZOOOOO!!!!!
And fab use of backward lead guitar especially during the last few bars. Loove it!
Well, you forgot John Bonham on the drums. When he died, Led Zeppelin died too.
Bonzo... RIP. revered for ever.
- I know Robert played harmonica and was good but I've heard that it wasn't him playing on this track. I don't remember who it was. Google could provide an answer.
""" is a country blues song written and first recorded by Kansas Joe McCoy and Memphis Minnie in 1929. The lyrics reflect experiences during the upheaval caused by the Great Mississippi Flood of 1927.
Thanks so much for sharing that! I've been listening to this song for 43 years and never knew that!
We should all check our history, where most great music comes from🎸🥃
Led Zeppelin was never redisan about their main influencers,
early black man's blues.
th-cam.com/video/swhEa8vuP6U/w-d-xo.html
They do say in the sleeve notes 'Whatever happened to Mephis Minnie' so hat tipping there.
Closing song of a perfect album. The untitled 4th album is perfection, from opening note to closing note.
Yes, exactly. This album was the quintessentially “perfect” one. The others that were similarly good, start to finish, were also from that era.
I always called it ZOSO, but yeah, it was untitled.
"In the Light" is super underrated yet so beautiful. I never hear Zepp fans mention it, but it's one of my favorites
Absolutely. In their top 3 ever recorded. Amazing song. Brings tears to my eyes when I hear it. PG is just such an amazing album. The Rover, Sick Again, Custard Pie, IMTOD. Amazing.
@@oldmaninavan3592 IMTOD = some of Bonham's best.
@@TheGuitarMonk the instrumtal studio rehearsal of Kashmir is my fav but have all the rehearsals of in the light. It was called "in the morning" and is awesome!!!
In the light & Ten years gone. Best tracks off their best album, kashmir too if you can handle hearing it for the 10millionth time.
One of my top 10 for sure!
Your facial expressions told a 1,000word story. God love ya.
All them stankfaces and the straight grooving made me subscribe, no joke. She’s completely FEELIN it.
Amazing engineering on that song. The compression on the drums made a solid decisive punch on every beat. The echo on the blues harp (harmonica) was haunting. The passion in the vocals left a mark on my soul. I have heard it a million times but it never gets old.
you know what, you will never get that feeling from today's music, NEVER
Amen to that Selwyn!
The Black Keys- Turn Blue
The album is worth listening to and one of the better albums in the last decade
The shit these poor kids are subjected to and pay for is child abuse. When the aliens finally get here led zep will be played at their landing.
A bit arrogant! From a baby boomer.... can’t think of any band today that I can compare with Led.... but
Tennessee whiskey
This Led Zep song is a cover of 1929 blues song by Kansas Joe and Memphis Minnie.
Been deeply devoted to Led Zeppelin since I was a kid in 1972. Indeed....."There's Led Zeppelin and then there's everybody else".....
When all the other kids were into The Partridge Family, The Osmonds and The Jackson Five I was jamming to my sister's Zeppelin albums!
DrVonChilla me too! 12 in 1972.... mind blown....lifelong devotee
1974 for me. Love them more now than ever. I especially love the live version of "Hangman" from No Quarter
Doubletap that's one you'll never be able to repay your sister for.
From the cradle to the grave... always... Zeppelin!
I love seeing young Black Americans really feeling Led Zeppelin’s interpretations of these blues songs- it’s as if those Delta Blues muses found a way to reach across the decades to their cultural descendants through the band.
I love that about it, too.
I agree Bill!!! Zeppelin even admits drawing their inspiration from delta blues! Robert Johnson was unique and his artistry was so short lived I'm a Leadbelly fan myself!
@@paulross406 Gallows Pole
@Huck Finn Exactly right. If you were to ask them, I’m sure they’d admit it, but like you said, it totally goes without saying. Even my guy, Tony Iommi, who arguably single-handedly sparked the entire genre of heavy metal, was largely influenced by the delta blues. That first Sabbath album, from 1969, is just heavy, detuned blues. But I love ❤️ it.
@Huck Finn You know, Tony has such a fascinating story, growing up in industrial Birmingham, England he nearly didn't make it out. On his last day of work at the factory (he had accepted a gig with a band to go on tour), a machine accident took the ends of his fingers off. They told him he would never be able to play again...
But he took light strings and detuned them, and then with some homemade prosthetic fingertips, he crafted that Sabbath sound which helped usher in an entire genre of music.
I never understood when people said rock was derived from blues. Then I was listening to zep one day and thought "oh, ok, I get it"
You must be a slow learner.
See if you can find a double album set called white boy blues it’s all garage sessions from London in the sixties all the the members of zeppelin the stones Jeff beck clapton etc
Totally blues, and I love how all the hard rock guitar legends were inspired by the old, black American blues guitarists like Muddy Waters, Buddy Guy, BB King, etc. Makes me proud to be American even though literally EVERY SINGLE one of my favorite bands is British. 🤣
@@josephbarr1659 the who received the Kennedy Center Honor (you should check out youtube) daltrey said it was amazing to get an american award because it was american music that brought color to his black and white, post war life. I liked that
Rock is a DIRECT descendant of the blues.
I feel nothing but happy seeing her reactions. My favorite band..as well as my fathers and late uncles. Led Zeppelin brings me so much joy and peace, love to see it doing that for others.
Welcome to the Led Zeppelin brotherhood. "When The Levee Breaks" always wipes me out.
Often brings me to tears and I don’t know why 😢
@@eddycerb That's the effect of great music.
@@saintgeorge6706 yes sir, it is. That's what I call Church
@@dionysusincarnate5713 Rock was and still is God. Accept no substitute.
Bought this album with milk round money 4puid hmv 14 yr old and 55 now love your reaction welcome to zeppelin 👍🇬🇧🇺🇸🇳🇿🇫🇷🇦🇺🇨🇦🇺🇦🗽
I'm from Wolverhampton England, I live very close to where Plant and Bonham were from, Wolverhampton has a massive jamaican population so growing up we were surrounded by amazing music, Ska, Reggae, Blues, Rock , Rock n roll we had it all. When the levee breaks was recorded in one take in a old mansion here in England.
Me too, I agree with all that you have said. I heard them live at Sheffield University, a very savvy entertainments guy booked them before they released ‘Stairway to Heaven’, they tried to get out of the gig, but were informed that the University had a very good Law department! The turned up and the speaker stack was huge, the best place to hear them was 200 yards up the road, which is where I heard them as the tickets had sold out in minutes. Those inside the hall were deaf for days. Awesome band and have never been surpassed.
Proud to be a Brummie (close 🤣) - hooked on Zeppelin from ‘68 on... still hanging at 67... 🇬🇧👍🏻
I’m a wolves fan & LZ, doesn’t get better than that! Even Planty is number one wolves support .
Lived in LA since 86 .. Ches hay is my home ..
@@thewinnertakesitall4384 Cheslyn Hay?
1st reaction to Led Zeppelin... Priceless.
You're perfect.
The most sampled drum beat ever. JOHN BONHAM.
How many people realize The Beastie Boys ripped the opening drums? “Rhymin and Stealin,”
Hammer of the Gods
The GREATEST EVER was taken way before his time
the most sampled beat is the amen break
I would say the drum break on James Brown's "Funky Drummer" would be the most sampled beat.
Best comment I've ever heard..."two angels just embraced my ears." No greater words spoken as to the effect this song has on people.
"Fun Fact" about Led Zeppelin: no other band has been sampled as much (and by a LOOOOONG shot) from the rap community than Zeppelin has been. Countless Zeppelin samples, along with famous rappers such as 2Pac, Eminem, Dr. Dre, P. Diddy, Beastie Boys, Schooly D., and hip-hop acts such as Salt n Pepa have all sampled Zeppelin's classic rifts into their own songs. To say Zeppelin was/is arguably the most influential band ever is a BIG understatement.
Source
Billy Squire.. read somewhere he was way up there too, but none the less LZ changed the landscape of music as we know it!
Add Frankie Goes To Hollywood's Relax to the list. Not rap, but Bonham supplies the drum samples...
Amen break wants to talk to you
@@davorinmestric969 Most sampled band, which is quite probably true, not song.
This is on my top 10 songs of all times list… yaaaaas!!!!
And that is what is missing in the music today ... talent, no computerization. Led Zeppelin was a band like no other.
Big facts. New music absolutely is missing it's soul. There hasn't been good new music in 20+ years
@@dennishayes1505 Shit man, you need to get out more.
@@dennishayes1505 RIVAL SONS
Yes so true. Where is the talent? What happened?
Glen Clark- you are not kidding.we had the filet mignon of talent in the 60s and 70s
Bonzo is killing those drums Best rock band ever and they only were together for almost 12 yrs
I see a bunch of folks here suggesting In My Time of Dyin'. They know what they're talkin' about. Take their advice. You won't be the same after hearing it.
Absolutely Jayy - loving your reactions! And if you felt carried away by Levee, please please please go find “In My Time of Dyin’ “ off of Physical Graffitti album - it will no doubt transfix and transport you away on angels’ wings.
When a Zeppelin song goes to so many places it never sounds contrived. It needs to go to that new place and then come home again. Saw them live 4 times. God's will that these 4 people came together.
Yea, we had some good music in the '70s.
The best. Led Zeppelin, Deep Purple, Black Sabbath, Rainbow, Uriah Heap, AC/DC, Pink Floyd, Blue Oyster Cult just to name a few.
And '60's
Don’t ya know it!
Really spoiled!
Saw the 77 tour, so incredible! Goat.. Zeppelin!!!! Musicianship at its finest!
Your reaction perfectly sums up how I felt my very first time listening to this song when I was 14! Who knew that British rockers could make the bluesiest song of all time?! It’s like you can feel the muddy waters of the Mississippi in between your toes. And the drum riff alone… John Bonham’s drumming in this song is so influential!
"...my ears felt like they went through, like, so many different stages of blessed, it's crazy."
Ahh, Zeppelin.
Isn't that song great? Sadly, it's a recounting of a terrible flood way back in the early 1900s that displaced a lot of folks. Great delta blues song totally Zepped up 😉
Mississippi River 1927.
@@earldeanpowell Yep. Memphis Minnie and Kansas Joe original song 1929.
There are numerous delta blues songs from that era about the 1927 Mississippi River flood.
No words can describe the feelings that real blues engender. Your reactions are so REAL -Keep on rocking, there is SO MUCH more for you to discover.
You transition from shock and surprise to melting into the groove effortlessly.
Watching a young lady get emotional about my (51 yr old guy) favorite song of all time just made my day. Music is something bigger than everything else. God bless you, and thanks for making my day. Music is the one thing that can bring us together during these difficult times.
Kansas Joe McCoy and Memphis Minnie wrote the song in 1927. Of course Led Zep made it famous
It bares little resemblance to the source. Its 95% original Zeppelin.
Still worth a listen
Memphis Minnie ahead of her time ..
John you can still hear elements of the original basic tune in Zep's version.
95% difference? Total bs. Lyrics and song structure are very similar th-cam.com/video/swhEa8vuP6U/w-d-xo.html
The face you made when you heard the chorus was the same exact face I made! I’ll never forget hearing this for the first time. I was blown away. Still my favorite song
No other band compares to Led Zeppelin, their music goes to super heavy rock and roll to country, to acoustic, to reggae. An incredible group of musicians that will never be beat!
This song comes at you like freight train, runs you down, and drags you all the way from Biloxi to Decatur.
Those of us in the know of a certain age have been listening to proper music made by proper musicians for years. Glad you like it!
It's about time you joined us all who have loved Led Zeppelin since the late 60's. Welcome aboard.
Love the killer drum track by the late great John Bonham...Peace...
Your facial expressions are the best.
Their blues songs are the ultimate tribute to all the great black bluesmen of the past....
Music timeless I'm 69 from South Africa enjoy
That's exactly how a Zeppelin reaction should be. Followed up with 3 days, locked away, binge listening to the album. And yes, there is a method to their madness. The repeat the riff over and over through their songs, but each sequence is more complex than the last
They wrote a tune, "The Song Remains the Same".
One day, The Blues, Rock, and Folk got together and said: Let us make a band in our own image..... Led Zeppelin was created
That song is what made me the hardcore Zeppelin fan I am. I will never forget the first time I heard that song…a rare rainy day in Southern California, sitting at home as a 13 y/o kid when I heard that song on the radio. I’m not even joking, I stopped what I was doing & was simply transfixed with the music. I had chills & I swear it felt like the most powerful spiritual 7 minutes of my life, lol. I immediately jumped on my bike (in the rain) and rode to the record store to buy that CD. One of the best musical experiences of my life!
That song is a beautiful 7 minutes. The great thing about Led Zeppelin is there are so many different parts to a single song.
Thats why they're legendary.
I am addicted to watching people experience something beautiful for the first time. Keep these coming!
Will do
Possibly my favorite Led Zep track - the relentless drums, the powerful vocals and the guitar that just keeps churning and grinding ... so many elements to achieve such a unique sound.
Love your face expression soooo much! Genuinly feeling of this masterpiece music. Pure emotions... Music is the most beautiful language on this planet,
Cryin won’t help ya, prayin won’t do ya no good.
Always translated that to, Get the hell up and get to work.
It means nothing will save you when the levee breaks
That’s a dumb translation.
Led Zeppelin's music 🎶 will always be timeless.
"Battle of Evermore" & "Since I've Been Lovin You" will be well worth the listen.
And pretty much everything else that they did.
“Since I’ve Been Lovin’ You” may be the best blues recording ever made.
So many songs on Physical Graffiti that blow minds. Then there's Song Remains the Same!
This song was always one of my many Zeppelin favorites. I always felt they gave it a very "delta swamp-rock" sound. Heavy, dirty-muddy, blues-rock with lots of bottom end and plenty of wailing, crying from the guitar. The song gained more meaning for me in 2005 as I empathized with the victims of Huricane Katrina.
Another zeppelin masterpiece is “in my time of dying, “ it’s got it all drums guitar vocals
That song sounds like it was recorded in one take in a garage. Love the energy.
Again, so cool to see the younger generation discover the music we (age 50+ people) kind of took for granted.
Welcome to the Zeppelin fandom. You've taken your first step into a much greater world.
Yes mam!!! Welcome to the legends ! Led Zeppelin! Makes you feel things you never knew possible.
Great reaction. Just subscribed.
Dirty, mean and nasty swamp blues from a British band. How do you beat that. You would LOVE "In My Time Of Dying"
Agree. A must.
I really enjoy seeing someone who gives a genuine, thoughtful, and realistic reaction. It doesn't seem forced like some of the other reaction videos I've seen by other people. I appreciate what you do.
Welcome to the church of “The Hammer of the Gods” (AKA: Led Zeppellin). Can we get an “Amen”?
Preach!
Amen
LOL
Amen to rock gods
Amen🙏
To see someone love a band at first hearing, that I've loved for so long, it warms my heart. A lot of bands were adapting the Blues into a Rock sound, and there were SO many good bands coming out of England at that time. But Zeppelin took that Blues/Rock concept, and forged it into a mighty rock-hard f-ing diamond. These guys are just such a perfect synergy of what Rock was becoming, and could be. Cheers to Jayy.
You understand 70's rock, and instrumentals beyond your peers and age group. So many reaction videos, the host gets bored during the song when there's no lyrics, but you GET IT.
I love your reactions, and especially love your description of angels falling next to each ear. Jayy, you are witnessing the greatest rock band of all time.
Led Zeppelin is the only band you will ever need to hear !
That's right!
Touche'
Its mind blowing this band been hooked for 40 years and still hooked
You are listening the best way to truly appreciate Zeppelin with headphones !
loved your reaction
That's Robert on the Harmonica....Incredible....Soo much Soul...
Absolutely amazing! Led Zeppelin FOREVER!
Led Zeppelin has so many different places to take you!
I'd love to see your reaction to "Thank You" by them.
It's so beautiful...
I saw one video, and subbed at once. You bring a real, genuine thing to these reactions. A joy to watch!
Ramble On, Hey, Hey What Can I Say, Gallows Pole, Friends, Misty Mountain Hop, No Quarter, Battle of Evermore , Trampled Underfoot...so many goodies
Damn good music. Oh to go back only smarter.
Robert Plant, the singer, was still only 22 when this was recorded, just a young guy from the Midlands.
Zeppelin, Floyd, sabbeth. I miss music.
I know you've got a catalog of music to react to. If you're looking for a mellow song that you'll get lost in, try Van Morrison "Into The Mystic" or "Tupelo Honey". Stay blessed & keep going!!!
This song is a total eargasm from start to finish.
"My ears felt like they went through... seven stages of blessed." Love that.
I had my virgin ears rocked to this music as a young teen in the 70’s. Never been the same since. Welcome to the show young lady. 🔊🎶🎵🎶☝️🥴👍
"Eargasm" I think is the term your looking for.
Welcome to the world of real music.