There is no better musician than John Paul Jones, no better drummer than John Bonham, no better singer than Rober Plant, and no better guitarist than Jimmy Page. Best band ever, never to be equaled.
RUSH is right there with them. But I think Chris Cornell is the best singer ever. Chris was so versatile. I have a separate category for Freddie Mercury; best front man ever.
Now this mah Jam!!! Back in the 70's when this song came out I went to my Black friends and played this song and....they...went...NUTS...I mean absolutely INSANE!!!! Right? It was so FUNKY!!! And the time we were all groovin' to Parliament and The Godfather of Funk, Mr. George Clinton 💙. Right? And then Led Zeppelin put this song out "Trampled Under Foot." We lost our natural minds Brah!!!. And it got played a lot in bars, dance clubs, on the streets, airwaves, etc. Just a Masterpiece song 🎵 Great....great reactions!!!!
I love the little high hat fill Bonham does starting at 6:26 - sort of a call and response with Plant. Such a hard driving beat that no one else could've done it credit. #Bonzo
There is a video on TH-cam of Trampled underfoot synched up to black and white clips of Buzby Berkeley/ Fred Astaire musicals made by 1970’s U.K. music show The Old Grey Whistle Test. Zep stopped appearing on t.v shows once they were established and didn’t bother with videos. So on its release the BBC needed something to accompany it. It’s wonderful and fits brilliantly.
Look! I’ve been sober for over 20 years now. That said. There is something to be said about going out partying at the club, coming home alone, putting on a set of headphones and listening to Physical Graffiti at 2:30 in the morning, in its entirety
@@gylesm8842 Good music was still pumping out when MTV was just music videos. Singing contests on TV and 'reality' shows on MTV later then spread to form American Idol type American Apprentice rot. I do agree when MTV added the ridiculous reality TV shows, ok, then I agree.
I saw them live in 1976 St. Louis MO...stoned to the bone...a lazer light show that would be considered primitive by today's standards. But, damn....they came out, played for four hours straight, no breaks, no encores...none of that. I was shaking like a leaf in the wind on my way out of the arena...
JPJ on the Clavinet and Jimmy’s multiple guitar dubs are standouts, but I’ve never gone to sleep on what Robert and John brought to this one. “A” game all the way makes this one soar….. 🤘😎
This song along with the next two, Kashmir and In the Light, are all in my top ten Zeppelin songs. And coming up, The Wanton Song, also in my top ten, along with Ten Years Gone, which would definitely make my top fifteen or twenty.
Achilles Last Stand, Black Dog, Hot Dog, The Rain Song ... You can make endless combinations of Best Zep Songs. And for that day, they are. New lists in the future as your tastes change or evolve. Great bands like Zep have catalogs that you yourself become them as their tastes evolved.
@@Greg-io1ip Yes, my favorite Zepp songs often change every few months. And can someone please give "Hots on for Nowhere" some love? How does that song never get recognized as a very good song is beyond me.
According to Jimmy, they had about an album and half's worth of music for this album so they decided to pull some songs that had been worked on but not released. This song had a working title of "Brandy and Coke" and yes, as you guys (and others) have mentioned, JPJ said he was inspired by Stevie Wonder's Superstition as well as Billy Preston's Outta Sight for this electric clavinet jam. During the solo, he also adds another clavinet track put through a wah low in the mix. Jones plays regular bass on the audio but had to use the bass pedals on the clavinet during live. The lyrics were inspired by Robert Johnson's song Terraplane Blues which compares a hot rod car with a hot woman. It's a tightly performed, heavy rocker that sees Jimmy utilize some studio techniques like the wah-wah to provide a chunky guitar texture, backward echo, panning guitar strafing and reverb. If you are able to do a live performance, look up one from Earls Court in 1975. There's a few on YT and if you're concerned with not being able to use live due to blocking or copyright, there's a live audio remaster called "Trampled Underfoot (Live at Earls Court 5-24-75) - Remaster" by a creator called Led Zeppelin Boots. Similar to when you did The Song Remains The Same/The Rain Song, you won't see them play but you'll hear the live performance.
John Paul Jones & John Bonham were a brilliant rhythm section and both loved RnB, this song came from one of their jams - JPJ played keys and the bass pedals
There was a lot of funk/groove influence coming over from America in 1975. They picked up on this and so did The Stones with their Black and Blue album around the same time
Greasy slicked-down Groovy leather trim I like the way ya hold the road Mama, it ain't no sin Talking 'bout love I'm talking 'bout love I'm talking 'bout Ooh, trouble-free transmission Helps your oil's flow Mama, let me pump your gas Mama, let me do it all Talking 'bout love, ah Talking 'bout love, oh Talking 'bout Check that heavy metal Underneath your hood Baby, I can work all night Believe I got the perfect tools Talking 'bout love Talking 'bout love Talking 'bout Automobile with comfort Really built with style Specialist tradition Mama, let me feast my eyes Talking 'bout love Talking 'bout love Talking 'bout Factory air-conditioned Heat begins to rise Guaranteed to run for hours Mama, you're the perfect size Talking 'bout love Talking 'bout love Talking 'bout Grooving on the freeway Gauges all are red Gun down on my gasoline Believe I'm gonna crack your head Talking 'bout love Talking 'bout love I'm talking 'bout I can't stop talking about I can't stop talking about Ooh yeah, yes-ah Drive on! Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yes, I'm coming through Come to me for service Every hundred miles Baby, let me check your points Fix your overdrive Talking 'bout love I'm talking 'bout love I'm talking 'bout Oh yes, fully automatic Comes in any size Makes me wonder what I did Before we synchronized Talking 'bout love I'm talking 'bout love I'm talking 'bout Oh-oh, feather-light suspension Corners couldn't hold I'm so glad I took a look Inside your showroom doors Talking 'bout love Talking 'bout love Talking 'bout I can't, I can't Oh, I can't stop talking about love I can't stop talking about love Oh, let me go on down, go on down Go on down, go on down, go on down, yes I can't stop talking 'bout I can't stop talking 'bout love, hey I can't stop talking 'bout love or my baby I can't stop talking 'bout love, my baby My baby, my baby, yeah! Uh Push Push Push it Push Push
Zeppelin's early, blues-based compositions evolved into the familiar LZ sound as the band, especially JPJ, were influenced by the musicianship expected of the early 1970s bands and demonstrated by progressive bands like Pink Floyd, Yes, et. al. Led Zeppelin took their massive talents and applied more challenging compositions and arrangements to produce gems like this song. Physical Graffiti may have had a couple throwaways, but when the album was released, Zeppelin once again blew us away with some of their best songs. Thanks for listening to this entire album!
They just could do anything. So many days at the river blasting this album good good times!! Thank you again for all you insightful and intellectual reactions. It is good to see their music live on🎼🎸🎶✌️
I have always LOVED the groove in this song. The keyboard does sound similar to the Clavinette, that Stevie Wonder uses on the song "Superstition". Great song, great solos, solid drums.
Some of my favorite Led Zeppelin songs are off this album: Trampled under foot, Boogie with Stu, Black Country Woman, Houses of the Holy, Ten Years Gone By and Down by the Seaside....this is good stuff right here
Really enjoy the live version too. I have heard that live (not sure of the truth of it), JPJ played keyboards with his hands and the bass line with his feet.
I'll be 62 years of age this year and KASHMIR was the most brilliant song ever written to be performed in the history of music and I've endured the greatest of eras in music during my lifetime as there where many greats, but this song is by far the greatest of all time during my 62 years. Led Zeppelin was the GREATEST, HAS BEEN THE GREATEST, AND WILL ALWAYS BE THE GREATEST OF ALL TIME IN ROCK HISTORY and Queen will ALWAYS BE SECOND because of the collective diversity of music they provided their fans.
Sounds like there are 8 people in the band. 😆 They were just that good. If you have the time, give their performance of this during their '75 Earls Court concert a listen/watch. Excellent! Glad you enjoyed this one. It's one of my favorites. Love the groove.
Recorded for “Physical Graffiti” in 1974: In The Light, Ten Years Gone, Kashmir, The Wanton Song, Sick Again, Custard Pie, Trampled Underfoot. Recorded prior: Bron-Y-Aur, The Rover (‘70), Night Flight, Boogie With Stu, Down By The Seaside (left off ‘IV’ in ‘71), Black Country Woman, Houses of The Holy (‘73).
That opening riff by John Paul gets me every time!! Apparently inspired by the Stevie Wonder song Superstition (both amazing use of the clavinet!). He continues that groove through. Then comes Bonham's driving beats...I still consider these two one of the best rhythm sections in all of rock!! Plant is just wailing away, and Jimmy is being Jimmy. Absolutely LOVE this track!! One of my faves off Physical Graffiti.
Great reaction guys. I didn't hear the compilation story, I remember in an interview Page being asked why a double album and he said "we just had so much we decided to make it a double album".
Love the dazzling white shirts but you guys look good in whatever you wear and I love the different caps you wear. Great song, love Led Zeppelin of course.
From what I can tell the tracks recorded at Headly Grange in 1974 are: Side 1 - Custard Pie In My Time of Dying Side 2 - Trampled Under Foot Kashmir Side 3 - In the Light Ten Years Gone Side 4 - The Wanton Song Sick Again
Ned from Spain as always down for the Zeppelin and watching you guys groovin with it. This song just moves, seems like it could on forever with Bonham and JPJ on the solid pocket. I agree with Che that Plant's voice sounds a tad rough and kinda tore up but he's still is killing it. The fatigue is understandable as groups back then played almost non stop between the studio and concerts that lasted between 2 to 3 hours. Page adding the phazey backwards guitars as well as the wah wah, JPJ smacking that Clavinet and everybody havin a funky good time !
This song was part of the recording sessions for "Physical Graffiti, but they had been jamming and developing it for a couple years. "Trampled Under Foot" was played at every Led Zeppelin concert following the release of the album.
After a couple re-listens, I feel like this album is better taken in as a whole. A couple songs stand out on there own, but as a whole album it really is beautiful.
I believe I read once where this song was inspired by Stevie Wonders superstition. I know I have referenced it before but they do a tremendous uptempo version of this song live at earls court in 1975 with JPJ, Page and Bonham all just killing it simultaneously. Page give a terrific Adlib guitar solo in the middle of it. You could always tell when page was feeling it because he would settle in right in front of Bonzos kick drum. It must have given him all the confidence in the world to just let it rip playing in front of such a powerhouse. Any way thanks for doing the reaction videos. You are probably my favorite reaction channel
Enjoyed your reaction guys, spot on. I've heard that when they played this live, JPJ was on keyboards but playing bass with his feet! Anyone else, I just wouldn't believe it.
The lyrics were based on Robert Johnson's 1936 "Terraplane Blues." A Terraplane is a classic car, and the song uses car parts as metaphors for sex: "pump your gas," "rev all night," etc
I was waiting for this one. They had no peers. Absolute killer. I am willing to say this side of vinyl with Houses of the Holy, Trampled Underfoot and soon to be reviewed Kashmir is untouchable in rock pantheon.
Each individual in this band is considered in the top best in their instrument (voice is an instrument). Called best rock band. their variety in the music covered all gendres. this is what music is
If you listen to "It's A New Day" by James Brown, the intro to Soul Man by Sam & Dave, and Outta Space by Billy Preston, you can hear all of them. Led Zepp did their thing with this one!!!!!!!
You are literally steamrolled by this tune, them at one of their most relentless paces. Great tune, as are almost the entire album. I can't wait for the Wanton Song and Sick Again, the best tunes for me on side 4, bone crushing Zeppelin Rock. This is a shiny diamond of a catalog, eh? Amazing and enjoy! 🎵🎸🎤🎹🎶
Haha, yeah, on a bootleg once Robert intro'd it with something like "This next song is supposedly about a motorcar, but it's really...just about ...moving parts!"
The lyrics are hilarious. Obviously Plant is singing about a woman but every line is describing the parts of some kind of classic sports-car metaphorically. Reminds me of "The Lemon Song". They made music that was fun, adventurous, and dangerous.
Its rumoured that Queen wrote "Im in love with my car" because of TU,( my all time favourorite LZ song) the other rumour is Queen wrote BRapsody as their STHeaven. All excellent songs.
No doubt each member is the best at their discipline. To me JPJ is usually the secret weapon, but I always key on what Page is doing. His guitar fills really make every song.
It's Bonzo playing just behind the beat, as tight as a MFer, that keeps this whole jam percolating...even throwing in some James Brown licks near the end. Dude was the groove king.
Page used a lot of really awesome recording techniques and effects that accentuated every song. I don’t think he used a bow since Led Zeppelin 1, but he frequently did a ton of creative work with the wah pedal, echo and delay effects, phasing effects and multi tracking to get the atmospherics he wanted. He was probably the greatest rock guitar composer, producer and studio wizard. Maybe some of the progressive rock guys - Gilmour, Fripp etc - were like that, but Page also rocked.
Page as the most prolific song writer who also played those original guitar riffs he created had an advantage of a wide open landscape. And he landscaped the yard he created full of lush gardens. I'd say a guy like Tom Scholz and Eric Johnson are more accomplished with equipment and technical studio abilities. But Jimmy Page so original so many songs you want to hear. I'm a big Alex Lifeson fan over his creativity and originality. Doesn't get the credit he's due. Same with Tony Iommi. But Jimmy Page has a body of work tough to question. Such a unique band who wouldn't be anything near what they became with any members except the 4 who became Led Zeppelin. They made an amazing team.
As far as Zep studio recordings go, he used the bow on three songs: Dazed and Confused, How Many More Times, and In The Light. Many people think he used the bow on In The Evening, but that is only true in live shows, not on the album.
@@Greg-io1ip I don’t know if Eric Johnson and Tom Scholz are more accomplished than Page in the studio. As great as they are, they really each have only one signature sound. And they came in later than Page using more advanced equipment. Page recorded Zep 1 - the whole album - on an 8 track in 30 hours! And that’s the most vibe-y hard rock record ever. Page had hundreds of ideas for sounds - including drum recording - that he could get in the studio with incredible ingenuity and vision. Credit of course also to JPJ, Glyn Johns, Andy John’s and Eddie Kramer (the greatest hard rock sound engineers of the era), but no one had the breadth of musical vision and competence Page possessed, right through Presence, at least not since Hendrix.
I've been trying lately to hear associations between this albums' songs and the songs on the previous albums from the years these songs were recorded. I don't think I've come up with much, and I think that may be because Zep created such a variety of musical styles in their work after their first two albums that everything just sounds like Zep. Anyway, I made these lists so I thought I'd post them in case anyone else is interested. Track Title Past Assoc Album Rec Year 1 Custard Pie 1974 2 The Rover Houses of the Holy 1972 3 In My Time of Dying 1974 4 Houses of the Holy Houses of the Holy 1972 5 Trampled Under Foot 1974 6 Kashmir 1974 7 In the Light 1974 8 Bron-Yr-Aur Led Zeppelin III 1970 9 Down by the Seaside Led Zeppelin IV 1971 10 Ten Years Gone 1974 11 Night Flight Led Zeppelin IV 1971 12 The Wanton Song 1974 13 Boogie with Stu Led Zeppelin IV 1971 14 Black Country Woman Houses of the Holy 1972 15 Sick Again 1974 Chronological order: Track Title Past Assoc Album Rec Year 8 Bron-Yr-Aur Led Zeppelin III 1970 9 Down by the Seaside Led Zeppelin IV 1971 11 Night Flight Led Zeppelin IV 1971 13 Boogie with Stu Led Zeppelin IV 1971 2 The Rover Houses of the Holy 1972 4 Houses of the Holy Houses of the Holy 1972 14 Black Country Woman Houses of the Holy 1972 1 Custard Pie Physical Graffiti 1974 3 In My Time of Dying Physical Graffiti 1974 5 Trampled Under Foot Physical Graffiti 1974 6 Kashmir Physical Graffiti 1974 7 In the Light Physical Graffiti 1974 10 Ten Years Gone Physical Graffiti 1974 12 The Wanton Song Physical Graffiti 1974 15 Sick Again Physical Graffiti 1974
Bonham locking it down as always. JPJ killing it, Page just some gnarly surfing over the top of it all and Plant just groovin' with some gritty vocals.
Great Zeppelin reactions fellas! Zeppelin is one of the greatest bands assembled. Can't wait for you guys to discover Tool. John Bonham is greatly looked up to by Danny Carey, who also one of the all time greats. Tool actually does an amazing cover of No Quarter. Check it out!
I had my old band play this. The drummer was twenty some years younger than us and didn't know if the song before he joined us, so when it was time to play it I just told him "the Dinosaur Stomp"
Plants vocal delivery on this track is straight up attitude and grit! Fuck he’s so damn good!!
There is no better musician than John Paul Jones, no better drummer than John Bonham, no better singer than Rober Plant, and no better guitarist than Jimmy Page. Best band ever, never to be equaled.
Two words... Taylor Swift
😂😂😂😂
@@lperea21 Ha ha ,,well ok you win /**/
@@w.geoffreyspaulding6588 Yeah you're right. But they were all in the same band!
RUSH is right there with them. But I think Chris Cornell is the best singer ever. Chris was so versatile. I have a separate category for Freddie Mercury; best front man ever.
@@julienmarquet8612 you make a valid argument Julien. 😊
Can't wait for "In the Light"
Ditto such a masterpiece!!
Oh yeah!!
Add The Wanton Song and Ten Years Gone and I’m with ya. That second disc is the sh*t. 🤘😎
In the Light is my current favorite LZ tune. Fifty years of listening; there’s always something to discover and it never gets old!
@@benvenue2730 agreed it puts me in my zone every time.
One of those songs that if you're driving be careful, cause it gonna make you go faster.
Now this mah Jam!!! Back in the 70's when this song came out I went to my Black friends and played this song and....they...went...NUTS...I mean absolutely INSANE!!!! Right? It was so FUNKY!!! And the time we were all groovin' to Parliament and The Godfather of Funk, Mr. George Clinton 💙. Right? And then Led Zeppelin put this song out "Trampled Under Foot." We lost our natural minds Brah!!!. And it got played a lot in bars, dance clubs, on the streets, airwaves, etc. Just a Masterpiece song 🎵 Great....great reactions!!!!
A masterpiece of an album. Check out
"Ten Years Gone"
They're going through the whole album in order.
@@APAL880
Thank you for the info, that's good to know.
I love the little high hat fill Bonham does starting at 6:26 - sort of a call and response with Plant. Such a hard driving beat that no one else could've done it credit. #Bonzo
“Come to me for service/Every hundred miles/Baby let me check your points/Fix your overdrive…”
A song that steps all over you.
Big feet! No joke.
The amazing JPJ on the keys...bass with his feet...and an awesome funky song from the greatest band ever!!
I know he did that in concert but surely they could record the bass separatly in the studio?
You ever notice how focused JPJ is on the live one at Earls Court. Not his usual laid back self. He must be playing some hard chit!
Actually Jones was directly influenced by Stevie Wonder’s Superstitious. Talk about a funk groove! This is definitely a great one to blast in the car.
You ever notice how focused JPJ is on the live one at Earls Court. Not his usual laid back self. He must be playing some hard chit!
One of my absolute favorites. Just a gritty funk masterpiece.
Next one is a MONSTER boys. Strap in.
There is a video on TH-cam of Trampled underfoot synched up to black and white clips of Buzby Berkeley/ Fred Astaire musicals made by 1970’s U.K. music show The Old Grey Whistle Test. Zep stopped appearing on t.v shows once they were established and didn’t bother with videos. So on its release the BBC needed something to accompany it. It’s wonderful and fits brilliantly.
Look! I’ve been sober for over 20 years now. That said. There is something to be said about going out partying at the club, coming home alone, putting on a set of headphones and listening to Physical Graffiti at 2:30 in the morning, in its entirety
I wish musicians still made epic timeless albums like this.
Auto tune killed it
MTV killed it
@@gylesm8842 Good music was still pumping out when MTV was just music videos. Singing contests on TV and 'reality' shows on MTV later then spread to form American Idol type American Apprentice rot. I do agree when MTV added the ridiculous reality TV shows, ok, then I agree.
so do thy
If they were smart, they would try🤔
Ten years gone is my personal favorite.
I saw them live in 1976 St. Louis MO...stoned to the bone...a lazer light show that would be considered primitive by today's standards.
But, damn....they came out, played for four hours straight, no breaks, no encores...none of that.
I was shaking like a leaf in the wind on my way out of the arena...
Would have been 75 or 77, they didn’t tour in 76
@@dickcnormis1444 Guess it was 77....substances were involved (cough)
@@David-cf2iq No problem as long as you remembered the concert, 😂.
@@dickcnormis1444 I checked the concert schedule. It was April 15 1977.
@@David-cf2iq Nice!
JPJ on the Clavinet and Jimmy’s multiple guitar dubs are standouts, but I’ve never gone to sleep on what Robert and John brought to this one. “A” game all the way makes this one soar….. 🤘😎
This song along with the next two, Kashmir and In the Light, are all in my top ten Zeppelin songs. And coming up, The Wanton Song, also in my top ten, along with Ten Years Gone, which would definitely make my top fifteen or twenty.
It's funny, almost every one has a top 3 or 4 Zepp songs from this album. But except for Kashmir, they are rarely the same songs. LOL.
Mine would be, In my Time of Dying, Trampled Underfoot and Kashmir. But I also love, The Rover, the Wanton Song and Tens Years Gone a lot as well.
Achilles Last Stand, Black Dog, Hot Dog, The Rain Song ... You can make endless combinations of Best Zep Songs. And for that day, they are. New lists in the future as your tastes change or evolve. Great bands like Zep have catalogs that you yourself become them as their tastes evolved.
@@Greg-io1ip Yes, my favorite Zepp songs often change every few months. And can someone please give "Hots on for Nowhere" some love? How does that song never get recognized as a very good song is beyond me.
@@boki1693 Ah, forgot In My Time of Dying! Also top 15-20.
According to Jimmy, they had about an album and half's worth of music for this album so they decided to pull some songs that had been worked on but not released. This song had a working title of "Brandy and Coke" and yes, as you guys (and others) have mentioned, JPJ said he was inspired by Stevie Wonder's Superstition as well as Billy Preston's Outta Sight for this electric clavinet jam. During the solo, he also adds another clavinet track put through a wah low in the mix. Jones plays regular bass on the audio but had to use the bass pedals on the clavinet during live. The lyrics were inspired by Robert Johnson's song Terraplane Blues which compares a hot rod car with a hot woman. It's a tightly performed, heavy rocker that sees Jimmy utilize some studio techniques like the wah-wah to provide a chunky guitar texture, backward echo, panning guitar strafing and reverb. If you are able to do a live performance, look up one from Earls Court in 1975. There's a few on YT and if you're concerned with not being able to use live due to blocking or copyright, there's a live audio remaster called "Trampled Underfoot (Live at Earls Court 5-24-75) - Remaster" by a creator called Led Zeppelin Boots. Similar to when you did The Song Remains The Same/The Rain Song, you won't see them play but you'll hear the live performance.
John Paul Jones & John Bonham were a brilliant rhythm section and both loved RnB, this song came from one of their jams - JPJ played keys and the bass pedals
There was a lot of funk/groove influence coming over from America in 1975. They picked up on this and so did The Stones with their Black and Blue album around the same time
I really really look forward to the Zeppelin reactions guys... Thank you
Greasy slicked-down
Groovy leather trim
I like the way ya hold the road
Mama, it ain't no sin
Talking 'bout love
I'm talking 'bout love
I'm talking 'bout
Ooh, trouble-free transmission
Helps your oil's flow
Mama, let me pump your gas
Mama, let me do it all
Talking 'bout love, ah
Talking 'bout love, oh
Talking 'bout
Check that heavy metal
Underneath your hood
Baby, I can work all night
Believe I got the perfect tools
Talking 'bout love
Talking 'bout love
Talking 'bout
Automobile with comfort
Really built with style
Specialist tradition
Mama, let me feast my eyes
Talking 'bout love
Talking 'bout love
Talking 'bout
Factory air-conditioned
Heat begins to rise
Guaranteed to run for hours
Mama, you're the perfect size
Talking 'bout love
Talking 'bout love
Talking 'bout
Grooving on the freeway
Gauges all are red
Gun down on my gasoline
Believe I'm gonna crack your head
Talking 'bout love
Talking 'bout love
I'm talking 'bout
I can't stop talking about
I can't stop talking about
Ooh yeah, yes-ah
Drive on!
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yes, I'm coming through
Come to me for service
Every hundred miles
Baby, let me check your points
Fix your overdrive
Talking 'bout love
I'm talking 'bout love
I'm talking 'bout
Oh yes, fully automatic
Comes in any size
Makes me wonder what I did
Before we synchronized
Talking 'bout love
I'm talking 'bout love
I'm talking 'bout
Oh-oh, feather-light suspension
Corners couldn't hold
I'm so glad I took a look
Inside your showroom doors
Talking 'bout love
Talking 'bout love
Talking 'bout
I can't, I can't
Oh, I can't stop talking about love
I can't stop talking about love
Oh, let me go on down, go on down
Go on down, go on down, go on down, yes
I can't stop talking 'bout
I can't stop talking 'bout love, hey
I can't stop talking 'bout love or my baby
I can't stop talking 'bout love, my baby
My baby, my baby, yeah!
Uh
Push
Push
Push it
Push
Push
Thank you for sharing
@@robertbrenneman5367 You’re welcome..enjoy the weekend ✌️
Zeppelin's early, blues-based compositions evolved into the familiar LZ sound as the band, especially JPJ, were influenced by the musicianship expected of the early 1970s bands and demonstrated by progressive bands like Pink Floyd, Yes, et. al. Led Zeppelin took their massive talents and applied more challenging compositions and arrangements to produce gems like this song. Physical Graffiti may have had a couple throwaways, but when the album was released, Zeppelin once again blew us away with some of their best songs. Thanks for listening to this entire album!
They just could do anything. So many days at the river blasting this album good good times!! Thank you again for all you insightful and intellectual reactions. It is good to see their music live on🎼🎸🎶✌️
This song and Kashmir have the best grooves.
It just keeps getting better and better as you go
Baby's , teens , parents , aunts , uncles , grandparents - everybody is a Led Zeppelin fan either secretly or openly
Another example of how awesome and integral JPJ was to the band…..and yes post surgery for Plant
Those drums and bass are slamming that rhythm hard. The guitar riff is great. Zepp can't be dissected, they're all great in all aspects.
I have always LOVED the groove in this song. The keyboard does sound similar to the Clavinette, that Stevie Wonder uses on the song "Superstition". Great song, great solos, solid drums.
So funky. An all timer.
Some of my favorite Led Zeppelin songs are off this album: Trampled under foot, Boogie with Stu, Black Country Woman, Houses of the Holy, Ten Years Gone By and Down by the Seaside....this is good stuff right here
Hard driving nonstop funky groove. Probably one of my top 5 favorite Zeppelin tunes
Really enjoy the live version too. I have heard that live (not sure of the truth of it), JPJ played keyboards with his hands and the bass line with his feet.
I'll be 62 years of age this year and KASHMIR was the most brilliant song ever written to be performed in the history of music and I've endured the greatest of eras in music during my lifetime as there where many greats, but this song is by far the greatest of all time during my 62 years. Led Zeppelin was the GREATEST, HAS BEEN THE GREATEST, AND WILL ALWAYS BE THE GREATEST OF ALL TIME IN ROCK HISTORY and Queen will ALWAYS BE SECOND because of the collective diversity of music they provided their fans.
Live JPJ played the clav part with his hands and the bass with his feet! Total monster!
Can’t wIt for Ten Years Gone.
Welcome to great music I'm 65 and heard it
More Led for my head!
Dammit man, 4 of the greatest monster musicians!!! Love that in yer face sh#t....Bring it.
The greatest rock album by the GOATS
Sounds like there are 8 people in the band. 😆 They were just that good. If you have the time, give their performance of this during their '75 Earls Court concert a listen/watch. Excellent!
Glad you enjoyed this one. It's one of my favorites. Love the groove.
Recorded for “Physical Graffiti” in 1974: In The Light, Ten Years Gone, Kashmir, The Wanton Song, Sick Again, Custard Pie, Trampled Underfoot. Recorded prior: Bron-Y-Aur, The Rover (‘70), Night Flight, Boogie With Stu, Down By The Seaside (left off ‘IV’ in ‘71), Black Country Woman, Houses of The Holy (‘73).
That opening riff by John Paul gets me every time!! Apparently inspired by the Stevie Wonder song Superstition (both amazing use of the clavinet!). He continues that groove through. Then comes Bonham's driving beats...I still consider these two one of the best rhythm sections in all of rock!! Plant is just wailing away, and Jimmy is being Jimmy.
Absolutely LOVE this track!! One of my faves off Physical Graffiti.
The GREATEST rock band of ALLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLL time!!!
Great reaction guys. I didn't hear the compilation story, I remember in an interview Page being asked why a double album and he said "we just had so much we decided to make it a double album".
One of Zeppelin's funkiest songs.
Love the dazzling white shirts but you guys look good in whatever you wear and I love the different caps you wear. Great song, love Led Zeppelin of course.
From what I can tell the tracks recorded at Headly Grange in 1974 are:
Side 1 - Custard Pie
In My Time of Dying
Side 2 - Trampled Under Foot
Kashmir
Side 3 - In the Light
Ten Years Gone
Side 4 - The Wanton Song
Sick Again
yeah, i agree with this list
Love the Dubs hat. Epic songs being served next. Hope you boys are ready! Can’t wait and nice job!
Ned from Spain as always down for the Zeppelin and watching you guys groovin with it. This song just moves, seems like it could on forever with Bonham and JPJ on the solid pocket. I agree with Che that Plant's voice sounds a tad rough and kinda tore up but he's still is killing it. The fatigue is understandable as groups back then played almost non stop between the studio and concerts that lasted between 2 to 3 hours. Page adding the phazey backwards guitars as well as the wah wah, JPJ smacking that Clavinet and everybody havin a funky good time !
Plant's lyrics are pure innuendo , all my best to you and yours from Liverpool
you guys are the best, speaking of best for me the next song Kashmir is my all time fav Lz even over stairway to heaven.
For years, my favorite Zep. tune.... decades. Just an addictive jam.
This song was part of the recording sessions for "Physical Graffiti, but they had been jamming and developing it for a couple years. "Trampled Under Foot" was played at every Led Zeppelin concert following the release of the album.
What a funk driven groove!
After a couple re-listens, I feel like this album is better taken in as a whole. A couple songs stand out on there own, but as a whole album it really is beautiful.
The next song is the BIG one!!! This one is great and there are some other of my absolutel favorites coming, like 10 Years Gone & Night Flight...yay!
I believe I read once where this song was inspired by Stevie Wonders superstition. I know I have referenced it before but they do a tremendous uptempo version of this song live at earls court in 1975 with JPJ, Page and Bonham all just killing it simultaneously. Page give a terrific Adlib guitar solo in the middle of it. You could always tell when page was feeling it because he would settle in right in front of Bonzos kick drum. It must have given him all the confidence in the world to just let it rip playing in front of such a powerhouse. Any way thanks for doing the reaction videos. You are probably my favorite reaction channel
Enjoyed your reaction guys, spot on. I've heard that when they played this live, JPJ was on keyboards but playing bass with his feet! Anyone else, I just wouldn't believe it.
I didn't know this album was a collection of Zep deep tracks. Damnit, grew up before the internet and all ;)
Need to watch the live version from 2007 at O2 in London - 60+ years old and they KILLED this tune
The lyrics were based on Robert Johnson's 1936 "Terraplane Blues." A Terraplane is a classic car, and the song uses car parts as metaphors for sex: "pump your gas," "rev all night," etc
All around great album….great music, friends, medication….great for an oiled up evening….
This is probably my favorite album of all-time
Put this on when driving the interstate. Perfect!
I was waiting for this one. They had no peers. Absolute killer. I am willing to say this side of vinyl with Houses of the Holy, Trampled Underfoot and soon to be reviewed Kashmir is untouchable in rock pantheon.
One of my favorite Led Zeppelin songs!
Each individual in this band is considered in the top best in their instrument (voice is an instrument). Called best rock band. their variety in the music covered all gendres. this is what music is
This is SUCH a driving-in-the-desert song for me! Love it!
Great funk/rock fusion track. Love it ❤
Followed 💜✌️✨
If you listen to "It's A New Day" by James Brown, the intro to Soul Man by Sam & Dave, and Outta Space by Billy Preston, you can hear all of them. Led Zepp did their thing with this one!!!!!!!
High energy song. Keeps on chugging.
When you guys get to Bron Yr Aur it is the shortest song , you should do Down By The Seaside at the same time. They really go good together.
You are literally steamrolled by this tune, them at one of their most relentless paces. Great tune, as are almost the entire album. I can't wait for the Wanton Song and Sick Again, the best tunes for me on side 4, bone crushing Zeppelin Rock. This is a shiny diamond of a catalog, eh? Amazing and enjoy! 🎵🎸🎤🎹🎶
You can understand the young rock singer's love for his new Jaguar XKE after hearing this
That's how you do it right there.
Totally agree.
Led Zeppelin’s best
Love it! It's a song about comparing a car to a woman.such a great album!
Haha, yeah, on a bootleg once Robert intro'd it with something like "This next song is supposedly about a motorcar, but it's really...just about ...moving parts!"
Thank you Led Zeppelin 🙌
One of their top 10 times
The lyrics are hilarious. Obviously Plant is singing about a woman but every line is describing the parts of some kind of classic sports-car metaphorically. Reminds me of "The Lemon Song". They made music that was fun, adventurous, and dangerous.
Its rumoured that Queen wrote "Im in love with my car" because of TU,( my all time favourorite LZ song) the other rumour is Queen wrote BRapsody as their STHeaven. All excellent songs.
And now for something completely different, well, In a few, "Down By the Seaside". Luvit.
No doubt each member is the best at their discipline. To me JPJ is usually the secret weapon, but I always key on what Page is doing. His guitar fills really make every song.
It's Bonzo playing just behind the beat, as tight as a MFer, that keeps this whole jam percolating...even throwing in some James Brown licks near the end. Dude was the groove king.
Talking about love.
Page used a lot of really awesome recording techniques and effects that accentuated every song. I don’t think he used a bow since Led Zeppelin 1, but he frequently did a ton of creative work with the wah pedal, echo and delay effects, phasing effects and multi tracking to get the atmospherics he wanted. He was probably the greatest rock guitar composer, producer and studio wizard. Maybe some of the progressive rock guys - Gilmour, Fripp etc - were like that, but Page also rocked.
Page as the most prolific song writer who also played those original guitar riffs he created had an advantage of a wide open landscape. And he landscaped the yard he created full of lush gardens. I'd say a guy like Tom Scholz and Eric Johnson are more accomplished with equipment and technical studio abilities. But Jimmy Page so original so many songs you want to hear. I'm a big Alex Lifeson fan over his creativity and originality. Doesn't get the credit he's due. Same with Tony Iommi. But Jimmy Page has a body of work tough to question. Such a unique band who wouldn't be anything near what they became with any members except the 4 who became Led Zeppelin. They made an amazing team.
@@Greg-io1ip I also love all the guys you mentioned.
As far as Zep studio recordings go, he used the bow on three songs: Dazed and Confused, How Many More Times, and In The Light. Many people think he used the bow on In The Evening, but that is only true in live shows, not on the album.
The only other time besides LZ 1 that Jimmy used a bow was the intro to In The Evening.
@@Greg-io1ip I don’t know if Eric Johnson and Tom Scholz are more accomplished than Page in the studio. As great as they are, they really each have only one signature sound. And they came in later than Page using more advanced equipment. Page recorded Zep 1 - the whole album - on an 8 track in 30 hours! And that’s the most vibe-y hard rock record ever. Page had hundreds of ideas for sounds - including drum recording - that he could get in the studio with incredible ingenuity and vision. Credit of course also to JPJ, Glyn Johns, Andy John’s and Eddie Kramer (the greatest hard rock sound engineers of the era), but no one had the breadth of musical vision and competence Page possessed, right through Presence, at least not since Hendrix.
I've been trying lately to hear associations between this albums' songs and the songs on the previous albums from the years these songs were recorded. I don't think I've come up with much, and I think that may be because Zep created such a variety of musical styles in their work after their first two albums that everything just sounds like Zep. Anyway, I made these lists so I thought I'd post them in case anyone else is interested.
Track Title Past Assoc Album Rec Year
1 Custard Pie 1974
2 The Rover Houses of the Holy 1972
3 In My Time of Dying 1974
4 Houses of the Holy Houses of the Holy 1972
5 Trampled Under Foot 1974
6 Kashmir 1974
7 In the Light 1974
8 Bron-Yr-Aur Led Zeppelin III 1970
9 Down by the Seaside Led Zeppelin IV 1971
10 Ten Years Gone 1974
11 Night Flight Led Zeppelin IV 1971
12 The Wanton Song 1974
13 Boogie with Stu Led Zeppelin IV 1971
14 Black Country Woman Houses of the Holy 1972
15 Sick Again 1974
Chronological order:
Track Title Past Assoc Album Rec Year
8 Bron-Yr-Aur Led Zeppelin III 1970
9 Down by the Seaside Led Zeppelin IV 1971
11 Night Flight Led Zeppelin IV 1971
13 Boogie with Stu Led Zeppelin IV 1971
2 The Rover Houses of the Holy 1972
4 Houses of the Holy Houses of the Holy 1972
14 Black Country Woman Houses of the Holy 1972
1 Custard Pie Physical Graffiti 1974
3 In My Time of Dying Physical Graffiti 1974
5 Trampled Under Foot Physical Graffiti 1974
6 Kashmir Physical Graffiti 1974
7 In the Light Physical Graffiti 1974
10 Ten Years Gone Physical Graffiti 1974
12 The Wanton Song Physical Graffiti 1974
15 Sick Again Physical Graffiti 1974
Love that beat!!
Bonham locking it down as always. JPJ killing it, Page just some gnarly surfing over the top of it all and Plant just groovin' with some gritty vocals.
Knew you'd like this one ...what a funky groove!
oh and hey - congrats on 20K subscribers! more to come!
Great Zeppelin reactions fellas! Zeppelin is one of the greatest bands assembled. Can't wait for you guys to discover Tool. John Bonham is greatly looked up to by Danny Carey, who also one of the all time greats. Tool actually does an amazing cover of No Quarter. Check it out!
Ten Years Gone will be special.
I had my old band play this. The drummer was twenty some years younger than us and didn't know if the song before he joined us, so when it was time to play it I just told him "the Dinosaur Stomp"
Underrated song i love it!❤
Totally awesome song.. There really hitting it on this one fast and hard! Great everything..RP..JP..BONZO..JPJ
JPJ is just a force of nature on this one. So funky