Never really thought about it too much, but the reviewer is right. Throughout their carrier, they often, left the song proper for extended calls and responses, and additional playing. But also, isn't that why we love them ? Besides, so many other bands were also doing that same thing around this time. Stretching out and jamming set the FM bands apart from the AM bands. Growth was all around, not like today. Maybe music can't grow any further.
I think Led Zeppelin usually did a good job - especially in there earlier shows, of not indulging in too much call and response and overall additional playing as you say. It’s a fine line but they tend to hold it pretty well. However I will say for this concert and in this one song we can hear it’s quite obvious that they’re taking it a bit too far for this show. Especially Robert in this show, as much as I love hearing him, he gets borderline annoying in this recording. I can see how a whole show of this vocal improvisation could get annoying, especially if you came to see The Who and the band before them won’t get off the stage.
@@nastyjazz2282 I guess it all depends on what you are looking for in popular rock music. I you are excited to see the headliner band instead of the warm up band in the first place, you're kind of biased to start with. Music was changing so fast back then. Great players were dropping out or dieing. Great bands breaking up right and left.
Some guy said he had to kick Led-Zeppelin off the stage because they went too long on their set! Sounds like Led-Zeppelin to me ;) IF I had a time machine!
I was at that Merriweather show♥️✔🎯1️⃣0️⃣
Hope this is gonna be in the movie hopefully soon to be coming to a theater ..(when they finally get the movie off the ground)
Had my headphones on, got an alert....boom
Cool video!
An exquisite explosion of WLL haha!
Isn’t this the show where (The) Led Zeppelin opened for The Who?
Yes. There was a poster for this show too, it’s worth a small fortune.
I have that poster still, somewhere around here💞🎯
@@bobbyliebling8968 Lucky man you are!
Never really thought about it too much, but the reviewer is right. Throughout their carrier, they often, left the song proper for extended calls and responses, and additional playing. But also, isn't that why we love them ? Besides, so many other bands were also doing that same thing around this time. Stretching out and jamming set the FM bands apart from the AM bands. Growth was all around, not like today. Maybe music can't grow any further.
I think Led Zeppelin usually did a good job - especially in there earlier shows, of not indulging in too much call and response and overall additional playing as you say. It’s a fine line but they tend to hold it pretty well. However I will say for this concert and in this one song we can hear it’s quite obvious that they’re taking it a bit too far for this show. Especially Robert in this show, as much as I love hearing him, he gets borderline annoying in this recording.
I can see how a whole show of this vocal improvisation could get annoying, especially if you came to see The Who and the band before them won’t get off the stage.
@@nastyjazz2282 I guess it all depends on what you are looking for in popular rock music. I you are excited to see the headliner band instead of the warm up band in the first place, you're kind of biased to start with. Music was changing so fast back then. Great players were dropping out or dieing. Great bands breaking up right and left.
Great set! Is The Who's set floating around too?
Some guy said he had to kick Led-Zeppelin off the stage because they went too long on their set! Sounds like Led-Zeppelin to me ;) IF I had a time machine!
This is extraordinary. Did they play Wheaton though?