Led Zeppelin III [Remaster]Led Zeppelin
Release Date: 08/09/1994
Original Release:
1970
# of Discs:
1
J&R Item # 118965_CD
UPC # 075678267826
Label: Atlantic (USA)
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Disc: 1
To listen to sound clips, you'll need the most current version of the
Performer: Led Zeppelin
Engineer: Terry Manning; Andy Johns; Andrew Johns; Terry Manning Producer: Jimmy Page; Peter Grant; Jimmy Page Distributor: WEA (Distributor) Notes: Led Zeppelin: Jimmy Page (slide guitar, pedal steel guitar, banjo, mandolin, background vocals); John Paul Jones (bass instrument); John Bonham, Robert Plant. Personnel: Robert Plant (vocals, harmonica); Jimmy Page (guitar, acoustic guitar, electric guitar); John Paul Jones (keyboards); John Bonham (drums); Viram Jasani (tabla). Additional personnel: Viram Jasani. Audio Mixers: Eddie Kramer; Andy Johns. Audio Remasterers: Jimmy Page; George Marino. Liner Note Author: Kaz Akaiwa. Recording information: Ardent Studios, Memphis, TN (1970); Headley Grange, Hampshire, England (1970); Island Studios, London, England (1970); London, England (1970); Olympic Studios, London, England (1970). Arrangers: Robert Plant; Jimmy Page; Charles Obscure. On their first two albums, Led Zeppelin unleashed a relentless barrage of heavy blues and rockabilly riffs, but Led Zeppelin III provided the band with the necessary room to grow musically. While there are still a handful of metallic rockers, III is built on a folky, acoustic foundation that gives the music extra depth. And even the rockers aren't as straightforward as before: the galloping "Immigrant Song" is powered by Robert Plant's banshee wail, "Celebration Day" turns blues-rock inside out with a warped slide guitar riff, and "Out on the Tiles" lumbers along with a tricky, multi-part riff. Nevertheless, the heart of the album lies on the second side, when the band delve deeply into English folk. "Gallows Pole" updates a traditional tune with a menacing flair, and "Bron-Y-Aur Stomp" is an infectious acoustic romp, while "That's the Way" and "Tangerine" are shimmering songs with graceful country flourishes. The band hasn't left the blues behind, but the twisted bottleneck blues of "Hats off to (Roy) Harper" actually outstrips the epic "Since I've Been Loving You," which is the only time Zeppelin sound a bit set in their ways. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine LED ZEPPELIN III is the sound of rock's brash enfants terrible beginning to mature. While the take-no-prisoners blues-rock of the first two albums is still prominent in the band's tool box, other implements are beginning to appear. The delicate acoustic whispers that would run through much of ZEPPELIN IV have their folk/blues antecedents here (the lambent "That's the Way," the earthy "Bron-Y-Aur Stomp"), the results of the band's creative encampment in a woodland dwelling. At the same time, the heavier tracks are unprecedented in their ferocious swagger. Robert Plant's bone-chilling battle cry and the band's savage riffing on "The Immigrant Song" do full justice to the song's Viking imagery, and it's easy to believe that the "hammer of the gods" Plant sings about is being swung straight in your direction.
Rolling Stone (11/26/70, p.34) - "...their music is as ephemeral as Marvel Comics, and as vivid as an old Technicolor cartoon....Their albums refine the crude public tools of all dull white blues bands into something awesome..." -Lester Bangs
Q (11/94, p.143) - 5 Stars - "...Zeppelin were spinning around like a carousel...from the crunchy riff anthems ('Immigrant Song') to blues rollercoasters ('Since I've Been Loving You') to tail-shaking boogie ('Out On The Tiles')..."
Formed from the ashes of British blues-rockers the Yardbirds, Led Zeppelin shot to the stratosphere in the early 1970s. With Dionysian frenzy and a blast of blues-drenched riffs, they became one of the biggest bands of the era. Their intense musical excursions helped define the sound of hard rock, while their penchant for folk balladry added to their mystique as rock gods. The group called it quits after the death of drummer John Bonham in 1980, and remaining members Robert Plant, Jimmy Page, and John Paul Jones pursued (mostly) separate musical ventures.
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Influences:
Briggs, Anne Burnette, Johnny Cream Dixon, Willie Graham, Davy Hendrix, Jimi Holmes, Jake Jansch, Bert Johnson, Blind Willie Leadbelly Memphis Minnie Renbourn, John Spirit (Rock)
Similar Genres:
British Folk Rock |