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Rhonda Ross

Joined: 30 Oct 2004 Posts: 1066 Location: Los Banos,Ca
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MikeyDio

Joined: 01 Jul 2006 Posts: 93 Location: Isle of Man
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Posted: Mon Dec 10, 2007 6:48 pm Post subject: |
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Does anyone know anyone who was/is there tonight? I really wanna hear how it went!! _________________ If I speak at one constant volume. at one constant pitch. at one constant rhythm.
Right into your ear, you still wont hear. |
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Rhonda Ross

Joined: 30 Oct 2004 Posts: 1066 Location: Los Banos,Ca
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Rhonda Ross

Joined: 30 Oct 2004 Posts: 1066 Location: Los Banos,Ca
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Brollachan
Joined: 17 Mar 2006 Posts: 123 Location: Poznan, Poland
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Posted: Wed Dec 12, 2007 10:00 am Post subject: |
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WOW!!! Thanks for the footage! Kashmir rulezzzzzz. And so does Robert. Just listen to his input between 2:04 and 2:10 Hooooooo yyyeeeeaaaahhhh. Yes, this man still knows how to do his job:) Properly  |
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Rhonda Ross

Joined: 30 Oct 2004 Posts: 1066 Location: Los Banos,Ca
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Posted: Thu Dec 20, 2007 12:32 pm Post subject: |
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I just found this on blahmouth... and I hope its fkn true!!
MonstersAndCritics.com reports that LED ZEPPELIN will headline next year's Glastonbury Festival.
The legendary rock group who played a sensational comeback concert at London's O2 arena earlier this month will take to the stage for the world-famous musical extravaganza, in Somerset, England, before embarking on an 18-month world tour.
A source close to the band Robert Plant, Jimmy Page, John Paul Jones and drummer Jason Bonham, who has replaced his late father John Bonham said: "It will kick off at next year's Glastonbury after Robert has finished touring with American country star Alison Krauss."
Read more at MonstersAndCritics.com. _________________
http://www.myspace.com/metal4pets
http://www.theanimalrescuesite.com/tpc/ARS_linktous
http://www.save-a-life.org/ |
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Brollachan
Joined: 17 Mar 2006 Posts: 123 Location: Poznan, Poland
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Posted: Fri Dec 21, 2007 10:25 am Post subject: |
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Well, Robert seems quite busy these days: the Led Zep reunion, the tour with Alison, supposedly the follow up to Raising Sand (they're gonna cut a studio album early next year). Then there is this Glastonbury thing. And hopefuly he's not gonna give up on the Strange Sensations. I'd love to hear their studio output.
The time is running down. At least he's been so active, unlike Jimmy.
There's still a lot to be done, and it has to be done NOW.
BTW: Same with Ronnie  |
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thecoop

Joined: 23 Feb 2006 Posts: 1390 Location: Blackpool
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Posted: Sat Dec 22, 2007 9:16 am Post subject: |
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Well, anyone who has read this thread before will know I'm not a Led Zep fan (in fact I'm less of one now than I was then) - but they sound pretty good on those clips. Doesn't sound much different from their earlier live stuff I've seen - and I think Plant maybe BENEFITS from the slight deterioration in range etc that comes with age - his voice irritates me a lot of the time but now it's lower it's not as grating.
Still wouldn't go though  _________________ Along Came A Spider..... |
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Bobby66 Guest
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Posted: Sat Dec 22, 2007 1:43 pm Post subject: |
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| ...ZePPeLiN..."Cryin WoNT HelP Ya, PrayiN Wont Do Ya NO GOOD"... |
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panayiotis1984

Joined: 11 Aug 2006 Posts: 640 Location: Somewhere in your dreams...
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Posted: Mon Jan 28, 2008 4:51 pm Post subject: |
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Dan Sloan of Reuters reports that LED ZEPPELIN wont have another reunion session before September at the earliest, lead guitarist Jimmy Page said in Tokyo on Monday.
A successful reunion show in London in December rekindled hopes of a world tour, but Page said that singer Robert Plants tour with U.S. country singer Alison Krauss is keeping him busy for now.
"I can assure you the amount of work that we put into the O2 (concert), for ourselves rehearsing and the staging of it, was probably what you put into a world tour," Page said.
But, "Robert Plant also had a parallel project running and hes really busy with that project, certainly until September, so I cant give you any news."
Page, in Tokyo to promote a greatest hits release, painted a happy picture of the reunion.
"It was exhilarating, fantastic, every week was a week to look forward to," he said. "We did the show and it was great."
Read more at Reuters: http://uk.reuters.com/article/domesticNews/idUKT9054520080128 _________________ Video games are bad for you? That what they said about Rock 'n' Roll... |
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panayiotis1984

Joined: 11 Aug 2006 Posts: 640 Location: Somewhere in your dreams...
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Posted: Sun May 11, 2008 2:35 am Post subject: |
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Mirror.co.uk reports that LED ZEPPELIN is ready rock again to mark its 40th anniversary this year.
Fans have been calling for ZEPPELIN to tour after their successful gig at London's 02 Arena last December, which saw Jason Bonham on drums in place of late dad John.
Singer Robert Plant, 59, was originally opposed to the idea but has been talked round by bandmates Jimmy Page, 64, and John Paul Jones, 62.
A longtime pal, WHITESNAKE's frontman David Coverdale, said yesterday the tour was "very likely" and he was expecting to be the support act.
David said: "I'm expecting a call from Jimmy any day asking my band WHITESNAKE to support them on their world tour. Am I on board? You bet. Probably worth billions!
"Unlike rolling out the wheelchairs with the umpteenth ROLLING STONES world tour, a LED ZEPPELIN tour will be incredible."
Read more at Mirror.co.uk. _________________ Video games are bad for you? That what they said about Rock 'n' Roll... |
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panayiotis1984

Joined: 11 Aug 2006 Posts: 640 Location: Somewhere in your dreams...
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Posted: Sat May 31, 2008 4:13 am Post subject: |
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Secrets of the Guitar Heroes: Jimmy Page
Every song you played at Led Zeppelin's reunion show in London last year started with or was based on a killer riff. What makes a great Zeppelin riff?
It is something you know instinctively. It has energy and attitude. There's sex in it as well. It was definitely my concept to have a riff-based band. My influences were the riff-based blues coming from Chicago in the Fifties Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf and Billy Boy Arnold records. "Boogie Chillen'," by John Lee Hooker that is a riff. But you take it, absorb it and apply your own character, so it comes out another way.
Which happened that night. Your guitar-vocal interplay with Robert Plant, especially in "In My Time of Dying" and "Nobody's Fault But Mine," sounded brand-new, born on the spot.
In the Led Zeppelin shows of the Sixties and Seventies, it was the same numbers every night, but they were constantly in a state of flux. If I played something good, really substantial, I'd stick it in again. But Led Zeppelin were a working band in the truest sense. Even the rehearsals, in the run-up to that night in London, were dramatically different, in content and drama, from the show, which had its own character.
How hard was it to hear American blues and rock & roll records in Britain when you were growing up in the Fifties?
To hear current releases, you tuned in to AFN, the Armed Forces Network in Europe, and hoped that you could catch the title of something after they played it. We never got to see Elvis Presley until we saw his films. But the people who got sucked into rock & roll were collecting records, studying what was coming out of America. I had a friend who was not interested in a record unless it was by a black artist.
There was some blues in skiffle music. You got the songs, but the attitude and playing were not there yet. It was a learning experience, tracking these records down and finding the original sources the Sleepy John Estes version of "Milk Cow Blues," Arthur "Big Boy" Crudup doing "That's All Right."
You just played along to the records?
That's what most of the British guitarists from that period did. You listened to the solo, lifted the tone arm and put it back down to hear it again. Once I was able to get a good guitar, my ability to work out what was being played on those records came in leaps and bounds.
How did your experiences as a studio guitarist in the Sixties playing behind so many different singers influence your writing and playing for Zeppelin?
I was very inspired by the [vocal] groups of the Fifties. I loved the way they worked, the perspective of the guitar within that sound. Blues was a pivotal thing on the first Zeppelin album. But I was playing acoustic guitar as well as electric in sessions, and I was into people like [American studio guitarist] James Burton. I wasn't into jazz so much I preferred things raw.
For a short time, you and Jeff Beck both played lead guitar in the Yardbirds. Did you ever consider having a second guitarist in Led Zeppelin?
In the Yardbirds, when Jeff was there, we played the riffs in harmony. The approach was almost like a big band with brass the power of that applied to guitars. In Led Zeppelin, I never considered having anything duplicated, because we were such a complete unit. We felt we could do anything in-house, certainly on the records. Once a song got on the road, those parts would change, especially where there were numerous guitar parts on the record. We used to do "Ten Years Gone" [on Physical Graffiti], and that's got lots of guitars. We did a pretty good version. It wasn't until I played it with the Black Crowes [in 1999] that I heard all of those parts live. That was a thrill.
How would you describe your tone or the one you like most of all?
It varies. I've used pedals going all the way back, pre-Yardbirds. I was using a fuzzbox in sessions. But the engineers couldn't understand it. Anything radical, they couldn't deal with it. In the Yardbirds, I was trying the violin bow and the wah-wah, using distortion and echo. I had phase pedals and chorus pedals as time went on.
What attracted you to the bow? It is the signature sound in "Dazed and Confused."
It was proposed to me when I was doing studio work. One of the session violinists was the father of David McCallum, the actor in the TV show The Man From U.N.C.L.E. String players would keep to themselves, but this guy was quite friendly. He said to me one day we'd just finished a session "Have you ever tried bowing the guitar?" I said it wouldn't work. The strings aren't arched over the guitar, the way they are on a violin. He said, "Have a go." He gave me a bow. I tried it and realized there was something in it. I don't remember if I used it on any sessions, but I certainly used it the minute I was in the Yardbirds [notably on the 1967 single "Little Games"].
Your most famous solo is arguably the one at the end of "Stairway to Heaven." How much of it did you compose before you recorded it?
It wasn't structured at all [laughs]. I had a start. I knew where and how I was going to begin. And I just did it. There was an amplifier [in the studio] that I was trying out. It sounded good, so I thought, "OK, take a deep breath, and play." I did three takes and chose one of them. They were all different. The solo sounds constructed and it is, sort of, but purely of the moment. For me, a solo is something where you just fly, but within the context of the song.
Young guitarists learn to play now by studying your riffs and solos. What is left for you to discover on the guitar?
There is a lot I can and should be doing. The main thing is quality. I've always had a high bench mark in everything I play. That won't change. The important thing is to commit to playing. You have to put a lot in to get a lot out.
The great thing about the guitar, when I was 12 years old, was that it was portable. It made the music accessible to me all the time. I could get together with my mates, and before you knew it you had the serious spirit of music there even kids just playing a few chords. You can do it with computers and keypads now. But I'm interested in how you get that spirit on the guitar. Because that's my instrument of choice. _________________ Video games are bad for you? That what they said about Rock 'n' Roll... |
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Mysterioman
Joined: 13 May 2008 Posts: 113 Location: My Home
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Posted: Sat May 31, 2008 7:27 am Post subject: |
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Led Zeppelin... here are the memorable songs:
Stairway To Heaven *****
Was voted as the greatest rock song ever, well it is excellent indeed, makes tired quite quickly... but what is really cool about it is the fact that it's a grower, starts from downtempo and then reaches the uptempo rockin' at the end. That's five.
Rock & Roll ****
Well, quite straight, honest rockin' there... basically nothing wrong there but still it just sounds too basic. It's just a... song, a rock & roll song like the title says, that's it. Catchy, cool rocking... That deserves four stars.
Then we have ballads like "Thank You" and "Tangerine" which are both examples of three star songs, nice ballads, nothing basically wrong, just blahhhh well nice okay ballads.
Rest... two or one, "Whole Lotta Love" is probably the worst one and most overrated piece of CRAP.
 _________________ Come on and dance for The Lord Of The Last Day... |
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panayiotis1984

Joined: 11 Aug 2006 Posts: 640 Location: Somewhere in your dreams...
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Posted: Mon Jun 09, 2008 1:58 am Post subject: |
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According to Aislinn Simpson of UK's Telegraph, guitarist Jimmy Page stated in a brand new interview over the weekend that LED ZEPPELIN is ready to reunite and perform more live events.
But he said that fans could have to wait until autumn 2009 as band members had to tie up individual projects first.
Page and John Paul Jones joined the FOO FIGHTERS onstage Saturday night (June 7) during the final encore of the Dave Grohl-fronted band's concert at Wembley Stadium in London, England. The ZEPPELIN duo and the FOOS played "Rock And Roll" with Dave Grohl on drums and FOO FIGHTERS drummer Taylor Hawkins singing. Grohl and Hawkins then switched places for "Ramble On".
An emotional Grohl told the crowd after the impromptu appearance: "Welcome to the greatest day of my whole entire life."
In a recent issue of Uncut magazine, singer Robert Plant, who is widely viewed as the lone hold out on agreeing to a full scale ZEPPELIN tour, was asked if he felt the success of the band's performance last December at London's O2 Arena was enough of a victory to permanently ice any future work with the band. Plant said, "Not at all. I really enjoyed it. And hopefully, one day we could do it again for another really, really good reason... For people who came from Australia or Japan, to Jason (Bonham's) family, John's family, all the families anticipation and expectation was huge. The potential for failure was also great because nobody knew what it was going to be like."
Plant went on to reflect on the O2 show saying, "We did what we set out to do and more, in every respect. We showed people that LED ZEPPELIN did go on a bit... The interplay between us all was excellent."
John Paul Jones, who has said that he, like Page and Bonham, would like the band to hit the road, reflected on the reunion gig, saying, "It felt like the first night of a tour. You think, 'Oh, I could do that bit better, or change something in that song.' And we didn't get a chance to do any more."
When pressed about the prospects of a ZEPPELIN reunion album, Jones said, "I'm not too certain about anything at the moment. I've got no idea what's going to happen, but I'd certainly like to play with Jimmy again."
Jimmy Page said that there are currently no plans to release a CD or DVD from the O2 show: "It was recorded, but we didn't go in with the express purpose of making a DVD to come out at Christmas, or whatever. We haven't seen the images or investigated the multitracks. It's feasible that it might come out at some distant point, but it'll be a massive job to embark on."
When asked point blank what the current status of ZEPPELIN is now and if a tour could happen, Page said, "The focus was on the O2 show. That's what I had my focus on. As for Robert, he had a parallel project (with Alison Krauss) and it's been successful, which I suppose means he doesn't have time for ZEPPELIN at this moment. What I do know is at the rehearsals, and the O2 gig, we were really inspiring. Okay? That's all I'll say." _________________ Video games are bad for you? That what they said about Rock 'n' Roll... |
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metal44
Joined: 02 Jul 2008 Posts: 85 Location: Mexico
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Posted: Sun Jul 06, 2008 8:19 pm Post subject: |
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| I do love Led Zep! |
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