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Led Zeppelin - And It Makes Me Wonder album

Led Zeppelin - And It Makes Me Wonder album

  • Performer: Led Zeppelin
  • Genre: Rock
  • Title: And It Makes Me Wonder
  • Released: 1992
  • Style: Classic Rock
  • Country: Japan
  • MP3 version size: 1271 mb
  • FLAC version size: 1625 mb
  • Other: ASF AU APE ADX WMA WAV MMF
  • Rating: 4.9
  • Votes: 590

Description

Ooh, it makes me wonder. There's a feeling I get When I look to the west And my spirit is crying For leaving. Ooh, it really makes me wonder. And it's whispered that soon If we all call the tune Then the piper will lead us to reason.

Ooh, it makes me wonder, Ooh, it makes me wonder. There's a feeling I get when I look to the west, And my spirit is crying for leaving. In my thoughts I have seen rings of smoke through the trees, And the voices of those who stand looking. Ooh, it makes me wonder, Ooh, it really makes me wonder. And it's whispered that soon, if we all call the tune, Then the piper will lead us to reason. Stairway To Heaven", released in November 1971 on the band's 4th album, is often rated among the greatest rock songs of all time. However, it wasn't a chart hit because it was never released as a single. Robert Plant's own explanation of the lyrics was that it "was some cynical aside about a woman getting everything she wanted all the time without giving back any thought or consideration. Jimmy Page says that "'Stairway' crystallized the essence of the band.

Ooh, makes me wonder Ooh, really makes me wonder. And it's whispered that soon if we all call the tune Then the piper will lead us to reason And a new day will dawn for those who stand long And the forests will echo with laughter. If there's a bustle in your hedgerow, don't be alarmed now It's just a spring clean for the May queen Yes, there are two paths you can go by, but in the long run There's still time to change the road you're on. And it makes me wonder Ohhhh, woah. Rolling Stone ranked it as Led Zeppelin’s song, saying: The signature power ballad on Led Zeppelin IV towers over Seventies rock like a monolith. From the Elizabethan ambience of its acoustic introduction to Plant’s lyrical mysticism to Page’s spiraling solo, the eight-minute song is a masterpiece of slow-reveal intensity that withholds power, then ascends skyward like nothing in rock.

Led Zeppelin's second album was recorded during the precious little downtime they had on their endless 1969 world tour. It took them months to record in studios all across America and Europe, yet somehow it sounds cohesive. The track listing almost reads like a greatest hits collection: "Whole Lotta Love," "Thank You," "Heartbreaker," "What Is And What Should Never Be" and "Bring It On Home. Led Zeppelin IV won this poll in a blow-out, and it's really no surprise. It captures the band at their heaviest and mightiest, and there's not a single weak moment. Few albums get off to a stronger start than the double-shot of "Black Dog" and "Rock and Roll.

Led Zeppelin III is best known as the band's acoustic album. This stuttering electric surge defiantly kicks against all that. They liked the song so much they named their 2012 live album after it. 45. "Hey, Hey, What Can I Do," Single (1970). Led Zeppelin's only non-album B-side (it was the flip of "Immigrant Song") stems from their third, partly acoustic LP. "Hey, Hey, What Can I Do" would have fit perfectly nestled somewhere on Led Zeppelin III's second side. 44. "In the Evening," In Through the Out Door (1979). Led Zeppelin were performing "Dancing Days" live long before it made its official debut on Houses of the Holy: There's even a version from an entire year earlier on the How the West Was Won concert album that documents a pair of June 1972 shows. Fine-tuned by this take. 35. "Travelling Riverside Blues," Led Zeppelin (1990).

Led Zeppelin, the original hammer-swinging band of rock gods, is back-and all it took was Chris Hemsworth to pull it off. (Or is that Liam?) The English supergroup of the 1970s is now the supergroup for the 21st-century superhero set, with its stomping 1970 classic Immigrant Song powering the Thor: Ragnarok trailer to record downloads and entering the Billboard charts for the first time since its release. There’s also a rumor swirling that Zeppelin may reunite for this summer’s Desert Trip Festival. 7. In Through the Out Door (1979) Zeppelin’s penultimate album-and the last with John Bonham-was reviled by many of the group’s rabid fans for seeming to jettison the signature Zeppelin sound for more contemporary stylings. Page thought the album was a little soft. But the group rarely sounded better than on Fool in the Rain, with a piano hook for the ages and a great Plant vocal.

In their career, the British rock band Led Zeppelin recorded many songs that consisted, in whole or part, of pre-existing songs, melodies, or lyrics. This is a partial list of songs that contributed to or inspired Led Zeppelin songs or covers.

While the album cover itself features no title nor band name, Led Zeppelin IV is quite the unforgettable album, complete with some of Zeppelin's best songs of all time. Upon receiving just okay feedback on their previous album, Led Zeppelin III, the band took to a nameless album (though. Rock The Best Songs on Led Zeppelin's Album Led Zeppelin IV. Ranker Music. While the album cover itself features no title nor band name, Led Zeppelin IV is quite the unforgettable album, complete with some of Zeppelin's best songs of all time.

Led Zeppelin is the debut album by English rock band Led Zeppelin. It was released on 12 January 1969 in the United States and on 31 March in the United Kingdom by Atlantic Records. The album was recorded in September and October 1968 at Olympic Studios, London, shortly after the band's formation. It contains a mix of original material worked out in the first rehearsals, and remakes and rearrangements of contemporary blues and folk songs

Led Zeppelin had a fully formed, distinctive sound from the outset, as their eponymous debut illustrates. Taking the heavy, distorted electric blues of Jimi Hendrix, Jeff Beck, and Cream to an extreme, Zeppelin created a majestic, powerful brand of guitar rock constructed around simple, memorable riffs and lumbering rhythms. But the key to the group's attack was subtlety: it wasn't just an onslaught of guitar noise, it was shaded and textured, filled with alternating dynamics and tempos. As Led Zeppelin proves, the group was capable of such multi-layered music from the start.

Tracklist

1 Rock And Roll 3:45
2 Celebration Day 3:33
3 Black Dog 5:46
4 Over The Hills And Far Away 6:07
5 Misty Mountain Hop 4:43
6 Since I've Been Loving You 8:13
7 No Quarter 12:30
8 The Song Remains The Same 5:17
9 The Rain Song 7:48
10 Stairway To Heaven 9:52

Notes

Live in Buffalo.

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
TDOLZ 0001/2 Led Zeppelin In Concert & Beyond ‎(2xCD, Unofficial) The Diagrams Of Led-Zeppelin TDOLZ 0001/2 Japan 1996
62121/2 Led Zeppelin Where The Zeppelin Roam ‎(2xCD, Unofficial) Midas Touch , Dynamite Studio 62121/2 Japan 1996
MC-0125 Led Zeppelin Slowing Down In Buffalo ‎(3xCD, Unofficial) Moonchild Records MC-0125 Japan 2018
none Led Zeppelin Outrageous Live! ‎(2xCD, Ltd, Num, Unofficial) Zoso's Company none 1991
HEN 090-1/2 Led Zeppelin Where The Buffalo Roam ‎(2xCD, Album, RE, Unofficial, Dig) The Home(r) Entertainment Network HEN 090-1/2 Europe Unknown