Get The Led Out: November 20, 2012 [VIDEO]
Communication Breakdown--I
In My Time Of Dying--Physical Graffiti
Friends--III
Communication Breakdown--I
In My Time Of Dying--Physical Graffiti
Friends--III
According to a poll by the British Phonographic Industry, Black Sabbath is the most important British hard rock band. 3600 hard rock and metal fans participated, and Sabbath garnered 45 percent of the vote. In a statement, Ozzy Osbourne and company say, “We are honored and flattered to be acknowledged in a poll like this which is voted for by the fans. We thank you.”
If you are a diehard Led Zeppelin fan and picked up a copy of their new concert DVD, Celebration Day, which was released on Monday, then study it closely and perhaps you too, like Jason Bonham, will see something that he says was also in the band's first concert film, The Song Remains the Same.
What Is And What Should Never Be--II
Celebration Day--III
Fool In The Rain--In Thru The Out Door
Commercials for Monday (Nov. 19) night's episode of 'Revolution' on NBC have featured Led Zeppelin's 'Kashmir,' one of two songs by the band that will play during the hour-long episode. Producers Eric Kripke and J.J. Abrams recently sat down to reveal they're big Zep-heads, joking that they wanted to build a show they could squeeze Led Zeppelin songs into.
After drummer John Bonham died on Sept. 25, 1980, effectively putting an end to Led Zeppelin, fans were hungry for more music. Their last album, 1979’s ‘In Through the Out Door,’ marked a strong return after a three-year absence. But the band had broken up, and there wasn’t too much unused music sitting around, because Led Zeppelin didn’t waste much. Over the course of eight albums and 10 years, only one non-LP B-side (‘Hey Hey What Can I Do’) surfaced. And the few leftover tracks that they had in the can made up roughly half of 1975’s ‘Physical Graffiti.’
Rock And Roll--IV
Gallows Pole--III
Four Sticks--IV
Over The Hills And Far Away--Houses Of The Holy
In The Light--Physical Graffiti
The Rover--Physical Graffiti