Listen to: Led Zeppelin Three

Listen to Led Zeppelin 3.  If you hate Led Zeppelin you will find sounds that are totally different from what you are expecting from the Zep. If you love them, you will only find more to love.

I’m a huge Led Zeppelin Fan. They are the zenith of Rock and Roll. They strike the balance between accessibility and musicality. They sound hard, need to put on a satanic show to prove it. They’re technically complex, but they never reached the self-indulgence of progressive rock. Some would consider Zepplin grandfathers of both genres.

The band is often criticized as overly bombastic and meat-headed. This may be true.  Don’t get me wrong, Led Zeppelin is dad rock. But goddamn do they rock.

Many people have only heard their big singles, played over and over by their local classic rock radio station. If this describes you I would recommend a dive into their discography. The four of five songs you have heard on repeat for the past twenty years fail to do their music justice.

Most people recommending a Led Zeppelin album would point you to their fourth album. It contains the bands most iconic songs like "Stairway to Heaven", "Rock and Roll" and "Black Dog".   

These songs are incredible, but if you’re anything like me, they are tired to your ears. Years of repetitive play have stripped them of their magic.  "Stairway" is 8 minutes long and seems to lack any actual lyrical content.

Enter Led Zeppelin 3. Out of the bands six classic albums, it is the most underappreciated. I would say it is criminally underrated.  The only cut off the album to receive any radio play is "Immigrant Song."

The album's sound from a typical 70’s rock album to an acoustic odyssey.  Robert Plant’s voice and John Bonham’s driving drum beat create an unmistakably Led Zeppelin sound. The lush instrumentation of the album takes Led Zeppelin in a new of sonic direction while never fully diverging from the bands classic sound.

However, I think the real treats of the album are the folk songs like "Tangerine", "Gallows Pole", and "Bron-Y-Aur Stomp". These songs are masterpieces in their own right. I think these songs specifically showcase the band's musical range.

"Tangerine" is my favorite song on the album. This song is the furthest thing from the typical lewd sex, drugs, and noise of Led Zeppelin. It is clearly the tenderest song in their catalog. Despite only having 12 lines of lyrics, the lush acoustic guitar and instrumentation of the track encapsulate the feeling of being in love on a hazy spring day. The gorgeous pedal guitar solo adds to the track's psychedelic feeling.

"Bron-Y-Aur Stomp" is a blast. Like many other of the songs, It draws inspiration from English and American folk music. Instead of focusing on the mournful or poetic elements of folk, it draws from the celebratory side of folk music. It conjures images of a small, late 19th-century town coming together to celebrate in the town center. "Stomp" has one of the strongest downbeats I have ever experienced in rock music.  This song makes me want to stomp my feet into the dirt. The beat is best explained as a “hoedown” style groove.

"Gallows Pole" has the most interesting history behind any Zeppelin Song. "Gallows Poleis a traditional English folk song that existed in some form prior to the seventeenth century. The song describes a man’s desperate attempts to save himself from being executed.  As the song increases in tempo and lyrical desperation, a mandolin 12- string and banjo accompany the guitar. In the cruel and final verse, we hear from the hangman himself. Despite taking the bribes, he decides to kill the condemned.
Oh yes, you got a fine sister, she warmed my blood from cold,She warmed my blood to boiling hot to keep you from the gallows pole,Your brother brought me silver, and your sister warmed my soul,But now I laugh and pull so hard to see you swinging on the gallows pole.
The final song on the album, "Hats off to Roy Harper" is trash. Don’t listen to it.

Led Zeppelin 3 is worth listening to because it shows the maturing of a band from a purely hard rock outfit into a unit that could effectively perform songs that span the range of insturmentation and human emotion. Even if you dislike Led Zeppelin, I implore you to take an hour of your life and listen to this album.    

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