Led Zeppelin Houses Of The Holy
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Houses of the Holy is truly an astonishing collection of songs and is definitely among their best. "No Quarter" really allows John Paul Jones to shine on the keyboard and frankly, he's better at that than at bass playing, an absolute master of the instrument. He paints a whole landscape and atmosphere for the song with his soft strokes like that of a master painter, going along perfectly with Robert Plant's echoey, psychedelic vocals that tell of a tale with influence from Viking and Norse mythology. "The Rain Song" is simply one of the most beautiful songs of all time and is a ballad with creative mellotron use by Jones to create a simulated orchestra. Robert Plant's lyrics on this are some of his most heart-achingly sincere, and the dynamics in this song are enough to rival even Queen's theatrical dynamics.
"The Ocean" is being an all-out hard rocker with an unusual time signature, being partially in septuple meter, with a repeated two-measure phrase of one bar each of 4/4 and 7/8 and by the end shifts to a doo-wop song. It's an utter genius style exploration that gives it a lot of variety within one song. "Over The Hills and Far Away" features six-string acoustic guitar in unison with a 12-string for the intro, with a beautiful melody that plays throughout, with one of the best jam sessions forwarded by Bonzo's symphonic drumming.
"The Song Remains The Same" is a great opener and song that sets the mood of the album perfectly but has a weird vocal pitch-up that sadly became more common with their albums after this point for some reason, the common idea being accepted that Robert's voice was suffering a bit after his overuse of during the 1969-1972 period, his throat surgery when he had nodules, and singing with laryngitis during some performances. "D'yer Mak'er" is a great reggae rock song that is carried heavily by Bonham's impressive technique, and the vocal play gives it even more charm. "The Crunge" is pretty fun with its concept being to parody dance songs that came out at the time by making a beat and melody impossible to dance to, and even having Robert poke fun at the fact a lot of those songs lacked bridges in the outro of the song ("Oh, will you excuse me/I'm just trying to find the bridge/Has anybody seen the bridge?"). This album holds a special place in the Led Zeppelin chronology and was their only record of 100% original material, featuring zero covers, and zero plagiarism. Easily one of the greatest of all time and a joyfully odd experience. — via Sputnik Music
↓
Label: Atlantic
Format: Vinyl, LP, Album, Reissue, Remastered, Stereo, 180 gram, Gatefold
Reissued: 2014 / Original Release: 1973
Genre: Rock
Style: Classic Rock, Hard Rock
File under: School of Rock
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- Regular price
- $48.00 SGD
- Regular price
-
- Sale price
- $48.00 SGD
- Unit price
- per
Couldn't load pickup availability
About
Houses of the Holy is truly an astonishing collection of songs and is definitely among their best. "No Quarter" really allows John Paul Jones to shine on the keyboard and frankly, he's better at that than at bass playing, an absolute master of the instrument. He paints a whole landscape and atmosphere for the song with his soft strokes like that of a master painter, going along perfectly with Robert Plant's echoey, psychedelic vocals that tell of a tale with influence from Viking and Norse mythology. "The Rain Song" is simply one of the most beautiful songs of all time and is a ballad with creative mellotron use by Jones to create a simulated orchestra. Robert Plant's lyrics on this are some of his most heart-achingly sincere, and the dynamics in this song are enough to rival even Queen's theatrical dynamics.
"The Ocean" is being an all-out hard rocker with an unusual time signature, being partially in septuple meter, with a repeated two-measure phrase of one bar each of 4/4 and 7/8 and by the end shifts to a doo-wop song. It's an utter genius style exploration that gives it a lot of variety within one song. "Over The Hills and Far Away" features six-string acoustic guitar in unison with a 12-string for the intro, with a beautiful melody that plays throughout, with one of the best jam sessions forwarded by Bonzo's symphonic drumming.
"The Song Remains The Same" is a great opener and song that sets the mood of the album perfectly but has a weird vocal pitch-up that sadly became more common with their albums after this point for some reason, the common idea being accepted that Robert's voice was suffering a bit after his overuse of during the 1969-1972 period, his throat surgery when he had nodules, and singing with laryngitis during some performances. "D'yer Mak'er" is a great reggae rock song that is carried heavily by Bonham's impressive technique, and the vocal play gives it even more charm. "The Crunge" is pretty fun with its concept being to parody dance songs that came out at the time by making a beat and melody impossible to dance to, and even having Robert poke fun at the fact a lot of those songs lacked bridges in the outro of the song ("Oh, will you excuse me/I'm just trying to find the bridge/Has anybody seen the bridge?"). This album holds a special place in the Led Zeppelin chronology and was their only record of 100% original material, featuring zero covers, and zero plagiarism. Easily one of the greatest of all time and a joyfully odd experience. — via Sputnik Music
↓
Label: Atlantic
Format: Vinyl, LP, Album, Reissue, Remastered, Stereo, 180 gram, Gatefold
Reissued: 2014 / Original Release: 1973
Genre: Rock
Style: Classic Rock, Hard Rock
File under: School of Rock
⦿
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