Led Zeppelin: Whole Lotta Rock | FULL MOVIE | 2019 | Documentary, Biography

Led Zeppelin, One of the most iconic rock bands of all time, and key pioneers of hard rock. Follow the band through their journey, from formation in 1968, their exciting climb to being one of the most influential bands in history.
Jason Bonham
David Gilmour
Peter Grant
John Paul Jones
Steven Machat
Kris Needs
Bryan J. Olson
Ozzy Osbourne
Documentary
Biography
#ledzeppelin #rockstar #rockmusic #stairwaytoheaven #robertplant #johnbonham #ozzyosbourne #johnpauljones #jimmypage

Пікірлер: 143

  • @welcome1221
    @welcome12213 ай бұрын

    Im 65 I started listening to Led Zeppelin when I was 14 .. i now listen to them nearly every day thankfully I watch these utube videos now which we never had back then! We were Lucky to hear them on the radio in Australia back then.. when they came to Australia I couldn’t go 😢 I was lucky to have one record! Vinyl now! I was 14! I also bought David Bowies Aladan Sane when it came out the following year! Music is the place i go to now and Led Zeppelin is top of the list! Thx you Led Zeppelin for giving me the past 51yrs of listening to you all! Bless you all! You have given me many memories of playing you first thing on a Sunday morning annoying the neighbours! 😂 when this music was considered extremely out there! Nothing else like them up till then, there was cream deep purple alice cooper but thats it All the rest came later In those days on the radio they weren’t allowed to play any of their music and similar before 12 midday! Back then pubs on sundays opened at 10 closed at 1 then reopened at 4-6pm Yep How times have changed

  • @Ian-bq7gp
    @Ian-bq7gp6 ай бұрын

    Jason Bonham really did John proud and his drumming really is a compliment to his dad and the band. It must have been so emotional for him never mind the fear of being slaughtered by the media if he made the slightest mistake but what a great gig he played.

  • @JokersWild70

    @JokersWild70

    6 ай бұрын

    He did an incredible job, no doubt. No one else could've gotten as close to doing John's drumming justice other than his own son.

  • @dannypina9211

    @dannypina9211

    5 ай бұрын

    I could not agree with you more @lan-bq7gp i've been very lucky to have seen him with Full Circle twice Papa is Very proud and so was i to see him play John's chops

  • @giantclam1822

    @giantclam1822

    3 ай бұрын

    Eh....Cmon...He has zero feel

  • @Diane-od1tz
    @Diane-od1tz3 ай бұрын

    I happen to be African American and I decided to buy a dvd concert with led zeplin,WOW!! Beautiful❤❤❤😂😂

  • @alextakacs768
    @alextakacs7683 ай бұрын

    20 years ago back in WINNIPEG on Citi Rock Radio Station every Tuesday the DJ said; ''Its time to let the LED out''!! and he played 2 hrs non-stop LED ZEPPELIN around 10pm 'till MIDNIGHT!! What a great way to finish a Tuesday!! Loved every minute of it!!

  • @BrazilMJ

    @BrazilMJ

    Ай бұрын

    They did this in California too on Fridays

  • @JohnEuliss
    @JohnEuliss6 ай бұрын

    Led Zeppelin were the greatest rock bands ever. I love them and always will. Documentaries are a must see.

  • @heliotropezzz333

    @heliotropezzz333

    3 ай бұрын

    Was the greatest rock band ever. Band is a collective noun.

  • @BassistPaul
    @BassistPaul5 ай бұрын

    To this day I remember (as a 16 year old) being at a party at my older brother's student flat in 1969 hearing the first Led Zep album being played. A revelation.

  • @magnuskjartansson3013
    @magnuskjartansson30134 ай бұрын

    Best band ever! saw them onstage in 1970. never forget !

  • @ProfessorKenneth

    @ProfessorKenneth

    2 ай бұрын

    ONE.. definitely not the best, easy mate..lol.. they were a collage band, rock stars, not musicans..at least page was a rock star not a musician. John Paul is a musician. Pink Floyd were musicans, the Beatles. They cared about the music and did different things. Page just cared about the drugs being a pedo and looking good. 🙄 Overrated band actually.

  • @maxinelachance7658
    @maxinelachance76582 ай бұрын

    Hate when they're referred to as a heavy metal band,may have been the starting point for metal,but this is real rock and roll!

  • @bumsharvest5493
    @bumsharvest5493Ай бұрын

    Back in '69, I was 7 years old my older brother was 12, and he was explaining to me about these 'radio stations on the FM dial and they play long songs, like Inagaddavita', just at that moment the DJ comes on and says, 'here's some of that new Led Zeppelin', and plays 'How many more Times'. We sat there listening to it on my fathers 'Stereo Console', as big as a coffin, and were amazed by the sound of LZ, and the length they played on the radio. Needless to say, my bubble gum AM radio days were numbered, and have been a Led Zeppelin fan ever since.

  • @mathstar4176
    @mathstar41762 ай бұрын

    What Robert Plant said about adjusting his voice to Jimmy Page's guitar is very revealing.

  • @1775MarineCorps
    @1775MarineCorps8 ай бұрын

    Thank you for sharing, the greatest rock band ever.

  • @StuartHanson-fo7iw
    @StuartHanson-fo7iw18 күн бұрын

    What amazes me is how so many bands can play the same instruments with the same chords yet somehow always sound different

  • @yeti1002
    @yeti10024 ай бұрын

    First time I heard Zeppelin was in 1975 I was 8 years old 😂 .... Surfing the radio / channel I came across " Whole lotta love " and " Black Dog " Holy Crap 😮, it blew me away , I've been a fan ever since . 😅

  • @ClassicRock83
    @ClassicRock833 ай бұрын

    I believe that somewhere in the world, there are people who feel the same emotions that I feel when I listen to masterpieces like this song.

  • @Anglo_Saxon1

    @Anglo_Saxon1

    Ай бұрын

    Which song?

  • @karentarr8930
    @karentarr89304 ай бұрын

    Each member gave a special gift to the band, of course I love Robert Plant and always will. Saw Page and Plant play in the 90’s what a show, missed every Led Zeppelin concert by a day my while life. Seeing them in the 90’s completed my life, rock on men🎶♥️😎

  • @stevesyverson8625
    @stevesyverson86256 ай бұрын

    Yes! A monstrous tallentried group of musianianship! I will never forget them at The Forum. So beautiful!

  • @dannypina9211

    @dannypina9211

    5 ай бұрын

    HEY an L.A. person i myself grew up in L.A. 72-88 what a time to be in that area it was also in 73 i heard my 1st LZ album VAHALLA i was born

  • @dannypina9211

    @dannypina9211

    5 ай бұрын

    have seen many of great shows at the FORUM

  • @BluesJammer69
    @BluesJammer696 ай бұрын

    "Hammer of the Gods"...a great read!!!

  • @ChrisDefalcoblues
    @ChrisDefalcoblues3 ай бұрын

    I saw them in Seattle, what a great show; right at the stage, best ever concert of a lifetime🎸

  • @debiconner6377

    @debiconner6377

    Ай бұрын

    I was at that concert too! What a light show! The only problem was with the venue. Up on the third level, you could hear the music bouncing off the ceiling like an echo, which created a garbled effect. Had to sit in the hall to hear it properly.

  • @adambana5857
    @adambana58577 ай бұрын

    These documentaries are so cobbled together. Hardly from the heart! They introduce Peter Grant and as the introductory narrative is being said, there's a massive picture of Richard Cole lol! It's an OK view, and thank you for the upload! But you can see why Zep were so protective of their history.

  • @antrygis1

    @antrygis1

    6 ай бұрын

    Cobbled together. I hear ya. There a good one now but when his says bass, like the fish, instead of bass like the guitar....you kind of wince. Of course, as you said, misinformation. Cobbled.

  • @anthonyfuentes1417

    @anthonyfuentes1417

    6 ай бұрын

    Yes at 6:33 that sure is Richard Cole🤣

  • @edgarcamacho9520
    @edgarcamacho95206 ай бұрын

    No artist ever comes close either as a solo artist or as a band.NONE!!!!

  • @fredpiszkos5197

    @fredpiszkos5197

    6 ай бұрын

    Deep Purple was near to it. Time to time even better, but in summary yes, Led Zeppelin is the winner on the long distance.

  • @mrreemann3739
    @mrreemann37393 ай бұрын

    They completely skipped over Houses of the Holy! They didn't press Plant or Page as to why John Paul Jones was left out of that reunion on MTV.

  • @chumbels
    @chumbels3 ай бұрын

    I can never express this adequately... it's like in 1968 ,there was a giant void in the sky. I mean apocalyptic huge. Wide open and available. Led Zeppelin took it and filled it. The whole fucki g thing. Yep.. no one else Gonna take this spot??? All these riffs are Available too? Yep.

  • @mathstar4176
    @mathstar41762 ай бұрын

    In 1970 I realised that they were breaking new ground........❤❤❤

  • @bitter37

    @bitter37

    Ай бұрын

    In 1970 I was shitting in my diaper🤣

  • @fastfred321
    @fastfred32117 күн бұрын

    It’s amazing to hear Robert say that “the LEGEND has been dogging him all along the way.” Just never was comfortable with being the GOAT! I suppose in this case, when you are ALWAYS compared to the FIRST thing you do in life as a professional and THAT THING happens to be being part of the greatest band in music history, it can be daunting to know that you have ZERO chance to ever really not get viewed like that forever!

  • @peterheal8744
    @peterheal87442 ай бұрын

    I agree with your observation about JPJ. The only reason I can think of is that the mainstream media would call it a reunion or restart of the band, and Robert was having none of it.

  • @peterprice8897
    @peterprice88974 ай бұрын

    I have a Led zepplin single it has black dog on one side and misty mountain hop on the b side I bought it back when those songs were released.

  • @patgalvez4563

    @patgalvez4563

    4 ай бұрын

    I remember that 45 on the jukebox at Pizza Hut in the 70's

  • @petej.8676
    @petej.86765 ай бұрын

    Quite funny..had to bring Zep to the states to get recognized and Jimi had to go to the U.K.

  • @mikepurkat6259
    @mikepurkat62592 ай бұрын

    Greatest of all time with a few others close behind! Lots of awesome music in this era we grew up in! Thank God later in life it’s helped get my mind off terrible losses thanx guys u R awesome ! Mikey

  • @paleoaram5105
    @paleoaram51056 ай бұрын

    Jimmy Page reveals why he switched to Gibson Les Pauls - and how Joe Walsh helped shape the sound of Led Zeppelin II. “I just really enjoyed playing Joe’s guitar, and so I agreed with him that maybe I should buy his Les Paul Standard after all.” Page enjoyed it so much, in fact, that he went on to use Walsh’s Les Paul on some of Led Zeppelin’s biggest hits, from Whole Lotta Love to What Is and What Should Never Be. Not only that, the Les Paul helped shape the entire sound of Led Zep’s second album, just as the Fender Telecaster had influenced their debut record a few months before. “I played the Les Paul on Whole Lotta Love and What Is and What Should Never Be and that decided it for me: it was definitely going to be the Les Paul from then on,” Page concluded. “I always wanted to make a change for each album sonically and that was my first decision for Led Zeppelin II.

  • @Not-Kurosawa
    @Not-Kurosawa2 ай бұрын

    The gods of rock.

  • @desicoinc5597
    @desicoinc55975 ай бұрын

    I just Love Pagey's face every time a Reporter came up to him. They were not nice to them at all. 😅

  • @JohnEuliss
    @JohnEuliss4 ай бұрын

    Led Zeppelin were huge! Their was a kind of magic in their songs. I was supposed to have seen them on the 1980 U.S. Tour but we all know what happened. I don't really like 20 minute guitar and drum solos but I look beyond that on their albums.

  • @jonash226

    @jonash226

    Ай бұрын

    ❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @tillross4078
    @tillross40785 ай бұрын

    Really interesting ,, everything so well done ,, Jayson's dad would be Proud of him ,, is has and is carrying the torche well ,, Thanks for sharing 👍 its a keeper 🙏

  • @user-xd8pj2mm4t
    @user-xd8pj2mm4tАй бұрын

    Everything was CRAZY back then, absolutely crazy!

  • @StuartHanson-fo7iw
    @StuartHanson-fo7iw18 күн бұрын

    J p Jones is a lovely fella,🇬🇧👍

  • @jonashallberg2832
    @jonashallberg28326 ай бұрын

    Jimmy Page is born in 1944

  • @allancerf9038

    @allancerf9038

    6 ай бұрын

    Yep. Definitely an unauthorized biography, lol.

  • @tinapasquale8918
    @tinapasquale89182 ай бұрын

    It's good to hear these songs

  • @johnpav3591
    @johnpav35916 ай бұрын

    I dont care who it is,, no body plays this like mr.john bonham,,,his son or who ever, he was a great musician an a madd man on drums, jp,,bpt. ct

  • @user-kj6cd7qq5o
    @user-kj6cd7qq5o2 ай бұрын

    Every weekday 8pm rock station 104.3 plays get the LED out

  • @mrsmacca126
    @mrsmacca126Ай бұрын

    Wow. Peter Grant- back then and more recently- reminds me of Ian Bailey.

  • @KingPowas
    @KingPowas4 ай бұрын

    Their music is transcending across generations, they are still gnarly 🖤 better than any black group trying to make “music”

  • @captur69
    @captur692 ай бұрын

    Queen meeting the Queen....i must be high...

  • @jonash226

    @jonash226

    Ай бұрын

    🎉

  • @user-se2pq4xq6s
    @user-se2pq4xq6s2 ай бұрын

    Zep rules ok!

  • @brettjones4733
    @brettjones47336 ай бұрын

    Good to watch but nothing new to be seen here , bring on becoming Led Zeppelin

  • @terencehennegan1439
    @terencehennegan14396 ай бұрын

    Great documentary but the unnecessary banging background noise when talking starts spoils it 👎

  • @yves2694
    @yves26943 ай бұрын

    It was the Led Zeppelin roadies who actually invented the term Heavy Metal. It refers to the heavy banks of speakers they had to haul in and out of the pubs and clubs when they started. Many up or down stairs. I know because I asked them. Speakers weren't that powerful back then. They played smaller venues sometimes using the pa system.

  • @badger8800
    @badger88006 ай бұрын

    At around 2 8 48 there's a picture of David Coverdale thought that was kind of odd 🤨

  • @Nunya.Bidness

    @Nunya.Bidness

    6 ай бұрын

    Same lol

  • @markgordon2260

    @markgordon2260

    6 ай бұрын

    PAge and Coverdale released an album together "Walking Into Clarksdale" in 1998.

  • @vegashdrider

    @vegashdrider

    6 ай бұрын

    Especially when they were talking about plant at the time

  • @Aspasia2929
    @Aspasia29294 ай бұрын

    There are many good rock guitarists… and some great ones… but Jimmy Page is the GOAT! He doesn’t play the guitar he fuses with it!

  • @RoseAleksandron-xu9qb

    @RoseAleksandron-xu9qb

    2 ай бұрын

    Sorry, Jimmy Hendricks is the best. He just copied him.

  • @jeffmantle2468
    @jeffmantle24686 ай бұрын

    Page was born 9/1/1944

  • @jameshagy6419

    @jameshagy6419

    5 ай бұрын

    January 9, 1944

  • @davetir
    @davetir4 ай бұрын

    Half a Billion fans tried to get tickets for a single show? 10% of the world population?

  • @chumbels
    @chumbels3 ай бұрын

    To this day ,musicians don't understand ,it's the distant microphone that gives it depth. ...To this day ,they want that bigness but would rather keep the.mic real close and add reverb.

  • @shootfirst2097
    @shootfirst20974 ай бұрын

    5:50 I'm no fan of the British Royal family necessarily, but I can appreciate the decorum, civility and manners of those 4 guitar legends meeting the Queen and kind of what it represents-- the past, tradition, White civilization-- that most other races LACK

  • @ou8126

    @ou8126

    2 ай бұрын

    WHAT???

  • @RichardNixonsHippieRemoval
    @RichardNixonsHippieRemoval6 ай бұрын

    Hooooooo-yeh! Sookie! It's alright!

  • @crunchyflower
    @crunchyflower3 ай бұрын

    EDIT: Jimmy Page born January 9, 1944 not 1943 as stated in this documentary

  • @Blues-House
    @Blues-House6 ай бұрын

    Jimmy page was born in 1944 not 1943

  • @henriettaskolnick4445

    @henriettaskolnick4445

    6 ай бұрын

    That was the first error I saw so I clicked it off. Such a detail is not difficult to find.

  • @rodhanson7112
    @rodhanson71126 ай бұрын

    LED ZEPPELIN WERE THE GREATEST BAND IN THE WORLD IN THE 1970s AND THE LATE GREAT JOHN HENRY BONHAM DIED IN 1980 FROM ALCOHOL ABUSE AND HIS DRUM SOLO Live ON UTUBE CALLED MOBY DICK GOES FOR 14 MINUTES AND HE PLAYS THE DRUMS WITH HIS HANDS AND HE PLAYED AROUND THE DRUM KIT WITH THE DRUM STICKS OVER THE DRUM KIT WITH THE DRUM STICKS AND HE NEVER MISSED A BEAT With THE HIGH HATS AND SADLY HE DIED FROM ALCOHOL ABUSE IN 1980 AM HE WAS THE GREATEST DRUMMER WHO EVER LIVED 😔

  • @janetwilhelm4435

    @janetwilhelm4435

    5 ай бұрын

    Right on!

  • @zig3

    @zig3

    3 ай бұрын

    WHY ARE YOU YELLING?

  • @user-kj6cd7qq5o
    @user-kj6cd7qq5o2 ай бұрын

    From what I hear, someone from another band asked what do you call yourselves Jimmy Page said the New Yardbirds that other bandmember said-that would go over like a lead balloon

  • @RoseAleksandron-xu9qb

    @RoseAleksandron-xu9qb

    2 ай бұрын

    Keith Moon made the comment. To them that they would go down like a LED ZEPPL. IN.

  • @thomasley7178
    @thomasley7178Ай бұрын

    All great bands are ambitious and believe in themselves. But I don't think there was another band who so deliberately and self-evidently came together to be the biggest band in the world - by, say, next year..

  • @AnnaRaymond-gm4fu

    @AnnaRaymond-gm4fu

    3 күн бұрын

    Great and iconic band love them all. Did you ever attend any of their concert?

  • @PurplePickle00
    @PurplePickle004 ай бұрын

    Page wasn't born in 1943... it was 1944

  • @user-yu8cg7lz2h
    @user-yu8cg7lz2hАй бұрын

    john paul was a great bass man the zepp were both salt and pepprer.....

  • @Canyon2023
    @Canyon2023Ай бұрын

    Elephant ears Peter Grant. Omg. (min 7:40)

  • @edwardlewandowski5473
    @edwardlewandowski54734 ай бұрын

    🌹✋

  • @jamiecampbell1981
    @jamiecampbell19813 ай бұрын

    As a kid, and I mean a young kid 678 years old, first grade the sum of between kindergarten two in first grade my mother says after I dropped believe it or not a meteorite that my brother and his friend watched land on a green at a golf course You could say the guy on Mars hit it on the green and one it would’ve been a one putt lol my brother said it was all smoking. They just heard a pump. They were shagging lost golf balls and selling them anyway it’s my older brother he comes home put it in my hand so it’s very heavy. I’m like it’s right through my fingers right out of my feet splat two toes almost had to be removed. I couldn’t swim in the lake at my cottage, so I started listening to my father’s tracks, and when this documentary started talking about no TV appearances, no singles, just no exposure you had to go to a concert I was a little kid, so I was starved for Led Zeppelin images I found cream magazine beginning I think it was when the levee breaks got my attention so I sat and listened on these big giant headphones to the whole track. Black dog became the song I wish I could rewind and play again, rewind and play again, so I was forced to listen all the way through get back to Black dog, so stay away to heaven go a hold of me and he also had Led Zeppelin 3 Led Zeppelin, one in physical graffiti, which became to turn a freeze, my swan song, the song houses of the holy 10 years gone Kashmir, the Rover and the wonton song 10 years gone with the first song. I learned on guitar when I was 12 years old, but shit if I had a cell phone with all thisinformation it just wouldn’t have been so magical Peter Grant was a genius in that regard

  • @johnmccree8941

    @johnmccree8941

    3 ай бұрын

    I almost understood some of that.

  • @Mike-pf1ru

    @Mike-pf1ru

    3 ай бұрын

    You forgot the bit about that acid you dropped and you were never the same again.

  • @AngelHadzi
    @AngelHadzi3 ай бұрын

    There is not one Led Zep song in the documentary!

  • @johnmccree8941

    @johnmccree8941

    3 ай бұрын

    Does there have to be? About Zeppelin isn't it?

  • @dietrichess9997

    @dietrichess9997

    3 ай бұрын

    Yes, I noticed a lot of fake sounding musical approximations, but there is at least one actual Led Zep songs that they play repeatedly. I assume the documentary makers had to pay for the rights to the actual music, so they bought 30 seconds of How Many More Times and played it throughout the film. Fair enough.

  • @BRIDG_L
    @BRIDG_L7 күн бұрын

    Page was born in 1944 not 1943.

  • @verbalswagrawkey1932
    @verbalswagrawkey1932Ай бұрын

    Robert and Jimmy never seemed to talk, didn't have to, they were always on the same Page. See what I did there?

  • @CelebrityInsider_Crackle

    @CelebrityInsider_Crackle

    Ай бұрын

    Cute.

  • @hoedanook8181
    @hoedanook81814 ай бұрын

    Jammie ....

  • @leechild4655
    @leechild46555 ай бұрын

    I just realized a lot of the appeal to the band is simple the name. Not the meaning but the way it looks and sounds. It almost looks like a foreign language reading it. Maybe the name of an underground secret society? Would have been as great as Jimmy and Cloudcutters or something? maybe, maybe not. everyone knows what the two words evoke in an instant.

  • @TetianaSimmons
    @TetianaSimmons3 ай бұрын

    Я тебе такое запрещаю петь про меня Плант.Ти незнаешь моей страсти..да что ти вообще..❤

  • @lawrencejhutchinson
    @lawrencejhutchinson6 ай бұрын

    Jimmy Page wanted to recruit Terry Reid. Terry Reid's manager sent the message that Jimmy Page wouldn't be able to play guitar anymore if he continued trying to recruit Reid!

  • @Mar-wc4th

    @Mar-wc4th

    5 ай бұрын

    No, esa historia no era de Terry Reíd.

  • @lawrencejhutchinson

    @lawrencejhutchinson

    5 ай бұрын

    @@Mar-wc4th Jimmy Page invited Terry Reid to join The New Yardbirds. He said no, but he recommended Robert Plant.

  • @Mar-wc4th

    @Mar-wc4th

    5 ай бұрын

    @@lawrencejhutchinson Cierto. Terry tenía contrato en America y dijo no a Led Zeppelin (omg). Lo intentó con Marriott pero su manager lo amenazó con romperle los dedos. Eso al menos, es lo que se contó en El martillo de los dioses !! Gracias a Dios.

  • @williamflinchum-qo6ch
    @williamflinchum-qo6ch5 ай бұрын

    Absolutely not met, in my opinon tgey were hard funk😊

  • @user-ys5tc2ip6g
    @user-ys5tc2ip6g3 ай бұрын

    Yes they should of never let Jones out.shame on them.Don and Mal did it to Mark.of Grand Funk Railroad to.not good ✝️☮️

  • @StuartHanson-fo7iw
    @StuartHanson-fo7iw18 күн бұрын

    J p Jones was too nice a man to blank like that,a call wud of bin nice but I presume they didn’t call him because with him along too then it’s definitely zeppelin isn’t it,?I don’t think for a minute they ment to snub him because he’s such a mimics fellas,as they are,more likely a confidence thing,probably regretted it afterwards,glad they had the o2 with him though because they definitely showed they still had it🇬🇧👍

  • @AMF0901
    @AMF09014 ай бұрын

    Jimmy Page was born in 1944 and NOT 1943, everybody knows that but you don't

  • @TOMM.E.COCKVOMIT666
    @TOMM.E.COCKVOMIT6664 ай бұрын

    My Respect is no more for Plant/Page after how they treated JPJ Fukkin EGO Bullshit JPJ IS A MUSICIANS MUSICIAN

  • @TetianaSimmons
    @TetianaSimmons3 ай бұрын

    J Pol,sin Paul Stanley.

  • @dusanterzic3739
    @dusanterzic37393 ай бұрын

    Page, Beck and Clapton. Ok. So, where is the greatest of that time? Blackmore. Hardly ever mentioned. Those three would need two life times, to come nowhere near to Richie. Full respect to the three, but mr Blackmore is the best.

  • @jonash226
    @jonash226Ай бұрын

    Grant looks like an aggressive man

  • @MM-ig1iv
    @MM-ig1iv4 ай бұрын

    I think Page "conjured" a band together.. The 4 perfect ingredients would make up led Zeppelin. Certain bands are just meant to be here.. they don't come along very often anymore. I think Ozzy said it pretty good there. or every 10 or 20 years or something? like it's meant to happen. of course back then.. music's not the same anymore.

  • @crypttonite
    @crypttoniteАй бұрын

    not rock, only morons say rock without roll. they think there’s no difference. LZ is rock n roll. They were 25 minute solos for a reason,it wasn’t self indulgent. Jimmy was drawn to guitar in a way you could only know if it happened to you. He was making guitar music on purpose for it’s own sake without the other instruments being simple back up filler. He wanted each instrument & vocal to be on same level. It was also about performance. When your entire days focuses on playing for a few hours, you luxuriate in the moment. It might not be enjoyable to everyone, for the player the time length is out the window.

  • @richardbutler9484
    @richardbutler94842 ай бұрын

    Peter Grant elephant ears

  • @griffhenshaw5631
    @griffhenshaw56313 ай бұрын

    Out verbal them....yep english speak English well

  • @747ZEPP
    @747ZEPP2 ай бұрын

    This documentary isn't that great...

  • @wholeworld399
    @wholeworld3994 ай бұрын

    Fake zepp songs are annoying.. .

  • @zig3

    @zig3

    3 ай бұрын

    The real ones are Copywrite

  • @Mike-pf1ru

    @Mike-pf1ru

    3 ай бұрын

    Better than having Led Zeppelin’s lawyer on the other end of the phone.

  • @user-pb9vf8rg6z
    @user-pb9vf8rg6z2 ай бұрын

    Hows it going guys? Im the guy who scratched Jimmy Pages guitar while doing work at his house in 2016/17, wasnt even my fault - he was on something and trying to have me hold his guitar and let go before my hands were there, i caught it but the bottom swung and hit other guitar and scratched it. The guy he talks about in interviews that is supposed to have ducked him and he can't find him - thats me, only i didn't duck him and he's been fucking with me the whole time. He could have filed an ins claim even tho it wasn't my fault but wants me to pay. He has half way stalked me ever since calling all my employers, random messages here and there. He flips between he is sorry and I owe him a million dollars for his guitar. He has baically ruined my life over it.

  • @motleydesign
    @motleydesign6 ай бұрын

    Cool

  • @37Dionysos
    @37Dionysos2 ай бұрын

    F'in awful "fake Zep" music tracks

  • @user-ob1oi7kn2w
    @user-ob1oi7kn2wАй бұрын

    Led zeppelin whole lot of shite😅😅😅😅

  • @contingency9
    @contingency95 ай бұрын

    Plant and Page were wrong and ignorant to leave John Paul Jones out of their new project, he was the backbone of Led Zep, Bonzo had been the heart beat.

  • @dannypina9211

    @dannypina9211

    5 ай бұрын

    Actually he refused

  • @rathert3

    @rathert3

    4 ай бұрын

    You're right. He found out in the news. He didn't refuse at all. That's revisionism. He said he didn't know what he would have done. Their snub made the point moot.

  • @Gunn27

    @Gunn27

    4 ай бұрын

    It’s up to them

  • @Aspasia2929

    @Aspasia2929

    4 ай бұрын

    Maybe… but Jimmy Page and Robert Plant are THE SOUL!

  • @sweetkittiez

    @sweetkittiez

    3 ай бұрын

    Jones was definitely the meat and potatoes of Zeppelin