Led Zeppelin IV

From Free net encyclopedia

(Difference between revisions)
Revision as of 19:08, 21 April 2006
Blainster (Talk | contribs)
"one of the most popular," instead of "some people"
← Previous diff
Current revision
Blainster (Talk | contribs)
"one of the most popular," instead of "some people"

Current revision

Template:Album infobox Template:No unicode character Image:Zoso.png is the fourth album released by the British rock band Led Zeppelin. It has no easily expressed official title and is variously referred to as Led Zeppelin IV, Four Symbols, Runes, Sticks, Zoso (after the first character or symbol used in the title), Four, or even Untitled. It was recorded at the newly opened studios of Island Records at Basing Street in London, and was recorded around the same time as Jethro Tull was also recording their fourth album, Aqualung.

After the fairly negative critical reaction Led Zeppelin III had received in the autumn of 1970, Jimmy Page decided that the next album would not have a proper title in order to see if the music could sell itself. The original pressing did not have a readable title or the name Led Zeppelin anywhere on the exterior jacket, instead featuring four hand-drawn symbols on the inner sleeve and record label, each one chosen (or designed in the case of Jimmy Page) by the band member it represents. (There is actually a fifth, smaller symbol chosen by guest vocalist Sandy Denny representing her contribution to "The Battle of Evermore" and visible on the LP inner sleeve personnel list only.) These symbols are the official title of the album, and Atlantic Records initially distributed graphics of the symbols in many sizes to the press for inclusion in charts and articles. The album was the first to be produced without conventional identification, and this communicated an anti-commercial stance that was controversial at the time (especially among certain executives at Atlantic).

Image:Zoso.png remains a perennial favorite on classic rock radio and features "Stairway to Heaven", one of the most popular rock songs ever recorded. The track wins many regional 'best song' radio polls annually.

The song "When The Levee Breaks" features very unusual drum sounds, that have been sampled by many hip hop artists including the Beastie Boys.

While reaching #2 in the US—and lasting an amazing 259 weeks on that chart—it was also the band's third consecutive UK chart topper.

Image:Zoso.png is currently fourth on the RIAA's list of the bestselling albums of all time in the US.

In 2006, the album was rated #1 on Classic Rock Magazine's 100 Greatest British Albums poll.

Contents

Track listing

  1. "Black Dog" (Page/Plant/Jones) - 4:54
  2. "Rock and Roll" (Page/Plant/Jones/Bonham) - 3:40
  3. "The Battle of Evermore" (Page/Plant) - 5:51
  4. "Stairway to Heaven" (Page/Plant) - 8:03
  5. "Misty Mountain Hop" (Page/Plant/Jones) - 4:38
  6. "Four Sticks" (Page/Plant) - 4:44
  7. "Going to California" (Page/Plant) - 3:31
  8. "When the Levee Breaks" (Page/Plant/Jones/Bonham/Memphis Minnie/Kansas Joe McCoy) - 7:07

Personnel

Chart positions

Billboard Music Charts (North America) – album

1971	Led Zeppelin IV	 The Billboard 200       	No. 2

Billboard (North America) – singles

1972	Black Dog	 Pop Singles	                No. 15
1972	   Rock and Roll    Pop Singles	                   No. 47

Additional notes

  • Despite the immense popularity of "Stairway to Heaven"—which received heavy AOR radio rotation in the early 1970s and remains one of the most popular rock songs of all time—the song was never officially released as a single and thus it was never seen on the Billboard charts.
  • Side A of the album was made somewhat infamous as make-out music in Fast Times At Ridgemont High, in a scene which Damone says to Ratner, "When it comes to making out, whenever possible, put on side one of Led Zeppelin IV." Ratner later commits a slight gaffe, by playing (Physical Graffiti's) 'Kashmir'.
  • Although the symbols that form its title (and the album itself) are sometimes referred to as "Runes", none are, in fact, runes.
    • The symbol for Robert Plant is Maàt's feather representing truth, justice, fairness and writing, encapsulated by an unbroken circle representing life.
    • Jimmy Page's is a stylized Capricorn ruled by Saturn. Although looking almost like the word "Zoso", it is not intended to be written or pronounced as such. Page's symbol is remarkably similar to other sigils of hermetist J. Cardan and magician Austin Osman Spare found in: Gettings, Fred (1982) Dictionary of Occult, Hermetic and Alchemical Sigils, ISBN 0-7100-0095-2. Another interpretation of the symbol is that it crudely depicts a guitar (the "oSo") and the guitarist's arm (the "Z").
    • John Bonham's symbol, the three interlocking rings, looks like the logo for Ballantine beer - noting the drummer's fondness for alcohol. It could also depict an aerial view of a drum kit. It does in fact represent the occult Man-Wife-Child trilogy, and more commonly is a Christian symbol for the Trinity.
    • John Paul Jones' symbol is a single circle intersecting 3 vesica pisces (a triquetra). Taken from a book of runes, it symbolises a person with confidence and competence.
  • In 1998 Q magazine readers voted Image:Zoso.png the 26th greatest album of all time.
  • It is number 66 on the list of Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Albums of All Time.
  • It is number 7 on Pitchfork Media's Top 100 Albums of The 1970s.
  • Cadillac has been utilizing "Rock and Roll" as background music for their television advertising.
  • A 2005 listener poll conducted by Toronto classic rock station Q107 (CILQ) named Image:Zoso.png the #2 best classic rock album of all time.
  • The Battle of Evermore is supposedly is based on Tolkien's "Lord of the Rings".[1] The band themselves have never mentioned the inspiration for the lyric.
  • The sheet music for Stairway to Heaven is the largest selling piece of sheet music in Rock music history averaging about 15000 copies per year. To date it has sold over 1 million.

External links

Led Zeppelin
John Bonham · John Paul Jones · Jimmy Page · Robert Plant
Discography
Studio Albums: Led Zeppelin · II · III · Image:Zoso.png (IV) · Houses of the Holy · Physical Graffiti · Presence · In Through the Out Door · Coda

Live Albums: The Song Remains the Same · BBC Sessions · How the West Was Won
Compilations: Box Set · Profiled · Remasters · Box Set 2 · Complete Studio Recordings · Early Days · Latter Days

Films
The Song Remains the Same · Led Zeppelin DVD
Other
Peter Grant · Swan Song Records · The Yardbirds · XYZ · The Firm · Page and Plant
bg:Led Zeppelin IV

cs:Led Zeppelin IV de:Led Zeppelin IV es:Led Zeppelin IV fr:Four Symbols it:Led Zeppelin IV nl:Led Zeppelin IV pl:Led Zeppelin IV ru:Led Zeppelin IV fi:Led Zeppelin IV sv:Led Zeppelin IV