Led Zeppelin: Classic Or Dud?

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RS, hire some folk-rock writers.

Feel a million filaments (Sund4r), Thursday, 30 July 2020 12:57 (three years ago) link

reading early dismissive Kerrang reviews of things like Bathory, Voivod, and Sodom was interesting in a similar fashion (I think Oor Neechy shared it on FB).

listening to music that's relatively new and inventive (or doing something old in a new way) is often hard! you have no reference points, or the reference points you do have are more comfortable so sometimes you view deviations from them as "bad".

like when I first listened to Meshuggah, I loved them live, but I bought a cd and at first couldn't figure out how to listen to their music - "It's the same chord over and over, wtf!". since I was familiar with metal, but this was a subgenre of it that was alien to me.

i said it in another thread but there was one older metalhead who grew up with its emergence in the 80s and he listened to Meshuggah and he said "WHAT IS THIS SHIT? it sounds like their amps are turning on and off over and over again"

XVI Pedicabo eam (Neanderthal), Thursday, 30 July 2020 12:58 (three years ago) link

I also get why Sabbath kind of unfairly got labeled the "big dumb metal band" by many critics

XVI Pedicabo eam (Neanderthal), Thursday, 30 July 2020 12:59 (three years ago) link

If Lester Bangs was alive today (meaning, if he was the same age in 2020 that he was in 1969) he'd be the ideal Pitchfork writer - a dorky, semi-coherent twentysomething working through his personal life issues using record reviews as a frame.

but also fuck you (unperson), Thursday, 30 July 2020 13:00 (three years ago) link

Oh, completely. Bangs had a very explicit aesthetic, and you can see how he would love the pulpy stuff like WLL and Immigrant Song and be turned off by Since I've Been Loving You (which was always a firm skip for me, especially when I'd just started to dig Zeppelin as a teenager). We don't have to choose between Plant or Iggy, but it's no surprise where Bangs fell on that dichotomy, or that he preferred what Iggy did with his limited pallette.

I'd definitely say Bangs on III seems more qualified-ly positive than most rock crits of that era on Zep.

(xxxp to sund4r)

Pinche Cumbion Bien Loco (stevie), Thursday, 30 July 2020 13:04 (three years ago) link

I also get why Sabbath kind of unfairly got labeled the "big dumb metal band" by many critics

Bangs was a fan, tho. He identified them as a Christian-rock band, ie scared shitless of the devil.

Pinche Cumbion Bien Loco (stevie), Thursday, 30 July 2020 13:05 (three years ago) link

Bangs was a fan, tho. He identified them as a Christian-rock band, ie scared shitless of the devil.

Yeah, he wrote a really great story on them that's included in the second anthology of his work, Mainlines, Blood Feasts and Bad Taste.

but also fuck you (unperson), Thursday, 30 July 2020 13:06 (three years ago) link

Some of my favourite pieces of his are in that second volume - that piece he wrote about electric-era Miles music being all about pain.

Pinche Cumbion Bien Loco (stevie), Thursday, 30 July 2020 13:26 (three years ago) link

The Zep III review specifically reads like an assignment that was foisted upon him. Like, maybe Mendelsohn absolutely refused to go back to that well, so they just thought at the last minute, eh, give it to Bangs. And Bangs probably hadn't thought that much about Zeppelin at the time, and possibly didn't even have that long to listen to this one, so crafted a snide review in keeping with the magazine's disdain, but at the same time was forced to concede its attributes, however much in passing and replete with backhanded undercutting, because Bangs, for all his faults, nonetheless had a pair of ears, and could recognize that III, of all albums, couldn't be dismissed the same way or quite as easily as its predecessors.

Xgau, for his own snide part, def. seemed to recognize that III was a big step forward (even if he is still fixated on The Blues):

"Led Zeppelin III [Atlantic, 1970]
If the great blues guitarists can make their instruments cry out like human voices, it's only fitting that Robert Plant should make his voice galvanize like an electric guitar. I've always approved theoretically of the formula that pits the untiring freak intensity of that voice against Jimmy Page's repeated low-register fuzz riffs, and here they really whip it into shape. Plant is overpowering even when Page goes to his acoustic, as he does to great effect on several surprisingly folky (not to mention folk bluesy) cuts. No drum solos, either. Heavy. B+"

Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 30 July 2020 14:36 (three years ago) link

I can't imagine putting on LZ III and not being just struck dumb by Immigrant Song and not mention it in a review

Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 30 July 2020 15:28 (three years ago) link

Just some anonymous blues rock, pat visceral impact, nbd, dime a dozen in 1970.

Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 30 July 2020 16:28 (three years ago) link

You shoulda heard Son House's songs about Norway...

"...And the Gods Socially Distanced" (C. Grisso/McCain), Thursday, 30 July 2020 16:31 (three years ago) link

Foghat's "Leif Eriksson Bop" was better

XVI Pedicabo eam (Neanderthal), Thursday, 30 July 2020 16:33 (three years ago) link

I challenge you to seriously distinguish between LZ and The Aynsley Dunbar Retaliation.

pomenitul, Thursday, 30 July 2020 16:33 (three years ago) link

lol

gnarled and turbid sinuses (Jon not Jon), Thursday, 30 July 2020 16:34 (three years ago) link

FWIW, since it's always worth revisiting, here's Lenny Kaye's review of the fourth album:

https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-album-reviews/led-zeppelin-iv-101608/

Needless to say, he also misses the mark with III, suggesting that IV somehow loses "the leaden acoustic moves that seemed to weigh down their third," but he at seems to at least get it.

It might seem a bit incongruous to say that Led Zeppelin — a band never particularly known for its tendency to understate matters — has produced an album which is remarkable for its low-keyed and tasteful subtlety, but that’s just the case here. The march of the dinosaurs that broke the ground for their first epic release has apparently vanished, taking along with it the splattering electronics of their second effort and the leaden acoustic moves that seemed to weigh down their third. What’s been saved is the pumping adrenaline drive that held the key to such classics as “Communication Breakdown” and “Whole Lotta Love,” the incredibly sharp and precise vocal dynamism of Robert Plant, and some of the tightest arranging and producing Jimmy Page has yet seen his way toward doing. If this thing with the semi-metaphysical title isn’t quite their best to date, since the very chances that the others took meant they would visit some outrageous highs as well as some overbearing lows, it certainly comes off as their most consistently good.

Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 30 July 2020 16:34 (three years ago) link

it is funny how that crew had sussed out the primordial stooges/glam/alice cooper/etc etc primordial ooze from which punk was going to spring, but they all seemed nearly blind to what was happening with hard rock and metal...seems like there was this conventional wisdom that "yawn Cream did it first" and everything that was happening in heavy rock was just a heavy blues ripoff

Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 30 July 2020 17:07 (three years ago) link

Yeah, I long wondered about the biases of rock critics and where they came from (something significant did change at the turn of the millennium, whatever words we want to use to talk about it) - is it just as simple as that heavy rock/'metal' and prog had a much more mainstream audience, and with a demographic that 20something writers wanted to distance themselves from?

Feel a million filaments (Sund4r), Thursday, 30 July 2020 17:13 (three years ago) link

I mean, there's also the stuff upthread about the unsavoury context of that mainstream-ness.

Feel a million filaments (Sund4r), Thursday, 30 July 2020 17:16 (three years ago) link

Didn’t Bangs also think kick out the jams was bogus but did a total 180 a few years later?

brimstead, Thursday, 30 July 2020 17:55 (three years ago) link

Here's his negative 1969 review: https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-album-reviews/kick-out-the-jams-252641/

Feel a million filaments (Sund4r), Thursday, 30 July 2020 18:31 (three years ago) link

Can't tell whether Bangs was the OG rockist or the OG anti-rockist.

pomenitul, Thursday, 30 July 2020 19:29 (three years ago) link

whynotboth.gif

Gin and Juice Newton (Ye Mad Puffin), Thursday, 30 July 2020 19:45 (three years ago) link

I would say this from the Bangs MC5 review is an extremely fair observation:

these boys, so the line ran, could play their guitars like John Coltrane and Pharaoh Sanders played sax!

Well, the album is out now and we can all judge for ourselves. For my money they come on more like Blue Cheer than Trane and Sanders

Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 30 July 2020 22:38 (three years ago) link

otm.

Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 30 July 2020 22:38 (three years ago) link

Yeah, that perfectly encapsulates my own disappointment with Kick Out the Jams when I heard it for the first time. I've warmed up to it since, but it's a record that's more notable for what it promises than for the actual delivery.

pomenitul, Thursday, 30 July 2020 22:40 (three years ago) link

Bangs later said something to the effect that he was really reviewing the hype around the 5 and he came around on the music after meeting them and hearing Back In The USA.

Also remember too how in his long review of Fun House that he initially hated it.

Bangs never really came around on Zeppelin tho, frequently dissing them in other pieces over the years.

"...And the Gods Socially Distanced" (C. Grisso/McCain), Thursday, 30 July 2020 22:43 (three years ago) link

Wayne Kramer:

My entire motivation was a knee jerk reaction to the criticism I got from Lester Bangs. His review in Rolling Stone fucked me up. I was on acid, I read the review on acid, and I’m young and creative and believing the hype, and my heart sank. He was a young writer, trying to make his bones, so he thought he’d say something provocative and contrary to the current consensus, as people were loving the MC5. And he was going to come out and say 'these guys talk a good game, but they can’t tune their own guitars.' Writers had been coming out on junkets and then writing glowing reviews about us, hired by the record label. It was paid for. Like most people, I thought you got in the paper on merit. That isn’t how it really works in the world. So I’m on acid, and I’m reading the review, and the guy is just ripping us apart. It got to me because I knew there were great weaknesses in the band and the music, the rhythm section in particular. The bass playing and the drumming.


Except, a) the bass is not exactly prominent on Kick Out The Jams, certainly not prominent to detract; and b) Dennis Thompson was arguably Keith Moon’s greatest disciple, one of the only drummers who really understood the importance of Moon’s role...and since Moon’s role was the center around which the rest of the band revolved, I can see why Kramer wouldn’t be too keen on that.

Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Thursday, 30 July 2020 22:59 (three years ago) link

Bangs dissing them pretty much defines "punching up." Anyway, Zeppelin to me epitomizes one of my favorite Simpsons gags:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tdyFEQeMYCU

Zeppelin is like one of those giant beers. Awesome songs, awesome sound, awesome musicians, diverse songwriting, everything from hard rock to folk to arty experiments, and yet there's this contingent whose response would be "other than that, what else do they really have going for them?"

I have a hunch much of this contingent called Cream "The Cream," btw.

Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 30 July 2020 23:05 (three years ago) link

XP I don't remember it exactly, but Kramer mentioned in the Jim Dero book that when he finally met Lester, he wanted to kick his ass, but Bangs opened with, "Hey, you guys are great" and they got wasted together.

"...And the Gods Socially Distanced" (C. Grisso/McCain), Thursday, 30 July 2020 23:07 (three years ago) link

XP and The Pink Floyd and The Free and The Taste!

"...And the Gods Socially Distanced" (C. Grisso/McCain), Thursday, 30 July 2020 23:08 (three years ago) link

I'm struggling with the idea that people aren't allowed to simply not like Led Zeppelin very much. This is moving towards US Beatles derangement territory.

Sonny Shamrock (Tom D.), Thursday, 30 July 2020 23:11 (three years ago) link

Anyone can not like anything. But to not like Zeppelin because they are anonymous blues rock is pretty silly. I don't listen to the Beatles that much and never have, but I would never say "bah, there's nothing going on there, what an empty void, snooze" or whatever.

Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 30 July 2020 23:19 (three years ago) link

Zeppelin was one of the original poptimist bands: critics didn't get them, but the public sent them to the top of the charts.

Tōne Locatelli Romano (PBKR), Friday, 31 July 2020 00:26 (three years ago) link

Pulled the Armageddon album off the shelf. Blows my mind that Keith Relf finally decided he really wanted to be in Led Zeppelin...and Black Sabbath...and, idk, King Crimson or something...and it all worked!

"...And the Gods Socially Distanced" (C. Grisso/McCain), Friday, 31 July 2020 00:30 (three years ago) link

that’s a hell of an album

kick out the jams rocks I don’t have anything bad to say about it

brimstead, Friday, 31 July 2020 01:41 (three years ago) link

I would say this from the Bangs MC5 review is an extremely fair observation:

these boys, so the line ran, could play their guitars like John Coltrane and Pharaoh Sanders played sax!

Well, the album is out now and we can all judge for ourselves. For my money they come on more like Blue Cheer than Trane and Sanders

― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, July 30, 2020 5:38 PM (five hours ago) bookmarkflaglink

Was that really said about Kick out the Jams? By whom? It feels like a bit of an easy setup to knock down.

longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Friday, 31 July 2020 03:43 (three years ago) link

Haha, I wondered the same thing.

Feel a million filaments (Sund4r), Friday, 31 July 2020 04:23 (three years ago) link

“The free-jazz movement, the music of Pharoah Sanders, Archie Shepp, John Coltrane and Sun Ra – that's what originally inspired me and the MC5,” Kramer told Rolling Stone in 2014. “What the most advanced jazz musicians were doing was pushing the music forward, and that was my goal as a rock player in the MC5. I needed a source of inspiration that was unorthodox and provocative on every level. I had reached a point where I could play the guitar okay. I could play Chuck Berry solos and Rolling Stones songs. Sun Ra showed me where to go from there.”

In a Red Bull Music Academy piece on Sanders:

Drawing on his travels through Japan with Coltrane’s group, as well as his reading about ancient Egypt, Tauhid balanced the incendiary sax shredding of Sanders’ years with Coltrane with a newfound lyricism and patience, letting each song unfold at a natural pace. And with the guitar of Sonny Sharrock adding both furious noise and nimble R&B chording that gave the sidelong “Upper Egypt & Lower Egypt” its melodic hook, Sanders’ work began to resonate beyond jazz as the Stooges and MC5 incorporated the spirit of Sanders into their proto-punk sound.

From a Spin guide to alternative music of the '60s:

Sanders continued to develop his "spiritual jazz" on albums like 1969's Karma (which features acid-jazz touchstone "The Creator Has a Master Plan"), but Tauhid was a crucial influence on both the MC5 and the Stooges in their initial tickets to sonic reduction.

Of course these are all recent, in hindsight and tinged with maybe a bit of hipster revisionism. Or maybe just focusing on Sonny Sharrock's guitar. Why Bangs mentioned it in his review at the time? Who knows.

Josh in Chicago, Friday, 31 July 2020 04:42 (three years ago) link

Yeah, if Kramer is saying those were his influences now, he probably said it then too. I'm not an expert on the MC5 and honestly didn't know they were talked about in those terms.

Feel a million filaments (Sund4r), Friday, 31 July 2020 04:58 (three years ago) link

John Sinclair was a big Jazz not Rock guy who took the garage band MC5 (who still might have been the Bounty Hunters then) under his wing and introduced them to Coltrane, Sanders etc. which they would fuse into Rock for their "High Energy Sound". Alot of the hype Bangs--himself a Jazz snob of note--was rallied against came directly from Sinclair and his svengali-ing of the band.

"...And the Gods Socially Distanced" (C. Grisso/McCain), Friday, 31 July 2020 05:02 (three years ago) link

Basically what Sinclair was pitching w/the MC5 was Jazz Fusion--not the definitive kind ala Miles or, like say Santana--but a more abstract concept of Rock music played with the hothouse intensity and high improvisation of Free Jazz.

"...And the Gods Socially Distanced" (C. Grisso/McCain), Friday, 31 July 2020 05:13 (three years ago) link

...and, you know, dope guns fucking in the streets.

"...And the Gods Socially Distanced" (C. Grisso/McCain), Friday, 31 July 2020 05:14 (three years ago) link

Yeah, if Kramer is saying those were his influences now, he probably said it then too. I'm not an expert on the MC5 and honestly didn't know they were talked about in those terms.

Final track on "Kick Out the Jams"?

8. "Starship" (MC5, Sun Ra)

Sonny Shamrock (Tom D.), Friday, 31 July 2020 07:57 (three years ago) link

Also they used to cover Upper Egypt by Pharoah Sanders

Pinche Cumbion Bien Loco (stevie), Friday, 31 July 2020 10:20 (three years ago) link

Yeah I dunno, I had read so much about MC5 before I heard them and initially it was just so much more regular rock than I expected

I've come to appreciate them a lot more on their own terms but honestly I don't personally hear the avant garde jazz in them

Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Saturday, 1 August 2020 16:04 (three years ago) link

pretty sure there's an MC5 thread in the archives that does a deep dive into how they are the archetypical "sounds incredible on paper, notsomuch on record" band.

Jersey Al (Albert R. Broccoli), Saturday, 1 August 2020 16:14 (three years ago) link

Has another (i.e. not the MC5) band lived up to the MC5’s promise?

pomenitul, Saturday, 1 August 2020 16:17 (three years ago) link

What was their promise? A free jazz infused radical politics rock band? The biggest issue is that essentially *none* of the rock bands of the era or beyond had the free chops of Coltrane or Coleman or Sanders or Miles or whomever. It's not particularly political, but the Stooges "Fun House" (the song and album) is jazzier and more dangerous and less conventional than anything I've ever heard from the MC5.

Josh in Chicago, Saturday, 1 August 2020 16:47 (three years ago) link

Fun House is one of the GOATs in my book, and I agree, but it's not as improvisationally 'loose' (heh) as I imagine that promise to have been.

pomenitul, Saturday, 1 August 2020 16:50 (three years ago) link


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