Free Republic
Browse · Search
General/Chat
Topics · Post Article

To: SamAdams76

I don’t think I could pick a favorite Zep album. I just remember back in 1978 my friends and I were awaiting their next release for what seemed like a very long time. Presence had come out a couple of years before, but like you noted, it didn’t satisfy, and hey... we were nineteen or twenty years old and life seemed to move like molasses. We wanted and expected something like Zep I, or II, or III, or IV, or Houses of the Holy or Physical Graffiti. Something with hard driving Blues/Rock. Old school stuff, with an easy to play song or two for those of us who liked to fiddle with the guitar. (Ala Stairway or Going To California or Babe I’m Gonna Leave You)

But to us “In Through The Out Door” sounded like some sort of unholy cross between Elvis, The Beatles (back-beat stuff), The Beegees and Benny Hill’s theme song. It just wasn’t at all what we were expecting, and it drove us away from Zeppelin for years to come. Years later we joked that Zep had singlehandedly caused the birth of disco when that album hit the streets. :) (I actually ticked off a few people with that comment) LOL!


92 posted on 01/09/2011 10:00:50 AM PST by RingerSIX (My wife and I took an AIDS vaccine that they offer down at our Church.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 74 | View Replies ]


To: RingerSIX
..."Years later we joked that Zep had singlehandedly caused the birth of disco when that album hit the streets."... Disco as I knew it was already fading by the time In Through The Out Door was released. I think the beginning of the end for Disco was the night in 1979 that rock DJ Steve Dahl held court at Comiskey Park where fans brought in their own disco records to be blown sky-high during the 7th inning stretch of a Chisox game.Steve Dahl
93 posted on 01/10/2011 5:01:28 AM PST by equaviator ("There's a (datum) plane on the horizon coming in...see it?")
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 92 | View Replies ]

Free Republic
Browse · Search
General/Chat
Topics · Post Article


FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson