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"Stairway to Heaven"
Download Windows Media Player here if you are unable to hear music. Welcome to Beyond the Music! Throughout the school year, this page periodically features the biography of a classic rock, rhythm and blues, or country artist. Also included is a carefully selected MP3 track of one of the artist's most memorable songs. Do you have a good voice? You can even sing along with the provided lyrics! Did you miss a previous installment? Simply scroll down to the bottom of the page.Now sit back, relax, and enjoy the latest edition of Beyond the Music!
TITLE:
"Stairway
to Heaven" YEAR:
1971 ARTIST:
Led Zeppelin




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Led Zeppelin's roots: Jimmy Page (lower left) and The Yardbirds.
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Led Zeppelin
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Jimmy Page
Robert Plant
John Paul Jones
John Bonham
The First Album
Jimmy Page and his classic double-neck guitar.
Led Zeppelin IV: The definitive Zeppelin album.
A Led Zeppelin concert would often leave the audience exhausted.
Jimmy Page and Robert Plant formed one of rock and roll's greatest duos.
Robert Plant tires of singing "Stairway to Heaven" but realizes it is considered a rock and roll classic.
Led Zeppelin was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1995.
ABOUT THE ARTIST: Led Zeppelin redefined rock in the Seventies and for all time. They were as influential in that decade as the Beatles were in the prior one. Their impact extends to classic and alternative rockers alike. Then and now, Led Zeppelin looms larger than life on the rock landscape as a band for the ages with an almost mystical power to evoke primal passions. The combination of Jimmy Pages powerful, layered guitar work, Robert Plants upper-timbre vocals, John Paul Jones melodic bass playing and keyboard work, and John Bonhams thunderous drumming made for a band whose alchemy proved enchanting and irresistible. The motto of the group is definitely, Ever onward, Page said in 1977, perfectly summing up Led Zeppelins forward-thinking philosophy.
The group formed in 1968 from the ashes of The Yardbirds, for which guitarist Jimmy Page had served as lead guitarist after Eric Clapton and Jeff Beck. Pages stint in the Yardbirds (1966-1968) followed a period of years as one of Britains most in-demand session guitarists. As a generally anonymous hired gun, Page performed on mid-Sixties British Invasion records by the likes of Donovan (Hurdy Gurdy Man), Them (Gloria), The Kinks (You Really Got Me), The Who (I Cant Explain), and hundreds of others. Page assembled a New Yardbirds in order to fulfill contractual obligations that, once served, allowed him to move on to his blues-based dream band, Led Zeppelin.
Bassist John Paul Jones also boasted a lofty session musicians pedigree. His resume included work for The Rolling Stones, Donovan, Jeff Beck, and Dusty Springfield. Singer Robert Plant and drummer John Bonzo Bonham came from Birmingham, England, where they had previously played in The Band of Joy. Page described Led Zeppelin in a press release for their first album with these words: I cant put a tag to our music. Every one of us has been influenced by the blues, but its ones interpretation of it and how you utilize it. I wish someone would invent an expression, but the closest I can get is contemporary blues.
Integrating Delta blues and U.K. folk influences with a modern rock approach, Led Zeppelins symbiosis gave rise to hard rock, which flourished in the Seventies under their expert tutelage. Such classics as Whole Lotta Love were built around Pages heavyweight guitar riffs, Plants raw, half-screamed vocals, and the rhythm sections deep, walloping assaults all hallmarks of a new approach to rock that combined heaviness and delicacy.
In Jimmy Pages words, the band aimed for a kind of construction in light and shade. The members of Led Zeppelin were musical sponges, often traveling the world literally traipsing about foreign lands and figuratively exploring the cultural landscape via their record collections in search of fresh input to trigger their muse. The very thing Zeppelin was about was that there were absolutely no limits, explained bassist Jones. We all had ideas, and wed use everything we came across, whether it was folk, country music, blues, Indian, Arabic.
The groups use of familiar blues-rock forms spiced with exotic flavors found favor among the rock audience that emerged in the Seventies. Led Zeppelin aimed itself at the album market, eschewing the AM-radio singles orientation of the previous decade. Their self-titled first album found them elongating blues forms with extended solos and psychedelic effects, most notably on the agonized Dazed and Confused, and launching pithy hard-rock rave-ups like Good Times Bad Times and Communication Breakdown. Led Zeppelin II found them further tightening up and modernizing their blues-rock approach on such tracks as Whole Lotta Love, Heartbreaker, and Ramble On. Led Zeppelin III took a more acoustic, folk-oriented approach on such numbers as Leadbellys Gallows Pole and their own Tangerine, yet they also rocked furiously on Immigrant Song and offered a lengthy electric blues, Since Ive Been Loving You.
The groups untitled fourth album (a.k.a., Led Zeppelin IV, The Ruins Album, and ZOSO), which appeared in 1971, remains an enduring rock milestone and their defining work. The album was a fully realized hybrid of the folk and hard-rock directions theyd been pursuing, particularly on When the Levee Breaks and The Battle of Evermore. Black Dog was a piledriving hard-rock number cut from the same cloth as Whole Lotta Love. Most significant of the albums eight tracks was the fable-like Stairway to Heaven, an eight-minute epic that, while never released as a single, remains radios all-time most-requested rock song. Not coincidentally, the song is featured on this page. Houses of the Holy, Led Zeppelins fifth album, was another larger-than-life offering, from its startling artwork to the adventuresome music within. Even more taut, dynamic and groove-oriented, it included such Zeppelin staples as Dancing Days, The Song Remains the Same, and Dyer Maker. They followed this with the Physical Graffiti, a double-album assertion of group strength that included the Trampled Underfoot, Sick Again, Ten Years Gone, and the lengthy, Eastern-flavored Kashmir.
Led Zeppelins sold-out concert tours became rituals of high-energy rock and roll theater. The Song Remains the Same, a film documentary and double-album soundtrack from 1976, attests to the groups powerful and somewhat saturnalian appeal at the height of their popularity. The darker side of Led Zeppelin their reputation as one of the most hedonistic and indulgent of all rock bands is an undeniable facet of the bands history.
In the mid-to-late Seventies, a series of tragedies befell and ultimately broke up Led Zeppelin. A 1975 car crash on a Greek island nearly cost Plant his leg and sidelined him (and the band) for two years. In 1977, Plants six-year-old son Karac died of a viral infection. The group inevitably lost momentum, as three years passed between the release of the underrated Presence (1976) and In Through the Out Door, their final studio album (1979). On September 25, 1980, while in the midst of rehearsals for an upcoming American tour, Led Zeppelin suffered another debilitating blow. Drummer John Bonham was found dead due to asphyxiation following excessive alcohol consumption. Feeling that he was irreplaceable, Led Zeppelin disbanded.
Robert Plant launched a solo career, Jimmy Page formed The Firm with former Bad Company singer Paul Rodgers, and John Paul Jones returned to producing, arranging and scoring music. There were brief reunions at Live Aid and for Atlantic Records 40th anniversary celebration. Something of the old power was rekindled in 1995 when Page and Plant reunited to record an album (No Quarter) and tour with a large and diverse ensemble of musicians.
Meanwhile, the Led Zeppelin legend endures and grows long after their demise, much like that of The Doors and Elvis Presley. The lingering appeal of Led Zeppelin is perhaps best summed up by guitarist Page: Passion is the word... It was a very passionate band, and thats really what comes through. At the dawn of the new millennium, Led Zeppelin placed second only to The Beatles in terms of record sales, having sold 84 million units. Led Zeppelin IV is the fourth best-selling album in history, having sold more than 22 million copies, and four other albums by the band Physical Graffiti, Led Zeppelin II, Houses of the Holy, and Led Zeppelin - also rank among the all-time top 100 best-sellers. Fittingly, Led Zeppelin is tied with The Beatles (five apiece) for the most albums on that esteemed list a mark of both bands impact.
In their ceaseless determination to move music forward, Led Zeppelin carved out an indelible place in rock history. As a result, the group was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1995.
Biography information courtesy of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum.
LYRICS |
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There's a lady who's sure all that glitters is gold,
And she's buying a stairway to heaven.
When she gets there she knows, if the stores are all closed,
With a word she can get what she came for.
Ooh, ooh, and she's buying a stairway to heaven.
There's a sign on the wall, but she wants to be sure,
'Cause you know sometimes words have two meanings.
In a tree by the brook, there's a songbird who sings,
Sometimes all of our thoughts are misgiven.
Ooh, it makes me wonder,
Ooh, it makes me wonder.
There's a feeling I get when I look to the west,
And my spirit is crying for leaving.
In my thoughts, I have seen rings of smoke through the trees,
And the voices of those who standing looking.
Ooh, it makes me wonder,
Ooh, it really makes me wonder.
And it's whispered that soon if we all call the tune,
Then the piper will lead us to reason.
And a new day will dawn for those who stand long,
And the forests will echo with laughter.
If there's a bustle in your hedgerow, don't be alarmed now,
It's just a spring clean for the May queen.
Yes, there are two paths you can go by, but in the long run
There's still time to change the road you're on.
And it makes me wonder.
Your head is humming and it won't go, in case you don't know,
The piper's calling you to join him,
Dear lady, can you hear the wind blow, and did you know,
Your stairway lies on the whispering wind.
And as we wind on down the road,
Our shadows taller than our soul.
There walks a lady we all know,
Who shines white light and wants to show,
How everything still turns to gold.
And if you listen very hard,
The tune will come to you at last.
When all are one and one is all,
To be a rock and not to roll.
And she's buying a stairway to heaven.
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