« Back to Top Level | Led Zeppelin

Led Zeppelin - The Song Remains The Same (First U.S Pressing Needledrop)(Jgster6969)

Track listing:
  1. No Quarter 12:32
  2. Rock And Roll 3:55
  3. Celebration Day 3:58
  4. Stairway To Heaven 10:56
  5. Moby Dick 12:56
  6. The Song Remains The Same 5:55
  7. Rain Song 8:26
  8. Whole Lotta Love 14:22
  9. Dazed And Confused 27:01

Notes


Led Zeppelin The Song Remains the Same First U.S Pressing Vinyl Rip Flac
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Song Remains the Same
Live album / soundtrack to The Song Remains the Same by Led Zeppelin
Released 28 September 1976
Recorded 27–29 July 1973 at Madison Square Garden, New York City, New York, United States
Genre Hard rock, heavy metal
Length 99:45
Language English
Label Swan Song
Producer Jimmy Page

The Song Remains the Same is the soundtrack live album of the concert film of the same name by the English rock band Led Zeppelin. The album was originally released in 1976, before being remastered and re-issued in 2007.
Contents
Overview

The recording of the album and the film took place during three nights of concerts at New York's Madison Square Garden, during the band's 1973 concert tour of the United States. All songs were recorded by Eddie Kramer using the Wally Heider Mobile Studio truck, and later mixed at Electric Lady Studios in New York and Trident Studios in London.

The album was released on 28 September 1976, by Swan Song Records. The sleeve design depicted a dilapidated movie house located on Old Street film studios in London, which was used by the group for rehearsals prior to their 1973 tour.

Until both the album and the film were remastered and re-released in 2007, there were significant differences between the two in terms of the songs included on each. These differences were as follows:

* The film included "Black Dog", but not "Celebration Day".
* The soundtrack album included "Celebration Day", but not "Black Dog".
* The film also included "Since I've Been Loving You", the introduction to "Heartbreaker", the instrumental "Bron-Yr-Aur" (which appeared on Physical Graffiti) and a hurdy gurdy piece called "Autumn Lake", none of which featured on the album.

In addition, of the songs that both the album and the film had in common, some of the recordings featured on the album were of different performances from those in the film. Other tracks which were recorded at Madison Square Garden, but omitted from both the film and the soundtrack album, included "The Ocean" and "Misty Mountain Hop". A comprehensive analysis of the sources of the original album and the edits is available at The Garden Tapes.
2007 reissue

The Song Remains The Same soundtrack album was reissued on CD on November 20, 2007, with the surviving band members having overseen the remixing and remastering of the original release. This coincided with the re-issue of the film, available on DVD. The new version of the soundtrack included six songs that were not on the original album release: "Black Dog", "Over the Hills and Far Away", "Misty Mountain Hop", "Since I've Been Loving You", "The Ocean" and "Heartbreaker", plus new liner notes by Cameron Crowe.

With the 2007 re-release of both the album and film, the songs were synchronized so that the full set-list from the concerts was available on both, with each song mixed the same way (the only exceptions being "Bron-Yr-Aur" and "Autumn Lake", both of which continued to be absent from the album).

Led Zeppelin guitarist and producer Jimmy Page explained:

We have revisited The Song Remains The Same and can now offer the complete set as played at Madison Square Garden. This differs substantially from the original soundtrack released in 1976, and highlights the technical prowess of Kevin Shirley, who worked with us on How The West Was Won.[1]

Due to legal complications, the band decided not to change the video portion of the original movie for the re-release.[2] Instead, Shirley created an entirely new mix of the three 1973 Madison Square Garden concerts so that the audio portion of the film would better match the on-screen visuals. The audio on the new CD release was nearly identical to the soundtrack of the new DVD release. One difference was that the songs included on the CDs that were not featured in the original movie were included as bonus tracks on the DVD.[3]

The audio mixes also differed from those found on the 2003 Led Zeppelin DVD. The most obvious example is that "Black Dog" was two minutes longer on the 2003 DVD than on the 2007 releases.

On 29 July 2008, a four-LP edition of the 2007 re-issue, on 180 gram audiophile vinyl, was released. It was presented in a deluxe archival two-piece box with foil-stamping. It includes a 12-page oversized full-color booklet with dozens of previously unpublished stills from the film, as well as four individual jackets with new and unique artwork. A special white vinyl edition was also printed in very limited numbers. Just 200 were produced, with only 100 being made available to the public from Led Zeppelin's official website.
Critical reception
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 3/5 stars [4] (original version)
Robert Christgau (C+) [5] (original version)
Q 2/5 stars [6] (original version)
Blender 3/5 stars [7] (original version)
Uncut 4/5 stars [8] (reissued version)
Mojo 4/5 stars [9] (reissued version)

Upon its initial release in 1976, the album received some poor reviews, with some critics considering it to be over-produced and lumbering.[10] Indeed, the band's members themselves have since expressed a lack of fondness for the recording. Page has admitted that the end product was hardly the best representation of Led Zeppelin as a live band:

Obviously we were committed to putting this album out, although it wasn't necessarily the best live stuff we have. I don't look upon it as a live album...it's essentially a soundtrack.[11]

In an interview he gave to rock journalist Cameron Crowe, Page elaborated:

As far as Led Zeppelin's studio recordings went, every single one of them has a certain ambiance, certain atmospherics that made them special. When it came to the live shows, we were always trying to move things forward and we certainly weren't happy leaving them as they were. The songs were always in a state of change. On [The] Song Remains the Same you can hear the urgency and not much else. The live shows were an extension of the albums.[12]

Track listing
Original release

Side one

1. "Rock and Roll" (John Bonham, John Paul Jones, Jimmy Page, Robert Plant) – 4:03
2. "Celebration Day" (Jones, Page, Plant) – 3:49
3. "The Song Remains the Same" (Page, Plant) – 6:00
4. "Rain Song" (Page, Plant) – 8:25

Side two

5. "Dazed and Confused" (Page) – 26:53

Side three

6. "No Quarter" (Jones, Page, Plant) – 12:30
7. "Stairway to Heaven" (Page, Plant) – 10:58

Side four

8. "Moby Dick" (Bonham, Jones, Page) – 12:47
9. "Whole Lotta Love" (Bonham, Willie Dixon, Jones, Page, Plant) – 14:25



Original release

Chart (1976)? Peak Position?
Japanese Albums Chart[15] 6
UK Albums Chart[16] 1
US Billboard The 200 Albums Chart[17] 2
Norwegian Albums Chart[18] 21
Swedish Albums Chart[19] 29
Canadian RPM Top 100 Albums Chart[20] 8
New Zealand Top 50 Albums Chart[21] 6
German Albums Chart[22] 28
Spanish Albums Chart[23] 23



Notes:
(*) Remastered and expanded edition
[edit] Sales certifications
Country? Sales? Certification?
United Kingdom (BPI) 300,000+ Platinum[35]*
France (SNEP) 75,000+ Gold[36]*
Germany (IFPI) 100,000+ Gold[37]*
Argentina (CAPIF) 30,000+ Gold[38]
United States (RIAA) 4,000,000+ 4x Platinum[39]*

Note: (*) Pre-remastered sales only
Personnel

Led Zeppelin

* John Bonham – drums, percussion
* John Paul Jones – bass guitar, keyboards, Mellotron
* Jimmy Page – electric guitars, backing vocals, Theremin, production
* Robert Plant – vocals

Additional personnel

* Cameron Crowe – liner notes

* Peter Grant – executive producer
* George Hardie – record sleeve
* Hipgnosis – record sleeve
* Eddie Kramer – engineering, mixing

Rip Disclaimer Included