Atlantic / Wea
1979
In Through The Out Door
About This Album
Somewhere between Presence and In Through the Out Door, disco, punk, and new wave had overtaken rock & roll, and Led Zeppelin chose to tentatively embrace these pop revolutions, adding synthesizers to the mix and emphasizing John Bonham's inherent way with a groove. The album's opening number, "In the Evening," with its stomping rhythms and heavy, staggered riffs, suggests that Zeppelin haven't deviated from their course, but by the time the rolling shuffle of "South Bound Suarez" kicks into gear, it's apparent that they've regained their sense of humor. After "South Bound Suarez," the group tries a variety of styles, whether it's an overdriven homage to Bakersfield county called "Hot Dog," the layered, Latin-tinged percussion and pianos of "Fool in the Rain," or the slickly seductive ballad "All My Love." "Carouselambra," a lurching, self-consciously ambitious synth-driven number, and the slow blues "I'm Gonna Crawl" aren't quite as impressive as the rest of the album, but the record was a graceful way to close to Zeppelin's career, even if it wasn't intended as the final chapter. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
Track List
(try tracks 1,2,3,4 and 5)
1.
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This album proves undoubtably what true musicians all of Led Zeppelin were regardless of the genre...and masters of all
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my first zeppelin album...need l e s s to say i went out and got all the other ones.
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Although Erlewine subtlety discards "I'm Gonna Crawl" ...to me.... it's one of Plant's finest vocal performances . An incredible gust of passion in his delivery makes the simple and purposely cliche lyrics work. Page's playing sounds as though he is just a session musician with keen taste. This isn't meant as a swipe but that his non-commandi n g place actually helps the song become more complete with purpose. I love it!
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burnburnette : Page said later on that he wasn't as keen on this album, especially "All My Love". He and Bonzo were planning for the next one to be a hard rock record. I know that a lot of people think it was a bad way to go out, but I like the diversity here.
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I remember hearing "In the Evening" within a week or so of the release of In Through the Out Door, and the song hit me like a ton of bricks. I fell in love instantly. I was twelve.
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Why is it people tend to always disagree with Stephen Thomas's reviews? Lol.
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hey hey now this album is good its not the best but come on now...
in the evening fool in the rain is one of my fav songs carouselambt a some good songs on there plus jimmy page was on herion soo yea... |
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Anyone remember the marketing push behind this release? The LP was sold in a brown paper wrapper to conceal one of 7 album covers. Really, it was the same art from 7 angles, but unique at the time. I have 3 cover versions..on e gifted, one bought and one inherited, all vinyl of course. I didn't think much of the album at the time, kind of anti-climact i c after the power of "Song Remains the Same". Tons better than Coda though, even though that was just an odds & ends collection, post Bonham.
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ems77. man what you said re: Zeps in-thru-the- o u t - d o o r . . . . my heart is there too!!! Hearing it & seeing the album art again is like a time machine.
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I have to agree Analog is the way to go but instead of Vinyl I think you can't beat Reel to Reel tape through a tube amplifier!
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Memories of this album are still so vivid; senior year in high school, crammed with a bunch of other guys into a beat-up Nova, cruising around with songs from this album blaring..... l i s t e n i n g to it over and over again. And then the shock of Bonham's death, the realization that Led Zep would never be the same again...the melancholy to this day wondering what could have been, what should have been.
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"It's almost as if "I'm gonna crawl" was fated to be their very last song." Nice, because it is the perfect end. I think it was their best blues tune of their catalog - real, elder-states m e n of rock-n-roll and blues - that one is both symphonic and bourbon-dirt y . When I heard it first in 1897, it was still the "new, un-cool album". Funny.
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Joe and Dean, you are both correct. I am glad some people out there know what REAL MUSIC is supposed to sound like. Vinyl picks up every note, every nuance,
glad I took care of my records. |
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Led Zeppelin is the best I believe because none of their songs sounds the same.
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No doubt, sound IS analogue, not a digitized sampling of reality like CDs. The sound is quite different. If you want the real thing, the true sound, you want virgin vinyl.
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All my love was the coolest song! I had the brown sleeve. Classic music all the way.
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A good Half speed mastered Recording on good quality virgin vinyl using a Quality turntable is the best sound there is,when it comes to listening to music PERIOD!!!!!! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! Those who think CDs or Mp3s sound better ,just don't know what they are listening to.
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Grim Cage, you're dead wrong. Vinyl contains an actual impression of the sound, where cd's give you a digital translation of their best approximatio n of the sound. BIG difference. I thought everyone knew this. It's not just the "cool" factor--you get the actual sound. It's like the difference between seeing something with your eyes and then looking at a bitmap of the same image.
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I love the snap crackle and pop of old records!
If you ask me, it gives much more character to the music. Especially great when it comes to old jazz or blues. Ah! Sooooo good! Cd's can suck it. so can MP3's. |
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That's because MP3's are already antiquated technology, a de facto standard that refuses to die. The only reason it continues to live on is because all of the alternatives don't have enough commercial push.
Vorbis and AAC both provide twice the quality or half file size, and the artifacts they produce at low bitrates are less offensive to the ear; e.g., the subtle pre-echo of Vorbis versus the metalic, lifeless sound of MP3's. Nothing beats Flac, though, if you have the disk space for it. |
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Just for the record (pun unintended - honest) I was an early CD adopter. They're certainly way more convenient, far less fragile, and they don't go snap/crackle / p o p in the quiet parts. What they lack is any cool factor whatsoever. As far as the fidelity thing goes though, I'd take a clean album over an MP3 any day.
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ah, records. large, low fidelity pieces of a time long gone... anyone who would prefer a record over a cd or mp3 is simply wasting time on the past. we dont advance just so we can whine about our advancements and praise obsolete technologies . embrace the now, guys.
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are there any CD's that are considered rare and given value?, there are some imports and what have you but not really, I would be really tentative to pay for an over priced "rare" cd, not in this day and age. Get the wax it sounds better, smells better and looks better. Digital turntables are cheaper now, embrace your inner record nerd.
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zeppelin; good band,compete n t musicians,me d i o c r e stage presence, somewhat pretentious. lyricly; thank god for tolkien: galadriel would have never been able to buy that stairway to heaven, other than that led would just get dazed and confused enough to simply play pirates. pete is god-richards is homeric.
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Definitely agree - albums are way better. Does anyone know - albums & album covers are obviously given dollar values like comic books, old coins, etc. - are there any CD's that are considered rare and given value? But finding rare albums & covers is a lot more fun.
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I remember the paper cover. Additionally the sleeve was infused with dye, so that if you rubbed a sponge across it, it would turn color like the swath on the cover. Albums where so much cooler than CD's – imagine folding up a poster, or stickers in a jewel case. Sigh!
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Wow what a group I will never forget seeing this group in concert they where the best. No one else comes close
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Hey remember the brown paper covered album? Supposedly there were four different album covers. I only saw the one i had, like the one shown above. then again how would i know what the others would have looked like? That's golden, early trick marketing...
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It's almost as if "I'm gonna crawl" was fated to be their very last song. What a perfect way to end it. I often wonder how their next album would have sounded had Bonham lived longer...
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My favorite Zeppelin album...blam e it on my youth at the time of its release. I was born too late to fully experience early Zep. I love it all now, but this remains my favorite.
And yes, F**k S.T.E.! |
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