Monday, November 4, 2024

155. Led Zeppelin - Led Zeppelin (January 1969)





1. Good Times Bad Times*

2. Babe I'm Gonna Leave You

3. You Shook Me

4. Dazed and Confused*

5. Your Time Is Gonna Come

6. Black Mountain Side

7. Communication Breakdown*

8. I Can't Quit You Baby

9. How Many More Times


****


Homer Simpson once quipped that Jimmy Page was "the greatest thief of Black American music of all time". This is kind of true, but it's worth noting that back in the late 60s British bands engaging in borderline copyright-infringing reworkings of old blues songs was a pretty common thing. And Page didn't just rip off Black people - he ripped off Jeff Beck's version of "You Shook Me" and straight-up stole the foundations of "Dazed and Confused". In any case, I don't know that that line of reasoning is especially productive. Whatever his sources, Page's approach was ground-breaking and unique. I can't imagine anyone preferring Beck's version of "You Shook Me" (though, to be honest, I don't much care for either version). And "Dazed and Confused" is one of those songs that pretty much rewrote the rules of popular music. Without it there'd simply be no heavy metal. Or at the very least no Black Sabbath. 

65 years later, the idea of skull-crushingly heavy riff-based stadium rock is pretty old hat. The genre's been celebrated, buried and resurrected any number of times over the years. But Zeppelin endure through it all, for the simple fact that they rock so fucking hard. Yes, Robert Plant's lyrics are, at this early point, not overly complex and frankly rather misogynistic. And he hasn't really learned to control his voice yet. But putting that aside, you have three of the finest instrumentalists in the history of popular music backing him up. And best of all, these guys can all play brilliantly, but they're not too proud to play dumb when it's called for. So you have immediate, ultra-rocking riffs backed up by a pounding rhythm section, but you also have blistering, technically dazzling solos and forays into gentle, complex folk and psychedelia. 

This is not my favourite Led Zeppelin album, mind. Of course that's IV. And truth be told, I find it difficult to sit through any of their albums except for IV and Houses of the Holy. But Led Zeppelin is a pretty kickass album. The eclecticism for which the band are famous is already present, and so you get a good mix of heavy rock with folk and even Indian influences. But there's also a simplicity and rawness to the album - probably attributable to the brief time and low budget of the recording, as well as the fact that most of these songs were worked-out live before hand and so tend to reflect one of their sets. "Dazed and Confused" is, I think, the only song here that can really stand alongside their later classics, but it's one hell of a brilliant song and worth the price of admission alone. The "so dumb it's brilliant" riff on "Communication Breakdown" is another highlight, and "How Many More Times" is a ferocious workout that highlights all the band's strengths (and gets pretty funky, too).

What really sets this album apart from its peers is the approach. Plenty of bands had rocked really damned hard before Led Zeppelin, but none in quite this way. The incorporation of so many different forms of music into a cohesive sound, rather than diluting the impact of the music, resulted in something incredibly immediate and thrilling. I'm actually looking forward to revisiting the first few Led Zeppelin albums, as I suspect I may find myself enjoying them a lot more than I did previously - especially coming to them from behind, as it were, with a better knowledge of just what preceded them and how they fit into the history of rock. It's fun to discover new music, but it's also fun to rediscover bands and albums you never gave a fair shake in the first place.




154. Quicksilver Messenger Service - Happy Trails (March 1969)




1. Who Do You Love Suite -

I. Who Do You Love (Part One)

II. When Do You Love

III. Where Do You Love

IV. How Do You Love

V. Which Do You Love

VI. Who Do You Love (Part 2)

2. Mona

3. Maiden of the Cancer Moon

4. Calvary

5. Happy Trails


**1/2


Does a twenty minute long exploratory jazz-acid reworking of the Bo Diddley classic "Who Do You Love" sound like a good time to you? If so, I strongly recommend Happy Trails. Personally, though, I kind of think this album is a waste of time.

I think I would have enjoyed the "Who Do You Love" suite a bit more if I wasn't intimately familiar with the original. As it was, I couldn't help thinking of how much I liked Diddley's version and how much the Quicksilver Messenger Service got wrong with their interpretation of it. The original is spooky, fun, sexy, concise and a rhythmic monster. The suite is a long, jammy exercise in so-so guitar heroics, anchored by some extremely unimpressive drum work. I mean, Bo Diddley is considered one of the fathers of punk rock. The Quicksilver Messenger Service are a freeform acid-jazz-rock combo built around twenty minute guitar solos and feedback experiments.

After a few listens, I was able to shed most of my preconceptions and appreciate Happy Trails for what it is, instead of what I wish it would be. And I have to admit - there are a few moments of real beauty here, and the musicians have some pretty impressive chops. But this really just isn't my cup of tea. And it's not just the Diddley covers. The two originals that close out the album are sort of pointless. I've bemoaned the fact several times, but I think you really need to be stoned to appreciate this music, and I'm not about to risk another psychotic break just so that I can properly appreciate "Maiden of the Cancer Moon".

I can see why people like this stuff. I think the problem is I sit and listen to these sorts of albums through, when they're really intended as party soundtracks. As background music to a swinging party, Happy Trails would be excellent. I tried listening to it drunk once while on the computer dicking around, and I didn't mind it. But my last listen was twenty minutes ago, at 11 in the morning, stone cold sober and preparing to go to work in a few hours. Not really an environment conducive to getting all groovy, to use the parlance of the time. 

Happy Trails is a solid album, and its approach points the way forward for a lot of jammy, exploratory music. I can definitely see why people liked it at the time - it manages to go to to some very strange places while remaining pretty accessible, and we haven't really had much like it in the Book at this point. Doing this project, I've found that I'm no great fan of the San Francisco sound, but for a lot of people in the 60s and onward this album must have been a window into a world, and a legendary scene, which a lot of people idolised and still mythologise and pine for to this day. Then there's the fact that this album's approach - taking classic songs and reworking them into long, unrecognisable forms - would be pretty popular through the early 70s until punk came along and remind everyone how to rock. Happy Trails manages to strike a solid balance between direct rock and proggy excess, and I kind of admire the Quicksilver Messenger Service for that. I just really doubt I'll be listening to this album again any time soon.




155. Led Zeppelin - Led Zeppelin (January 1969)

1. Good Times Bad Times * 2. Babe I'm Gonna Leave You 3. You Shook Me 4. Dazed and Confused* 5. Your Time Is Gonna Come 6. Black Moun...