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Led Zeppelin Albums
Led Zeppelin - Houses Of The Holy
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<blockquote data-quote="Floyd" data-source="post: 283" data-attributes="member: 1"><p><em>Houses of the Holy</em> is often one of the most polarizing of Zeppelin's six iconic albums. After the massive commercial and artistic success of <em>Led Zeppelin IV</em>, the band's follow-up had a lot to live up to. Zeppelin seized on that to take some huge risks on <em>Houses of the Holy</em>—to mixed results. There's the bizarre reggae-inspired "D'yer Mak Mak'er" and the synth and keyboard heavy "No Quarter," which remains one of Zeppelin's most fascinating works. And while "The Rain Song" and "Over the Hills and Far Away" are two pieces of classic Zeppelin beauty, the rest of the album suffers from some confusing moments that never really caught on in 1973, and certainly don't work today.</p><p></p><p>The Song Remains The Same</p><p>The Rain Song</p><p>Over The Hills And Far Away</p><p>The Crunge</p><p>Dancing Days</p><p>D'yer Maker</p><p>No Quarter</p><p>The Ocean</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Floyd, post: 283, member: 1"] [I]Houses of the Holy[/I] is often one of the most polarizing of Zeppelin's six iconic albums. After the massive commercial and artistic success of [I]Led Zeppelin IV[/I], the band's follow-up had a lot to live up to. Zeppelin seized on that to take some huge risks on [I]Houses of the Holy[/I]—to mixed results. There's the bizarre reggae-inspired "D'yer Mak Mak'er" and the synth and keyboard heavy "No Quarter," which remains one of Zeppelin's most fascinating works. And while "The Rain Song" and "Over the Hills and Far Away" are two pieces of classic Zeppelin beauty, the rest of the album suffers from some confusing moments that never really caught on in 1973, and certainly don't work today. The Song Remains The Same The Rain Song Over The Hills And Far Away The Crunge Dancing Days D'yer Maker No Quarter The Ocean [/QUOTE]
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Led Zeppelin - Houses Of The Holy
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