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Pattern-chaser wrote: ↑February 28th, 2021, 3:31 pm And, for you video junkies: I doubt this is exactly the same version I just listened to, but it's still the very best of classic rock. Enjoy!Took a listen while I was coding - well familiar with a few of these. Seemed to have some of the same compositional tightness that Led Zepplin had. I noticed, even LZ's first album in 1969, it's like they landed with superband formula and I can see where Deep Purple had their own variant of something similar.
Papus79 wrote: ↑March 1st, 2021, 11:07 amPattern-chaser wrote: ↑February 28th, 2021, 3:31 pm And, for you video junkies: I doubt this is exactly the same version I just listened to, but it's still the very best of classic rock. Enjoy!Took a listen while I was coding - well familiar with a few of these. Seemed to have some of the same compositional tightness that Led Zepplin had. I noticed, even LZ's first album in 1969, it's like they landed with superband formula and I can see where Deep Purple had their own variant of something similar.
Pattern-chaser wrote: ↑March 1st, 2021, 11:49 am Yes, Led Zeppelin and Deep Purple lead the (heavy rock) field in the late-60s and early 70s. To choose one over the other is nothing more than personal taste. I followed both avidly, and clearly remember the excitement and enjoyment as each album came out. LZ 2 and 4, and DP from In Rock to Made in Japan. They don't do rock like that any more, that I am aware of.I will say this - I had to scratch my head a few weeks ago when I went Youtube-diving for some earlier stuff from my youth.
Papus79 wrote: ↑March 1st, 2021, 12:12 pm I found myself tracking rock music a lot less after the 2000's but as far as a band who was of 1970's musicianship calibre - I'd definitely recommend Tool's Aenima and possibly their later albums to which I know some of them are quite good but I haven't listened to the others end to end in the same way.
Also the band Muse was compositionally pretty strong (Absolution was probably my favorite album by them) but it may or may not work for you - it's a bit like they took a lot of the mid 2000's garage rock swagger and fused it with what I'd think of as a trance music sonic ethos but did it with more typical instruments (although to wind that back a bit - very dynamic rather than flat).
Papus79 wrote: ↑March 1st, 2021, 11:07 amI loved both bands back in the day, and Black Sabbath too. They were loud alright. I saw Ritchie Blackmore's Rainbow in the 70s and that was a real tinnitus-inducing show.Pattern-chaser wrote: ↑February 28th, 2021, 3:31 pm And, for you video junkies: I doubt this is exactly the same version I just listened to, but it's still the very best of classic rock. Enjoy!Took a listen while I was coding - well familiar with a few of these. Seemed to have some of the same compositional tightness that Led Zepplin had. I noticed, even LZ's first album in 1969, it's like they landed with superband formula and I can see where Deep Purple had their own variant of something similar.
Sy Borg wrote: ↑March 1st, 2021, 8:40 pm I loved both bands back in the day, and Black Sabbath too.I liked Sabbuff, but not like LZ or DP, both of whom seemed to me to be rather more talented.
Sy Borg wrote: ↑March 1st, 2021, 8:40 pm Another classic four piece, the Jeff Beck Group (with Rod Stewart), played heavy blues-rock before all of those bands, and they are widely thought to have had a major influence on Jimmy Page when he formed Led Zep, having played with Beck in the Yardbirds. There was friendly competition between the two at the time, as we can see below.Jeff Back never received the acclaim that other - perhaps less talented - musicians did. That kind of thing just happens sometimes. In the prog-rock genre, Gentle Giant were easily as good as the bands that topped the (LP) charts at the time, but it never quite happened for them. Anyone who's never heard of them could do a lot worse than check them out. . Octopus is one of their best albums, but they're pretty good live anyway, so most performances will give you video junkies the idea. I haven't watched the video I just linked, of course. TVs are for watching video; computers are for stills and text. So there.
Papus79 wrote: ↑March 1st, 2021, 12:12 pm I'd definitely recommend Tool's Aenima and possibly their later albums to which I know some of them are quite good but I haven't listened to the others end to end in the same way.As, like you, I have drifted away from heavy rock, I wasn't totally overboard with Aenima. It's a cross between DP/LZ and Rage Against The Machine (one-hit wonders: one exceptional album only). I don't see them as being quite as talented as DP or LZ. Fans more centred on heavy rock would love Tool more than I do, I think. I can certainly see the appeal. Thanks for the tip anyway. All new discoveries happily accepted! But now I'm off to listen to some 50s jazz....
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