Led Zeppelin IV

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (1604 ratings)
Led Zeppelin IV album cover
Album Information
ALBUM ONLY // EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 8   Total Length: 42:27

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Lenny Kaye

eMusic Contributor

As musician, writer, and producer, Lenny Kaye is intimately involved with the creative impulse. He has been a guitarist for poet-rocker Patti Smith since her ba...more »

04.14.10
The mid-period masterpiece
2007 | Label: Atlantic Records

Hop. And choose your own font while you're at it. The Zeppelin mid-period masterpiece was hard to spot at first. Its cover seemed overtly rural, a bent man carrying a bundle of sticks seen through a frame on a weathered wall; and perhaps it would continue the scaled-down evolution of III. But the transformation begun at Bron-y-Aur would find new complexities: in particular, a song called "Stairway to Heaven." They began conceptual work in November, 1970, when Page began thinking of a track that combined and built through sections, an opus. The song begins simply and over the course of each new section, climbs that very stairway, a beautiful metaphor made manifest by Robert's lyrics, written as the band ran through the song's metamorphosis. Critics had been noticeably myopic on Led Zeppelin; a mixture of snobbery and positioning against the overtly populist, and certainly missed the group's staying power, not to mention appeal to the female hard rock audience, who did like and respond to the band's flirtatious manner. But this streak of English romantique, allusioning Byron and Wilde and Crowley and Celtic outcroppings in British history and the land of Faery and Mississippi floodplain (which, despite all, my choice… read more »

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Le Zeppelin IV Revisited

CalBear

This album debuted during my high school years. After hearing \"Going to California\" at the end of the recent HBO Entourage finale, it made me go back and listen to these tracks again. Hard to believe that 40 years later, it sounds as incredible as the first time I put it the turntable. Pound for pound -- has to rank high on any classic list. It also served as the bridge between their second LP and Houses of the Holy, two other game changers which will always stand the test of time. Just wished I would have seen them in concert.

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A true rock classic

MCMaenza

This is a great album. Here's my full review - http://mcmaenza.blogspot.com/2011/06/led-zeppelin-led-zeppelin-iv.html

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Zeppelin Lives on

ErinGoddess

I know these songs and they all came from when I was no more than a baby. The true greats never wear out, and this is definitely one of them!

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40 year love affair!

strawberryfields

I've still got my record when it first came out! Zeppelin's best album... an I love 'em all! I was only 7 and worked my butt off to get it... almost 40 years later I still love it!

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Priceless

knightcy

A record that will be important forever!

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One of the Greatest Rock Albums

eaa001

Led Zeppelin's fourth album solidified the band's place as one of the most significant bands in rock and roll. Starting with Black Dog and Rock & Roll, Zeppelin showed that it could rock as well as anyone. Then came Stairway to Heaven, one of the epic rock classics. The songs many parts showcased the band's wide range as musicians. The opening riff to Misty Mountain Hop was classic. Though you have to download all of the tracks on the album, you won't regret it.

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Every track is perfect!

xj32

Not sure how this could ever be anything but 5 stars!

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Classic Zep

bbeamer

What else is there to say?

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Classic

dondejuan

an essential in any collection

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Absolute classic

lastkings

The opening to "Levee" alone is worth the price of admission. There's a reason that nearly all of IV made it to their "early days" greatest hits album.

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They Say All Music Guide

Encompassing heavy metal, folk, pure rock & roll, and blues, Led Zeppelin’s untitled fourth album is a monolithic record, defining not only Led Zeppelin but the sound and style of ’70s hard rock. Expanding on the breakthroughs of III, Zeppelin fuse their majestic hard rock with a mystical, rural English folk that gives the record an epic scope. Even at its most basic — the muscular, traditionalist “Rock and Roll” — the album has a grand sense of drama, which is only deepened by Robert Plant’s burgeoning obsession with mythology, religion, and the occult. Plant’s mysticism comes to a head on the eerie folk ballad “The Battle of Evermore,” a mandolin-driven song with haunting vocals from Sandy Denny, and on the epic “Stairway to Heaven.” Of all of Zeppelin’s songs, “Stairway to Heaven” is the most famous, and not unjustly. Building from a simple fingerpicked acoustic guitar to a storming torrent of guitar riffs and solos, it encapsulates the entire album in one song. Which, of course, isn’t discounting the rest of the album. “Going to California” is the group’s best folk song, and the rockers are endlessly inventive, whether it’s the complex, multi-layered “Black Dog,” the pounding hippie satire “Misty Mountain Hop,” or the funky riffs of “Four Sticks.” But the closer, “When the Levee Breaks,” is the one song truly equal to “Stairway,” helping give IV the feeling of an epic. An apocalyptic slice of urban blues, “When the Levee Breaks” is as forceful and frightening as Zeppelin ever got, and its seismic rhythms and layered dynamics illustrate why none of their imitators could ever equal them. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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