eMusic Review 0
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 »