

1LP Original album on 180 gram vinyl, newly remastered in gatefold sleeve. Review: Old ones are the best ones - Great album and sounds great. Was packaged very nicely and well protected. Review: Excellent audiophile pressing if a classic rock album - Superb classic album- remastered and sounding better than ever. Whole Lotta Love will blow away any cobwebs and give your system a real try out. I cannot recommend this particular pressing highly enough. Just buy it- you know you want to!

| ASIN | B00IXHBUG0 |
| Best Sellers Rank | 444 in CDs & Vinyl ( See Top 100 in CDs & Vinyl ) 55 in Classic British Rock 70 in Pop Rock 158 in Vinyl |
| Country of origin | France |
| Customer reviews | 4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars (6,281) |
| Is discontinued by manufacturer | No |
| Item model number | 28930323 |
| Label | Atlantic |
| Manufacturer | Atlantic |
| Number of discs | 1 |
| Original Release Date | 2014 |
| Product Dimensions | 30.48 x 32 x 2.54 cm; 235.87 g |
L**Y
Old ones are the best ones
Great album and sounds great. Was packaged very nicely and well protected.
M**R
Excellent audiophile pressing if a classic rock album
Superb classic album- remastered and sounding better than ever. Whole Lotta Love will blow away any cobwebs and give your system a real try out. I cannot recommend this particular pressing highly enough. Just buy it- you know you want to!
C**N
Quick Reviews!
Barely a year after their debut, Zeppelin released what is probably their most famous album. This one firmly cemented their reputation as rockâs undisputed kings and helped them break America like no British band had done before or possibly since. Riff laden, dripping with sex, and stuffed with epic songs it is a rock monument and remains the standard bearer for the genre as well as being one of the albums which aspiring artists look to for guidance and inspiration. âWhole Lotta Loveâ is frequently listed as having the greatest guitar riff of all time and it isnât difficult to see why. It is very simple, only a few notes, but within those notes is the embodiment of rock n roll. We immediately sense sex, excess, freedom, confidence, flamboyance, attitude, and a raft of other feelings, and thatâs before Plant even opens his maw to unleash those timeless first words. As with many tracks here there is a looseness which comes from the track starting off from live jamming sessions, yet as well as this the song is incredibly tight- the sound of a band working as a whole. We get the impression that each member could anticipate the moves of the others. Though the riff was Pageâs own genius, Plant adds a stream of Willie Dixon inspired lyrics to create the finished article- the song is primarily about sex and aside from the lyrics, youâll probably get that from the moans and groans. More than a simple rock anthem, the strange middle section shows that the band were keen to experiment with other sounds and techniques but equally ready to return to normality via a stunning Page solo. âWhat Is And What Should Never Beâ seems to be a quiet moment in the album as it opens with jangly, soft guitars and some quiet Plant vocals with some phased effects. Plant sings to a woman of running away and all signals are pointing towards a straightforward love song. Bonzo comes in though with a blast lifting the song off into a heavier chorus. This is one of the major light and dark, soft and heavy combo songs which the band recorded, the technique working as well as any other song theyâve done. We get a last blues guitar solo, followed by a larger, louder one, we get fading effects, we get an outro over a minute long of Page and Plant psychedelic partying- all in all another hit. âThe Lemon Songâ continues the riff magic with another masterful introduction from Plant and Bonham. Plant squeals loudly through a range of Carry On style innuendos and classic Blues routines while Jones gives the song some funk with his bouncy improvised bass. Page unleashes one of his best solos before a free jamming session in the middle, before an explosion of excessive metal madness where every member blasts away as loud and fast as possible. âThank Youâ brings the quiet moment eventually, a ballad packed with loving sentiment, hippy ideals, organs, chimes, acoustic beauty, harmomic vocals, yet keeping free of saccharine droplets. One of Pageâs best acoustic solos features here, backed wonderfully by some subtle keys by Jones while Bonzo keeps blasting away inexplicably. Plant wrote all of the lyrics here in a tribute to his wife, a sign that his skills as a writer were growing significantly and the band were continually messing with form ending the song not once, but twice. âHeartbreakerâ opens with one of my favourite riffs ever, one which oozes with sleaze and rock-god quality. Add to this some raunchy lyrics about a sexually conquering woman and a man grown wise and weary of her ways, some skyscraping power chords, and a lesson in skins by Bonzo and we have another classic. As great as the riff is, the real moment of genius is Pageâs improvised solo which goes on and one and which you never want to end. Beginning slowly with the spotlight on him, he string bends and picks up speed before free jamming up and down the fret board with ridiculous speed and then burning out; just as you think itâs over, the rest of the band provide cavalry support which kicks Page back to life and things go from insane to somewhere else. This opened the door for a million imitators. âLivin Lovin Womanâ follows quickly and is similar in sound and theme, this time relating the story of a groupie who harassed the band. Page never liked the song and it was never performed fully live, but it is one of my favourites. The light and shade is there again, the title is used as a refrain with Page giving backing vocals, the riff is again inspired, and the whole thing is silly, fast, and fun. âRamble Onâ is another acoustic moment and while it is recognized as a favourite by fans and critics alike, itâs never been too high on my list. Itâs well constructed and well played as to be expected, the lyrics are full of Tolkien and folk inspired moments, and it provides a breather after the previous songs. I simply find it quite plain, but the melodies and rhythms are charming nonetheless. âMoby Dickâ is the stuff of drumming legend- a lone man stuck behind his kit as a spotlight shines upon his brow while he stares down a slavering crowd of fifty thousand, his band-mates off stage, his arms held high, ready to swing down and begin a 10 minute thunderous lesson. The version on How The West Was Won is near 20 minutes, whilst the original here is a meager 4 minutes and features accompaniment from Page and Jones at the start and end. When played live the band would often jam along, incorporating bits of other Zep tracks as well as segueing into songs from other artists, but the selling point is that Bonzo would thump away for an eternity with a variety of techniques. The fact that his drum solos keeps listeners entertained is testament to his genius and skill as most would turn off within 1 minute. âBring It On Homeâ is often the forgotten track here- most people hear the slow, soft intro, the harmonica along with Plantâs zany vocals and assume the rest of the track is similar nonsense. While this part does last over a minute and isnât the most listenable part of the canon, around halfway through Page unleashes one of his greatest riffs- all the more powerful because people never get this far in the track. Bonzo crashes in to help out, the riff is repeated in 3 different keys before Plant chimes in with some heavy rock vocals. This could have been 2 standalone tracks, though one of them would have went down as a classic, the other possibly as a joke. Any number of tracks from this album are classed as rock classics; indeed some of them are classic simply amongst the best songs of all time, so much so that every music fan should have it in their collection. It goes without saying that any budding rock stars or guitarists (or drummers, bassists, singers) should use this as a bible. This album marked a turning point in the bandâs career, where they would move away more from covers and become creative song-writers in their own right. It also shows a change in the tide of rock music, becoming, heavier, faster, more sexual, more daring, more technical; many of todayâs clichĂ©s and standards were either started or perfected here. It is already obvious that this is an influential album- for any younger readers or those who have not yet heard it for whatever reason- this does transcend genres and boundaries and whatever may have been putting you off getting this-put that aside and give it a go- it will likely be nothing like you expected.
M**1
Scratched
Paid ÂŁ19.57 for good as new but badly scratched 1st track second side 'Ramble on' swapped for this new copy (it was) brilliant, whole lotta love in surround! my original collection complete..
P**M
I recommend this sellar.
The cd arrived promptly & was/ is as expected. I do not review music, except for special circumstances, as it is too personal & there is no accounting for taste . Iv had the album on vinyl since I was a child, so nice to hear it again albeit without snapcracklepop charms of ancient vinyl.
N**5
How can music be this good?
When I was 17 years old in 1972 I was an apprentice electrician in Sunderland and I used to buy a vinyl album every week from my wages. This was one one of the first albums I bought, and I thought then "how can music be this good?". Now I am 61 and retired and I am revisiting the entire Led Zeppelin studio album series on CD and I can say that I think I was right in 1972. Music to me just does not get better than this, but let me give my opinion on the whole series and invite others to comment. Led Zeppelin 1 reinvented the blues and was one of the best debut albums ever made. Led Zeppelin 2 was even better and I just love this album and every song on it. Led Zeppelin 3 was a surprise to me (not like the first two) and it takes repeated listens to appreciate how good it really is Led Zeppelin 4 carries on from the second album and shows the band progressing, but still along the same path. I love this album. Houses of the Holy sees the band trying out some new ideas and to me its better than the third album. Physical Graffiti is the bands faultless masterpiece and its impossible to get those songs out of my head Presence to me is the weakest of the series, but if this were released by any other band it would be considered to be very, very good. In Through the Out Door will be delivered from Amazon soon, and I just can't wait to hear it.
A**X
Had ik al op CD maar voor deze prijs wou ik deze ook op vinyl.
G**N
En klassisk popgrupp som jag nu lyssnar pÄ till ett bra pris
C**S
Great vinyl! The sound quality is excellent and truly captures the energy of classic rock. Led Zeppelin II is a must have for anyone who loves rock music
F**A
Ottima qualitĂ audio
R**U
Robert plant voice not well recorded or remastered, very unnatural vocals.
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