LED ZEPPELIN REVISITED, PART THREE (2015): More graffiti scribbles

 |   |  1 min read

Led Zeppelin: Sick Again (early version)
LED ZEPPELIN REVISITED, PART THREE (2015): More graffiti scribbles

As we have now learned to our (literal) cost, the Jimmy Page remastering of Led Zeppelin albums plus a "bonus disc" of uneccesary "mixes" is little more than a PR job to flog more product.

The previous reissues and remasters of the actual albums are excellent, but this nonsense about rough mixes or a different mix from a different studio elevates discarded versions.

They were rough, and therefore not of release standard.

Until now?

Okay, magazines like Mojo get their interview with Page on the back of the project but the artefacts themselves just seem further editions in some on-going disagreement with Robert Plant (who seems wisely silent on the matter).

Plant has a career, and Page doesn't seem to.

220px_Led_Zeppelin___Physical_GraffitiYou'd hope the edition of Physical Graffiti -- widely considered their double album masterwork -- might have seen Page up his game, but regrettably here we are again with more of the "rough mix" stuff, the "rough orchestra mix" of Kashmir (as Driving Through Kashir) and an early version of In the Light as Everybody Makes It Through.

The latter is perhaps the most interesting of these additional tracks as you can hear how this first attempt underwent a significant revision in the studio later on. To become something better.

If Page had offered more such material over these reissues -- working drawings, as it were -- then the expanded editions might have been worth serious investigation.

As it is, just getting the original albums remastered is the only sensible course of action . . . unless you really, really want to hear some of your favourite Led Zepp songs as they were never intended to be heard.

For two previous columns on this reissue series see here. And there is more of Led Zeppelin here.

Share It

Your Comments

post a comment

More from this section   Absolute Elsewhere articles index

BIG STAR REISSUED AND REVERED (1992): The Great Lost American Pop Band - found!

BIG STAR REISSUED AND REVERED (1992): The Great Lost American Pop Band - found!

The reputation and influence of some artists far outstrips their sales figures. Dylan – even at his various peaks – was hardly shipping out albums by the crate load and Van... > Read more

THE VELVET UNDERGROUND AND NICO, AGAIN (2014): Still at all tomorrow's parties

THE VELVET UNDERGROUND AND NICO, AGAIN (2014): Still at all tomorrow's parties

Every now and again when music magazine editors get bored, or some significant anniversary rolls around, they gather the staff and usually some guests to vote on The Greatest Albums of the Rock... > Read more

Elsewhere at Elsewhere

Elsewhere Art . . . Vernon Reid

Elsewhere Art . . . Vernon Reid

This collage was very simple but oddly enough it took quite a long time to execute properly. It is of Vernon Reid from the band Living Colour and it accompanied a 2017 interview with him, the... > Read more

Tri Nguyen: The Art of the Japanese Zither (ARC Music)

Tri Nguyen: The Art of the Japanese Zither (ARC Music)

As with the Korean gayageum, the 16-string Vietnamese zither (dan tranh, pronounced “dan chang”) is fiendishly difficult to play but offers gloriously, light and evocative charms in the... > Read more