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Led Zep
#51
SEARS APPLIANCES WROTE:
"Nagual LoneWolf is the Admin. here?

Then why am I listed as a member, but Nagual LoneWolf is listed as a "Visitor"?"
MY RIDICULOUS RESPONSE:
You're listed as a "member" because that is what you are perceived to be lacking, eunuch
When you finally find a harem to guard I'm sure nothing will...come of it 
SEARS AUTOMATED MESSAGE WROTE:
"a) If I want such advice from you, I'll ask for it."
MY SILLY RESPONSE:
You apparently have quite a collection of un-original comeback lines. I'll leave it for you to respond by saying, 'I know you are, but what am I?'
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#52
SEARS WROTE:
"Some of the insights expressed here are interesting."

MY RESPONSE:
Yes, every insight except mine, right?
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#53
Glad you like the site Sear..welcome. I am indeed a visitor and Admin here, well somebody has to do it...!
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#54
Well done NW.



So far so good, LKM to the contrary notwithstanding. He's not a bad sort; just determined to divert from the topic to personal rivalries.



That's fine, for children aged 5. Wouldn't be so bad if he could stay on topic.



I'm enjoying the LZ thread. I've been an LZ fan since high school.



I remember listing to Stairway to Heaven on the car radio; the car had a slant 6, w/ pushbutton automatic transmission.



The gal that was sitting next to me was stacked like a BSH (a side affect of birth control pills I imagine).



The good ol' days!



Thanks again NW for being such an able and gracious host.
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#55
Wow, you sure brought back memories. I can barely remember those old cars with the pushbutton transmissions. I remember feeling that they were a lot more cool than using the bar on the steering wheel. I guess they were prone to breaking quite often because they were obviously phased out. However, my memories of them were feeling that they were extremely cool.
I think Zeppelin wrote a song about those cars. When The Transmission Breaks...no...was it?....levee?
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#56
I thought I was had auditory hallucinations when I heard Robert Plant & Band of Joy singing "Satan Your Kingdom Must Come Down" http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GnVYht0iq-Y 
 Hallelujah! the power of prayer works in mysterious ways.
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#57
Nagual LoneWolf wrote:In words in the LZ song were "ah..ah....ahhhhh...ahhhhhhhhhhh...ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh...squeeze my lemon!"
mkay...I'm going to hand out the gold star, if you don't mind sear. My thread...my call.
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#58
sear wrote:Well done NW.



So far so good, LKM to the contrary notwithstanding. He's not a bad sort; just determined to divert from the topic to personal rivalries.



That's fine, for children aged 5. Wouldn't be so bad if he could stay on topic.



I'm enjoying the LZ thread. I've been an LZ fan since high school.



I remember listing to Stairway to Heaven on the car radio; the car had a slant 6, w/ pushbutton automatic transmission.



The gal that was sitting next to me was stacked like a BSH (a side affect of birth control pills I imagine).



The good ol' days!



Thanks again NW for being such an able and gracious host.Glad you are enjoying the thread sear ...imagine that Wei created a thread some people actually LIKE I'm just kidding. But of course. 
Yeah, LZ for me in my teens too...that's the best time to be into them.
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#59
"When The Transmission Breaks..." LM
At last!

WY,
Most of what I listen to electronically these days is talk.
Usually NPR, but sometimes recorded lectures from greats like Noam Chomsky.

Problem is, miss a syllable, and the meaning of an entire sentence can be changed.

So when I'm doing house work, vacuuming, or whatever; I fire up the LZ.

I can miss an entire stanza, and pick it right up again.

I don't drink coffee. But the jolt I get from LZ may beat what others get from a double latte frapacinno.
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#60
Next time stick a Led Zeppelin CD in your BLT and eat the whole thing
Guaranteed rock enlightenment
Hey, if you don't believe me...
Just Do It!
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#61
Royal Orleans is another Zeppelin song I feel might make for a really cool Elvis version
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#62
This is really interesting
now that Wei has shared the Dread Zeppelin concept
I can see how a number of classic Zeppelin songs
can be 'translated' into Elvis versions
Dyer Mak'er is most definitely another song
that can be Elvis-i-fied
If transferred into an Elvis friendly key
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#63
*MY COMMENT: I must admit that when it comes to showing forth Aliester Crowley's sex magick in musical form there is no greater rock guitarist than Jimmy Page was, at his best. Since Crowley stylized himself as being against all that is good I seriously doubt this fact to be a "good" thing. Nonetheless, it is indeed very interesting and unique. I venture that the Sentient Forces of Nature can outdo anything Crowley and Page ever did if the Sentient Forces of Nature are indeed inclined to do so.
Here is an interesting Guitar World interview with Jimmy Page that purportedly was published in 2008:

Page’s interest in Crowley would be, like Crowley himself, grossly misrepresented and misunderstood.  Perhaps even maligned.
In the early 1970s, Jimmy Page owned an occult bookshop and publishing house, “The Equinox Booksellers and Publishers” in Kensington High Street, London, eventually closing it as the increasing success of Led Zeppelin resulted in his having insufficient time to devote to it.  In “I’m With The Band,” Pamela Des Barres recalls one of the more interesting aspects of her relationship with Page: scouring Hollywood for rare occult literature to ship back to the Guitar God.
The infamous Boleskin House, (purchased by Page, formerly owned by Aleister Crowley) lies on the edge of Loch Ness in Scotland.  Sections of Page’s fantasy sequence in the film The Song Remains the Same were filmed at night on the mountainside directly behind Boleskine House.
Jimmy Page interview below, from Guitar World January 2008:
(Guitar World) Could we talk a little about the meaning behind your Sequence [in The Song Remains The Same movie]?
(Page) To me, the significance is very clear, isn’t it?
(GW) Well, I find it interesting that you were choosing to represent yourself as a hermit at a time when you were really quite a public figure.
(Page) Well, I was hermetic. I was involved in the hermetic arts, but I wasn’t a recluse. Or maybe I was… The image of the hermit that was used for the [inside cover] art-work on Led Zeppelin IV and in the movie actually has it’s origins in a painting of Christ called The Light of the World by the pre-Raphaelite artist William Holman Hunt. The imagery was later transferred to the Waite tarot deck [the most popular tarot deck in use in the English-speaking world]. My segment was supposed to be the aspirant going to the beacon of truth, which is represented by the hermit and his journey toward it. What I was trying to say through the transformation was that enlightenment can be achieved at any point in time; it just depends on when you want to access it. In other words you can always see the truth, but do you recognize it when you see it or do you have to reflect back on it later?
(GW) There was always a certain amount of speculation about your occult studies. It may have been subtle, but you weren’t really hiding it.
(Page) I was living it. That’s all there is to it. It was my life - that fusion of magick and music.
(GW) Your use of symbols was very advanced. The sigil [symbols of occult powers] on Led Zeppelin IV and the embroidery on your stage clothes from that time period are good examples on how you left your mark on popular culture. It’s something that major corporations are aggressively pursuing these days: using symbols as a from of branding.
(Page) You mean talismanic magick? Yes, I knew what I was doing. There’s no point in saying much about it, because the more you discuss it, the more eccentric you appear to be. But the fact is - as far as I was concerned - it was working, so I used it. But it’s really no different than people who wear ribbons around their wrists: it’s a talismanic approach to something. Well let me amend that: it’s not exactly the same thing, but it is in the same realm. I’ll leave this subject by saying the four musical elements of Led Zeppelin making a fifth is magick into itself. That’s the alchemical process.
Stairway To Heaven: a glorious manifestation of the great work
The Crowley quotes that revolutionized occult thinking for Page and countless other seekers of truth:
“Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the law.”
“Love is the law.  Love under will.”
“Every man and every woman is a star.”
http://www.zimbio.com/Aleister+Crowley/ ... ering+mage
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#64
I'm beginning to explore the concept

of changing the key of certain Zeppelin karaoke songs

without changing the tempo using Sony Soundforge Pro 10

Oh, there are lots of Zeppelin karaoke songs to choose from:
http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss? ... ke&x=0&y=0
*This and the post above are also shared on my Much Better Direction thread*
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#65
Jonesy in Blue Light
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#66
He's also obviously a fellow led-hed so I dig him just on that.

Just FTR, I like the live version of Stairway, the one on the album, but the regular version is not as stimulating after 30 years or so of listening to it.
I would still prefer it over many many other songs from other bands...I do think I could survive, and thrive, on a steady diet of nothing-but-Zeppelin. On a desert Island, if I had home grocery delivery from Walmart...free electricity ala Tesla, and all of Zeppelin's recordings...I'd be in paradise, no ****.
And I don't even need any of that because I have those songs inscribed upon my soul. I know them in the dark.
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#67
Is Stairway your favorite song? These past few days its had new meaning for me, I'm liking it more. Its really hard to come up with a favorite, I guess it shifts for me. I really like Over the Hills and Far Away. I used to be able to play the opening riff on my guitar, but I have not had my guitar with me for years and years...I might have forgot it. But can always learn again And I used to play Stairway...and sing it too, but only in privacy. I recorded myself once to hear how i sounded...a singer I am not, lol. But my playing wasn't bad. Stairway is a fun song to play on the guitar. Maybe I played it so much I got so used to it. "Babe I'm gonna leave you"...another song I could play, and that was a neat one, the finger picking has a very interesting rhythm. I also could do some of "misty mountain hop".
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#68
I'd have to say What is and What Should Never Be is my #1. And I like Fool in the Rain, too...perpetually.
I also like, presently, Sick Again and Black Country Woman.
Carouselambra and Achilles Last Stand are perpetual favorites..as well as Night Flight.
They are all pretty deep songs, imo, Zep is just deep if you're the deep listener...Battle of Evermore and Stairway are very rich in shared collective consciousness symbolism, don't you think?
There's not a single song of theirs I don't like!
And I like all of Plant's solo stuff and he was really good with Allison Kraus, imo...they deserved Best Album, I think!
And I liked The Firm, a lot...I have memorized both of those albums and also have them in my vast digital library.
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#69
Oh yes, the Firm, I was so happy they came out with music as it brought Jimmy back into mainstream. Then during that time Robert had his solo work pretty active, so it was really an enjoyable time. I got to see Robert in concert, it was great. I didn't get to see Jimmy Page but would have if had the chance. A few years ago I was looking into what Jonesy was up to, he was doing lots of blue grass, and he is very much behind-the-scene musician so has his hand in stuff not directly known about, movie soundtracks for example.



My perpetual fav may be Kashmir...live versions of it are just so powerful. Carouselambra is one I really love too.



Collective symbolism...yes, Robert's lyrics are very deep. He's a Leo with Pisces moon..or is it Pisces rising? well Pisces one or the other...Pisces the poet.
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#70
I noticed their Live at Knebworth 1979 is pretty awesome. Been listening to some song versions from that...Achilles Last Stand...Robert Called it the wheel chair song, lol. He was in an accident prior to Presence album, and so the Presence album was put together as an act of war maybe could be described...the intent to not let injury hold them back, Jimmy said it was a very spontaneous album, songs composed on the fly, the name Presence and black obelisk on the cover represents the band's sheer force or "presence". Their power which is what they felt most resonated about who they were for the world.



They seem so happy at this Knebworth concert, like they truly realized the fruits of their labor and how as a band they harmonized energetically.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=20XfsejPQXE
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#71
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#72
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