đ SURF 'N TURF đď¸
-THE ISLAND LIFE-
https://image.nostr.build/8a71c7d4ea0564c87ea7e7cf142dd557d9b47cf6deef571b698090907378a9ee.jpg
8 Nov 1971, Led Zeppelin released their fourth album.
https://youtu.be/8j7oT2I8Nz8
With no title printed on the album, and generally referred to as Four Symbols, The Fourth Album or Led Zeppelin IV it has gone on to sell over 37 million copies worldwide. The 19th century rustic oil painting on the front of the album was purchased by Robert Plant from an antique shop in Reading, Berkshire, England. The 20th century urban tower block on the back of the full gatefold LP cover is Butterfield Court in Eves Hill, Dudley, England.
Led Zeppelin â Led Zeppelin IV
*******************************
On 8th Nov 1971, Led Zeppelin released their fourth album. With no title printed on the album, and generally referred to as Four Symbols, The Fourth Album or Led Zeppelin IV, it has gone on to sell over 37 million copies worldwide. The 19th-century rustic oil painting on the front of the album was purchased by Robert Plant from an antique shop in Reading, Berkshire, England. The 20th-century urban tower block on the back of the full gatefold LP cover is Butterfield Court in Eves Hill, Dudley, England.
No title is printed on the album, because the band deliberately wanted it to be untitled, going as far as identifying themselves with four specially-chosen symbols. Even so, it is generally referred to as Led Zeppelin IV, following the naming standard used by the bandâs first three studio albums, the symbols themselves having no verbal or written equivalent.
In October 1970 Jimmy Page and Robert Plant returned to Bron-Yr-Aur, the Welsh cottage where they had composed much of Led Zeppelin III and developed new song ideas. âLed Zeppelin IIIâ had been released in early October 1970, but only two months later they started work on its follow-up at Island Studios, Notting Hill, London.
Then in January 1971 Zeppelin decided to get out of town, back to the space where they could all contribute with the clock ticking a bit more slowly. For the previous album, they had begun working at Headley Grange in Headley, Hampshire, UK. An 18th-century former workhouse, the large house was popular with rock bands such as Humble Pie and Fleetwood Mac for rehearsal and routining tracks prior to recording, mainly because it was far enough from neighbours to avoid noise complaints. Zeppelin repeated the technique of recording there with the Rolling Stones mobile studio, continuing their working relationship with engineer Andy Johns.
Ian âStuâ Stewart was a founder member of the Rolling Stones and managed their mobile studio, so he was on hand to help out, most notably on piano for âRock And Rollâ, the Headley Grange sessions yielding 6 out of the albumâs 8 tracks. Perhaps surprisingly, the most classic and evocative track âStairway To Heavenâ, wasnât recorded at Headley Grange, although the lyrics were conceived there. Jimmy Page had worked on the structure of the song with John Paul Jones, and based on that Robert Plant came up with most of the lyrics in a burst of inspiration, apparently on the spur of the moment, around the fire at Headley Grange. The band then recorded the final version at Island after they returned to London.
One track that certainly was recorded at Headley Grange was the much-sampled âWhen The Levee Breaksâ, John Bonhamâs overpowering drum sound captured with just two microphones in the hallway of the house. The album was first mixed at Sunset Sound, Los Angeles but only one of those mixes (âWhen The Levee Breaksâ) made it to the final version, the rest being remixed at Londonâs Olympic Studios.
As with the intention for the album to remain untitled, no lettering was included anywhere on the original LP sleeve, not even the catalogue number. This was an intentional move on the part of Zeppelin to be judged solely on their music, and, since the album continues to be hugely successful and influential, they probably were.
The 19th-century rustic oil painting on the front of the album was purchased by Robert Plant from an antique shop in Reading in Berkshire, then hung on the wall of a house in Eves Hill, Dudley, in the English Midlands, and photographed there. The original front cover showed only the painting of the old man with the bundle of sticks; only when the gatefold was opened out would the viewer see the more modern tower blocks beyond. In January 2010 the cover for Led Zeppelinâs fourth album was among the ten chosen by Britainâs Royal Mail for a set of âClassic Album Coverâ postage stamps.
The inside illustration was entitled âThe Hermitâ, reminiscent of the Tarot card of the same name, and credited to Barrington Colby MOM, although apparently this is a misprint and the artistâs surname is actually Coleby. Jimmy Page arranged the printing of the lyrics to âStairway to Heavenâ on the inner bag. He came across the typeface in the 19th Century art magazine âStudioâ and had an alphabet created from it, in which the âStairway To Heavenâ lyrics were reprinted. The album has alternatively been referred to as Four Symbols, Untitled, Runes, Sticks, ZoSo and The Hermit.
Credits goes to the respective
Author âď¸/ Photographerđ¸
đ đłď¸
#Bitcoin #Satoshis #Freedom #Apocalypse #Music #Movies #Philosophy #Literature
#Grownostr #Stoicism #Nature
APOCALYPSE ANONYMOUS by
ATOSHI ANARKOMOTO