Led Zeppelin
Madison Square Garden
Four Blocks In The Snow
(SoundBoard)
Here is the link
https://mega.co.nz/#!y0Eg1aSJ!7H9-C8te-UA2u3oIJzQGSyz-G5tT4WDZT7viNumO49M
This is definitely one of the best shows of 1975. The jamming is very heavy and powerful! Everyone is on point and seems like they are having a blast, Just like they always do at the Garden!!!!! Enjoy this show people!!!!!
The band's third and final night at Madison Square Garden
begins with a brief soundcheck, even Plant attempts to warm up his sore
voice. Page blazes through the guitar solo near the end of Sick Again.
As the song ends, Plant tells the crowd "we came four blocks in the
snow to get here," adding "isn't it good though, it snows?... doesn't it
change the vibe of the city?... I think it's great." In My Time of Dying is excellent. The band is on fire during The Song Remains the Same. Page shreds wildly through the guitar solos with amazing precision as Bonzo and Jones race along at top speed. The Rain Song is absolutely fantastic, one of the best in recent memory.
Kashmir sounds like an army marching into battle. A mesmerizing performance, the best thus far. No Quarter is introduced as featuring "the impeccably clean fingernails of John Paul Jones... the man who made Monty Python's Flying Circus
a flop in New York." Page delivers a dramatically erratic guitar solo.
Jones somehow ends up in a different key at the end of the instrumental
section. As the song ends, Plant tells the crowd "I told you we intend
to have a good time." Page shreds frantically through the guitar solo
during Trampled Underfoot. Before Moby Dick,
Plant announces "ladies and gentlemen, at this point in the evening we
wanna feature one of the finest percussionists that Led Zeppelin's ever
had... the bowler-hatted wonder... the man who made constipation passé,
John Bonham!"
Dazed and Confused is introduced as "the immaculate conception." Page's fingers get a bit sticky during the lead-in to the bow solo. The San Francisco interlude
is brilliant. After blazing through an explosive entrance to the guitar
solo/workout section, Page breaks a string, leaving Plant to improvise a
brief vocal solo. The instrumental machinery is in full-swing, led by
Page's wild soloing. He even gets into the riff from Walter's Walk for the first time since 1/7/1973. The Mars, the Bringer of War section
is followed by an amazing stop-start jam. The epic journey reaches its
climax with the phenomenal outro jam. A truly mind-blowing performance,
one of the best thus far.
Page tears through the guitar solo during Black Dog. Plant hints at You Shook Me before the show-closing Heartbreaker.
The walls of the arena quake under the power of Bonzo's thunderous
fills during the initial verses. The a cappella solo is followed by an
impromptu rendition of That's All Right.
Page shreds through the frenzied guitar solo section. As the band
leaves the stage, Plant announces "ladies and gentlemen of New York,
you're too much... and we ain't so bad ourselves." An unbelievable
performance. Must hear.
The tape is an outstanding matrix of audience and soundboard recordings, fit for an official release.
No comments:
Post a Comment