Pick four songs from any band and you can tell a lot about their sound. This summer, I’m featuring #RockBlocks, four picks from bands across various genres. They might be wildly different from each other, but what binds them together is the fact that they’re all a part of my life soundtrack.
The blues can bring you down. Rock can bring you up. That’s the wild dynamic at play throughout a good portion of Led Zeppelin’s storied catalog. Their songs take your soul in both directions. It can feel like your innards are being torn apart. But it can feel so good. Zeppelin is far more than hard, headbangin’ rock. It’s why they’re still one of my all-time favorite bands. Led Zeppelin IV was an epic recording with an epic ending: “When the Levee Breaks”.
Not as celebrated as the monster tracks on Side 1, “When the Levee Breaks” is largely remembered because it came out in an era of album oriented rock. Back in 1971, the majority of people listened to albums from beginning to end. In this format, “When the Levee Breaks” was a powerful, mind-numbing finale. It was one of the most bluesy songs ever recorded by the band, but it also brought immense power thanks to Bonzo’s thunderous beats and Page’s electric interpretation of the blues.
“When the levee breaks, I'll have no place to stay.”