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mrcozdude
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Topic: Another Zepp Poll Posted: February 26 2009 at 23:52 |
I don't want to sound morbid but I think Bonham or Page would of died.If not they would of quit.Page was a genius,he wouldn't of kept it going.The thing that made Zeppelin so epic was there demand and always let crowds wanting more.A band that big and wild was destined to crash.
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Eraserhead
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Posted: February 26 2009 at 20:49 |
rushfan4 wrote:
They may have released a couple of more albums and then broken up and went their separate ways, only to re-unite every 5 or 10 years or so to do reunion tours and possibly to release another new album here or there. |
I agree with that
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In heaven, everything is fine
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Gustavo Froes
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Posted: February 26 2009 at 07:39 |
Let's see....the band was in decadence since Plant's car accident.That famous Knebworth show in '79 sounded to me like a 'goodbye'.Then again,a T.V. promo was being made by then:"Led Zeppelin,the 80's."I don't think they would have broke up so soon.They would more likely loose a fair share of popularity with punk and radio pop going mainstream,and appeal to a more soft direction as in In Through the Out Door(which I happen to find quite mediocre,by the way).The band would change in order to survive,not necessarily for the best,and definetely loose popularity(unless they turned to a cheap pop shot as did Genesis,and become radio favourites again).
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Guzzman
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Posted: February 24 2009 at 10:37 |
It's quite possible that they'd have surprised everybody with a new turn in their musical direction (back to the roots? heavier? poppier? folkier?). I think that Led Zep might have gone on as a band, although they surely would have made a number of solo projects. Listening to their later work, would it have been possible that John Paul Jones (try to get your copy of The Thunderthief!) might have led them into proggier waters? Or would Plant have set sails to Bluegrass anyway and taken the others with him? Might Page have done something like Outrider with LZ? Nobody knows and maybe that it's good like that. I like to remember them as one of the greatest bands and wouldn't have wanted to see them go down the drain like Collins-led Genesis.
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"We've got to get in to get out"
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WalterDigsTunes
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Joined: September 11 2007
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Posted: February 22 2009 at 23:21 |
What would've happened? The 80s.
Their ability to operate amidst the possibilities and limitations of that era would have been the defining factor in the music. Would have gone 90125 on us? Would they have stripped things back and gone for something extremely energetic? Hard to tell.
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lazland
Prog Reviewer
Joined: October 28 2008
Location: Wales
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Posted: February 17 2009 at 13:37 |
Certainly no popularity loss - they would have continued selling LPs by the truckload and selling out all sorts of stadia - look at The Who & Pink Floyd for evidence of that. I think that they were all too close as a foursome of mates to have quit - it was the loss of Bonham that prompted that and the fact that Plant is now doing his own thing (very well, I think) that has made him refuse to take any further part. BTW - I saw them at Knebworth in 79 - I thought they were awful. It must be me, I suppose
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The Quiet One
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Posted: February 17 2009 at 12:05 |
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The Pessimist
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Joined: June 13 2007
Location: United Kingdom
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Posted: February 17 2009 at 11:59 |
Plant would have started up a solo career and left the band, and Peter Gabriel would have joined zepp to create future poppier albums.
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"Market value is irrelevant to intrinsic value."
Arnold Schoenberg
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Jim Garten
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Posted: February 17 2009 at 11:30 |
Personally I think Knebworth would have been the last you saw of LZ for a few years; whether they would then have returned reinvigorated, or continued to trade on diminishing returns, who knows?
In Through The Out Door was by no means their greatest work & the DVD of the Knebworth show, whilst energetic, was hardly inspiring - it's a good live DVD, but a document of a band past their best. It's right they split soon afterward, but utterly tragic why they had to.
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Blacksword
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Posted: February 17 2009 at 10:33 |
I think their popularity was on the slide anyway (correct me if I'm wrong), although I know they played a huge show at Knebworth in 79.. but in terms of record sales...?
I think they would have released at least one more album, which may have had a softer sound.
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mystic fred
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Posted: February 17 2009 at 02:44 |
very interesting question, but thinking back i remember LZ were being criticised fror their Knebworth performance and the dominance of JPJ on "In through the out Door". Fearing the band were in decline and stories about JP occult dabbling, tensions were high, Bonham was very nervous about the new tour and could have overdone it with the drinking.
i feel the band could have done with a break at this point, and returned re-energised, remember it was too much pressure that broke up Deep Purple. These days it is not unusual for a band to go their separate ways from time to time and reform, but then they were pressured by management to keep going over the fear they would be forgotten!
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Atavachron
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Posted: February 17 2009 at 01:42 |
^ they did rock that year, not their best live period but interesting
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harmonium.ro
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Posted: February 17 2009 at 01:32 |
If you watch the performance at Knebworth '79 (on the Led Zeppelin DVD) you'll be surprised to find out that at that particular time, parallel to releasing their softest album, they were playing the heaviest, fastest and eadgiest stuff they ever got to perform on stage. The performance of Achilles Last Stand makes me think of thrash-metal in state of conception. Therefore I would say that assuming that soft synth-oriented period would have followed in their career is just that... an assumption. (Please excuse my English, I sense several errors in phrase construction.)
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Petrovsk Mizinski
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Posted: February 17 2009 at 01:18 |
They would have done what I think they did after 1975 anyway....continued to suck.
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Jozef
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Posted: February 17 2009 at 00:52 |
Had they continued, I think they might have continued with the heavy synth use but only to go for a more poppier, softer sound.
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Atavachron
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Posted: February 17 2009 at 00:22 |
^ In Through the Out Door was mostly great is what it was, but it's hard to say...Plant's direction away from Zep's traditional sound on his first two solo albums continued in the vein of that record and is a clue to where he was interested in going musically, whether the rest of them would have gone along is unknown..I suspect they would've stayed together for at least another 5 to 10 years, you don't find that kind of chemistry very often and though they all may have done some solo work, their relationship would've continued (unlike the Beatles)
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BroSpence
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Posted: February 16 2009 at 23:57 |
In Through the Out Door was mostly lame. So...they probably would have burnt out more and gotten really really lame.
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rushfan4
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Posted: February 16 2009 at 14:49 |
They may have released a couple of more albums and then broken up and went their separate ways, only to re-unite every 5 or 10 years or so to do reunion tours and possibly to release another new album here or there.
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Alberto Muņoz
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Joined: July 26 2006
Location: Mexico
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Points: 3577
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Posted: February 16 2009 at 14:39 |
And update of an old poll /07/12/93
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