Led Zeppelin weren’t just a band that was put together on a whim. A lot of the time, when bands initially start making music, there isn’t a whole lot of direction there. People come together because ...
It’s an idyllic song, and tragic, and godly, and sublimely gorgeous. It contains multitudes. This weekend, “Becoming Led Zeppelin,” the first official documentary about the band, opened on ...
Watch in Movie Theaters on October 20th, 1976 - Buy Led Zeppelin - The Song Remains the Same Movie Tickets Watch on DVD or Blu-ray starting December 21st, 1999 - Buy Led Zeppelin - The Song ...
With such a rich inspiration behind the music for the song, it’s no surprise that it wound up being one of Led Zeppelin’s most dynamic offerings. However, while it was all very exciting for the band, ...
As their new documentary film Becoming Led Zeppelin arrives in cinemas this weekend, fans have ranked the band’s Top 10 songs on Ranker. And surprisingly two of their most famous songs only just ...
Becoming Led Zeppelin', the first documentary the surviving ... know each other musically by playing "Train Kept a Rollin'," a song first recorded in the 1950s by Tiny Bradshaw.
From the start, director Bernard MacMahon and writer and producer Allison McGourty knew there would be obstacles involved in making a documentary about Led Zeppelin, especially one done with the ...
How did four masters of their craft come together to form arguably the greatest hard-rock band of all time? That’s the focus of the new documentary Becoming Led Zeppelin. As the title indicates, the ...
Led Zeppelin on Imax, Parthenope by Paolo Sorrentino and Armand starring Renate Reinsve, both Cannes premieres, and Barry Koeghan in Irish drama Bring Them Down headline an interesting specialty ...
given Jimmy Page's subsequent success with Led Zeppelin. They asked: "Were they selling out arenas, did the average person know their songs word for word? Was it tabloid news when Clapton left or ...
In its way, the rise of Led Zeppelin was just as inexorable ... Kept A’Rollin’.” The original hit version by Johnny Burnette is played and the song is mentioned several times in the film ...