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mercredi 25 février 2015

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Caroline Thanh Hương
Zep’s sixth still lives up to its billing as one of the best double albums of all time
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Led Zeppelin - Physical Graffiti: The last great rock album just got better


   

LED ZEPPELIN: Physical Graffiti (Swan Song Deluxe Edition) 
Verdict: Zeppelin's crowning glory revisited
Rating:
The hunger for treasures from the glory days of British rock is showing no signs of abating. There is still a huge demand for the music made by The Who and Queen in the Seventies.
And when the Rolling Stones re-issued the sprawling Exile On Main Street in 2010, the celebrated double album flew to the top of the charts. It was inevitable that Led Zeppelin would get in on the act.
The hell-raising quartet towered over rock’s heyday. Last year’s repackaging of the band’s first five LPs, curated by guitarist Jimmy Page, introduced their thunderous riffs to a generation of younger fans.
Tour de force (left to right): Led Zeppelin’s Page, Bonham, Plant and Jones
Tour de force (left to right): Led Zeppelin’s Page, Bonham, Plant and Jones
Now, 40 years to the week after its original release, it is the turn of Physical Graffiti. Out on Monday, with extra whistles, bells and seven supplementary tracks, Zep’s sixth still lives up to its billing as one of the best double albums of all time.
The record took 18 months to finish, with sessions delayed when bassist John Paul Jones announced he was leaving to become a choirmaster at Winchester Cathedral.
Multi-talented Jones ended up staying and made a significant contribution that belied his image as the quiet man of a louder-than-life band that featured charismatic singer Robert Plant, the virtuoso Page and powerhouse drummer John Bonham.
If Zeppelin’s previous albums captured the group at their most raw and immediate, Physical Graffiti was dazzlingly diverse, framing a group at the top of its game.
With drums that reverberated like sonic booms beneath Plant’s blood-curdling roars, there was no shortage of rock bombast. 
But there were also generous helpings of pop frivolity, gentle folk tunes and eclectic sounds influenced by Page and Plant’s growing interest in world music. 
Zep’s sixth still lives up to its billing as one of the best double albums of all time
Zep’s sixth still lives up to its billing as one of the best double albums of all time
The latest package comes in a number of formats. For entry level fans, the original LP has been remastered in full. There is a reasonably priced three-CD ‘deluxe’ edition that includes the extra tracks. And, for those with deep pockets, there are versions on vinyl and a big-ticket boxed set.
The original album contained some of Zeppelin’s most enduring songs, including the majestic Kashmir. 
An Eastern flavoured piece inspired by Benjamin Britten’s Young Person’s Guide To The Orchestra, its eight thumping minutes sound as extraordinary today as they did in 1975.
And then there was Trampled Under Foot. Spiced up by John Paul Jones’s Stevie Wonder-style clavinet, this was a piece of music that virtually invented funk-rock, setting a template that would later inspire the Red Hot Chili Peppers and Rage Against The Machine.
But Physical Graffiti was most notable for its sheer scope: the bottleneck blues of In My Time Of Dying; the country tinged whimsy of Down By The Seaside; the chiming folk of Bron-Y-Aur; the high-spirited, bar-room piano of Boogie With Stu. 
And entire careers, including those of The Darkness and AC/DC, have been built on the kind of sharp, strutting grooves Zeppelin pioneered on Houses Of The Holy and Sick Again.Alongside the 15 original numbers, the additional tracks give an insight into the group’s creative workings without offering any completely new songs. 
Driving Through Kashmir is a rough mix of that eight-minute orchestral opus. Brandy & Coke is an early version of Trampled Under Foot.
Everybody Makes It Through, is a stripped-down take on In The Light, a song later recorded with different lyrics and Page playing an acoustic guitar with a violin bow.
If Physical Graffiti was the sound of a band confident enough to take risks, it was also one of the last great hurrahs of the classic rock era. 
Nine months after its release, punk band the Sex Pistols played their first London gig, and the days of double albums, grandiose arena concerts and Bacchanalian excess inhabited by Zeppelin and their jet-setting peers were numbered.
But, as it celebrates its 40th anniversary next week, Physical Graffiti remains a double collection to rank with the Stones’ Exile On Main Street, The Who’s Tommy and The Beatles’ White Album.
The original LP has been re-mastered in full on CD, selling for £15. There is also a three-CD ‘deluxe’ edition that includes the extra tracks (£18), versions on vinyl (from £27) and, for super-fans, a big-ticket boxed set (£117).
New releases 
IMAGINE DRAGONS: Smoke + Mirrors (Interscope)
Rating:
Finding their niche between the meaty pop of OneRepublic and Coldplay’s shiny rock, Las Vegas band Imagine Dragons had a major hit with Radioactive, a single that sold nine million. This second album charts a similarly glossy path. 
New single I Bet My Life chimes perfectly with a machine-tooled pop landscape where sparkling hooks are everything, but there is greater individuality in the jittery electronics of Gold and the beats that power Hopeless Opus. 

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