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justkindanutty asked: You have a fantastic blog :) I also really enjoy the music you have :)

oh, thank you :)

3 days ago on May 29, 2012 at 09:16pm

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zeppelinlaughed:

He’s my lover.

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ledzeppelinconcertchronology:

1968 September 7
Gladsaxe, Denmark
Egegård Skole, Box 45 Teen Club
Part 4

1 week ago on May 23, 2012 at 01:30pm
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ledzeppelinconcertchronology:

1968 September 7
Gladsaxe, Denmark
Egegård Skole, Box 45 Teen Club
Part 3

And so it was that in August 1968, an upcoming show on the Gladsaxe schedule caught Jorgen’s attention. “I was told that the Yardbirds were coming and I thought, ‘ah, that sounds great.’ I was really looking forward to it. Some people have asked me whether they were advertised as The Yardbirds or The New Yardbirds. I am not sure exactly what was listed in our club magazine, but I recall that I was somehow tipped off in advance that something wasn’t right. I got suspicious that what we were going to have performing at the club was not the real thing. You could actually say I was disappointed even before the concert started because I was looking forward to seeing The Yardbirds again, and what we were getting was one Yardbirds member and three totally unknown guys.”

When September 7th finally came around, it didn’t take long for Jorgen - and everyone else - to be won over by the exciting new band. “My disappointment was only up until they started performing, because from what I recall it was a great concert.” Led Zeppelin had only been together for about three weeks, but the vision and savagery of the group’s musical attack was already in full flower. Peter Grant later recalled, “I remember standing by the side of the stage and being amazed, it was obvious that there was a chemistry.”

Opening with “Train Kept A’rollin’”- the first song they had played at their first rehearsal less than a month previous, and a nod to the Yardbirds fans like Jorgen - Zeppelin proceeded to blast through a set containing embryonic versions of the songs that would become their first album. “I Can’t Quit You,” “You Shook Me,” “Dazed and Confused” and “Babe I’m Gonna Leave You” were almost certainly played, as well as the hodgepodge of Yardbirds riffs and old blues chestnuts that became “How Many More Times.”

Jorgen recalls that right from the start, the band had something special to it. “I think that we were all a bit puzzled [as to] what was going on,” he states, “because the stage performance was different from what we had seen before. It was not just a band standing there playing, it was , um…very extroverted. I took a number of photos, and unfortunately, the film has suffered some damage [over the years]. There weren’t any actual lights on the stage in those days, at least nothing that you could actually use to take pictures with, so I used a flash. I used my mother’s holiday camera and my father’s old flash and I just snapped away.”

1 week ago on May 23, 2012 at 01:30pm
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