,

Led Zeppelin Quotes

Quotes tagged as "led-zeppelin" Showing 1-7 of 7
Dave Grohl
“Heavy Metal would not exist without Led Zeppelin, and if it did, it would suck.”
Dave Grohl

Mark Barrowcliffe
“I was petrified of making a mistake—head-banging to the wrong song or not hard enough, or thinking a guitar solo was over when it wasn't. A rule of thumb is that if the guitar solo is by Led Zep or Lynyrd Skynyrd then it's not over. Ever.”
Mark Barrowcliffe, The Elfish Gene: Dungeons, Dragons And Growing Up Strange

“As for Crowley, his reputation grew and grew. His gospel of “Do what thou wilt”—modified and transformed—appealed strongly to the socially liberated sixties generation. He resurfaced as a countercultural icon; his photograph appeared on the cover of the Beatles’ album Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, and his ideas influenced everyone from Dr. Timothy Leary to the rock group Led Zeppelin. He was hailed as a prophet before his time for bringing together eastern and western esoteric traditions, and although he could never quite escape the “Satanist” tag that he had gained in the Edwardian newspapers, this ensured his present-day popularity.”
George Pendle, Strange Angel: The Otherworldly Life of Rocket Scientist John Whiteside Parsons – A Portrait of the JPL Founder: Genius, Rocketry, and the Occult

Andre the BFG
“Led Zeppelin was the rock band's rock band, but it was Plant who made it special. He had the knack of taking a seemingly inconsequential string of words, adding a searing shriek, and knocking the listener back on his heels. This was no less impressive on stage than in the restaurant.”
Andre the BFG, Andre's Adventures in MySpace

“Get the Led Out . . . to . . . get outta Bed”
Kevin kolenda

“Sometimes I need to Get the Led out . . . in order to get Outta the right side of the bed”
Kevin Kolenda

Pierenrico Gottero
“One of the most powerful experiences in which these questions would surface was listening to the guitar solo in Stairway to Heaven by Led Zeppelin. Some said the band had made a pact with the devil, that the song contained hidden satanic messages if played backwards. But for me, especially during the final solo, it felt like a portal opening onto something mysterious and absolute. As if those notes – in their apparent simplicity – held the power to evoke a longing for the infinite. Every chord seemed like a threshold to cross, an invitation to go beyond the visible and to question the deeper meaning of existence.”
Pierenrico Gottero, The Strength of Fragile Days: A Long Journey Across the Middle Lands