"Celebration Day" | ||||
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Song by Led Zeppelin from the album Led Zeppelin III | ||||
Released | 5 October 1970 | |||
Recorded | May–August 1970 | |||
Genre | Hard rock, heavy metal | |||
Length | 3:29 | |||
Label | Atlantic Records | |||
Writer | Jimmy Page, Robert Plant, John Paul Jones | |||
Producer | Jimmy Page | |||
Led Zeppelin III track listing | ||||
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"Celebration Day" is the third track from English rock band Led Zeppelin's 1970 album Led Zeppelin III.
The track was almost left off the album, due to a studio oversight in which an engineer accidentally erased the first few bars of John Bonham's drum track. To disguise it, the Moog synthesizer from the end of the previous song on the album, "Friends", was used to composite over the edit. This enabled the track to be salvaged and included on the album.[1]
"Celebration Day" is made up of jangling Jimmy Page guitar riffs and a hypnotic, trance-like mood. In an interview he gave to Guitar World magazine in 1993, Page discussed the construction of the song:
There's about three or four riffs going down on that one, isn't there? Half was done with a guitar in standard tuning and the other half was done on slide guitar tuned to an open A, I think. We put that together at Headley Grange. Because we rented the Rolling Stones' mobile recording studio, we could relax and take our time and develop the songs in rehearsals. I do not remember too much about that song other than that and what I told you earlier about the opening being erased. I used to play the whole thing live on my electric 12-string.[1]
The lyrics of Robert Plant refer to his impressions of the city of New York. On Led Zeppelin's 1971 concert tour of the United States, Robert Plant would sometimes introduce it as "The New York Song". "Celebration Day" was often played live in Led Zeppelin concerts from 1971 through 1973, and was returned to the band's set list at Knebworth in 1979 (where Page unusually performed the song using his Gibson EDS-1275 double-necked guitar).[2] A live version from the band's 1973 U.S. tour was recorded and included on their concert soundtrack The Song Remains the Same.
When released in 1976, the album's accompanying film did not include this live cut of "Celebration Day," but when the DVD of the film was reissued in 2007, footage of the song was added to the second extras disc, and included on the reissue of the album. This reissued version is slightly different from the one that was originally included on the 1976 album, in particular featuring a different guitar solo. Jimmy Page performed "Celebration Day" on his tour with The Black Crowes in 1999, and another version performed by Page and The Black Crowes can be found on the album Live at the Greek. Record producer Rick Rubin says, "It ["Celebration Day"] feels like a freight train, even though it's not one of their heavier songs. There's tremendous momentum in the way they play together. The bass playing is beyond incredible and the guitars interact really well—there's a heavy-riffing guitar, which is answered by a funky guitar."[3]
Contents |
1970 7" single (Poland: Daszkowska N 037)
1970 7" single (South Africa: Atlantic Teal MR 10)
Notes:
(*) B-side by Black Sabbath
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