News

The tunes came first in the pecking order, but the album cover art wasn’t far behind, and we’re ranking the nine Led Zeppelin album covers from worst to first. Note: Yes, we said nine.
Let's go back to a time when record sales meant something and album art mattered. Here's our roundup of the greatest 70s ...
Led Zeppelin’s only double album, Physical Graffiti, featuring hits like “Kashmir” and “Trampled Underfoot,” was released 50 years ago on February 24, 1975.
Led Zeppelin made a wild stylistic leap after the biggest album of their career, and that issomething very few bands have the bravery to do (whether it's what's in their hearts or not).
To be so well-regarded as a touring band, Led Zeppelin certainly shied away from live albums. They released just one official concert recording during their ’70s-era heyday, 1976’s bombastic ...
The band was up against a deadline to hand in the album, writes George Case in Led Zeppelin FAQ. “When the proofs for the album came back, they didn’t look anything like the original artwork.
Led Zeppelin's untitled 1971 album, which most call Led Zeppelin IV due to the numerical progression of the band's records to that point, is filled with classic cuts. Side one alone has "Black Dog ...
The 52-year-old mystery surrounding the figure featured on Led Zeppelin ’s fourth studio album cover has finally been solved. The identity of the man – hunched over with a pile of sticks ...