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Page and Plant | |
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About 32 pages (9,455 words) in 22 products |
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Encyclopedia and Summary Information
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Page and Plant Information
720 words, approx. 2 pages
 Page and Plant is the name that Jimmy Page and Robert Plant, both formerly of English rock band Led Zeppelin, recorded and toured under in the mid-1990s. The initial plans for a reunion were made in 1993, with talk between the two of collaborating...




summary from source:
 The Boston Globe
Page and Plant rock in return to Boston
04/10/1995: 582 words, approx. 2 pages PAGE & PLANT At: Boston Garden through tonight with Rusted Root. Hero worship hath no equal to what was experienced last night at Boston Garden. The Page & Plant tour -- really the second coming of Led Zeppelin -- broke all the...
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 The Washington Post
Plant and Page: Halfway Up That Stairway
07/08/1998: 718 words, approx. 2 pages There was a whole lotta love at MCI Center last night and it was directed at Robert Plant and Jimmy Page. It's been 19 years since Page and Plant traveled as Led Zeppelin, and almost as long since they played the Led Zeppelin songbook....
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 AP News
Led Zeppelin lets the 'Good Times' roll
12/11/2007: 962 words, approx. 3 pages After that performance, Led Zeppelin really must go on tour.The reunited rock 'n' roll legends were superb Monday in their first full concert in nearly three decades, mixing in classics like "Stairway to Heaven" and "Black Dog" with the thumping "Kashmir" and the hard-rocking "Dazed...




Literary Criticism
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Critical Essay by Bud Scoppa
1,109 words, approx. 4 pages
 [Led Zeppelin plays] a basic, sinewy brand of music that depends for its impact more on simple relentlessness than on dramatic development. Not many bands could get away with working within such a simple framework, but Led Zeppelin takes a seemingly arrogant delight in flattening everything in its path through a perfect execution of fundamentals. In the Sixties, it would have been hard to imagine a band like Zeppelin winning a mass following (it may now be the most popular single attraction in rock) with su...
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Critical Essay by Jim Miller
948 words, approx. 3 pages
 [With] the release of Physical Graffiti, Led Zeppelin's sixth album, the question [of what group is the world's best rock band] has actually become relevant. This two-record set, the product of almost two years' labor, is the band's Tommy, Beggar's Banquet and Sgt. Pepper rolled into one: Physical Graffiti is Led Zeppelin's bid for artistic respectability. In a virtual recapitulation of the group's career, Physical Graffiti touches all the bases. There'...
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Critical Essay by John Mendelsohn
641 words, approx. 2 pages
 [The] excesses of the [Jeff Beck Group's] Truth album (most notably its self-indulgence and restrictedness), are fully in evidence on Led Zeppelin's debut album [Led Zeppelin]. Jimmy Page, around whom the Zeppelin revolves, is, admittedly, an extraordinarily proficient blues guitarist and explorer of his instrument's electronic capabilities. Unfortunately, he is also a very limited producer and a writer of weak, unimaginative songs, and the Zeppelin album suffers from his having both pr...


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Page and Plant | |
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About 32 pages (9,455 words) in 22 products |
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