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John Paul Jones – vocals, 4/6/10/12-string bass guitars, bass steel guitar, acoustic/electric guitars, acoustic/electric mandolin, piano, organ, synthesizers, Kyma, koto, autoharp, ukulele, harmonica; Terl Bryant – drums, percussion, toforan; Nick Beggs – Chapman Stick on "Leafy Meadows" and "Shibuya Bop"
Pages in category "Songs written by John Paul Jones (musician)" The following 40 pages are in this category, out of 40 total. This list may not reflect recent changes.
The song opens with John Paul Jones playing the Hammond M-100 organ. [1] Guitarist Jimmy Page plays the Gibson J-200 acoustic guitar, as well as an out-of-tune Fender 800, a 10-string steel guitar, on this track. [5] Page stated that he learned how to play the steel guitar only during the sessions for the first album. [6]
It was written by John Paul Jones, Jimmy Page, and Robert Plant. The song became a centerpiece at all Led Zeppelin concerts thereafter, until their final tour. It appears in both the film versions and both live album versions of The Song Remains the Same, released in 1976 and expanded in 2007.
The song itself is split in three sections. The first section is a fast-paced showcase of Jones on synthesizer (he overdubbed bass guitar or already recorded it as part of the backing track), with Robert Plant's vocals mixed down slightly underneath Jones, the drums of John Bonham and Page's guitar chord progression
John Paul Jones (born John Baldwin; 3 January 1946) [1] is an English musician and record producer who was the bassist and keyboardist for the rock band Led Zeppelin. He was a session musician and arranger when he formed the band with Jimmy Page in 1968. Jones developed a solo career after drummer John Bonham died and
Although Page and John Paul Jones based their guitar and bass lines on the original song, [13] they did not follow its twelve-bar blues I–IV–V–I structure, but instead used a one-chord or modal approach to create a droning sound. [1] Plant used many of the original lyrics, but with a different melodic approach. [14] He also added a ...
The unique sound of the intro was created by Page using a bow on an acoustic guitar, as a backdrop to Jones' opening synthesiser solo. [5] The song is based on an earlier band composition titled "In the Morning". [6] Led Zeppelin also recorded an alternative version of the song, "Everybody Makes It Through" (In the Light) [Early Version/In ...