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Led Zeppelin – Live At The Big Hall Budokan Oct 3 1972 (The Diagrams Of Led Zeppelin TDOLZ Vol. 73)

 Live At The Big Hall Budokan Oct 3 1972 (The Diagrams Of Led Zeppelin TDOLZ Vol. 73)

Budokan, Tokyo, Japan – October 3rd, 1972

Disc 1 (55:10):  Rock And Roll, Black Dog, Over The Hills And Far Away, Misty Mountain Hop, Since I’ve Been Loving You, Dancing Days, Bron-Y-Aur Stomp, The Song Remains The Same, The Rain Song

Disc 2 (72:40):  Dazed And Confused, Stairway To Heaven, Blue Suede Shoes, Whole Lotta Love, Immigrant Song, The Ocean

Led Zeppelin’s second night in the Big Hall Budokan has six separate audience recordings in circulation.  The earliest was released twice on Tarantura in the mid-nineties, in The Campaign boxset and separately on 2nd Night In a Judo Arena(Tarantura).  The second tape was pressed on Live In Tokyo (Amsterdam AMS 9609-3-1/2/3). 

Live At The Big Hall Budokan Oct 3 1972 was released in 1998 and is the third source to surface.  In the subsequent years it’s been used by other labels to fill in gaps in the three newer tapes, namely Explosion(Flagge), Majestic Rock(Reel Masters) and No Use Gneco (Tarantura TCD-65-1,2,3).  The sound quality is similar to the third source for the previous evening (and also pressed by TDOLZ).  It is clear but slightly distant.  This tape also has slight distortion in louder passages. 

This tour of Japan is notable for being the start of an overhaul of the set list. For two years their shows began with “Immigrant Song” and “Heartbreaker,” but starting here and lasting for three years “Rock And Roll” is installed into the opening slot. The number isn’t segued with the second number as was Zeppelin’s custom and Plant has time to greet the audience before Bonham counts in “Black Dog.” The versions of this song were incredibly heavy.

“Arigato. That’s all I know of Japanese” Plant says before introducing “Over The Hills And Far Away” as something from their fifth LP. The band recorded Houses Of The Holy the previous summer and the initial plan was for it to be released before this tour. It would have to wait another six months before its publication but the entire album, except for “No Quarter” and “D’yer M’ker,” would make an appearance in this show.

“Misty Mountain Hop” was also added to the set list for the first time and is segued directly with “Since I’ve Been Loving You” which contains the blues histrionics of a band who truly loved playing the piece. After “Dancing Days,” another new song, the band sit to play “Bron-Yr-Aur Stomp.”

The acoustic set reached four songs and about twenty minutes on their previous tour, but this one song set is the only remnant. Having the full slate of acoustic numbers would have pushed the length of the show to a routine three hours, but it does eliminate one of the more fun parts of the stage act. Following this are the two opening numbers from the new album.

“Last night it was called ‘Zep’ and tonight we’ll call it ‘The Overture'” is how Plant introduces “The Song Remains The Same.” They both made their stage debuts the previous night and are both played close to their studio counterparts.

“Dazed & Confused” reaches twenty-six minutes in this show. Plant punctuates Page’s ascending riffs after the second verse and Page uses some “The Song Remains The Same” style chimes on the guitar before launching into the fast riffs that lead into the violin bow section. They play an instrumental version of “The Crunge” sixteen minutes into the piece before the call-and-response section. The coda is very intense and Plant sounds out of breath as he says, “well…good evening!”

He introduces “Stairway To Heaven” by saying, “here’s a song about time. And ah, and ah, some of the flashes that govern our passage through it. Heavy trip, man.” There is a short delay as Jones tunes his keyboards before they play the piece. Plant sings “Blue Suede Shoes” before the band play the final song of the set, a twenty-five minute “Whole Lotta Love” medley. The inclusions are common for this era with “Everybody Need Somebody To Love” before Plant doing an Elvis impersonation during “Boogie Chillun’.”

Page plays great boogie on the guitar before “Let’s Have A Party.” The final song in the medley is a long, drawn out and heavier than granite version of “You Shook Me” augmented considerably from its studio counterpart. The show closes with two encores, their biggest hit in Japan “Immigrant Song” and “The Ocean.”

Live At The Big Hall Budokan Oct 3 1972 is another solid release on The Digrams Of Led Zeppelin.  It is packaged in a gatefold cardboard sleeve with good use of the cover of the tour program on the artwork. 

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  1. This source has a great vibe , despite the distortion. Explosion is from a different source and while it’s clearer, it’s plagued by some sort of humming sound, like a fan. This is my favorite version of this show. 2nd Night In A Judo Arena (Tarantura) is also great title from a different clear source.

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  2. This release has some overloaded distortion problems. Not sure if the title Explosion on the Flagge Label is from a differnt source or not, whatever the case may be, Explosion is a much easier listen and preferable to this title.

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