
English rock band LedZeppelin recorded "YouShook Me" for their 1969 debut album Led Zeppelin. AllMusic critic Bill Janovitz describes it as "aheavy, pummeling bit of post-psychedelic blues-rock, with healthy doses ofvocal histrionics from Robert Plant and guitar fireworks from Jimmy Page".[6] At nearly six and a half minutes, it isconsiderably longer than the Muddy Waters or Jeff Beck recordings. Except forthe breaks during the song's guitar solo, Led Zeppelin uses a straightforwardtwelve-bar blues arrangement, but performed at a slower tempo.
잉글리시 락 밴드 레드 제플린.........1969년 그들의 데뷔 앨범에 이 곡을 녹음했다....라고 시작하면서..
그 밑에 내용들이...
led zeppelin - you shook me.
듣기 좋다.
Disagreement over influence
Since theirversion was released nine months after Beck's and the two have similarities,Led Zeppelin have been accused of stealing Beck's idea.[30] Page chalks it up to coincidence,citing his and Beck's similar background and tastes, and denied hearing Beck'sversion. Page in 1977 elaborated:
[Beck] had thesame sort of taste in music as I did. That's why you'll find on the early LPswe both did a song like "You Shook Me." It was the type of thing we'dboth played in bands. Someone told me he'd already recorded it after we'dalready put it down on the first Zeppelin album. I thought, "Oh dear, it'sgoing to be identical," but it was nothing like it, fortunately. I justhad no idea he'd done it. It was on Truth but I first heard it when Iwas in Miami after we'd recorded our version. It's a classic example of comingfrom the same area musically, of having a similar taste.[31]
However, Beck biographer Annette Carsonnotes "during a 1976 interview with NME's Billy Altman, Beckattested to [the fact that Page had accompanied Peter Grant to several JeffBeck Group gigs when they first played America], stating that '[Jimmy] was goingwith us from city to city, taking things in'. Rod Stewart made a similar claimabout Page on a US radio show during the eighties".[32] Carson adds, "Both Beck andStewart had vivid memories of Jimmy Page traveling around with their U.S. tourthat summer, when he'd obviously listened to all their material".[33]
Led Zeppelin biographer Mick Wall also points out in When Giants Walked the Earth: A Biography of Led Zeppelinthat "Peter Grant had given him [Jimmy Page] an advance copy of Truthweeks before its release" and "it seems inconceivable that John PaulJones would not have mentioned at some point that he had actually playedHammond organ on the Truth version".[34] Major differences between the twoversions include the prominence afforded Nicky Hopkins keyboard playing in the Mickie Most mix, and that Stewart sings onlytwo verses in the Jeff Beck recording.[35]

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