Led Zeppelin has a history of taking credit for songs they didn't write. They recorded "Babe, I'm Gonna Leave You" after hearing Joan Baez perform it, but th beginner to early intermediate piano tutorialLed Zeppelin "I'm Gonna Leave You"0:00 Part 12:19 Part 24:32 Part 36:20 Part 49:30 Part 511:25 Part 6Help S Babe I'm Gonna Leave You - Led Zeppelin (Easy Piano Tutorial) in Synthesiahttps://www.facebook.com/wildscratchbandEnjoy! Provided to YouTube by Rhino AtlanticBabe I'm Gonna Leave You (Remaster) · Led ZeppelinLed Zeppelin x Led Zeppelin℗ 2013 Atlantic RecordsGuitar: Jimmy PagePr . Songfacts®:This popular folk song is about a guy who is letting his lady know that he's about to "Ramble On" and leave song was written by an American singer named Anne Bredon around 1959 and recorded by Joan Baez, who released it on her 1962 live album In Concert. Baez came across the song when she played a show at Oberlin College and a student named Janet Smith played it for her. Smith heard the song from Bredon when they were both attending University of California, Baez' album was issued, "Babe I'm Gonna Leave You" was listed as "traditional," as she didn't know who wrote it. This was corrected in later pressings, but Jimmy Page had a copy without the credit, so he assumed it was a traditional song and it was credited on the album as "Traditional, arranged by Jimmy Page."Remarkably, about two decades went by before the credit was corrected. Bredon and Smith didn't listen to Led Zeppelin, so it wasn't until Smith heard her son listening to the song that she noticed it and contacted Bredon. An arrangement was worked out to compensate Bredon, and the song credits were changed to list Page, Robert Plant and Bredon as Page explained how he adapted the song for Led Zeppelin in Daniel Rachel's The Art of Noise: Conversations with Great Songwriters: "I worked out this arrangement using a more finger-style method and then having a flamenco burst in it. Again, it's light and shade and this drama of accents; using the intensity of what would be a louder section for effect."There is a Led Zeppelin drinking game where you have to take a swig every time Robert Plant sings "baby." This song leads to inebriation in that one, since he repeats "babe" or "baby" 31 his 2012 Rolling Stone interview, Jimmy Page cited this song as one that showed the empathy he and Robert Plant had when working together. "I knew exactly how that was going to shape up," he said. "I set the mood with the acoustic guitar and that flamenco-like section. But Robert embraced it. He came up with an incredible, plaintive vocal."A group called the Plebs released a version of this song in 1964, and the following year, The Association covered it. The Plebs listed it as a traditional song, but The Association credited Bredon as the songwriter. At the 1:43 mark, you can hear a recording of Plant saying, "I can hear it calling me" just before he sings the line - as if he "hears it calling him." >>Suggestion credit: Andrew - Brisbane, Australia Led Zeppelin only played this live on their 1969 tour, but Jimmy Page and Robert Plant brought it back for their 1998 tour in a 9-minute version. >>Suggestion credit: Chris - Whitesboro, NY Asked what kind of acoustic guitar he used on this song, Jimmy Page explained to Guitar Player magazine in 1977: "That was a Gibson J-200, which wasn't mine; I borrowed it. It was a beautiful guitar, really great. I've never found a guitar of that quality anywhere since. I could play so easily on it, get a really thick sound; it had heavy-gauge strings on it, but it just didn't seem to feel like it."Page recorded a version with Steve Winwood in 1968 that was never album cover features a historical picture of a fiery zeppelin about to crash. The Hindenburg, the Germans' top-of-the-line dirigible airship, crashed in the US (New Jersey) upon its arrival from its first transatlantic trip in 1937. The dirigible airship was made by Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin, explaining the name of the is from the early days of Led Zeppelin, before Jimmy Page expanded his meager guitar collection after a bit of inspiration from Eric Clapton. Page explained: "In the beginning of Zeppelin, I had this very small guitar arsenal: a Harmony acoustic, a Telecaster. Then, one day, I went to Eric Clapton's house, and every room had all these guitars in them. His whole house was like a guitar shrine. I was like 'Crikey!' Eric explained to me: 'They are all tax deductible!' So that's when I started buying more guitars." >>Suggestion credit: Bertrand - Paris, France, for above 2

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