Article 4ABPT How Dissonance and Anticipation Add Complexity to Led Zeppelin’s Viking Anthem ‘The Immigrant Song’

How Dissonance and Anticipation Add Complexity to Led Zeppelin’s Viking Anthem ‘The Immigrant Song’

by
Lori Dorn
from Laughing Squid on (#4ABPT)
Led-Zeppelin-Immigrant-Song-12Tone.jpg

12Tone, the wonderfully fast-talking, quick-doodling music theorist, offers a surprisingly lengthy analysis of the 2 1/2 minute Led Zeppelin Viking-themed anthem "The Immigrant Song". He particularly notes how the relatively simple, rhythmic riff is made much more complex with the strategic use of dissonance, downbeat rhythms, gallops, a walking bassline and a device called anticipation, which bassist John Paul Jones applies at the end of the second bar by playing a C instead of a B. 12Tone wonders why this was done, but doesn't really get a satisfactory answer to his query.

"there's one thing in there that I really want to draw some attention to. At the end of the second
bar when he's walking up the B major scale for the second time he actually overshoots the high B and plays a C" I can assure you he's playing a C but I can't tell you is why I know it's not a mistake"

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The post How Dissonance and Anticipation Add Complexity to Led Zeppelin's Viking Anthem 'The Immigrant Song' first appeared on Laughing Squid.

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