The Rain Song
The Rain Song | |
---|---|
Appears on | Houses of the Holy |
Published by | Superhype Music |
Registration | ASCAP 480099810 |
Release date | 18 March 1973 |
Recorded | May 1972 at Stargroves with the Rolling Stones Mobile Studio. Mixed at Olympic Studios, London. |
Genre | Hard rock, rock |
Language | English |
Length | 7 min 32 sec |
Composer | Jimmy Page, Robert Plant |
Label | Atlantic Records |
Producer | Jimmy Page |
Engineer | Eddie Kramer |
'The Rain Song' is a song from English rock band Led Zeppelin's fifth album Houses of the Holy, released in 1973.
Recording
'The Rain Song' is a love ballad of over 7 minutes in length. Guitarist Jimmy Page originally constructed the melody of this song at his home in Plumpton, England, where he had recently installed a studio console. A new Vista model, it was partly made up from the Pye Mobile Studio which had been used to record the group's 1970 Royal Albert Hall performance.[1] Page played a Danelectro guitar.[2]
Page was able to bring in a completed arrangement of the melody, for which singer Robert Plant composed some lyrics. These lyrics are considered by Plant himself to be his best overall vocal performance. The song also features a mellotron played by John Paul Jones to add to the orchestral effect, and an EMS VCS3 was also used for special overdubs.
The working title for this track was 'Slush,' a reference to its easy listening mock orchestral arrangement.[3]
Live history
During Led Zeppelin concerts from late 1972 until 1975, the band played this song immediately following 'The Song Remains the Same', presenting the songs in the same order as they appeared on the album. They organized their setlist in this manner because Page used a Gibson EDS-1275 double-necked guitar for both songs: the top, 12-string portion for 'The Song Remains the Same' and then switching to the bottom, 6-string portion for 'The Rain Song'. The song was dropped from the 1977 U.S. tour, but returned for Led Zeppelin's 1979 concerts in Copenhagen, Denmark and at the Knebworth Music Festival, as well as their European tour in 1980.[4] 'The Rain Song' was the only song from Houses of the Holy performed on the 1980 European tour. In this incarnation, Page again utilized the double-neck, the only known time he used that guitar solely for the 6-string portion without using the 12-string portion on a preceding song. For all live versions of the song, the orchestral string sounds (violins and cellos) were played by Jones on either the mellotron (1972-1975) or a Yamaha synthesizer (1979-1980), as the band never utilised a string section on-stage.
When played live, Page used the 6-string neck of the EDS-1275 for 'The Rain Song' in order to have two different tunings on the same guitar. The 12-string was tuned to Standard tuning (E-A-D-G-B-E) for his use on 'The Song Remains the Same'. The alternate tuning used for 'The Rain Song' on the 6-string next was Asus4 (E-A-D-A-D-E) - a step higher than the album cut, which is D-G-C-G-C-D. This is quite an uncommon modal tuning and makes for a very rich sounding accompaniment, led by John Paul Jones. The likely reason the alternate tuning was used in live performances is that while it required Plant to sing in a higher key, it necessitated a tuning change of only two strings (the B and G) on the EDS-1275, whereas the song's original key would have required the tuning of five of the six strings to be changed. As this same guitar would later be used in the show for 'Stairway to Heaven', the six-string neck would then need to be returned to standard tuning, the alternate 'Rain Song' tuning allowed this to be achieved with relative ease.
Page and Plant recorded a version of the song in 1994 but it was not originally released on their album No Quarter: Jimmy Page and Robert Plant Unledded. It was, however, released on the special tenth anniversary reissue of that album in 2004.
References in other media
'The Rain Song' has appeared in two films: Almost Famous, directed by Cameron Crowe (who, as a teen reporter for Rolling Stone magazine, covered Led Zeppelin), and Led Zeppelin's own 1976 concert film, The Song Remains the Same (and accompanying soundtrack), as part of lead singer Robert Plant's fantasy sequence.
Credits
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Notes
- ↑ Dave Lewis (1994), The Complete Guide to the Music of Led Zeppelin, Omnibus Press, ISBN 0-7119-3528-9.
- ↑ Dave Lewis (1994), The Complete Guide to the Music of Led Zeppelin, Omnibus Press, ISBN 0-7119-3528-9.
- ↑ Dave Lewis (1994), The Complete Guide to the Music of Led Zeppelin, Omnibus Press, ISBN 0-7119-3528-9.
- ↑ Dave Lewis (1994), The Complete Guide to the Music of Led Zeppelin, Omnibus Press, ISBN 0-7119-3528-9.