Album Reviews

Led Zeppelin: How The West Was Won

Led Zeppelin
How The West Was Won
(Swan Song/Rhino)
Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

Jimmy Page closes out the initial run of remastered reissues from Led Zeppelinโ€™s catalog he started in 2014 with this package, initially released in 2003. Clocking in at two and a half hours, the three discs totaling 17 songs were compiled from a few June 1972 California shows, hence the โ€œwestโ€ in the title. At the time of its appearance, it was the bandโ€™s third live set but there has since been another with the reunion Celebration Day covering music from the groupโ€™s entire career.

It can, at times, be a heavy lift. The performances sequenced to reflect a single Zepp show are crisp and clean (one of the various editions on this reissue includes a Blu-ray version mixed in surround sound) capturing the quartet at arguably its concert peak. But drawn-out takes of three songs (โ€œMoby Dickโ€ with its Bonham drum solo, โ€œWhole Lotta Love,โ€ and at 25 minutes, an interminable โ€œDazed and Confusedโ€) that combine for over an hour of playing time, will tax the patience of even those who were there. Regardless, energized, comparatively compact presentations of seldom heard live tunes like โ€œDancing Days,โ€ along with a terrific three song acoustic portion that includes transcendent versions of โ€œGoing to California,โ€ โ€œThatโ€™s the Wayโ€ and โ€œBron-Yr-Aur Stompโ€ makes this required listening for any rocking fan or newbie. Zepp also turns in a riveting slow blues โ€œSince I Been Loving Youโ€ that brings them back to their roots.

This is generally considered the finest of three live releases from the original foursome and with some judicious pruning of your own, or a finger ready to fast forward through some of the extended-beyond-listenable cuts, it shows how powerful, dramatic and explosive Zeppelin could be at their best.ย Now is also a logical time to view, or revisit, the double DVD issued in tandem with How the West Was Won, to see how superlative the foursome was throughout their existence.ย  ย 

But Page misses a key opportunity by not adding any formerly unissued material to what was first released. This was a major attraction on the previous Zeppelin reissues and is something that should have happened here since itโ€™s likely there were other gigs from this tour recorded. While the remastering adds some clarity, anyone who already owned this and doesnโ€™t care about the deluxe booklet or surround sound, can live with their 15-year-old copy.ย