Music Appreciation
Related: About this forumThirteen minutes of previously unseen Led Zeppelin footage has surfaced after lying in a drawer for 45 years
From Classic Rock magazine:
https://www.loudersound.com/news/led-zeppelin-copenhagen-1979-footage
By Fraser Lewry ( Classic Rock ) published 32 minutes ago
The holy grail footage of Led Zeppelin's final warm-up show before their historic Knebworth dates was shot in Denmark in 1979
Thirteen minutes of previously unseen footage of Led Zeppelin playing live has emerged online. The film was shot at the 2000-capacity Falkoner Centre in Copenhagen, Denmark, in July 1979, at the second of two warm-up shows prior to the band's final UK shows at Knebworth the following month.
The 8mm film was originally shot by Led Zeppelin fan Lennart Ström, who revealed the existence of the footage last summer. Since then, Ström's footage has been scanned by US company Reel Revival Film and colour-corrected by The Pink Floyd Research Group, before being matched with an audio recording from the show.
"We brought the Super 8 camera to test a new film that would work indoors, Ström tells LedZepNews. "It was no problem getting the camera in, it was quite small and I think I had it in my trousers on my back. Filming wasnt that often done in those days. They looked more for audio equipment."
The footage, which Ström kept in a drawer for over 40 years, includes sections of Song Remains The Same, Black Dog, Nobodys Fault But Mine, Over The Hills And Far Away, Misty Mountain Hop, Since Ive Been Loving You, No Quarter, Hot Dog, Rain Song, White Summer, Kashmir, Trampled Underfoot, Sick Again, Achilles Last Stand, In The Evening, Stairway To Heaven and Whole Lotta Love, as well as a clip of Jimmy Page's guitar solo.
-snip-

Hugin
(36,063 posts)The sound is cued precisely with the drumsticks.
I'm surprised there was an audio recording of the show still available.
IbogaProject
(4,306 posts)Any recording not in commercial release by artist or label may be freely traded if not sold, a cool thing sliped into the 1990s DMCA law. Al Gore got that provision in as he was a music fan and pro taper.
rubbersole
(9,724 posts)ProfessorGAC
(72,419 posts)Performances are generally good.
Plant sounds go on nearly all of it.
Page's solo on the snippet if Stairway is dreck, but some stuff is solid.
The songs, except for Kashmir, lack size when JOJ is playing keys. With the dough they were raking in on tour in those days, they could have afforded to pay his bass tech to play on the songs with keys. I had an old bootleg of them and thought the same thing back then.
One thing I really noted was the cameras in those days didn't like dark or very white. Probably looked great live, though.
BTW: My wife's good friend went to see the new Zeppelin documentary. She gave it a rave review.