Wikipedia:Vaglio/Led Zeppelin: differenze tra le versioni
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Riga 32:
1) Se qualcuno ha la fortuna di andare al concerto che faranno a Londra il 26 novembre, faccia una marea di foto;<br/>2) Potrei chiedere al webmaster di un sito la concessione di pubblicazione delle foto del loro unico concerto in italia (anche se sono in B/N e piuttosto brutte da vedere);<br/>3) Qualcuno conosce l'email a cui inviare la richiesta di host delle immagini con licenza? Se sì, postatelo, cosicché possa inviare la mail di richiesta. --{{Utente:Oni link/firma}} 16:10, 18 ott 2007 (CEST)
Per chiha voglia di tradurre da en:wiki
Allegations of plagiarism
When Led Zeppelin's debut album was released, it received generally positive reviews, however John Mendelsohn of Rolling Stone magazine, criticized the band for stealing music, notably "Black Mountain Side" from Bert Jansch's "Black Water Side" and the riff from "Your Time Is Gonna Come" from Traffic's "Dear Mr. Fantasy". He also accused the band of mimicking black artists, and showing off. This marked the beginning of a long rift between the band and the magazine, with Led Zeppelin rejecting later requests for interviews and cover stories as their level of success escalated.[32]
One song from the album, "Dazed and Confused", was a song originally written by Jake Holmes on his album "The Above Ground Sound" of Jake Holmes. The Yardbirds, Jimmy Page's old band, had made a version called "I'm Confused", and Page reworked the song again for Led Zeppelin's debut recording, with Holmes having never received any royalty payments for their recording.[73] Holmes did not file suit over the song, although he did send the band a letter stating "I understand it's a collaborative effort, but I think you should give me some credit at least and some remunity." His letter was never replied to and he did not follow up on it.[73] Holmes is however also reported to have said "what the hell, let him [Page] have it [Dazed and Confused]".[15]
Led Zeppelin II's credits have also been the subject of debate since the album's release. The prelude to "Bring It on Home" is a cover of Sonny Boy Williamson's "Bring it on Home" and drew comparisons with Willie Dixon's "Bring It on Back". "Whole Lotta Love" (sample (info)) shared some lyrics and an overall pattern with Dixon's "You Need Love/Woman You Need Love". In the 1970s, Arc Music, the publishing arm of Chess Records, brought a lawsuit against Led Zeppelin for copyright infringement over "Bring It on Home" and won an out-of-court settlement.[74] Dixon himself did not benefit until he sued Arc Music to recover his royalties and copyrights. Years later, Dixon filed suit against Led Zeppelin over "Whole Lotta Love" and an out-of-court settlement was reached. Later pressings of Led Zeppelin II credit Dixon.
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