At the time, Denver fans fell in love with Led Zeppelin, pestering DJs to play the rockers' music; today, some Westword readers aren't so enthusiastic — in fact, they call Led Zeppelin's members thieves.
Chris describes that 1968 concert this way:
The first U.S. performance of other artists' material!Aaron characterizes the band as:
Unapologetic plagiarists.Jason defends Led Zeppelin:
A young band playing some covers...yeah, that NEVER happens. That's not all they played.Chris notes:
Not covering someone else's song. Stealing it, and releasing it as their own. I used to adore them. Then I dug into it, instead of clinging to my feelings.Lori steers clear of the debate over the authenticity of Led Zeppelin and recalls another great Colorado show:
And Queen was at Regis. We know we live in a great state!!Read on for more of our coverage of Led Zeppelin:
"Led Zeppelin's Houses of the Holy Turns Forty"
"Lez Zeppelin Slays Sexism"
"Getting Out of the Led"
Led Zeppelin, which formed fifty years ago and just celebrated its half-century anniversary with a new book of historic photos from the band's glory days, has been subjected to scrutiny for plagiarism in courts and in the press, including in a Rolling Stone story about the band's ten most flagrant rip-offs.
The outfit Spirit accused Led Zeppelin of stealing a guitar line used in "Stairway to Heaven" from the song "Taurus." A court found Led Zeppelin innocent in 2016, but the case has been appealed and is still making its way through the courts.
In an era when sampling has become a common practice and widely accepted as a valid form of art for electronic music and hip-hop artists, whether Led Zeppelin should be singled out as thieves or considered pioneers of remix culture remains up for debate.
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