My musical tastes go from Zeppelin to Bob Dylan to Kanye West and Lil' Wayne. Anything modern and progressive.
I grew up listening to albums by Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin and Jimi Hendrix, and they all worked on that multi-layered level.
When you're listening to a recording, you're supposedly listening to some aspect of the past in the present as you travel slowly into the future, but you also know there's a very strong likelihood that the future of that recording, whether you made it or whether you're listening to a Led Zeppelin record, is going to continue probably far beyond where you are.
If it was up to me, I'd get more oil tanker drivers drunk. I don't value music much. I like the Beatles, but I hate Paul McCartney. I like Led Zeppelin, but I hate Robert Plant. I like the Who, but I hate Roger Daltrey.
I saw Deep Purple live once and I paid money for it and I thought, 'Geez, this is ridiculous. ' You just see through all that sort of stuff. I never liked those Deep Purples or those sort of things. I always hated it. I always thought it was a poor man's Led Zeppelin.
Led Zeppelin has been there through three generations of teenage angst. And there's a generation of kids now who won't know it, post-Linkin Park.
Every day, I hear a song and I think, This would be great to cover on Glee. I like Led Zeppelin, of course, and Pink Floyd, Alice in Chains.
I like all like classic rock bands like The Beatles and The Who and stuff and Led Zeppelin so I kinda dress like that. Kinda retro I guess. Well not retro but, like tight. I don't know. Like just jeans and shirts. I don't know. Kinda rock and roll I guess.
I'm too old for Led Zeppelin.
When I was seven or eight I was really into Cream, really into Led Zeppelin.
Well, I sort of don't trust anybody who doesn't like Led Zeppelin.
I am a cross between Carl Perkins and Led Zeppelin.
I love Aerosmith. I love Guns N' Roses, ACDC, anything from that era, Led Zeppelin. So my guitar style is very much like Slash or Jimmy Page. I love playing that kind of music. It's where my heart's at.
When I first started, it was the real basic stuff that was being played on the radio, so I was into Zeppelin, and Sabbath, and ACDC, and all stuff like that. I grew up in New York, on Long Island, so the local radio stations played all that kind of thing.
Led Zeppelin didn't write tunes that everybody liked, they left that to the Bee Gees.
Right from the first time we went to America in 1968, Led Zeppelin was a word-of-mouth thing. You can't really compare it to how it is today.
You can still see the shadow from when the Zeppelin floated over America; it took like Islam in the desert. . .
When we first began and I was 14, my influences were the stuff that was in my parent's record collection like Deep Purple and Led Zeppelin.
I think Led Zeppelin must have worn some of the most peculiar clothing that men had ever been seen to wear without cracking a smile.
Led Zeppelin is just a bunch of stupid idiots who wrote cool riffs.