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In Through the Out Door [Remastered] by Led Zeppelin

Led Zeppelin

In Through the Out Door [Remastered]

Release Date: Jul 31, 2015

Genre(s): Rock

Record label: Atlantic

67

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Album Review: In Through the Out Door [Remastered] by Led Zeppelin

Very Good, Based on 5 Critics

Paste Magazine - 78
Based on rating 7.8/10

Led Zeppelin’s red-carpet reissue series comes to a messy, intriguing climax with Presence, In Through the Out Door and Coda. This latter-day triumvirate documents a period clouded by clashing creativity, debilitating injury, substance abuse and, ultimately, the tragic death of drummer John Bonham—drama that tends to overwhelm the music itself. Sure, by the mid-‘70s, Zeppelin were past their spellbinding Zoso prime, but they never experimented with as much vigor as they did on these three underrated LPs.

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Pitchfork - 73
Based on rating 7.3/10

In the first six years of Led Zeppelin's existence, they released seven albums' worth of music, and nearly all of it was brilliant. During that time, everything seemed to go their way: they had a bottomless well of songs built on the blues, early rock, British and American folk, psychedelia, and R&B; they had the greatest riff machine the world had ever known in Jimmy Page, and they had hard rock's quintessential drummer in John Bonham. But given their penchant for excess and the hyper-intense life they lived as the world's biggest rock band in the '70s, there was no way it could last.

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PopMatters - 50
Based on rating 5/10

Even though Led Zeppelin lasted only ten years, it was nothing short of a miracle that they even lasted until 1979 to put out In Through the Out Door, which would become their final album of new material. Despite not knowing that their time together was almost at an end, Led Zeppelin still wheezed its way to the finish line with their eighth record. However, in its defense, an inferior Led Zeppelin album does not necessarily equate to being a generally bad album.

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Classic Rock Magazine
Opinion: Very Good

Fabled lost tracks. Wholly new versions of classics. Final trio of reissues unearths the diamonds. And so to the third act, the denouement; the last tranche of reissues wherein the mothership’s fins had started to loosen, and a slow, drawn-out decline ensued. At least that’s how the ….

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The Quietus
Opinion: Very Good

Though widely and justifiably regarded as Led Zeppelin's three least satisfying albums, these re-mastered, re-packaged and re-released editions of Presence, In Through The Outdoor and Coda actually contain some of the most interesting moments of the band's recent re-issue campaign. Indeed, who'd ….

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