Led Zeppelins Led Zeppelin IV, Erik Davis
Led Zeppelins Led Zeppelin IV, Erik Davis
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Led Zeppelin's Led Zeppelin IV

Author: Erik Davis

Series: 33 1/3

Narrator: Eric Altheide

Unabridged: 4 hr 1 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 05/13/2025


Synopsis

In this wickedly entertaining and thoroughly informed homage to one of rock music's towering pinnacles, Erik Davis investigates the magic—black or otherwise—that surrounds this album. Carefully peeling the layers from each song, Davis reveals their dark and often mystical roots—and leaves the reader to decide whether [FOUR SYMBOLS] is some form of occult induction or just an inspired, brilliantly played rock album.
Excerpt:
Stripping Led Zeppelin's famous name off the fourth record was an almost petulant attempt to let their Great Work symbolically stand on its own two feet. But the wordless jacket also lent the album charisma. Fans hunted for hidden meanings, or, in failing to find them, sensed a strange reflection of their own mute refusal to communicate with the outside world. This helped to create one of the supreme paradoxes of rock history: an esoteric megahit, a blockbuster arcanum. Stripped of words and numbers, the album no longer referred to anything but itself: a concrete talisman that drew you into its world, into the frame. All the stopgap titles we throw at the thing are lame: Led Zeppelin IV, [Untitled], Runes, Zoso, Four Symbols. In an almost Lovecraftian sense, the album was nameless, a thing from beyond, charged with manna. And yet this uncanny fetish was about as easy to buy as a jockstrap.

About Erik Davis

Erik Davis is an American journalist, critic, podcaster, counter-public intellectual whose writings have run the gamut from rock criticism to cultural analysis to creative explorations of esoteric mysticism. He is the author of Techgnosis: Myth, Magic & Mysticism in the Age of Information, The Visionary State: A Journey through California's Spiritual Landscape, and Nomad Codes: Adventures in Modern Esoterica.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Jason on January 11, 2021

Davis understands that both myth and technology were essential components in the Zeppelin saga, and he is hyper-fluent in both areas. He also, rather miraculously, evokes the mystique of the band—not an easy thing to do when the subject lies forty-plus years in the past. He locates Zep's cryptic pow......more

Goodreads review by Andrew on June 14, 2024

I was expecting an easier read because the Madvilliany book was a lot easier to get through, but I think a big part is 1. I don’t know enough about music theory 2. Zeppelin 4 was written in the 70’s so there isn’t the best first hand account about the album, considering the amount of drugs that they......more

Goodreads review by Alan on July 31, 2018

I like the 33 1/3 books and I like Led Zeppelin, although I have never subscribed to the hyperbolic nonsense and mythologising that constitutes the vast majority of the material written about the band over the years. I mean, they were an very good band but they were no Deep Purple… In the first few p......more

Goodreads review by Cwn_annwn_13 on May 25, 2023

Davis does a good job of capturing the magical vibe of Led Zeppelin with an emphasis on their fourth album using the spirit of the era of prime Led Zeppelin and the many musical and non musical influences Led Zeppelin had. Crowley and the Boleskine house on Loch Ness that Page lived in for years, To......more

Goodreads review by J.J. on January 01, 2018

I liked the format. We start with the album. How vinyl albums are made and how sound is recorded. Then we get onto the cover. The designs and colors. Is this Runes? Symbols? IV? untitled? He analyzes each idea. We don’t get a literal story of each song, we get a story explaining the songs. The book......more