Music from a Lifetime

Led Zeppelin: "In Through the Out Door" - 45 Years On


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To cover for not being able to tour in 1976 the band released the concert film “The Song Remains the Same” along with the live album to accompany it, but the reception was lukewarm at best. A 1977 tour of the US saw big crowds in attendance, but it was then cut short by the news of the death of Plant's five-year-old son due to a stomach virus. It put the band on an indefinite hiatus.

It wasn’t until another 15 months had passed that the band reconvened and began to write and record their next album, and even that was made difficult through events. The album was named to describe its struggles after the death of Plant's son and the taxation exile the band took from the UK which resulted in the band being unable to tour on British soil for more than two years, and trying to get back into the public mind was therefore like "trying to get in through the 'out' door." And thus became the start of Led Zeppelin’s determined course to lift its profile once again, one that ultimately came to signal the end of more things than was expected.


On this episode we are going to talk about “In Through the Out Door” by Led Zeppelin, the band’s 8th and final studio album released 45 years ago this week, on today’s episode where ‘you swore that you never would leave me baby, whatever happened to you?’ on Music from a Lifetime.

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Music from a LifetimeBy Bill Peters


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