With "Physical Graffiti" Led Zeppelin is artistically qu''il confirms their equal. Yet this disc divides the public today, some grumpy with concrete in the ears too long finding, too heavy, too bloated, too indigestible.
In my opinion it is still never anything, and this CD is part of the very best of Zep. It is fixed from the monstrous riffs of "Custard Pie" and at least three other pieces of anthology are present here: "Houses of the Holy", "Boogie with Stu" (Stu Ian Stewart, pianist and "sixth" Rolling Stones) and unsurpassable "Kashmir" (best song of Led Zeppelin, with 'amazing number of Bonham on drums)
Led Zeppelin also managed to stretch most of the other pieces without length becomes tiresome, both rhythmic and sonic finds abound. "Physical Graffiti" is the last great record of Zeppelin, perhaps their finest.
While we're talking about beauty, one can only regret the CD format, which deprives us of the sumptuous double cut pouch 33 original Tours, only criticism that today ''s we can do to reissues of "Physical Graffiti. "