DiscoverClassic Rock Album OlympicsHouses of the Holy by Led Zepplin...Episode #12
Houses of the Holy by Led Zepplin...Episode #12

Houses of the Holy by Led Zepplin...Episode #12

Update: 2025-12-03
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In this episode of Classic Rock Album Olympics music historians Gary Wenstrup and Robert Rodriguez enter Led Zeppelin’s 1973 album Houses
of the Holy and award their gold, silver and bronze medals. 


Medal Winners


⁠The
Rain Song⁠


⁠Dancing
Days⁠


⁠Over
The Hills And Far Away⁠


⁠D’yer
Mak’er⁠


⁠The
Ocean⁠


This is the group’s fifth studio album, and notably, the first Zeppelin record to actually have a title instead of a number. Coming off the monumental success of Led Zeppelin IV, the band used Houses of the Holy to push outward creatively, exploring styles beyond the heavy blues-rock they were originally known for. 


The album has a more colorful atmosphere compared to their earlier work. Jimmy Page layered acoustic and electric guitars with more studio effects; Robert Plant leaned into warm, expressive lyricism; John Paul Jones embraced keyboards, Mellotron textures, and early synthesizers; and John Bonham played with a powerful but increasingly varied rhythmic style. The result is an album that moves with confidence from epic rock to lush balladry, from funk-influenced rhythm experiments to playful reggae-inspired grooves.


 Houses of the Holy quickly hit #1 on the U.S. Billboard 200.  Although Led Zeppelin was famously resistant to the single-driven pop market, two tracks were released as singles in the U.S.: “Over the Hills and Far Away,” which reached #51 on the Billboard Hot 100, and “D’yer Mak’er,” which reached #20. Houses of the Holy reinforced the band’s reputation not only as the biggest hard-rock act of the era, but as a group constantly evolving and comfortable taking risks at the top of the mountain. 


The album’s cover, designed by Hipgnosis and photographed at
The Giant’s Causeway in Northern Ireland, features a series of golden-tinted children climbing the stone formations—an image loosely inspired by the science fiction novel Childhood’s End by Arthur C. Clarke. The artwork has since become one of rock’s most recognizable visuals.


Bonus Tracks


The
Rain Song (Live)


The
Ocean (Live)


Side One


The Song Remains The Same


The Rain Song


Over The Hills And Far Away


The Crunge


Side Two


Dancing Days


D'yer Mak'er


No Quarter


The Ocean




Hashtags:


#LedZeppelin #HousesOfTheHoly #ClassicRock #RobertPlant
#JimmyPage #JohnPaulJones #JohnBonham #OverTheHillsAndFarAway #NoQuarter
#TheOcean #RockHistory #1973Music #VinylCollection #MusicPodcast #AlbumDeepDive




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Houses of the Holy by Led Zepplin...Episode #12

Houses of the Holy by Led Zepplin...Episode #12

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