Led Zeppelin Box Set (1990)
Disc One
1. Whole Lotta Love
2. Heartbreaker
3. Communication Breakdown
4. Babe I'm Gonna Leave You
5. What Is and What Should Never Be
6. Thank You
7. I Can't Quit You Baby
8. Dazed and Confused
9. Your Time is Gonna Come
10. Ramble On
11. Traveling Riverside Blues
12. Friends
13. Celebration Day
14. Hey, Hey, What Can I Do
15. White Summer/Black Mountain Side
Disc Two
1. Black Dog
2. Over the Hills and Far Away
3. Immigrant Song
4. The Battle of Evermore
5. Bron-Yr-Aur Stomp
6. Tangerine
7. Going to California
8. Since I've Been Loving You
9. D'yer Maker
10.Gallows Pole
11.Custard Pie
12.Misty Mountain Hop
13.Rock and Roll
14.The Rain Song
15.Stairway to Heaven
Disc Three
1. Kashmir
2. Trampled Underfoot
3. For Your Live
4. No Quarter
5. Dancing Days
6. When the Levee Breaks
7. Achilles Last Stand
8. The Song Remains the Same
9. Ten Years Gone
10. In My Time of Dying
Disc Four
1. In the Evening
2. Candy Store Rock
3. The Ocean
4. Ozone Baby
5. Houses of the Holy
6. Wearing and Tearing
7. Poor Tom
8. Nobody's Fault But Mine
9. Fool in the Rain
10. In the Light
11. The Wanton Song
12. Moby Dick/Bonzo's Montreaux
13. I'm Gonna Crawl
14. All My Love
 
It was time for the obligatory box set. With the CD revolution in full swing, and every other group releasing such a retrospective, the band put out this 4 CD gem. For this box set, there are only 3 unreleased tracks, no live songs, nor “alternate versions” of any of the cuts. Since the band only had a total of 9 full length albums, that meant that a huge hunk (about 2/3 to be exact) of the band’s catalog is here. One almost wishes they would have just put out a box set with everything. So essentially this could be considered the “best” of Led Zeppelin.
Some albums are more heavily featured than others. Led Zeppelin IV and Houses of the Holy are each featured in their entirety, minus one song from each. The running order has a nice flow – minor alterations with the tracks staying fairly linear.
Strangely, a few years later the band released a second Box Set that was a total of only 2 CDs that featured everything in the band’s catalog that missed the cut on this one. For obvious reasons, that one isn’t nearly as strong, but it was nice for fans to be able to snag two box sets and become the proud owner of everything the band released in the studio.
The only thing I wish they would have done differently is not combining Moby Dick and Bonzo's Montreaux into a mix of one song. I wish they would have left them both in their original formats and have had them here separately. They did fix this on the successor, fortunately.
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