Led Zeppelin II
Led Zeppelin II is the second studio album by the English rock band Led Zeppelin, released on October 22, 1969, by Atlantic Records.[1] Produced by guitarist Jimmy Page with engineering by Eddie Kramer, the album was recorded piecemeal across multiple studios in the United Kingdom and the United States during the band's intensive 1969 touring schedule, including sessions at Olympic Studios in London, Mystic Studios in Los Angeles, and A&R Studios in New York.[2] Featuring nine tracks that blend heavy blues-rock riffs, folk-infused acoustics, and psychedelic experimentation, key songs include the riff-driven opener "Whole Lotta Love," the guitar showcase "Heartbreaker," the acoustic-electric hybrid "Ramble On," and the drum solo epic "Moby Dick."[1] Upon release, Led Zeppelin II achieved immediate commercial success, reaching number 1 on the Billboard 200 by December 27, 1969, where it remained for seven weeks.[3] The album has sold over 12 million copies in the United States alone, earning 12× Platinum certification from the RIAA on November 15, 1999.[4] Critically, Led Zeppelin II is regarded as a cornerstone of hard rock, refining the band's raw sound from their debut into a more polished yet aggressive style that influenced countless subsequent acts in rock and heavy metal.[1] Its innovative production techniques, such as backward echo on "Whole Lotta Love" and theremin effects, alongside Page's layered guitar arrangements and Robert Plant's soaring vocals, solidified Led Zeppelin's reputation as trailblazers.[2] The album's cover art, designed by David Juniper, features a blurred group photo superimposed over a historical image from the 1940s, evoking the band's touring lifestyle.[5] Reissued multiple times, including a 2014 deluxe edition with previously unreleased companion audio from the band's 1969 performances, Led Zeppelin II continues to be celebrated for capturing the explosive energy of Led Zeppelin's early career.[6]Background and recording
Conception and influences
The development of Led Zeppelin II was profoundly shaped by the band's grueling 1969 touring schedule, which encompassed approximately 139 performances across the United Kingdom, Scandinavia, and North America, including spring and summer North American legs as well as UK dates. This relentless pace, spanning multiple continents and often involving back-to-back shows, left little time for traditional studio composition, prompting the group to create much of the material spontaneously in hotel rooms, on airplanes, and backstage during breaks in their itinerary. The intensity of these tours not only honed the band's live chemistry but also infused the album with a raw, urgent energy reflective of their evolving stage presence.[7] Central to the album's sound were the profound influences from Chicago blues pioneers, particularly Willie Dixon and Howlin' Wolf, whose works the band reinterpreted to form three of its tracks. Jimmy Page, drawing from his session musician background, adapted Dixon's "You Need Love" into the riff-driven "Whole Lotta Love" and covered his "Bring It On Home" as a bookend to the album, while "The Lemon Song" reworked Howlin' Wolf's "Killing Floor" with amplified distortion and improvisation. These adaptations underscored Led Zeppelin's commitment to blues foundations, transforming classic structures into heavier, more electrified expressions that bridged traditional roots with emerging hard rock. However, these reinterpretations resulted in plagiarism lawsuits from Willie Dixon in the 1980s over "Whole Lotta Love" and "Bring It On Home," which were settled out of court.[8][9] Robert Plant's lyrical contributions further distinguished the album, weaving themes of mythology, fantasy, and personal introspection drawn from the band's nomadic tour life. Tracks like "Ramble On" incorporated allusions to J.R.R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings, referencing Mordor and Gollum amid imagery of wandering and lost love, inspired by Plant's readings and the disorienting vastness of American landscapes encountered on the road. This blend of fantastical escapism and real-time emotional reflection added a narrative depth to the music, complementing the instrumental aggression.[10][11] Jimmy Page envisioned Led Zeppelin II as a bold evolution from the band's 1968 debut, pushing toward a heavier, riff-centric rock sound that captured the group's maturing dynamics. In interviews, Page emphasized creating something "extreme" to showcase the band's peaks, incorporating layered guitars and dynamic shifts to amplify the blues base into a more visceral, timeless form, distinct from the debut's looser jam-oriented approach. This directive guided the album's construction, ensuring it reflected the heightened intensity developed through constant touring.[12][13]Recording sessions
The recording sessions for Led Zeppelin II took place intermittently from January to August 1969 across multiple studios in the United Kingdom and North America, reflecting the band's relentless touring schedule that left limited blocks of studio time.[7] Initial basic tracks were laid down at Olympic Studios in London in April 1969, followed by sessions at Mystic Studios (also known as Mirror Sound) in Hollywood and A&M Studios in Los Angeles in May 1969; additional work occurred at Morgan Studios in London, Quantum Studios and Sunset Sound in Los Angeles, and Groove Studios and Mayfair Recording Studios in New York City in June.[5] Overdubs were added piecemeal during tour stops, with the process emphasizing an improvised songwriting approach where songs were developed on the fly and captured live in the studio to preserve energy, drawing briefly from blues structures for riff-based compositions.[2] These sessions were marked by significant logistical challenges due to the band's extensive North American tours, which constrained recording to short windows of a few hours between concerts, often resulting in rushed setups and the need to transport tapes across continents for continuity.[14] This fragmented workflow led to remote mixing efforts, including initial passes in Vancouver during a tour leg before final completion in New York.[15] Jimmy Page and engineer Eddie Kramer handled the mixing over two intensive days in late August 1969 at A&R Recording Studios in New York City, using an 8-track Scully machine and a custom console to blend the disparate elements into a cohesive sound.[7] Key to the album's heavy tone was the equipment employed, with Page primarily using his 1959/1960 Gibson Les Paul Standard guitar to craft the signature riffs, amplified through Marshall stacks for raw power.[16] Drummer John Bonham contributed the thunderous percussion using his Ludwig Thermogloss maple kit, which provided the booming, resonant backbeat central to tracks like "Whole Lotta Love."[17]Music
Musical style
Led Zeppelin II represented a significant evolution in the band's sound, shifting toward a heavier form of blues-rock characterized by extended guitar solos, aggressive riffs, and pronounced dynamic shifts between intense crescendos and quieter passages.[14] This album is often credited as a prototype for heavy metal, with its raw power and visceral energy influencing subsequent hard rock and metal acts through tracks featuring thunderous rhythms and distorted guitars.[18] The overall style blended blues foundations with amplified rock aggression, creating a template for album-oriented rock that prioritized instrumental prowess over pop structures.[1] Key innovations included Jimmy Page's use of layered, multi-tracked guitars, often employing his Gibson Les Paul for stuttering riffs and virtuoso solos, as heard in the unaccompanied guitar break of "Heartbreaker."[14] John Bonham's drumming contributed to the album's thunderous backbone, utilizing similar distance-miking techniques to capture a powerful, room-filling sound that emphasized dynamic intensity and extended solos, such as the percussive showcase in "Moby Dick."[14] John Paul Jones enhanced the sonic texture with his bass lines and keyboard contributions, providing melodic support and atmospheric depth.[1] The album's adaptations of blues covers demonstrated the band's penchant for extended improvisations, transforming originals into sprawling jams; for instance, "The Lemon Song" reinterpreted Howlin' Wolf's "Killing Floor" with real-time echo effects and lyrical interpolations, while "Bring It On Home" incorporated harmonica and piano for a harmonically rich opener.[14] Production techniques further amplified the raw energy, including innovative effects like the backward echo on the descending slide guitar in "Whole Lotta Love," achieved through experimental mixing that added psychedelic disorientation to the track's heavy riff-driven structure.[19]Lyrics
The lyrics of Led Zeppelin II, largely written by vocalist Robert Plant, revolve around themes of sexual innuendo, mysticism, and classic blues tropes, often delivered with Plant's poetic and evocative imagery. Songs such as "Whole Lotta Love" and "What Is and What Should Never Be" exemplify this through vivid expressions of desire and fantasy, where Plant employs suggestive language to convey intense romantic and physical longing, drawing on blues traditions while infusing a psychedelic edge.[20][21] Plant's mystical elements frequently incorporate references to J.R.R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings, particularly in tracks like "Ramble On," which alludes to Mordor and Gollum to evoke a sense of epic journey and otherworldly escape intertwined with personal yearning. This literary influence reflects Plant's broader fascination with fantasy literature, blending it seamlessly with the album's rock framework. Additionally, Plant drew from Celtic folklore and Welsh mysticism—rooted in his Black Country upbringing near the Welsh borders—to infuse lyrics with a sense of ancient lore and spiritual depth, though these motifs are more subtly woven here than in later works.[22][23] The album's cover songs and adaptations highlight blues influences, with Plant reworking traditional lyrics from African American blues artists into Zeppelin's hard rock context; for instance, "The Lemon Song" adapts lines from Howlin' Wolf's "Killing Floor," preserving raw emotional tropes of infidelity and passion. Legal disputes arose later over these borrowings, notably when blues songwriter Willie Dixon sued the band in 1985, claiming "Whole Lotta Love" lifted lyrics from his "You Need Love," resulting in an out-of-court settlement that added Dixon's writing credit to the track.[24][25] Songwriting credits on Led Zeppelin II are predominantly shared among Jimmy Page, Robert Plant, John Paul Jones, and John Bonham, marking Plant's first official lyrical contributions to the band's catalog. This collaborative approach stemmed from an improvisational process, where Page's riffs and the rhythm section's grooves provided the foundation, allowing Plant to craft lyrics spontaneously during studio sessions or tours, often adapting blues phrases on the fly to fit the music's energy.[12][26]Artwork and packaging
Cover art
The cover art for Led Zeppelin II was designed by David Juniper, a former classmate of guitarist Jimmy Page at Sutton Art College in Surrey, England.[27] Juniper created the artwork on speculation and pitched it to the band's manager, Peter Grant, who approved it for the album.[27] The design draws from a World War I photograph of Jagdstaffel 11 (Jasta 11), the renowned German fighter squadron known as the "Flying Circus," led by Manfred von Richthofen, the Red Baron; the image, sourced from the Australian War Memorial, depicts pilots posing in front of their Albatros D.III aircraft.[28] To adapt the historical photo, Juniper employed airbrushing techniques to superimpose the faces of the four band members—Jimmy Page, Robert Plant, John Paul Jones, and John Bonham—onto four of the pilots, while replacing others with images of celebrities, including French actress Delphine Seyrig as Mary Magdalene from the 1969 film Mr. Freedom.[27] He added details such as beards and sunglasses to some figures for a modern twist, removed the aircraft and the Red Baron's distinctive red plane, and incorporated abstract cloud elements along with a faint outline of the Hindenburg airship against a sepia-toned brown background to evoke an aged, textured appearance.[28] This composite imagery reflects themes of aviation and ascent, influenced by the era's space exploration fervor following the Apollo 11 moon landing, earning the cover the nickname "The Brown Bomber" among fans.[28] Juniper's innovative packaging earned a nomination for the Grammy Award for Best Recording Package at the 12th Annual Grammy Awards in 1970, recognizing its creative fusion of historical and contemporary elements.[27]Inner sleeve and credits
The gatefold inner spread of Led Zeppelin II contained the album's liner notes alongside a collage of black-and-white photographs capturing moments from the band's 1969 North American tour. The liner notes presented production credits to Jimmy Page as producer, Peter Grant as executive producer, and a rotating team of engineers including Eddie Kramer (who mixed the album at A&R Recording Studios in New York), George Chkiantz, Chris Huston, and Andy Johns, underscoring the nomadic recording process across studios like Olympic Sound Studios in London and Juggy Sound in New York. Songwriting credits were uniformly assigned to band members Jimmy Page, Robert Plant, John Paul Jones, and John Bonham, while publishing was routed through Superhype Publishing, Inc. (administered by WB Music Corp.), a deliberate choice by the band to consolidate control over their catalog and infuse an air of mystique; early pressings listed Superhype for all tracks, including blues-derived material, to obscure origins and mitigate immediate copyright disputes until proper attributions (such as Willie Dixon's addition for "Whole Lotta Love") could be resolved.[29][30][31] This approach aligned with a minimalist design philosophy, prioritizing sparse, functional text over elaborate commentary to let the music dominate, with the inner sleeve itself consisting of a simple poly-lined paper bag bearing patent markings from 1969. Some international editions included a promotional poster replicating the gatefold imagery, enhancing the tactile experience for collectors.[32] Subsequent reissues evolved the packaging to restore and expand upon the original elements; for instance, the 2014 remastered edition by Jimmy Page replicated the gatefold in a card wallet format, reinstating the full collage after certain 1970s and 1980s pressings had simplified or omitted portions due to ongoing image rights concerns. Deluxe and super deluxe variants added a multi-page booklet with high-resolution scans of tour ephemera, expanded credits, and previously unseen photography, preserving the album's internal aesthetic while providing deeper historical context.[6]Release and reception
Release details
Led Zeppelin II was released on October 22, 1969, in the United States by Atlantic Records under catalog number SD 8236.[31] The album became available in the United Kingdom on October 31, 1969, via Atlantic Records with catalog number 588198.[31] This staggered rollout reflected the band's intensifying focus on the American market, where their debut album and extensive touring had built a substantial following. The initial format was a stereo vinyl LP in a gatefold sleeve, adhering to the standard pricing for major rock releases of the era, typically around $5 to $6 retail.[1] Subsequent formats included cassettes (CS 8236) and 8-track tapes, expanding accessibility through car stereos and portable players popular in the late 1960s.[31] Distribution was handled entirely by Atlantic Records, capitalizing on Led Zeppelin's burgeoning U.S. fanbase cultivated through relentless touring schedules that year.[33] The label's established network ensured wide availability in record stores across North America ahead of the UK launch, prioritizing the market where the band had already achieved breakthrough success with their first album.Initial critical reception
Upon its release in October 1969, Led Zeppelin II received mixed critical reception, with reviewers praising its raw energy and heaviness while criticizing its reliance on blues traditions as overly derivative. In a December 1969 Rolling Stone review, John Mendelsohn described the album as "one fucking heavyweight of an album" and the "heaviest thing I’ve run across since 'Parchman Farm' on Vincebus Eruptum," highlighting the "nervous excitement" generated by Jimmy Page's guitar work and the band's intense dynamics, particularly on tracks like "Whole Lotta Love" and "The Lemon Song."[34] However, the same review questioned the authenticity of Robert Plant's blues-inflected vocals, asking, "Who said that white men couldn’t sing blues?" in reference to "Bring It On Home," reflecting broader contemporary skepticism about the band's interpretations of Black blues influences as unoriginal or excessive.[34] The lead single "Whole Lotta Love" faced editing for its U.S. release on November 7, 1969, when Atlantic Records shortened the original 5:33 track to 3:10, removing much of the psychedelic theremin and a cappella breakdown to make it more radio-friendly, a move that contributed to its commercial breakthrough.[35] The edited version peaked at No. 4 on the Billboard Hot 100 in early 1970, marking Led Zeppelin's first major U.S. chart success and helping propel album sales despite the critical ambivalence. Fan enthusiasm during the band's intensive 1969-1970 tours played a key role in amplifying the album's word-of-mouth popularity, as audiences responded rapturously to the live renditions of its tracks, fostering a grassroots buzz that outpaced print media coverage.[8] This organic growth translated into strong early sales momentum, with Led Zeppelin II reaching No. 1 on the Billboard 200 by December 1969 after debuting at No. 7, eventually selling over one million copies within months and displacing the Beatles' Abbey Road from the top spot.[8]Commercial performance
Chart history
Led Zeppelin II achieved significant commercial success upon its release, topping the Billboard 200 in the United States for seven consecutive weeks beginning on December 27, 1969, and spending a total of 117 weeks on the chart.[36][3] It also reached number one on the UK Albums Chart on February 7, 1970, where it remained on the chart for a total of 129 weeks.[37] Internationally, the album peaked at number one in several markets during 1969 and 1970, including Canada, Australia, the Netherlands, Spain, Germany, Denmark, and Finland. The lead single "Whole Lotta Love" contributed to the album's momentum, peaking at number four on the US Billboard Hot 100 in January 1970 and marking the band's highest-charting single in that market.[38] Internationally, it reached the top 10 in over a dozen countries, including number one in Australia and Germany, number two in Canada, Belgium, and Denmark, number three in Austria, number four in New Zealand, and number five in the Netherlands.[39] In the UK, it peaked at number 21.[40] For the year-end charts in 1970, Led Zeppelin II ranked second on the Billboard 200 in the United States, underscoring its enduring popularity that year.[41] The 2014 remastered reissue prompted re-entries on major charts, reaching number nine on the Billboard 200 in the US.[42] In Europe, it entered the top 10 in several countries, including number six in Ireland, number seven in Germany, and number eight in Finland, while peaking at number 12 on the UK Albums Chart.[43][44]| Chart (1969–1970) | Peak Position |
|---|---|
| Australia (Kent Music Report) | 1 |
| Canada (RPM Top 100 Albums) | 1 |
| Germany (Official Top 100) | 1 |
| Netherlands (Dutch Top 40 Albums) | 1 |
| Spain (Promusicae) | 1 |
| UK Albums (OCC) | 1 |
| US Billboard 200 | 1 |
Certifications and sales
In the United States, Led Zeppelin II was certified 12× Platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) on November 15, 1999, for shipments exceeding 12 million copies.[45] The album has received numerous certifications internationally, reflecting its enduring commercial success. In the United Kingdom, it earned 4× Platinum status from the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) for sales of 1.2 million units. In Canada, Music Canada awarded it 9× Platinum certification, equivalent to 900,000 units, on June 1, 2006. Other notable certifications include 4× Platinum in Australia (280,000 units), 2× Gold in France (200,000 units), and Platinum in Argentina (60,000 units).[46] Estimated worldwide sales of Led Zeppelin II stand at over 21.9 million physical copies as of recent analyses, surpassing earlier figures from the late 1990s and incorporating data from certified markets and shipments.[47] This total has been bolstered by digital downloads and streaming, with equivalent album units from tracks like "Whole Lotta Love" (over 2.2 million downloads) and "Ramble On" (over 2.1 million downloads) contributing nearly 1 million additional units globally.[47] These figures position Led Zeppelin II as one of the band's top-selling releases, within Led Zeppelin's overall catalog that has exceeded 300 million albums sold worldwide.[48]| Region | Certification | Certified Units | Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| United States (RIAA) | 12× Platinum | 12,000,000 | November 15, 1999 |
| United Kingdom (BPI) | 4× Platinum | 1,200,000 | Unknown |
| Canada (Music Canada) | 9× Platinum | 900,000 | June 1, 2006 |
| Australia (ARIA) | 4× Platinum | 280,000 | Unknown |
| France (SNEP) | 2× Gold | 200,000 | Unknown |
| Argentina (CAPIF) | Platinum | 60,000 | January 1, 1993 |
Legacy
Cultural impact
Led Zeppelin II served as a foundational blueprint for the development of hard rock and heavy metal, blending blues-derived riffs with amplified intensity and rhythmic power that influenced subsequent generations of musicians. The album's aggressive sound, exemplified by tracks like "Whole Lotta Love" and "Heartbreaker," helped solidify the genre's emphasis on heavy guitar-driven compositions and dynamic shifts, paving the way for bands such as Black Sabbath, whose darker tonalities echoed Zeppelin's heaviness in their 1970 debut. Similarly, Guns N' Roses drew inspiration from the album's raw energy, with guitarist Slash citing Led Zeppelin II as a pivotal record that shaped his approach to riff-based songwriting and soloing.[8][49][50] The track "Whole Lotta Love," with its iconic riff and psychedelic breakdown, became a cultural touchstone beyond rock, frequently sampled in hip-hop to infuse tracks with its gritty groove. In visual media, "Whole Lotta Love" has appeared in the stage musical adaptation of Almost Famous (2019), where it underscores scenes of 1970s rock excess and band camaraderie, reinforcing the album's association with the era's hedonistic touring lifestyle.[51] Jimmy Page's guitar work on Led Zeppelin II introduced innovative techniques that profoundly impacted rock guitarists, particularly through the unaccompanied solo in "Heartbreaker," which featured rapid hammer-ons and pull-offs. This approach inspired Eddie Van Halen to develop his two-handed tapping technique after observing Page perform the solo live in 1971, crediting it as a key influence on his own virtuosic style in Van Halen. Slash of Guns N' Roses has also acknowledged the album's solos as formative, adopting similar improvisational flair and tonal aggression in his playing.[52][53][50] The album epitomized the excesses of 1970s rock culture, with its overt sexuality and blues adaptations reflecting a shift toward spectacle and indulgence over traditional fidelity to blues roots. By amplifying and electrifying Chicago and Delta blues structures into bombastic anthems, Led Zeppelin II contributed to the decline of blues purism, prioritizing rock's commercial and performative evolution amid the era's drug-fueled tours and larger-than-life personas.[8][54]Reappraisal and influence
In the 1970s and 1980s, Led Zeppelin II underwent significant reappraisal as a landmark of rock music, even amid ongoing accusations of blues plagiarism. Critics began to recognize its role in defining hard rock through innovative riff structures and production techniques, overshadowing earlier concerns about uncredited borrowings from blues sources.[55] A notable example was the 1985 lawsuit filed by Willie Dixon against the band over "Whole Lotta Love," which alleged infringement of his 1962 composition "You Need Love"; the case was settled out of court, with Dixon receiving songwriting credit on subsequent releases.[24] The album has consistently ranked highly in retrospective lists, affirming its enduring critical stature. In 2020, Rolling Stone placed Led Zeppelin II at No. 123 on its list of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time, praising its blues-rock fusion and Jimmy Page's production as foundational to heavy music. Similarly, in VH1's 2000 ranking of the 100 Greatest Artists of Hard Rock, Led Zeppelin topped the list, with II cited as a pivotal work in establishing the band's hard rock dominance.[56] Academic analyses have explored the album's lyrical themes, particularly gender dynamics, revealing complexities beyond surface-level machismo. Scholars note that Robert Plant's lyrics in tracks like "Whole Lotta Love" and "What Is and What Should Never Be" employ sexual imagery that blends dominance and vulnerability, inviting reinterpretations of power and pleasure from female perspectives in hard rock.[57] Production elements further contribute to genre fusion, as Page's rhythmic manipulations—such as layered guitars and metric shifts—merge blues repetition with proto-metal intensity, creating a trance-like hybrid that transcends traditional boundaries.[58] In the 21st century, the album has received widespread praise for its sonic innovation and lasting blueprint for rock production. The 2014 remastered reissue earned a Metacritic score of 95/100 based on 10 reviews, with critics lauding the enhanced clarity that highlights Page's groundbreaking use of studio effects and riff-driven energy as ahead of its time.[59]Reissues
2014 remaster
The 2014 remaster of Led Zeppelin II was overseen by guitarist Jimmy Page, who worked from the original analog master tapes to produce an enhanced version of the album. Released on June 3, 2014, by Atlantic Records and Swan Song, the project aimed to restore the recording's original dynamics and clarity, which had been compressed in earlier editions due to the limitations of 1960s vinyl and subsequent digital transfers.[6][60] The remaster was issued in six formats to cater to different collector preferences: a single-disc CD of the remastered album; a single 180-gram vinyl LP; digital downloads in standard and high-resolution audio; a two-disc deluxe edition (CD or 180-gram vinyl) pairing the remastered album with a companion disc of bonus material; and a super deluxe boxed set containing both CD and vinyl versions of the deluxe edition, along with additional collectibles. The companion audio featured eight previously unreleased tracks drawn from the original 1969 sessions, including rough mixes such as "Whole Lotta Love (Rough Mix with Vocal)," "What Is and What Should Never Be (Rough Mix with Vocal)," and "La La (Intro/Outro Rough Mix)," as well as backing tracks for "Thank You" and "Moby Dick." These outtakes provided insight into the band's creative process, showcasing alternate arrangements and raw studio performances.[6][61] Audiophiles praised the remaster for its improved sound quality, noting greater depth in the stereo imaging, enhanced instrumental separation, and a revival of the album's natural dynamics that brought forward details like John Bonham's drum fills and John Paul Jones's bass lines without over-processing. The super deluxe edition further appealed to fans by including memorabilia such as a high-quality reproduction print of the album's original cover artwork (one of the first 30,000 numbered copies), and an album-size hardcover book with rare photographs and liner notes by Page.[60][62][6][63] Commercially, the 2014 remaster sparked a resurgence for Led Zeppelin II, propelling it back onto global charts and contributing to the band's catalog sales exceeding 946,000 units in the United States that year across all reissues. The deluxe and super deluxe editions drove much of this boost, with the album re-entering the Billboard 200 at No. 9 and achieving similar top-20 placements in countries like France and Norway, underscoring the enduring appeal of the upgraded presentation.[64][65]Later editions and availability
Following the 2014 remaster, Led Zeppelin II was made available digitally, coinciding with the band's catalog debut on Spotify in December 2013 and on Apple Music upon its launch in June 2015, enabling widespread streaming access.[66][67] The remastered edition has sustained digital sales and streaming popularity, with tracks like "Whole Lotta Love" generating over 407,000 equivalent album units from streams alone as of 2021. Overall, the album has accrued approximately 974,000 equivalent album units from digital sales and streaming, the majority occurring since its digital rollout around 2014. As of September 2025, the album continues to accumulate streaming equivalents, with key tracks contributing significantly to ongoing digital consumption.[68][47] No major physical reissues of Led Zeppelin II have occurred since the 2014 edition, though the remastered vinyl LP has seen ongoing represses to fulfill collector demand, pressed on 180-gram vinyl at facilities like Pallas in Germany.[69] The album's remastered version is included in comprehensive Led Zeppelin collections, such as the 1993 The Complete Studio Recordings 10-CD box set, which compiles all nine studio albums and remains in print. Modern accessibility includes high-resolution audio formats on platforms like Tidal and Qobuz, where the 2014 remaster is offered in lossless quality up to 24-bit/96kHz, enhancing fidelity for audiophiles.[70][71] Jimmy Page's archival efforts, including meticulous remastering from original tapes and curation of unreleased material, have ensured the preservation of Led Zeppelin II's master recordings, safeguarding the band's legacy against degradation or loss.[72][73]Track listing
Original release
Led Zeppelin II was originally released on October 22, 1969, in the United States by Atlantic Records (catalogue SD 8236) and on October 31, 1969, in the United Kingdom by Atlantic (catalogue 588198). The album's standard edition features nine tracks divided across two sides of vinyl, with a total runtime of 40:00. All tracks are original compositions by the band members except for noted blues adaptations.| Side | No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| One | 1 | "Whole Lotta Love" | Page, Bonham, Jones, Plant | 4:55 |
| One | 2 | "What Is and What Should Never Be" | Page, Plant | 4:14 |
| One | 3 | "The Lemon Song" | Page, Bonham, Jones, Plant | 6:06 |
| One | 4 | "Thank You" | Page, Plant | 4:49 |
| Two | 5 | "Heartbreaker" | Page, Bonham, Jones, Plant | 4:14 |
| Two | 6 | "Living Loving Maid (She's Just a Woman)" | Page, Plant | 2:39 |
| Two | 7 | "Ramble On" | Page, Plant | 4:24 |
| Two | 8 | "Moby Dick" | Bonham, Page, Jones | 4:20 |
| Two | 9 | "Bring It On Home" | Page, Plant | 4:19 |
Deluxe edition (2014)
The 2014 deluxe edition of Led Zeppelin II, released on June 2, 2014, features the original album newly remastered by Jimmy Page alongside a companion disc containing eight previously unreleased studio outtakes from the album's recording sessions.[74] These bonus tracks include rough mixes with vocals and isolated backing tracks, offering insights into the band's creative process during the 1969 sessions.[61] The companion disc tracklist is as follows:| No. | Title | Writers | Length |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | "Whole Lotta Love" (rough mix with vocal) | Page, Bonham, Jones, Plant, Dixon | 5:38 |
| 2 | "What Is and What Should Never Be" (rough mix with vocal) | Page, Plant | 4:33 |
| 3 | "Thank You" (backing track) | Page, Plant | 4:21 |
| 4 | "Heartbreaker" (rough mix with vocal) | Page, Bonham, Jones, Plant | 4:24 |
| 5 | "Living Loving Maid (She's Just a Woman)" (backing track) | Page, Plant | 3:08 |
| 6 | "Ramble On" (rough mix with vocal) | Page, Plant | 4:43 |
| 7 | "Moby Dick" (backing track) | Page, Bonham, Jones | 1:37 |
| 8 | "La La" (intro/outro rough mix) | Page, Jones | 4:07 |