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Achilles Last Stand

"Achilles Last Stand"[a] is a song by the English rock group Led Zeppelin released as the opening track on their seventh studio album, Presence (1976). Guitarist Jimmy Page and singer Robert Plant began writing the song during the summer of 1975 and were influenced by Eastern music, mythology, and exposure to diverse cultures during their travels. At roughly ten-and-a-half minutes, it is one of the group's longest studio recordings[b] and one of their most complex, with interwoven sections and multiple, overdubbed guitar parts.

"Achilles Last Stand"
Song by Led Zeppelin
from the album Presence
Released31 March 1976 (1976-03-31)
RecordedNovember 1975[1]
StudioMusicland, Munich, Germany[1]
Genre progressive rock
Length10:26
LabelSwan Song
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)Jimmy Page

The song received mainly positive reviews from music critics, with some comparing "Achilles Last Stand" to other Zeppelin songs such as "Kashmir". The band featured it during concerts from 1977 to 1980, and a 1979 live performance is included on the Led Zeppelin DVD (2003). Page called it his favourite Led Zeppelin song in several interviews, and considers its guitar solo on a par with his "Stairway to Heaven" solo.

Background and lyrics edit

 
The Death of Achilles, brown ink and oil by Alexander Rothaug (1870–1946)

After their 1975 US tour and London concerts, Led Zeppelin took a break from performing.[4] In order to remain tax exiles, the group members needed to limit their time in the UK. This is alluded to in the song's opening lines: "It was an April morning when they told us we should go, and as I turned to you, you smiled at me, how could we say no".[5] Jimmy Page and Robert Plant went to Morocco in June 1975, where they developed material for their next album.[6] Page heard local music, which influenced his guitar parts on "Achilles Last Stand".[7] North African and Middle Eastern music had inspired earlier Led Zeppelin songs, such as "Friends", "Four Sticks", "No Quarter", and "Kashmir".[8][9]

Although "Achilles Last Stand" uses mythological imagery drawn from William Blake's Albion, the Atlas myth and the Greek hero Achilles,[10] its lyrics centre around the group's travels during their exile.[11] The title is an ironic reference to Plant's August 1975 automobile accident, in which he severely injured his ankle,[12] as Achilles was brought down by an arrow to his calcaneal tendon. Plant was unable to walk for a year, and recorded much of Presence in a wheelchair; the working title of "Achilles Last Stand" was "The Wheelchair Song".[13] Group biographer Martin Popoff described Plant's lyrics:

Albion is a Blake reference, but it's also an ancient name for what would become England. The Atlas Mountains, which span Morocco, Algeria, and Tunisia, are also referenced, but through a nice twist, the lyric referring directly to Atlas instead, the god who held the earth on his shoulders. Within he [Plant] also relates his travels in Greece, Spain, Montreux, Jersey, and California, as well as what one internalizes from travel.[13]

Composition and recording edit

"Achilles Last Stand" opens with Page's Moroccan-influenced solo guitar arpeggios, which Led Zeppelin biographers have described as haunting and mysterious.[14][11] Drummer John Bonham and bassist John Paul Jones then establish a driving hard rock rhythm that persists throughout the song.[15][16][17] After the long introductory riff is played four times, Plant begins singing.[18] His vocal sections are broken up by brief instrumental passages, and Page adds the first of several overdubbed guitar parts.[11]

At 3:42, the song shifts, and Page plays his first solo.[11][7] In addition to a change in tempo, the section includes breaks and a switch to 5/4 time,[19] with the rest notated in 4/4 time in the key of E minor with a moderately-fast tempo of 146 beats per minute.[20] When the vocals return, Page adds more guitars.[21] After a brief slide-guitar part, Plant begins an Eastern-influenced scat-style vocal.[11] At 8:25, Page plays a second solo with more overdubbed parts; a minute and a half later, the song winds down with chords echoing the opening.[21]

 
John Paul Jones (shown at a 1980 German concert) recorded with an eight-string bass for the first time on "Achilles Last Stand".

After extensive rehearsals in Los Angeles, Led Zeppelin went to Munich to record Presence at Musicland Studios.[22] They recorded the basic tracks for "Achilles Last Stand" during early sessions on 12 November 1975.[14] For the first time during a recording, Jones plays an eight-string bass guitar with a pick.[14] He said that it added more mid-range presence during Page's high-register guitar solos; although Page objected at first, he soon recognized the effectiveness of Jones' innovation.[11] Jones also uses a heavy metal gallop, a rhythmic figure[23] in which an eighth note is followed by two sixteenth notes.[24][c] To balance the sound, a second bass line was recorded; Popoff describes it as "a more traditional bass track, more elliptical and rife with pregnant pauses, simultaneously lying across the gallop and wholly independent of it."[14]

Without the rest of the group, Page recorded all the guitar overdubs in one evening: "There must be half a dozen going at once. I knew that every guitar overdub had to be very important, very strong within itself to identify each section."[26] The recording for Presence was completed on 27 November 1975, 15 days after the group laid down the basic tracks for "Achilles Last Stand".[27] Page produced the album, with Keith Harwood providing the audio engineering.[28]

Release and performance edit

Swan Song Records released Led Zeppelin's seventh studio album Presence on 31 March 1976, with "Achilles Last Stand" its opening track.[28] Although the album initially sold well, it was ultimately not a great success for the group.[27] There was no tour to support the album, but in November, after Plant had sufficiently recovered, Led Zeppelin began rehearsing for an American tour.[29] "Achilles Last Stand" was one of the first songs they attempted. Since their studio recording relied heavily on overdubs, they needed an arrangement which would work for a three-piece-plus vocal ensemble.[30] Page recalled:

We could have just eased into familiar stuff but we went straight in to the deep end by trying out "Achilles". I thought I'd have to use the twin-neck [6- and 12-string Gibson EDS-1275 guitar] but it actually sounded better with the six string using different effects. When we did that first rehearsal it just all clicked all over again.[31]

The song and "Nobody's Fault but Mine" were the only tracks from Presence that the group added to their repertoire.[32] Led Zeppelin performed it at most of their concerts – often late in the set, before "Stairway to Heaven".[30] A live performance of the song at the Knebworth Festival 1979 was filmed, and was later released on the Led Zeppelin DVD in 2003. When Presence was remastered for the 2015 deluxe-album editions, a reference mix of "Achilles Last Stand" entitled "Two Ones Are Won" was included.[26]

Reception edit

The song received mostly positive reviews from music critics. In a 1976 review of Presence, Rolling Stone journalist Stephen Davis wrote: "'Achilles Last Stand' could be the Yardbirds, 12 years down the road. The format is familiar: John Bonham's furiously attacking drum is really the lead instrument, until Jimmy Page tires of chording under Plant and takes over."[33] In a more negative view, Jon Young of Spin lambasted the song in his 1991 Led Zeppelin Boxed Set review: "Nothing could be less satisfying than ten minutes of 'Achilles Last Stand,' a simultaneously abrasive and boring ordeal."[34] Music journalist Andrew Earles described it in a retrospective review of Presence as "a galloping, dour yet exhilarating onslaught of genuine heavy metal ... 'Achilles Last Stand' can be seen as a precursor to the new wave of British heavy metal that would soon explode all over Europe".[35]

In a 2011 review of Presence published by Classic Rock Review, "Achilles Last Stand" was called the album's "tour de force" and "a true journey", though the reviewer felt that the song was somewhat long and repetitive.[36] In a retrospective review of Presence (Deluxe Edition), Andrew Doscas of PopMatters described "Achilles Last Stand" as the band's "last true epic".[37] AllMusic's Brian Downing called it the album's "most ambitious song ... the only one that resembles the layered masterpieces from Physical Graffiti."[12]

Personnel edit

According to Jean-Michel Guesdon and Philippe Margotin:[1]

See also edit

Notes edit

Footnotes

  1. ^ In Keith Shadwick's biography Led Zeppelin: The Story of a Band and Their Music 1968–1980 (2005), he uses the possessive case in the song title ("Achilles' Last Stand"), but does not explain why Page and Plant chose not to do so.[2] Other biographers use the actual title.
  2. ^ For comparison, the Swan Song album LP record labels list "In My Time of Dying" at 11:08, "Carouselambra" at 10:28, "Achilles Last Stand" at 10:26, and "Tea for One" at 9:27.[3]
  3. ^ When Jones was asked to describe Led Zeppelin's music on The David Letterman Show in 2012, he jokingly played the gallop on air bass.[15] However, only one other of their songs, "Immigrant Song" (1970), has been identified as having a "prototype of the heavy metal gallop"[25]

Citations

  1. ^ a b c Guesdon & Margotin 2018, p. 450.
  2. ^ Shadwick 2005, pp. 246–248.
  3. ^ Swan Song 1976, LP labels.
  4. ^ Shadwick 2005, pp. 240–241.
  5. ^ Alfred Music 2008, p. 241.
  6. ^ Shadwick 2005, pp. 241–243.
  7. ^ a b Fast 2001, p. 88.
  8. ^ Tolinski 2012, eBook.
  9. ^ Waksman 1998, p. 295.
  10. ^ Campbell 2016, p. 215.
  11. ^ a b c d e f Shadwick 2005, p. 246.
  12. ^ a b Downing, Brian. "Led Zeppelin: Achilles Last Stand – Review". AllMusic. from the original on 29 July 2018. Retrieved 24 July 2018.
  13. ^ a b Popoff 2017, p. 185.
  14. ^ a b c d Popoff 2017, p. 184.
  15. ^ a b Akkerman 2014, pp. 102–103.
  16. ^ Milward 2013, p. 135: "Jimmy Page was a master of orchestrating pulverizing hard rock songs like 'Achilles Last Stand'".
  17. ^ Schuman 2009, p. 37: "'Achilles Last Stand,' a hard rock number featuring manic drumming by Bonham."
  18. ^ Akkerman 2014, p. 103.
  19. ^ Akkerman 2014, p. 105.
  20. ^ Alfred Music 2008, p. 240.
  21. ^ a b Akkerman 2014, p. 106.
  22. ^ Shadwick 2005, pp. 243–244.
  23. ^ Stang & Purse 2014, p. 8.
  24. ^ Chlasciak, Metal Mike (7 May 2018). "Play Mega-Metal Licks in the Style of Metallica, Testament and Pantera". Guitar World. from the original on 27 May 2019. Retrieved 28 May 2019.
  25. ^ Popoff 2017, p. 67.
  26. ^ a b Power 2016, eBook.
  27. ^ a b Lewis 2012, eBook.
  28. ^ a b Atlantic 1993, p. 7.
  29. ^ Lewis & Pallett 2005, pp. 275–276.
  30. ^ a b Lewis & Pallett 2005, p. 308.
  31. ^ Lewis & Pallett 2005, p. 275.
  32. ^ Lewis 2010, eBook.
  33. ^ Davis, Stephen (20 May 1976). "Led Zeppelin: Presence". Rolling Stone. from the original on 9 August 2017. Retrieved 16 October 2017.
  34. ^ Young 1991, pp. 78–79.
  35. ^ Earles 2015, p. 195.
  36. ^ "Presence by Led Zeppelin". Classic Rock Review. 24 November 2011. from the original on 17 October 2017. Retrieved 16 October 2017.
  37. ^ Doscas, Andrew (10 September 2015). "Led Zeppelin: Presence (Deluxe Edition)". PopMatters. from the original on 1 August 2017. Retrieved 28 July 2017.

References

Bibliography edit

External links edit

  • "Achilles Last Stand" (Live 1977) video at ledzeppelin.com (official website)

achilles, last, stand, song, english, rock, group, zeppelin, released, opening, track, their, seventh, studio, album, presence, 1976, guitarist, jimmy, page, singer, robert, plant, began, writing, song, during, summer, 1975, were, influenced, eastern, music, m. Achilles Last Stand a is a song by the English rock group Led Zeppelin released as the opening track on their seventh studio album Presence 1976 Guitarist Jimmy Page and singer Robert Plant began writing the song during the summer of 1975 and were influenced by Eastern music mythology and exposure to diverse cultures during their travels At roughly ten and a half minutes it is one of the group s longest studio recordings b and one of their most complex with interwoven sections and multiple overdubbed guitar parts Achilles Last Stand Song by Led Zeppelinfrom the album PresenceReleased31 March 1976 1976 03 31 RecordedNovember 1975 1 StudioMusicland Munich Germany 1 GenreHard rockprogressive rockLength10 26LabelSwan SongSongwriter s Jimmy Page Robert PlantProducer s Jimmy PageThe song received mainly positive reviews from music critics with some comparing Achilles Last Stand to other Zeppelin songs such as Kashmir The band featured it during concerts from 1977 to 1980 and a 1979 live performance is included on the Led Zeppelin DVD 2003 Page called it his favourite Led Zeppelin song in several interviews and considers its guitar solo on a par with his Stairway to Heaven solo Contents 1 Background and lyrics 2 Composition and recording 3 Release and performance 4 Reception 5 Personnel 6 See also 7 Notes 8 Bibliography 9 External linksBackground and lyrics edit nbsp The Death of Achilles brown ink and oil by Alexander Rothaug 1870 1946 After their 1975 US tour and London concerts Led Zeppelin took a break from performing 4 In order to remain tax exiles the group members needed to limit their time in the UK This is alluded to in the song s opening lines It was an April morning when they told us we should go and as I turned to you you smiled at me how could we say no 5 Jimmy Page and Robert Plant went to Morocco in June 1975 where they developed material for their next album 6 Page heard local music which influenced his guitar parts on Achilles Last Stand 7 North African and Middle Eastern music had inspired earlier Led Zeppelin songs such as Friends Four Sticks No Quarter and Kashmir 8 9 Although Achilles Last Stand uses mythological imagery drawn from William Blake s Albion the Atlas myth and the Greek hero Achilles 10 its lyrics centre around the group s travels during their exile 11 The title is an ironic reference to Plant s August 1975 automobile accident in which he severely injured his ankle 12 as Achilles was brought down by an arrow to his calcaneal tendon Plant was unable to walk for a year and recorded much of Presence in a wheelchair the working title of Achilles Last Stand was The Wheelchair Song 13 Group biographer Martin Popoff described Plant s lyrics Albion is a Blake reference but it s also an ancient name for what would become England The Atlas Mountains which span Morocco Algeria and Tunisia are also referenced but through a nice twist the lyric referring directly to Atlas instead the god who held the earth on his shoulders Within he Plant also relates his travels in Greece Spain Montreux Jersey and California as well as what one internalizes from travel 13 Composition and recording edit nbsp Achilles Last Stand source source 30 second excerpt with vocal and guitar verses Problems playing this file See media help Achilles Last Stand opens with Page s Moroccan influenced solo guitar arpeggios which Led Zeppelin biographers have described as haunting and mysterious 14 11 Drummer John Bonham and bassist John Paul Jones then establish a driving hard rock rhythm that persists throughout the song 15 16 17 After the long introductory riff is played four times Plant begins singing 18 His vocal sections are broken up by brief instrumental passages and Page adds the first of several overdubbed guitar parts 11 At 3 42 the song shifts and Page plays his first solo 11 7 In addition to a change in tempo the section includes breaks and a switch to 5 4 time 19 with the rest notated in 4 4 time in the key of E minor with a moderately fast tempo of 146 beats per minute 20 When the vocals return Page adds more guitars 21 After a brief slide guitar part Plant begins an Eastern influenced scat style vocal 11 At 8 25 Page plays a second solo with more overdubbed parts a minute and a half later the song winds down with chords echoing the opening 21 nbsp John Paul Jones shown at a 1980 German concert recorded with an eight string bass for the first time on Achilles Last Stand After extensive rehearsals in Los Angeles Led Zeppelin went to Munich to record Presence at Musicland Studios 22 They recorded the basic tracks for Achilles Last Stand during early sessions on 12 November 1975 14 For the first time during a recording Jones plays an eight string bass guitar with a pick 14 He said that it added more mid range presence during Page s high register guitar solos although Page objected at first he soon recognized the effectiveness of Jones innovation 11 Jones also uses a heavy metal gallop a rhythmic figure 23 in which an eighth note is followed by two sixteenth notes 24 c To balance the sound a second bass line was recorded Popoff describes it as a more traditional bass track more elliptical and rife with pregnant pauses simultaneously lying across the gallop and wholly independent of it 14 Without the rest of the group Page recorded all the guitar overdubs in one evening There must be half a dozen going at once I knew that every guitar overdub had to be very important very strong within itself to identify each section 26 The recording for Presence was completed on 27 November 1975 15 days after the group laid down the basic tracks for Achilles Last Stand 27 Page produced the album with Keith Harwood providing the audio engineering 28 Release and performance editSwan Song Records released Led Zeppelin s seventh studio album Presence on 31 March 1976 with Achilles Last Stand its opening track 28 Although the album initially sold well it was ultimately not a great success for the group 27 There was no tour to support the album but in November after Plant had sufficiently recovered Led Zeppelin began rehearsing for an American tour 29 Achilles Last Stand was one of the first songs they attempted Since their studio recording relied heavily on overdubs they needed an arrangement which would work for a three piece plus vocal ensemble 30 Page recalled We could have just eased into familiar stuff but we went straight in to the deep end by trying out Achilles I thought I d have to use the twin neck 6 and 12 string Gibson EDS 1275 guitar but it actually sounded better with the six string using different effects When we did that first rehearsal it just all clicked all over again 31 The song and Nobody s Fault but Mine were the only tracks from Presence that the group added to their repertoire 32 Led Zeppelin performed it at most of their concerts often late in the set before Stairway to Heaven 30 A live performance of the song at the Knebworth Festival 1979 was filmed and was later released on the Led Zeppelin DVD in 2003 When Presence was remastered for the 2015 deluxe album editions a reference mix of Achilles Last Stand entitled Two Ones Are Won was included 26 Reception editThe song received mostly positive reviews from music critics In a 1976 review of Presence Rolling Stone journalist Stephen Davis wrote Achilles Last Stand could be the Yardbirds 12 years down the road The format is familiar John Bonham s furiously attacking drum is really the lead instrument until Jimmy Page tires of chording under Plant and takes over 33 In a more negative view Jon Young of Spin lambasted the song in his 1991 Led Zeppelin Boxed Set review Nothing could be less satisfying than ten minutes of Achilles Last Stand a simultaneously abrasive and boring ordeal 34 Music journalist Andrew Earles described it in a retrospective review of Presence as a galloping dour yet exhilarating onslaught of genuine heavy metal Achilles Last Stand can be seen as a precursor to the new wave of British heavy metal that would soon explode all over Europe 35 In a 2011 review of Presence published by Classic Rock Review Achilles Last Stand was called the album s tour de force and a true journey though the reviewer felt that the song was somewhat long and repetitive 36 In a retrospective review of Presence Deluxe Edition Andrew Doscas of PopMatters described Achilles Last Stand as the band s last true epic 37 AllMusic s Brian Downing called it the album s most ambitious song the only one that resembles the layered masterpieces from Physical Graffiti 12 Personnel editAccording to Jean Michel Guesdon and Philippe Margotin 1 Robert Plant vocals Jimmy Page electric guitars John Paul Jones bass John Bonham drumsSee also editList of cover versions of Led Zeppelin songs Achilles Last Stand entriesNotes editFootnotes In Keith Shadwick s biography Led Zeppelin The Story of a Band and Their Music 1968 1980 2005 he uses the possessive case in the song title Achilles Last Stand but does not explain why Page and Plant chose not to do so 2 Other biographers use the actual title For comparison the Swan Song album LP record labels list In My Time of Dying at 11 08 Carouselambra at 10 28 Achilles Last Stand at 10 26 and Tea for One at 9 27 3 When Jones was asked to describe Led Zeppelin s music on The David Letterman Show in 2012 he jokingly played the gallop on air bass 15 However only one other of their songs Immigrant Song 1970 has been identified as having a prototype of the heavy metal gallop 25 Citations a b c Guesdon amp Margotin 2018 p 450 Shadwick 2005 pp 246 248 Swan Song 1976 LP labels Shadwick 2005 pp 240 241 Alfred Music 2008 p 241 Shadwick 2005 pp 241 243 a b Fast 2001 p 88 Tolinski 2012 eBook Waksman 1998 p 295 Campbell 2016 p 215 a b c d e f Shadwick 2005 p 246 a b Downing Brian Led Zeppelin Achilles Last Stand Review AllMusic Archived from the original on 29 July 2018 Retrieved 24 July 2018 a b Popoff 2017 p 185 a b c d Popoff 2017 p 184 a b Akkerman 2014 pp 102 103 Milward 2013 p 135 Jimmy Page was a master of orchestrating pulverizing hard rock songs like Achilles Last Stand Schuman 2009 p 37 Achilles Last Stand a hard rock number featuring manic drumming by Bonham Akkerman 2014 p 103 Akkerman 2014 p 105 Alfred Music 2008 p 240 a b Akkerman 2014 p 106 Shadwick 2005 pp 243 244 Stang amp Purse 2014 p 8 Chlasciak Metal Mike 7 May 2018 Play Mega Metal Licks in the Style of Metallica Testament and Pantera Guitar World Archived from the original on 27 May 2019 Retrieved 28 May 2019 Popoff 2017 p 67 a b Power 2016 eBook a b Lewis 2012 eBook a b Atlantic 1993 p 7 Lewis amp Pallett 2005 pp 275 276 a b Lewis amp Pallett 2005 p 308 Lewis amp Pallett 2005 p 275 Lewis 2010 eBook Davis Stephen 20 May 1976 Led Zeppelin Presence Rolling Stone Archived from the original on 9 August 2017 Retrieved 16 October 2017 Young 1991 pp 78 79 Earles 2015 p 195 Presence by Led Zeppelin Classic Rock Review 24 November 2011 Archived from the original on 17 October 2017 Retrieved 16 October 2017 Doscas Andrew 10 September 2015 Led Zeppelin Presence Deluxe Edition PopMatters Archived from the original on 1 August 2017 Retrieved 28 July 2017 References Akkerman Gregg 2014 Experiencing Led Zeppelin A Listener s Companion Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0 81088 916 3 Alfred Music 2008 Achilles Last Stand Led Zeppelin Mothership Authentic Guitar Tab Edition Alfred Publishing ISBN 978 0 7390 5317 1 Atlantic 1993 The Complete Studio Recordings Boxed set booklet Led Zeppelin Atlantic Records Presence disc details OCLC 29660775 82526 2 Campbell Iain 2016 From Achilles to Alexander The Classical World and the World of Metal In Bayer Gerd ed Heavy Metal Music in Britain Routledge ISBN 978 0 7546 6423 9 Earles Andrew 2015 First published 2008 The LPs Presence In Bream Jon ed Whole Lotta Led Zeppelin The Illustrated History of the Heaviest Band of All Time 2nd ed Voyageur Press ISBN 978 0 7603 4932 8 Fast Susan 2001 In the Houses of the Holy Led Zeppelin and the Power of Rock Music Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 511756 5 Bibliography editGuesdon Jean Michel Margotin Philippe 2018 Led Zeppelin All the Songs The Story Behind Every Track Running Press ISBN 978 0 316 448 67 3 Lewis Dave 2010 Led Zeppelin The Tight But Loose Files Omnibus Press ISBN 978 0 857 12220 9 Lewis Dave 2012 Led Zeppelin A Celebration Omnibus Press ISBN 978 0 85712 819 5 Lewis Dave Pallett Simon 2005 Led Zeppelin The Concert File Omnibus Press ISBN 1 84449 659 7 Milward John 2013 Crossroads How the Blues Shaped Rock n Roll and Rock Saved the Blues UPNE ISBN 978 1 5555 3744 9 Popoff Martin 2017 Led Zeppelin All the Albums All the Songs MBI ISBN 978 0 76035 211 3 Power Martin 2016 No Quarter The Three Lives of Jimmy Page London Omnibus Press ISBN 978 1 78323 536 0 Schuman Michael A 2009 Led Zeppelin Legendary Rock Band Enslow Publishers ISBN 978 0 7660 3026 8 Shadwick Keith 2005 Led Zeppelin The Story of a Band and Their Music 1968 1980 1st ed Backbeat Books ISBN 0 87930 871 0 Stang Aaron Purse Bill 2014 Sound Innovations for Guitar Teacher Edition Book 2 A Revolutionary Guitar Method for Individual or Class Instruction Alfred Music ISBN 978 1 47063 317 2 Swan Song 1976 Presence Album notes Led Zeppelin Swan Song Records OCLC 5690359 SS 8416 Tolinski Brad 2012 Light and Shade Conversations with Jimmy Page Crown Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 307 98573 6 Waksman Steven Michael 1998 Instruments of Desire The Electric Guitar and the Shaping of Musical Experience University of Minnesota Young Jon January 1991 Blue Light Special Led Zeppelin Spin Vol 6 no 10 ISSN 0886 3032 External links edit Achilles Last Stand Live 1977 video at ledzeppelin com official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Achilles Last Stand amp oldid 1216555116, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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