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・ In the Dust of the Stars
・ In the Dutch Mountains
・ In the Dynamite Jet Saloon
・ In the Ecstasy of Billions
・ In the Electric Mist
・ In the Embrace of Evil
・ In the Empire of Shadow
・ In the Enchanted Garden
・ In the End
・ In the End (Black Veil Brides song)
・ In the End (disambiguation)
・ In the End (Kat DeLuna song)
・ In the End (Snow Patrol song)
・ In the End (Stefanie Heinzmann song)
・ In the End of Human Existence
In the Evening
・ In the Evenings Out There
・ In the Ever
・ In the Eye of the Beholder
・ In the Eye of the Storm
・ In the Eye of the Storm (Outlaws album)
・ In the Eye of the Storm (Roger Hodgson album)
・ In the Eyes of God
・ In the Eyes of Ioldánach
・ In the Eyes of Mr. Fury
・ In the Eyes of the Lord
・ In the Face of Demolition
・ In the Face of Funk
・ In the Falling Dark
・ In the Family


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In the Evening : ウィキペディア英語版
In the Evening

"In the Evening" is the first track on Led Zeppelin's 1979 album ''In Through the Out Door''. The track has a synthesizer-driven sound backed by a gargantuan guitar repetition.
==Overview==
The track features an extended droning introductory section led by Jimmy Page on guitar, which also includes low sustaining bass pedals played by John Paul Jones and also featured John Bonham playing a tympano; doing long extended single stroke rolls and random single hits, while he changed the pitch of the drum using the foot pedal. Page used a Gizmotron to create the droning effects and sliding solo at the beginning of the song,〔Brad Tolinski and Greg Di Bendetto, "Light and Shade", Guitar World, January 1998.〕 (Page would play a very similar section to the intro of "In the Evening" during "Dazed and Confused" using a violin bow, as can be heard on bootleg recordings of Led Zeppelin's concert at Tampa Stadium in 1973).
"In the Evening" was also one of the few songs that Page performed on his 1964 Fender Stratocaster. The Stratocaster's whammy bar was used, giving the riff a distinctive diving sound. The 'slamming door' effect heard at the onset of the guitar solo is a noise from the strings of the guitar being pulled off the magnets of the pickups due to the guitar's tremolo bridge slackening the stings so much the strings were initially magnetized to the pickup's pole pieces.
The creation of this song can be traced largely to Led Zeppelin bassist and keyboardist, John Paul Jones. When the band was recording this album, Page and drummer John Bonham would usually show up at the studio very late and work through the night. In their absence, "In the Evening" started out with just drums and keyboards created by Jones, who had a new drum machine to work with.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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