
Archival sketches of the Jimmy Page era, capturing the high-tension bridge between psychedelic blues and the birth of heavy rock.
2000 · Burning Airlines
Cumular Limit serves as a vital, grainy window into the final, most experimental days of The Yardbirds. It is less a polished studio statement and more a sonic archeology project, capturing the band as they transitioned from the pop-inflected blues of the mid-sixties into the heavy, distorted territory that would eventually define the seventies. The atmosphere is thick with the smell of old tape and the crackle of tube amps pushed to their breaking point. You can hear the gears turning in Jimmy Page's mind as he introduces techniques like the violin bow on guitar strings, creating a sense of dread and mystery that was entirely new to the rock landscape at the time.
How does Cumular Limit sound next to the rest of The Yardbirds's catalogue?
The vocals lean far further into breathy than the rest of the catalogue.
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