miércoles, 25 de enero de 2012

"D´Yer Mak´er" por Led Zeppelin en 1973 (Jimmy Page / Robert Plant / John Paul Jones / John Bonham)


Oh oh oh oh oh oh, You don't have to go oh oh oh oh
You don't have to go oh oh oh oh, you don't have to go.
Ah ah ah ah ah aye, All those tears I cry ah ah ah aye,
All those tears I cry oh oh ah aye, Baby please don't go.

When I read the letter you wrote me, it made me mah mah mad
When I read the words that it told me,
It made me sah sah sad, But I still love you so
I can't let you go, I love you, ooh baby I love you.

Oh oh oh oh oh oh, Every breath I take oh oh oh oh,
Oh Every move I make hey hey, Oh Baby please don't go.
Ah ah ah ah ah aye, You hurt me to my soul oh oh oh oh,
You hurt me to my soul ohh ohh,
Darling please don't go.

When I read the letter you sent me, it made me mah mah mad
When I read the news that it brought me,
It made me sah sah sad, But I still love you so
I can't let you go, I love you, ooh baby I love you.

Oh oh oh oh oh oh, You don't have to go oh oh oh oh,
You don't have to go oh oh oh oh,
Oh baby, baby, please please please please
ah ah ah ah ah baby ah ah I really love you baby
oo oo oo oo oo darlin' oooohhhh oh
Oh baby I still love you so,
Oh baby I still love you so ohohoh, ooo, oh oh oh oh oh yeah
(Why?) ah ah oh ah ah ah oooohhh
(Why?) ah ah ah ah ah, oooooooooooooo
(Why?) Ohhh baby....


Portada "Houses of the holy"

"D'yer Mak'er" es un tema hecho por la banda inglesa Led Zeppelin, integrada por: Jimmy Page, Robert Plant, John Paul Jones y John Bonham. La canción fue hecha en 1973 e integrada en el álbum “Houses of the Holy”.

En 2005 Mike Halloran, locutor de la estación estadounidense 94,9 FM,  entrevistó al que fuera vocalista de la banda inglesa Led Zeppelin, Sir Robert Anthony Plant. La entrevista giró en torno al significado de la canción "D'yer Mak'er".

En la entrevista Robert Plant habló de distintos significados e interpretaciones narrando como uno de ellos que: "D'yer Mak'er" es la abreviación de "did you make her", que a su vez, desde un análisis de su fonética suena como “Jamaica” (DYamaika), de esto podemos entender el ritmo del tema totalmente influenciado por el reggae jamaiquino. 

Arcadio Reyes

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