Kanye West Graduation Album Led Zeppelin Influence Melody Chord Progression ((exclusive)) -

I Wonder Listen to the opening sample (Labi Siffre’s My Song ). While it isn't a direct Zeppelin sample, the harmonic treatment is pure Ramble On . The piano voicings float between suspended tones. Instead of a happy "C" chord, Kanye holds the 4th or 2nd, creating that yearning, "looking over the horizon" feeling that defined tracks like Going to California . 2. The Chromatic Descent (The "Dazed and Confused" Move) In blues-rock, the most dramatic way to move from the root chord (I) to the four chord (IV) is to walk down chromatically: I - I7 - IV .

So the next time you hear "Can we get much higher?" on Dark Fantasy (a later album, but the same ethos), remember: that question started with Led Zeppelin, but Kanye West built the elevator. I Wonder Listen to the opening sample (Labi

Flashing Lights Flashing Lights sits on a drone. The string section moves through different lush chords (Minor, Major, Diminished), but the bass stays locked on one note (C#). That hypnotic stasis—the feeling of driving down the same highway at night—is ripped directly from the Kashmir playbook. It’s rock and roll minimalism applied to rap. 5. The "Acoustic Comeback" (Champion) Champion samples Steely Dan, but the attitude is Zeppelin. The track uses a simple, repetitive acoustic guitar loop that feels like the intro to Over the Hills and Far Away . In Zeppelin’s world, the acoustic guitar represents the calm before the storm. Kanye flips that: the acoustic loop is the storm. It’s the sound of a champion walking through a lobby in slow motion. The Verdict: Riff-Rap Most rap albums of 2007 were built on the 808 drum machine. Graduation was built on the Riff . Instead of a happy "C" chord, Kanye holds

Kanye uses this trick constantly on Graduation . So the next time you hear "Can we get much higher