Kanye West Graduation Album Led Zeppelin Influence Melody Chord Progression Access
While most producers in the mid-2000s were digging for obscure soul records, Kanye was digging into the riff-rock of the 1970s. By borrowing the chordal logic and melodic phrasing of Jimmy Page and Robert Plant, Kanye didn’t just make a hip-hop album; he made a rock star album. Here is how Zeppelin’s ghost shows up in the music theory of Graduation . Led Zeppelin famously avoided simple major/minor chords. Jimmy Page loved suspended chords (sus2 and sus4)—chords that hang in the air, creating tension before resolving.
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. While most producers in the mid-2000s were digging
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 . Led Zeppelin famously avoided simple major/minor chords


