"The Rain Song" is a song by English rock band Led Zeppelin, and the second track from their fifth album Houses of the Holy, released in 1973.
"The Rain Song" is a ballad of over seven minutes in length. Guitarist Jimmy Page originally constructed the melody of this song at his home in Plumpton, England, where he had recently installed a studio console. A new Vista model, it was partly made up from the Pye Mobile Studio which had been used to record the group's 1970 Royal Albert Hall performance and The Who's Live at Leeds album.
Page was able to bring in a completed arrangement of the melody, for which singer Robert Plant composed the words. This song is considered by Plant to be his best overall vocal performance. The song also features a mellotron played by John Paul Jones to add to the orchestral effect, while Page plays a Danelectro guitar.
The working title for this track was "Slush," a reference to its easy listening simulated orchestral arrangement.
George Harrison was reportedly the inspiration for "The Rain Song" when he made a comment to Led Zeppelin drummer John Bonham, about the fact that the group never wrote any ballads.
When the rain comes down in the summer time
The leaves start dripping when the sun starts to shine
Oh, ain't it a shame
Oh, I mean about the rain
When I'm alone in my bed alright
I can hear the rain fight the night
Oh, ain't it a shame
Oh, I mean about the rain
Rain, ain't it a shame
Nobody likes it when the rain starts to spill
I never did and I never will