The album was released on 31 March 1976, having been delayed by the completion of the album sleeve. In Britain it attained one of the highest ever advance orders, shipping gold on the day of release. It entered at No. 2 and peaked the following week at No. 1 on the US
Billboard Pop Albums chart. However, the album was the lowest selling of their career as it was overshadowed by the release of the band's movie and soundtrack
The Song Remains the Same. "Candy Store Rock" was released as a single in the US, but it failed to chart. In a contemporary review for
Rolling Stone,
Stephen Davis said
Presence "established Led Zeppelin as the premier heavy metal act" and "featured some exceptional rock music", highlighting the "clean and purifying" guitar riffs. In spite of "a few dull blues rock songs", Davis found the album was "another monster in what by now is a continuing tradition of battles won by this band of survivors".
Robert Christgau was less enthusiastic in
The Village Voice, citing "Hots on for Nowhere" as a "commanding cut" while finding much of the rest "consistent but unnecessary" in comparison with earlier recordings.
Neil McCormick of
The Daily Telegraph claimed it was "Zeppelin at their most blunted", awarding it two stars out of five. Lewis nonetheless believed that
Presence was underrated, as its music "packs a considerable punch", highlighting Page's playing and the production on the album. Fellow journalist
Mick Wall said it "pulled Led Zeppelin back from the brink of crisis".
2015 reissue A remastered version of
Presence, along with
In Through the Out Door and
Coda, were reissued on 31 July 2015. The reissue comes in six formats, including CD, vinyl and digital download. The deluxe and super deluxe editions feature bonus material containing alternative takes and one previously unreleased instrumental, "10 Ribs & All/Carrot Pod Pod". The reissue was released with an altered colour version of the original album's artwork as the bonus disc's cover. The reissue received generally positive reviews. At
Metacritic, which assigns a
normalised rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, the album received an
average score of 77, based on eight reviews.
Pitchfork wrote, "It might be their weakest album, but
Presence is among the most special; none of these songs sound like they could have come from another record."
Uncut said the original album is grand "in lyric form and musical scale", while "the discs of 'companion audio,' often short on revelation, here reveal a moment of sheer anomaly. '10 Ribs & All/Carrot Pod Pod (Pod)' is whatever that title may mean, everything the LP is not: a tender piano piece."
PopMatters was less impressed, saying "like the rest of the re-releases, the bonus material leaves too much to be desired", but concluded, "despite its weak second half,
Presence is too good of an album to be dismissed." ==Track listing==