In a contemporary review of
Physical Graffiti, Jim Miller of
Rolling Stone described "Ten Years Gone" as having a progression reminiscent of
the Beatles' "
Dear Prudence" that "resolves in a beautifully waddling refrain." Miller also believed Plant sounded like
Rod Stewart on the track, with Page "scooping broad and fuzzy chords" behind him. In another retrospective review of
Physical Graffiti (Deluxe Edition), Brice Ezell of
PopMatters gave "Ten Years Gone" an extremely positive review, stating the track was one of
Physical Graffiti's highlights along with having some of Page's "most enrapturing guitar work, particularly in the way he layers multiple riffs on top of each other." Ezell continued, calling the song's main riff "lovely and echoey" and "over the course of six and a half minutes [the song] ebbs and flows, trading off sky-gazing moments of reflection with bursts of euphoria." ==See also==