Led Zeppelin were an English
rock band formed in
1968 by
Robert Plant (
vocals,
harmonica),
Jimmy Page (
guitar),
John
Paul Jones (
bass guitar,
keyboards,
mandolin) and
John
Bonham (
drums). With their heavy,
guitar-driven sound, Led Zeppelin are regarded as one of the first
heavy metal bands, helping to
pioneer the genre. However, the band's individualistic style drew
from many sources and transcends any one genre. Their rock-infused
interpretation of the
blues and
folk genres also incorporated
rockabilly,
reggae,
soul,
funk,
classical,
Celtic,
Indian,
Arabic,
pop,
Latin and
country. The band did not release the popular
songs from their albums as singles in the UK, as they preferred to
develop the concept of "album-oriented rock".
Close to 30 years after disbanding following Bonham's death in
1980, the band continues to be held in high regard for their
artistic achievements, commercial success, and broad influence. The
band has sold an estimated 200 million albums worldwide, including
111.5 million certified units in the United States and they have
had all of their original studio albums reach the top 10 of the
Billboard album chart
in the U.S., with six reaching the number one spot. Led Zeppelin
are ranked #1 on
VH1's
100 Greatest Artists
of Hard Rock.
Rolling
Stone magazine has described Led Zeppelin as "the heaviest
band of all time", "the biggest band of the '70s" and
"unquestionably one of the most enduring bands in rock
history".Similarly, Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
describes Led Zeppelin being "as influential in
that decade (70s) as the Beatles were in
the prior one".
On 10
December 2007 the surviving members of Led Zeppelin reunited (along
with deceased drummer John Bonham's son, Jason) for the Ahmet Ertegün Tribute
Concert at The O2 Arena
in London.
History
The New Yardbirds (1968)
The beginning of Led Zeppelin can be traced back to the English
blues-influenced rock band
The Yardbirds. Jimmy Page joined The Yardbirds
in 1966 to play bass guitar after the original bassist,
Paul Samwell-Smith, left the group.
Shortly after, Page switched from bass to lead guitar, creating a
dual-lead guitar line up with
Jeff Beck.
Following the departure of Beck from the group in October 1966, The
Yardbirds, tired from constant touring and recording, were
beginning to wind down. Page wanted to form a
supergroup with himself and Beck on
guitars, and
The Who's rhythm
section—drummer
Keith Moon and bassist
John Entwistle. Vocalists
Donovan,
Steve Winwood
and
Steve Marriott were also
considered for the project. The group never formed, although Page,
Beck and Moon did record a song together in 1966, "
Beck's Bolero", which is featured on Beck's
1968 album,
Truth.
The recording session also included bassist-keyboardist John Paul
Jones, who told Page that he would be interested in collaborating
with him on future projects.
The Yardbirds played their final
gig in July 1968. However, they
were still committed to performing several
concerts in Scandinavia, so drummer
Jim McCarty and vocalist
Keith Relf authorised Page and bassist
Chris Dreja to use the Yardbirds name to fulfil
the band's obligations. Page and Dreja began putting a new line-up
together.
Page's first choice for lead singer, Terry Reid, declined the offer, but suggested
Robert Plant, a West
Bromwich
singer. Plant eventually accepted the position, recommending
a drummer, John Bonham from nearby
Redditch. When Dreja dropped out of the project to
become a
photographer (he would later
take the photograph that appeared on the back of Led Zeppelin's
debut album), John Paul Jones, at the suggestion of his wife,
contacted Page about the vacant position. Being familiar with
Jones' credentials, Page agreed to bring in Jones as the final
piece.
The group came together for the first time in a room below a record
store on Gerrard Street in London. Page suggested that they try
playing "
Train Kept A-Rollin'",
a
rockabilly song popularised by
Johnny Burnette that had been given new life
by the Yardbirds. "As soon as I heard John Bonham play," recalled
Jones, "I knew this was going to be great... We locked together as
a team immediately." Shortly afterwards, the group played together
on the final day of sessions for the
P.
J. Proby
album,
Three Week Hero. The
album's song "Jim's Blues" was the first studio track to feature
all four members of the future Led Zeppelin. Proby recalled, "Come
the last day we found we had some studio time, so I just asked the
band to play while I just came up with the words. ... They weren't
Led Zeppelin at the time, they were the New Yardbirds and they were
going to be my band."
The band
completed the Scandinavian tour as The
New Yardbirds, playing together for the first time in front of a
live audience at Gladsaxe Teen Clubs in Gladsaxe
, Denmark on
7 September 1968. However, it was clear to the band that
performing under the old Yardbirds tag was akin to working under
false pretences, and upon returning from Scandinavia they decided
to change their name. One account of the band's naming, which has
become almost legendary, has it that
Keith
Moon and
John Entwistle, drummer
and bassist for The Who, respectively, suggested that a possible
supergroup containing themselves, Jimmy Page, and Jeff Beck would
go down like a
lead zeppelin, a term Entwistle used to
describe a bad gig. The group deliberately dropped the 'a' in
Lead at the suggestion of their manager,
Peter Grant, to prevent "thick
Americans" from pronouncing it
"leed".
Grant also secured for the new band an advance deal of $200,000
from
Atlantic Records in November
1968, then the biggest deal of its kind for a new band. Atlantic
was a label known for a catalogue of blues, soul and jazz artists,
but in the late 1960s it began to take an interest in progressive
British rock acts, and signed Led Zeppelin without having ever seen
them, largely on the recommendation of singer
Dusty Springfield.Ian Fortnam, "Dazed
& confused",
Classic Rock
Magazine: Classic Rock Presents Led Zeppelin, 2008, p. 43.
Under the terms of the contract secured by Grant, the band alone
would decide when they would release albums and tour, and had final
say over the contents and design of each album. They also would
decide how to promote each release and which (if any) tracks to
release as singles, and formed their own company, Superhype, to
handle all publishing rights.
Early days (1968–1970)
With their
first album not yet released, the band made their live debut under
the name "Led Zeppelin" at the University of Surrey
, Guildford
on 25 October 1968. This was followed by a
US concert
debut on 26 December 1968 (when promoter Barry Fey added them
to a bill in Denver,
Colorado
) before
moving on to the west coast for dates in Los Angeles, San Francisco
and other cities. Led Zeppelin's
eponymous debut album was released on
12 January 1969, during their first US tour. The album's blend of
blues, folk and eastern influences with distorted amplification
made it one of the pivotal records in the creation of
heavy metal music. However, Plant has
commented that it is unfair for people to typecast the band as
heavy metal, since about a third of their music was acoustic. On
their first album Plant receives no credit for his contributions to
the songwriting, a result of his previous association with
CBS Records.
In an interview for the
Led Zeppelin
Profiled radio promo CD (1990) Page said that the album
took about 36 hours of studio time to create (including mixing),
and stated that he knows this because of the amount charged on the
studio bill. Peter Grant claimed the album cost £1,750 to produce
(including artwork). By 1975, the album had grossed $7,000,000.
Led
Zeppelin's album cover met an interesting protest when, at a
28 February 1970 gig in Copenhagen
, the band were billed as "The
Nobs" as the result of a threat of legal action from Countess
Eva von Zeppelin (granddaughter of Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin,
the creator of the Zeppelin airships), who,
upon seeing the logo of the Hindenburg crashing in flames,
threatened to have the show pulled off the air. She is
reported to have said: "They may be world famous, but a couple of
shrieking monkeys are not going to use a privileged family name
without permission."
In their first year, Led Zeppelin managed to complete four US and
four UK
concert tours, and also
released their second album, entitled
Led Zeppelin II. Recorded almost
entirely on the road at various North American
recording studios, the second album was an
even greater success than the first and reached the number one
chart position in the US and the UK. Here the band further
developed ideas established on their debut album, creating a work
which became even more widely acclaimed and arguably more
influential. It has been suggested that
Led Zeppelin II
largely wrote the blueprint for heavy metal bands that followed
it.
Following the album's release, Led Zeppelin completed several more
tours of the United States. They played often, initially in clubs
and
ballrooms, then in larger
auditoriums and eventually
stadiums as their popularity grew.
Led Zeppelin concerts could last more
than four hours, with expanded,
improvised live versions
of their song repertoire. Many of these shows have been preserved
as
Led Zeppelin bootleg
recordings. It was also during this period of intensive concert
touring that the band developed a reputation for off-stage excess.
One
alleged example of such extravagance was the shark episode, or red snapper incident, which
is said to have taken place at the Edgewater Inn in Seattle
, Washington
, on 28 July 1969.
Led Zeppelin's popularity in the early years was dwarfed by their
triumphant mid-seventies successes and it is this period that
continues to define the band. The band's image also changed as
members began to wear elaborate, flamboyant clothing.
Led Zeppelin began
travelling in a private jet airliner
(nicknamed The Starship),
rented out entire sections of hotels (most notably the Continental
Hyatt House
in Los Angeles, known colloquially as the "Riot
House"), and became the subject of many of rock's most famous
stories of debauchery.
One
escapade involved John Bonham riding a motorcycle through a rented
floor of the Riot House, while another involved the destruction of
a room in the Tokyo
Hilton, leading to the band being banned from
that establishment for life. However, although Led Zeppelin
developed a reputation for trashing their hotel suites and throwing
television sets out of the windows, some
suggest that these tales have been somewhat exaggerated.
Music journalist Chris Welch argues that "[Led Zeppelin's]
travels spawned many stories, but it was a myth that [they] were
constantly engaged in acts of wanton destruction and lewd
behaviour."
For the composition of their third album,
Led Zeppelin III, Jimmy Page and
Robert Plant retired to
Bron-Yr-Aur, a
remote cottage in Wales, in 1970. The result was a more acoustic
sound (and a song, "Bron-Yr-Aur Stomp", misspelt as "
Bron-Y-Aur Stomp" on the album cover),
which was strongly influenced by
folk and
Celtic music, and revealed the band's
versatility.
The album's rich acoustic sound initially received mixed reactions,
with many critics and fans surprised at the turn taken away from
the primarily electric compositions of the first two albums. Over
time, however, its reputation has improved and
Led Zeppelin
III is now generally praised. It has a unique
album cover featuring a wheel which, when
rotated, displays various images through cut outs in the main
jacket sleeve. The album's opening track, "
Immigrant Song", was released in November
1970 by Atlantic Records as a
single
against the band's wishes. It included their only non-album
b-side, "
Hey
Hey What Can I Do". Even though the band saw their albums as
indivisible, whole listening experiences—and their manager,
Peter Grant, maintained
an aggressive pro-album stance—some singles were released without
their consent. The group also increasingly resisted
television appearances, enforcing their
preference that their fans hear and see them in live
concerts.
"The biggest band in the world" (1971–1977)
Led Zeppelin's
fourth album was
released on 8 November 1971. There was no indication of a title or
a band name on the original cover, as the band disdained being
labelled as "hyped" and "overrated" by the music press, and in
response wanted to prove that the music could sell itself by giving
no indication of who they were. The album remained officially
untitled and is most commonly referred to as
Led Zeppelin
IV, though it is variously referred to by the four symbols
appearing on the record label, as
Four Symbols and
The
Fourth Album (both titles were used in the
Atlantic Records catalogue), as
Untitled,
Zoso,
Runes, or
IV.
Led Zeppelin IV further refined the band's unique formula
of combining earthy, acoustic elements with heavy metal and blues
emphases. The album included examples of hard rock, such as
"
Black Dog" and an acoustic track,
"
Going to California" (a tribute
to
Joni Mitchell). "
Rock and Roll" is a
tribute to the early rock music of the 1950s. In 2007, the song was
used prominently in
Cadillac automobile commercials—one of the few instances
of Led Zeppelin's surviving members licensing songs.
The album is one of the
best-selling albums in history
and its massive popularity cemented Led Zeppelin's superstardom in
the 1970s. To date it has sold 23 million copies in the United
States. The track "
Stairway to
Heaven", although never released as a
single, is sometimes quoted as being the most
requested, and most played
album-oriented rock FM radio song. In 2005, the magazine
Guitar World held a poll of
readers in which "Stairway to Heaven" was voted as having the
greatest
guitar solo of all time.
Led Zeppelin's next album,
Houses
of the Holy, was released in 1973. It featured further
experimentation, with longer tracks and expanded use of
synthesisers and
mellotron orchestration. The song "
Houses of the Holy" does not
appear on its namesake album, even though it was recorded at the
same time as other songs on the album; it eventually made its way
onto the 1975 album
Physical
Graffiti.
The orange album cover of Houses of the
Holy depicts images of nude children climbing up the Giant's
Causeway
(in County Antrim,
Northern Ireland). Although the children are not
depicted from the front, this was controversial at the time of the
album's release, and in some areas, such as the "
Bible Belt" and Spain, the record was
banned.
The album topped the charts, and Led Zeppelin's subsequent
concert tour of the United
States in 1973 broke records for attendance, as they
consistently filled large auditoriums and stadiums.
At Tampa Stadium, Florida
, they played to 56,800 fans (breaking the record
set by The Beatles at Shea
Stadium in 1965), and grossed $309,000. Three sold-out shows
at Madison
Square Garden
in New York were filmed for a motion picture, but
the theatrical release of this project (The Song Remains the
Same) would be delayed until 1976. Before the final
night's performance, $180,000 of the band's money from gate
receipts was stolen from a safety deposit box at the
Drake Hotel. It was never
recovered.
In 1974, Led Zeppelin took a break from touring and launched their
own record label,
Swan Song, named
after one of only five Led Zeppelin songs which the band never
released commercially (Page later re-worked the song with his band,
The Firm, and it appears as
"Midnight Moonlight" on their
first
album). The record label's logo, based on a drawing called
Evening: Fall of Day (1869) by
William Rimmer, features a picture of
Apollo. The logo can be found on much Led
Zeppelin memorabilia, especially
t-shirts.
In addition to using Swan Song as a vehicle to promote their own
albums, the band expanded the label's roster, signing artists such
as
Bad Company,
Pretty Things,
Maggie
Bell, Detective,
Dave Edmunds,
Midnight Flyer,
Sad Café and
Wildlife. The label was successful while Led Zeppelin existed, but
folded less than three years after they disbanded.
24 February 1975 saw the release of Led Zeppelin's first
double album,
Physical Graffiti, which was their
first release on the
Swan Song
Records label.
It consisted of fifteen songs, eight of
which were recorded at Headley Grange
in 1974, and the remainder being tracks previously
recorded but not released on earlier albums. A review in
Rolling Stone magazine referred to
Physical
Graffiti as Led Zeppelin's "bid for artistic respectability,"
adding that the only competition the band had for the title of
'World's Best Rock Band' were
The
Rolling Stones and The Who. The album was a massive fiscal and
critical success. Shortly after the release of
Physical
Graffiti, all previous Led Zeppelin albums simultaneously
re-entered the top-200 album chart, and the band embarked on
another
U.S.
tour, again playing to record-breaking crowds.
In May 1975, Led
Zeppelin played five highly successful, sold-out nights at the
Earls Court
Arena
in London, footage of which was released in 2003,
on the Led Zeppelin DVD.
Following
these triumphant Earls Court
appearances Led Zeppelin took a holiday and planned a series of
outdoor summer concerts in America, scheduled to open with two
dates in San
Francisco
.
These
plans were thwarted in August 1975 when Robert Plant and his wife
Maureen were involved in a serious car
crash while on holiday in Rhodes
,
Greece. Robert suffered a broken ankle and Maureen was badly
injured; a
blood transfusion saved
her life.
Unable to tour, Plant headed to the channel
island of Jersey
to spend
August and September recuperating, with Bonham and Page in
tow. The band then reconvened in Malibu,
California
. It was during this forced hiatus that much
of the material for their next album,
Presence, was written.
By this time, Led Zeppelin were the world's number one rock
attraction, having outsold most bands of the time, including the
Rolling Stones.
Presence, released in March 1976, marked a
change in the Led Zeppelin sound towards more straightforward,
guitar-based jams, departing from the acoustic ballads and
intricate arrangements featured on their previous albums. Though it
was a
platinum
seller,
Presence received mixed responses from critics and
fans and some speculated the band's legendary excesses may have
caught up with them. The recording of
Presence coincided
with the beginning of Page's
heroin use,
which may have interfered with Led Zeppelin's later live shows and
studio recordings, although Page has denied this.Jonh Ingham, "
Led Zeppelin: Presence (Swan Song)",
Sounds, 10 April 1976. Reproduced in Rock's Backpages.com
Despite the original criticisms, Jimmy Page has called
Presence his favourite album, and its opening track
"
Achilles Last Stand" his
favourite Led Zeppelin song. In an interview with a Swedish TV
program, Plant stated that
Presence is the album that
sounds the most "Led Zeppelin" of all their LPs.
Plant's injuries prevented Led Zeppelin from touring in 1976.
Instead, the band finally completed the concert film
The Song Remains The
Same, and
the
soundtrack album of the film. The recording had taken place
during three nights of concerts at Madison Square Garden in July
1973, during the band's
concert tour of the United
States. The film premiered in New York on 20 October 1976, but
was given a lukewarm reception by critics and fans. The film was
particularly unsuccessful in the UK, where, after being unwilling
to tour since 1975 due to a taxation exile, Led Zeppelin were
facing an uphill battle to recapture the public spotlight at
home.
In 1977, Led Zeppelin embarked on another major
concert tour of North
America. Here the band set another attendance record, with
76,229 people attending their Pontiac Silverdome concert on 30
April. It was, according to the
Guinness Book of Records, the
largest attendance to date for a single act show. However, though
the tour was financially profitable it was beset with off-stage
problems.
On 3 June a concert at Tampa Stadium
was cut short because of a severe thunderstorm, despite tickets printed with
"Rain or Shine". A
riot broke out
amongst the audience, resulting in several arrests and
injuries.
After a
23 July show at the "Day on the
Green" festival at the Oakland Coliseum
in Oakland, California
, John Bonham and members of the band's support
staff (including manager Peter Grant and security coordinator
John Bindon) were arrested after a
member of promoter Bill
Graham's staff was badly beaten during the performance.
A member of the staff had allegedly slapped Grant's son when he was
taking down a dressing room sign. This was seen by John Bonham, who
came over and kicked the man. Then, when Grant heard about this, he
went into the trailer, along with Bindon and assaulted the man
while tour manager Richard Cole stood outside and guarded the
trailer. The following day's second Oakland concert would prove to
be the band's final live appearance in the United States.
Two days
later, as the band checked in at a French Quarter
hotel for their 30 July performance at the Louisiana
Superdome
, news came that Plant's five year old son, Karac,
had died from a stomach virus. The rest of the tour was
immediately cancelled, prompting widespread speculation about the
band's future.
Bonham's death and breakup (1978–1980)
November
1978 saw the group recording again, this time at Polar Studios in Stockholm
, Sweden. The resultant album was
In Through the Out
Door, which exhibited a degree of sonic experimentation
that again drew mixed reactions from critics. Nevertheless, the
band still commanded legions of loyal fans, and the album easily
reached #1 in the UK and the U.S. in just its second week on the
Billboard album chart.
As a result of this album's release, Led Zeppelin's entire
catalogue made the
Billboard Top 200 between the weeks of
27 October and 3 November 1979.
In August
1979, after two warm-up shows in Copenhagen, Denmark
, Led Zeppelin headlined two concerts at the Knebworth Music Festival, where
crowds of close to 120,000 witnessed the return of the band.
However, Plant was not eager to tour full-time again, and even
considered leaving Led Zeppelin. He was persuaded to stay by Peter
Grant. A brief, low-key
European
tour was undertaken in June and July 1980, featuring a
stripped-down set without the usual lengthy jams and solos.
At one
show on 27 June, in Nuremberg
, Germany, the concert came to an abrupt end in the
middle of the third song when John Bonham collapsed on stage and
was rushed to a hospital. Press speculation arose that
Bonham's problem was caused by an excess of alcohol and drugs, but
the band claimed that he had simply overeaten, and they completed
the European tour on 7 July, at Berlin.
On 24 September 1980, Bonham was picked up by Led Zeppelin
assistant Rex King to attend rehearsals at
Bray Studios for the upcoming tour of the
United States, the band's first since 1977, scheduled to commence
on 17 October. During the journey Bonham had asked to stop for
breakfast, where he downed four quadruple
vodkas (450 ml), with a
ham
roll. After taking a bite of the ham roll he said to his assistant,
"Breakfast". He continued to drink heavily when he arrived at the
studio.
A
halt was called to the rehearsals late in the evening and the band
retired to Page's house — The Old Mill House in Clewer
, Windsor
. After midnight, Bonham had fallen asleep
and was taken to bed and placed on his side. At 1:45 pm the
next day Benji LeFevre (who had replaced
Richard Cole as Led Zeppelin's tour manager)
and John Paul Jones found him dead. Bonham was 32 years old. The
cause of death was
asphyxiation from vomit,
and a verdict of accidental death was returned at an inquest held
on 27 October. An
autopsy found no other
drugs in Bonham's body.
Bonham was cremated on 10 October 1980, and
his ashes buried at Rushock parish church in Droitwich
, Worcestershire,
England.
Despite rumours that
Cozy Powell,
Carmine Appice,
Barriemore Barlow,
Simon Kirke or
Bev
Bevan would join the group as his replacement, the remaining
members decided to disband after Bonham's death. They issued a
press statement on 4 December 1980 confirming that the band would
not continue without Bonham. "We wish it to be known that the loss
of our dear friend, and the deep sense of undivided harmony felt by
ourselves and our manager, have led us to decide that we could not
continue as we were."
Post-Led Zeppelin (1981–2007)
In 1982, the surviving members of the group released a collection
of out-takes from various sessions during Led Zeppelin's career,
entitled
Coda.
It included two
tracks taken from the band's performance at the Royal Albert
Hall
in 1970, one each from the Led Zeppelin
III and Houses of the Holy sessions, and three from
the In Through the Out Door sessions. It also
featured a 1976 John Bonham drum instrumental with electronic
effects added by Jimmy Page, called "
Bonzo's Montreux".
On 13
July 1985, Page, Plant and Jones reunited for the Live Aid concert at JFK Stadium,
Philadelphia
, playing a short set featuring drummers Tony Thompson and Phil
Collins and bassist Paul
Martinez. Collins had contributed to Plant's first two
solo albums while Martinez was a member of Plant's current solo
band. However, the performance was marred by the lack of rehearsal
with the two drummers, Page's struggles with an out-of-tune
Les Paul and poorly-functioning
monitors, and by Plant's hoarse voice. Page himself has described
the performance as "pretty shambolic", while Plant was even less
charitable, characterising it as an "atrocity".
When Live Aid footage
was released on a four-DVD set in late 2004 to raise money for
Sudan
, the group unanimously agreed not to allow footage
from their performance to be used, asserting that it was not up to
their standard. However, to demonstrate their ongoing
support for the campaign Page and Plant pledged proceeds from their
forthcoming
Page and Plant DVD
release and John Paul Jones pledged the proceeds of his
then-current US tour with Mutual Admiration Society to the
project.
The three members reunited again in May 1988, for the
Atlantic Records 40th
Anniversary concert, with Bonham's son,
Jason Bonham, on drums. However, the reunion
was again compromised by a disjointed performance, particularly by
Plant and Page (the two having argued immediately prior to coming
on stage about whether to play "Stairway to Heaven"), and by the
complete loss of Jones' keyboards on the live television feed. Page
later described the performance as "one big disappointment", and
Plant said unambiguously that "the gig was foul".
The first
Led Zeppelin box
set, featuring tracks remastered under the supervision of Jimmy
Page, introduced the band's music to many new fans, stimulating a
renaissance for Led Zeppelin. This set included four previously
unreleased tracks, including the
Robert Johnson tribute "
Travelling Riverside Blues". The
song peaked at number seven on the
Billboard Album Rock Tracks chart, with the
video in heavy rotation on MTV.1992 saw the release of the
"
Immigrant Song"/"
Hey Hey What Can I Do" (the original
b-side) as a CD single in the US.
Led Zeppelin Boxed Set 2
was released in 1993; the two box sets together containing all
known studio recordings, as well as some rare live tracks.
In 1994,
Page and Plant reunited in
the form of a 90 minute "UnLedded"
MTV project.
They later released an album called
No Quarter:
Jimmy Page and Robert Plant Unledded, which featured some
reworked Led Zeppelin songs, and embarked on a world tour the
following year. This is said to be the beginning of the inner rift
between the band members, as Jones was not even told of the
reunion. When asked where Jones was, Plant had replied that he was
out "parking the car".
On 12
January 1995, Led Zeppelin were inducted into the United States
Rock and Roll
Hall of Fame
by Aerosmith's vocalist,
Steven Tyler and guitarist Joe Perry. Jason and Zoe Bonham
also attended, representing their late father. At the
induction
ceremony, the band's inner rift became apparent when Jones
joked upon accepting his award, "Thank you, my friends, for finally
remembering my phone number", causing consternation and awkward
looks from Page and Plant. Afterwards, they played a brief set with
Tyler and Perry (featuring
Jason Bonham
on drums), and with
Neil Young and
Michael Lee replacing
Bonham.
On 29 August 1997, Atlantic released a single edit of "
Whole Lotta Love" in the U.S. and the UK,
making it the only Led Zeppelin UK CD single. Additional tracks on
this CD-single are "
Baby Come On
Home" and "
Travelling
Riverside Blues". It is the only single the band ever released
in the UK. It peaked at #21. 11 November 1997 saw the release of
Led Zeppelin BBC
Sessions, the first Led Zeppelin album in fifteen years.
The two-disc set included almost all of the band's recordings for
the BBC.
Page and Plant released
another album called
Walking
into Clarksdale in 1998, featuring all new material.
However, the album wasn't as successful as
No
Quarter, and the band slowly dissolved.
On 29 November 1999 the
RIAA announced that the
band were only the third act in music history to achieve four or
more
Diamond albums. In 2002,
Robert Plant and John Paul Jones reconciled after years of strife
that kept the band apart. This was followed by rumours of reunion,
quickly quashed by individual members' representatives. 2003 saw
the release of a triple live album,
How the West Was
Won, and a video collection,
Led Zeppelin DVD, both featuring
material from the band's heyday. By the end of the year, the DVD
had sold more than 520,000 copies.
Led Zeppelin were ranked #14 on
Rolling Stone's 2004 list
of the "100 Greatest Artists of All Time", and the following year
the band received a
Grammy Lifetime Achievement
Award. In November 2005, it was announced that Led Zeppelin and
Russian conductor
Valery Gergiev were
the winners of the 2006
Polar Music
Prize.
The King of Sweden presented the prize
to Plant, Page, and Jones, along with John Bonham's daughter, in
Stockholm
in May 2006. In November 2006, Led Zeppelin
were inducted into the
UK Music
Hall of Fame. The television broadcasting of the event
consisted of an introduction to the band by various famous
admirers, a presentation of an award to Jimmy Page and then a short
speech by the guitarist. After this, rock group
Wolfmother played a tribute to Led Zeppelin,
performing the song "
Communication Breakdown". Despite
having gained a reputation with the band for "raising hell" in the
1970s,
Robert Plant was awarded a CBE
by
Prince Charles for "Services to
Music" in July 2009, which followed
Jimmy
Page's
OBE four
years previously.
On 27 July 2007,
Atlantic/
Rhino, &
Warner Home Video announced three new Led
Zeppelin titles to be released in November, 2007. Released first
was
Mothership on 13
November, a 24-track best-of spanning the band's career, followed
by a reissue of
the
soundtrack to
The Song Remains the
Same on 20 November which includes previously unreleased
material, and a new DVD. On 15 October 2007, it was reported that
Led Zeppelin were expected to announce a new series of agreements
that make the band's songs available as legal digital downloads,
first as ringtones through
Verizon
Wireless then as digital downloads of the band's eight studio
albums and other recordings on 13 November. The offerings will be
available through both Verizon Wireless and
iTunes. On 3 November 2007, a UK newspaper the
Daily Mirror announced that it
had world exclusive rights to stream six previously unreleased
tracks via its
website. On 8 November 2007,
XM Satellite Radio launched XM LED, the
network's first artist-exclusive channel dedicated to Led Zeppelin.
On 13 November 2007, Led Zeppelin's complete works were published
on iTunes.
2007 reunion
On 10 December 2007 the surviving members of Led Zeppelin reunited
for a one-off
benefit concert held
in memory of music executive
Ahmet
Ertegün, with
Jason Bonham taking
up his late father's place on drums. It was announced on 12
September 2007 by promoter
Harvey
Goldsmith in a press conference.
The concert was to
help raise money for the Ahmet Ertegün Education Fund, which pays
for university scholarships in the UK, US and Turkey
.
Music critics praised the band's performance. Hamish MacBain of
NME proclaimed, "What they have done here tonight is proof
they can still perform to the level that originally earned them
their legendary reputation...We can only hope this isn't the last
we see of them." Page suggested the band may start work on new
material, and stated that a world tour may be in the works.
Meanwhile, Plant made his reluctance regarding a reunion tour known
to
The Sunday Times, stating: "having to live up to
something is terribly serious." However, he also made it known that
he could be in favour of more one-off shows in the near future: "It
wouldn't be such a bad idea to play together from time to
time."
Reunion tour reports (2008-2009)
Following the reunion concert and the press coverage it generated,
speculation on the future of the band and the possibility of a tour
with Jason Bonham on drums increased to a level not seen in several
years. In an interview promoting the release of the
Mothership compilation in Tokyo early in 2008, Jimmy Page
revealed that he was prepared to embark upon a world tour with Led
Zeppelin, but due to Robert Plant's tour commitments with
Alison Krauss, such plans will not be
announced until at least September.
Showing enthusiasm for continued
performing, in late spring Page and Jones joined Foo Fighters frontman Dave Grohl and drummer Taylor Hawkins onstage at Wembley
Stadium
to perform Led Zeppelin tracks "Rock and Roll" (Hawkins on
vocals and Grohl on drums), followed by "Ramble On" (Grohl on vocals and Hawkins on
drums).
Plant however continued to remain focused on his recent work and
tour with Krauss. Their duet album
Raising Sand became certified
platinum in March, and their recordings received awards including a
Grammy for the song "Gone, Gone, Gone (Done Moved On)" and Album of
the Year from the
Americana
Music Association. Along with concentrating on the duo's
American tour, Plant remained evasive on the subject of a Led
Zeppelin reunion tour, and expressed displeasure at the process
leading up to the 2007 reunion show during an interview with
GQ Magazine, saying "The endless paperwork was
like nothing I've experienced before. I've kept every one of the
emails that were exchanged before the concert and I'm thinking of
compiling them for a book, which I feel sure would be hailed as a
sort of literary version of
Spinal
Tap."
After the BBC reported in late August that Jimmy Page, John Paul
Jones, and Jason Bonham had been recording material which could
become a new Led Zeppelin project, the rumours of a reunion began
to accumulate through the remaining summer. On 29 September Plant
released a statement in which he called reports of a Led Zeppelin
reunion "frustrating and ridiculous". He said he would not be
recording or touring with the band, before adding, "I wish Jimmy
Page, John Paul Jones and Jason Bonham nothing but success with any
future projects."
Following Plant's statement, authoritative but divergent views of
the possibility of a Led Zeppelin reunion tour the next year were
offered by John Paul Jones and promoter Harvey Goldsmith. In late
October, Jones confirmed to
BBC Radio
Devon in Exeter that he, Page, and Bonham were seeking a
replacement for Plant. The bassist remarked: "We are trying out a
couple of singers. We want to do it. It's sounding great and we
want to get on and get out there." The next day, Goldsmith
commented on the prospect of a Led Zeppelin reunion, casting doubt
on the possibility or wisdom of such a venture. In an interview
with BBC News, Goldsmith stated "I think that there is an
opportunity for them to go out and present themselves. I don't
think a long rambling tour is the answer as Led Zeppelin." The
Ertegün Concert promoter felt the result of the ongoing plans of
Jones, Page, and Bonham would not be "called Led Zeppelin". A
spokesman for guitarist Jimmy Page later confirmed this, telling
RollingStone.com that a new band featuring Page, bassist John Paul
Jones and drummer Jason Bonham would not go by the name Led
Zeppelin due to the absence of singer Robert Plant.
On January 7, 2009,
MusicRadar reported
that Jimmy Page's manager Robert Mensch said that the band had
"tried out a few singers, but no one worked out, that was it. The
whole thing is completely over now. There are absolutely no plans
for them to continue." In a radio interview, Plant cited a fear of
disappointment as a major factor for not continuing a reunited
Zeppelin. "The disappointment that could be there once you commit
to that and the comparisons to something that was basically fired
by youth and a different kind of exuberance to now, it's very hard
to go back and meet that head on and do it justice."
On 28 October 2009 it was reported by NME that Robert Plant had
revealed that he is in talks with Michael Eavis to perform at the
2010 Glastonbury festival in England. Plant said he did not know
who he would perform with, thus sparking rumours that Led Zeppelin
may perform.
Songs in other media
While members of Led Zeppelin have seldom allowed their works to be
licensed for films or commercials, in recent years, their position
has softened. The songs of Led Zeppelin can be heard in movies such
as
Shrek the Third,
One Day in September,
School of Rock ("
Immigrant Song" in all three),
Dogtown and Z-Boys ("
Achilles Last Stand", "
Nobody's Fault but Mine", and
"
Hots On for Nowhere"),
Almost Famous ("
That's the Way",
"
The Rain Song", "
Misty Mountain Hop", "
Bron-Yr-Aur", and "
Tangerine"), "
Stairway to Heaven" was in a part of the
movie, but later on it was taken out, due to the length.
It Might Get Loud
("
The Rain Song", "
Ramble On", "
How
Many More Times", "
When The
Levee Breaks", "
Battle of
Evermore", "
Over the
Hills and Far Away", "
Whole Lotta
Love", "
White Summer", "
Stairway to Heaven", "
In My Time of Dying", and "
Ten Years Gone".)
Fast Times at Ridgemont
High ("
Kashmir"), and
Small Soldiers ("
Communication Breakdown"). The
television series
One Tree
Hill featured the song "
Babe I'm Gonna Leave You". The band
has denied frequent requests by developers of popular
music video games to use their songs. As
with other forms of media, the band seeks to protect the integrity
of their work. Specifically, "the band isn't comfortable with the
prospect of granting outsiders access to its master tapes, a
necessary step in creating the
games."
Also noteworthy is
Cadillac's use of "Rock
and Roll" in their US TV advertising campaign.
Recently, Led
Zeppelin have agreed to allow Apple
to sell
their music in Apple's iTunes Store,
with the greatest hits collection Mothership as the marquee
offering.
In April
2007, Hard Rock Park (now Freestyle Music Park
) in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina
, announced it had secured an agreement with the
band to create "Led Zeppelin -
The Ride", a roller coaster built by Bolliger & Mabillard,
synchronised to the music of Led Zeppelin's "Whole Lotta
Love". The coaster stands tall, features six inversions, and
spirals over a lagoon. The ride officially opened with the park on
May 9, 2008. The ride is currently "Standing but not operating"
(SBNO) due to Hard Rock Park filing
Chapter 11 bankruptcy. In January
2009, the park filed for
Chapter 7. In
February 2009, the park was sold to new owners FPI MB
Entertainment, who plan to reopen by Memorial Day 2009. On May 4,
2009, the ride was renamed "The Time Machine," with hit songs from
five decades replacing Led Zeppelin.
Allegations of plagiarism
The credits for
Led Zeppelin II were the subject of some
debate after the album's release. The prelude to "
Bring It On
Home" was a cover of
Sonny
Boy Williamson's 1963 recording of "Bring It On Home", written
by
Willie Dixon. Similarly, "The Lemon
Song" included an adaptation of
Howlin'
Wolf's "
Killing
Floor." In 1972, Arc Music, the publishing arm of
Chess Records, brought a lawsuit against Led
Zeppelin for
copyright
infringement over "Bring It On Home" and "The Lemon Song"; the
case was settled out of court for an undisclosed sum. Dixon himself
did not benefit from the settlement until he sued Arc Music to
recover his
royalties and
copyrights. In addition, "
Whole Lotta Love" contained lyrics that
were derivative of Dixon's 1962 song "You Need Love", though the
riff from the song was an original Jimmy Page composition. In 1985,
Dixon filed a copyright infringement suit against Led Zeppelin over
"Whole Lotta Love" and an out-of-court settlement was reached.
Later pressings of
Led Zeppelin II credit Dixon. The band
also paid a settlement to the publisher of
Ritchie Valens' song "Ooh! My Head" over the
song "
Boogie with Stu" (from
Physical Grafitti) which borrowed heavily from Valens'
song.
Dave Headlam, in an article entitled "Does the song remain the
same? Questions of authenticity and identification in the music of
Led Zeppelin", suggests that "...in the course of studies on the
music of Led Zeppelin, it has become apparent that many songs are
compilations of pre-existent material from multiple sources, both
acknowledged and unacknowledged." He contends that "...songs like
'Whole Lotta Love' and 'Dazed and Confused' are on the one hand not
"authored" by Led Zeppelin, but on the other hand are virtual
signatures identifying the band's musical essence."
However, noted blues author and producer Robert Palmer states "It is the custom, in blues music, for a singer to borrow verses from contemporary sources, both oral and recorded, add his own tune and/or arrangement, and call the song his own". Folklorist Carl Lindahl, refers to these recycling of lyrics in songs as "floating lyrics". He defines it within the folk-music tradition as "lines that have circulated so long in folk communities that tradition-steeped singers call them instantly to mind and rearrange them constantly, and often unconsciously, to suit their personal and community aesthetics".
In an interview he gave to
Guitar
World magazine in 1993, Page commented on the band's use
of classic blues songs:
[A]s far as my end of it goes, I always tried to bring
something fresh to anything that I used.
I always made sure to come up with some
variation.
In fact, I think in most cases, you would never know
what the original source could be.
Maybe not in every case -- but in most
cases.
So most of the comparisons rest on the
lyrics.
And Robert was supposed to change the lyrics, and he
didn't always do that -- which is what brought on most of the
grief.
They couldn't get us on the guitar parts of the music,
but they nailed us on the lyrics.
We did, however, take some liberties, I must say
[laughs].
But never mind; we did try to do the right
thing.
In another interview, Page responded to the suggestion that Led
Zeppelin used a lot of traditional and blues lyrics and tunes and
called them their own:
The thing is they were traditional lyrics and they went
back far before a lot of people that one related them
to.
The riffs we did were totally different, also, from the
ones that had come before, apart from something like "You Shook Me"
and "I Can't Quit You," which were attributed to Willie
Dixon.
The thing with "Bring It On Home," Christ, there's only
a tiny bit taken from Sonny Boy Williamson's version and we threw
that in as a tribute to him.
People say, "Oh, 'Bring It On Home' is
stolen."
Well, there's only a little bit in the song that
relates to anything that had gone before it, just the
end.
Discography
- Studio albums
- Filmography
See also
References
Published sources
- Jon Bream (2008), Whole Lotta Led Zeppelin: The Illustrated
History of the Heaviest Band of All Time, Minneapolis:
Voyageur Press. ISBN 0-7603-3507-9.
- Richard Cole and Richard Trubo
(1992), Stairway to Heaven:
Led Zeppelin Uncensored, New York: HarperCollins. ISBN
0-06-018323-3.
- Stephen Davis
(1985), Hammer of the
Gods: The Led Zeppelin Saga, New York: William Morrow
& Co. ISBN 0-688-04507-3.
- Susan Fast (2001), In the Houses of the Holy: Led Zeppelin
and the Power of Rock Music, New York: Oxford University
Press. ISBN 0-19-514723-5.
- Dave Lewis (1991), Led Zeppelin: A Celebration,
London: Omnibus Press. ISBN 0-7119-2416-3.
- Dave Lewis (1994), The Complete Guide to the Music of Led
Zeppelin, London: Omnibus Press. ISBN 0-7119-3528-9.
- Dave Lewis (2003), Led Zeppelin: Celebration II: The 'Tight
But Loose' Files, London: Omnibus Press. ISBN
1-84449-056-4.
- Dave Lewis and Simon Pallett (1997), Led Zeppelin: The
Concert File, London: Omnibus Press. ISBN 0-7119-5307-4.
- Luis Rey (1997), Led Zeppelin Live:
An Illustrated Exploration of Underground Tapes, Ontario: The
Hot Wacks Press. ISBN 0-9698080-7-0.
- Keith Shadwick (2005), Led Zeppelin: The Story of a Band
and Their Music 1968-1980, San Francisco: Backbeat Books. ISBN
0-87930-871-1.
- Mick Wall (2008), When
Giants Walked the Earth: A Biography of Led Zeppelin,
London: Orion. ISBN 978-0-7528-8877-4.
- Chris Welch (1994), Led
Zeppelin, London: Orion Books. ISBN 0-85797-930-3.
- Chris Welch (2002), Peter Grant: The Man Who Led
Zeppelin, London: Omnibus Press. ISBN 0-7119-9195-2.
- Chris Welch (2006), Led Zeppelin: Dazed and Confused: The
Stories Behind Every Song, Thunder's Mouth Press. ISBN
1-56025-818-7.
- Ritchie Yorke (1993), Led
Zeppelin: the Definitive Biography, Novato, California:
Underwood-Miller. ISBN 0-88733-177-7.
External links