Led Zeppelin

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Led Zeppelin
© Photo: ledzeppelin.com
(l. to r.) Jimmy Page, John Bonham, Robert Plant, and John Paul Jones, c 1975.
Years active 1968–1980
Status Inactive
Origin London
Music genre(s) Blues rock, Hard rock
Members Jimmy Page
Robert Plant
John Paul Jones
John Bonham (1968-1980)
Jason Bonham (post-1980 reunions)

Led Zeppelin were a highly rated English blues-rock outfit and statistically regarded as one of the most successful rock bands of the seventies. They first formed in 1968 from the remaining members of The Yardbirds, and consisted of Jimmy Page (b. 1946, guitar), Robert Plant (b. 1948, vocals), John Paul Jones (b. 1946, bass guitar / keyboards), and John Bonham (1948-1980, drums). They are considered one of the most influential bands in the world, becoming closely associated with the "album-oriented rock" (AOR) format and one of the progenitors of a style of rock music called "heavy metal", although the band's musical output transcended heaviness,[1] with a strong blues, folk, psychedelic, classical, Celtic, and world music flavour in their recordings, and acoustic live performances. The band also eschewed traditional promotional avenues in the industry, focussing on albums and concerts, without reliance on singles or television performances. The interaction of all four musicians on stage gave their live performances a visual counterpoint to voluminous intertwined harmonic and rhythmic structures of their compositions. Led Zeppelin arguably remains one of the most popular bands of all time, having sold close to 300 million records,[2][3] and millions of concert tickets worldwide. In the United States, Led Zeppelin has achieved 111.5 million certified unit sales,[4] with all of their studio albums reaching the Billboard Top 10. Since 1985, the band has had several reunions with different drummers, most notably Jason Bonham (b. 1966), son of John Bonham.

Band history

Origins

Their foundation lay in the legendary R&B outfit The Yardbirds, which guitarist Jimmy Page had joined in June 1966,[5] after initially turning down a previous invitation in February 1965. Just before joining The Yardbirds and during a break in that band's touring, Page was invited by Jeff Beck to consider the possibility of forming a "supergroup" based around a twin-lead guitar attack which included himself on 12-string with his friend Beck, and a rhythm section featuring bass player John Paul Jones and drummer Keith Moon with the addition of keyboardist Nicky Hopkins. Jones pulled out at the last minute to be replaced by John Entwistle, but the project encountered problems over the vocal spot with both Steve Winwood and Steve Marriott all being unavailable.[6] The project recorded the Page composition "Beck's Bolero" and a cover "Louie, Louie" at London's IBC Studios on 16 May before Entwistle and Moon left, believing the project would go over "like a lead zeppelin".[7] Page finally joined The Yardbirds with Beck, but he kept the idea of a supergroup and the sarcastic phrase for future use.

The New Yardbirds

By June 1968, The Yardbirds were drifting apart over musical direction. After a tour of the United States and a final gig with members Keith Relf and Jim McCarty at the Luton College of Technology, on 7 July 1968,[8] members Page, bass player Chris Dreja, and manager Peter Grant resolved to continue as a blues-rock combo, initially to play out a previously booked 10-day tour of Scandinavia, dubbed by the media as The New Yardbirds. With the line-up unsettled, session drummers Clem Cattini, Aynsley Dunbar, and singer Steve Marriott were considered for auditions and Page also briefly toyed with the idea of inviting back original Yardbird Anthony "Top" Topham on rhythm guitar.[9] On 12 July, Dreja contacted session drummer Paul Francis, but he was about to leave London for Germany and could not commit to the new line-up. Session man, arranger, bass player and keyboardist John Paul Jones then offered his services to the new group after seeing an article in Disc magazine on the Yardbird's future plans, which Page kept in mind after a phone call he received on 19 July 1968.[10] Filling the vocal and drummer spots were more of a dilemma. Due to contractual impasse Terry Reid (previously managed by Grant, now managed by Mickie Most) and B.J. Wilson (of Procol Harum) declined the respective positions, but Reid recommended an acquaintance of his, 19-year-old Midlands-born ex-Band of Joy vocalist Robert Plant. Page, Dreja and Grant went to see Plant perform live with a band called Obs-tweedle at the Birmingham Teacher Training College on 20 July 1968 and were duly impressed. He was invited back to Page's Pangbourne boathouse to discuss joining the new group and discovered he shared similar musical tastes with Page.[11] Plant signed up and in turn recommended his former Band of Joy colleague John Bonham, who was drumming for both Chris Farlowe and Tim Rose. Page and Grant travelled to the Country Club at Hampstead, North London, on 31 July, to watch Bonham perform and both agreed he was ideal for the band, and following over 30 invitational telegrams sent by Grant to persuade him, Bonham joined.[12] In the event Dreja decided to pursue a career in photography, eventually setting up a freelance studio in New York,[13] leaving Page to find a new bass player by August 4. He promptly recruited John Paul Jones, whom he'd known for years in session work, having last worked together on The Yardbird's Little Games album in 1967. What was also in Jones' favour was his additional keyboard and arranging abilities, and valuable studio experience. All four musicians then met for a rehearsal at a basement studio, located below a record store in Gerrard Street, London on August 12, 1968 and musically gelled together as a unit immediately. Their first song attempted was The Yardbirds standard "Train Kept a Rollin'" followed by a run through a Band of Joy favourite, Garnet Mimms' "As Long as I Have You", "I Can't Quit You Baby", and a version of Howlin' Wolf's "Smokestack Lightnin'". Jones later said "As soon as I heard John Bonham play, I knew this was going to be great ... We locked together as a team immediately."[14] Within days the group entered Lansdowne Recording Studios in Bayswater, London to record "Jim's Blues" and "Merry Hopkins Never Had Days Like These" with Texan-born singer P.J. Proby,[15] from an arranging session pre-booked by Jones.

Early years

This new outfit completed The Yardbirds' final contractual obligations in Scandinavia, with their first gig at the Teen Clubs - Box 45, Gladsaxe in Denmark on 7 September 1968, at 7.30 pm,[16] followed by a second show at the Brøndby Pop Club in Copenhagen. With the tour concluded on 16 September, the band then entered Olympic Studios in Barnes, West London recording their own eponymous début album within 30 hours on a budget of only £1750 (including artwork), with sessions starting on 27 September, assisted by engineer Glyn Johns.[17] The first two compositions recorded were "Babe I'm Gonna Leave You" and "I Can't Quit You Baby", on 4-track tape. Although originally booked in the studio as The Yardbirds, the album eventually released as Led Zeppelin, and produced by Page, showcased their brand of folk, eastern and blues-rock fusion with Plant's powerful vocal style and Page's accomplished guitar work being tight and urgent. Page wanted the sound as close as possible to those early live shows; he didn't want anything that couldn't be reproduced live effectively with just the four of them. Part of the astonishing presence and depth of those recordings came from the way he placed microphones in the room, to get varying sounds of vibrancy and decay. "Distance is depth," was Page’s maxim. The tracks recorded also displayed Page's musical credence in "light and shade" – music punctuated with both quieter and heavier dynamics,[18] and two in particular - "Communication Breakdown" and "Dazed and Confused" – have served as templates for much subsequent rock music. With the recordings concluded they then performed a series of gigs in the United Kingdom, beginning with the Mayfair Ballroom in Newcastle on October 4, and other bookings subsequently followed such as The Marquee on 18 October 1968 and Liverpool University on October 19,[19] before changing their name permanently to Led Zeppelin, based on a humorous idiom of Keith Moon as far back as May 1966.[20] Moon had often used the phrase "go over like a lead zeppelin", which Page liked and Grant promoted with a dropped "a" to preclude any mispronunciation.[21] On October 22, Grant and Page then registered the band's own publishing company under the tongue-in-cheek name of Superhype Music, Inc. to ensure all songwriting royalties would accrue independently.[22] The first public appearance under their new moniker was at Surrey University on October 25, 1968. On October 28, Led Zeppelin was signed to Atlantic Records by label Executive Vice-President Jerry Wexler in New York,[23] at the recommendation of Dusty Springfield and producer Bert Burns for a then record negotiated advance of US$200,000 - an unprecedented amount for a new group whose first album nobody had yet heard.[24] Wexler's decision was also assisted by Page's and Jones' session reputations as well as the announced dissolution of label supergroup Cream, preceding November 1968. Page had particularly sought out Atlantic Records because of its strong historical background with blues, soul and jazz artists, as opposed to other rock acts during the 1960s that were usually being signed with Elektra and Atco.

Even more important, though, were the contract terms that Grant secured: Essentially, Led Zeppelin held control of key clauses. They alone would decide when they would release albums and tour, and they had final say over the contents and design of each album. They also would decide how much they would do to promote each release (not that much beyond tours, though those would be extensive) and which tracks to select as singles (Grant and the band insisted none, despite the label's many unauthorised attempts).[25] A major band would be working for itself, not for a company or for management (Led Zeppelin had no formal contract with Grant). With the album now in the hands of Atlantic Records, Grant resolved that they should focus on the US market (albums were usually released and promoted first in the US before the UK), and after a few appearances, Grant also concluded that formulaic television programmes were not the best medium to highlight the band’s musical dynamics. This inevitably led to a lack of airplay in their early days, but in the longer term created the sense of mystique that was to sustain them over the coming decade. Grant's promotional philosophy was that if a person wanted to see or hear the band, they had to go to their concert and experience them. Consequently, the only connection the audience had with the band was through the records and the concerts. The band's skill at extending and improvising on their studio record repertoire elevated their live shows to something very different from playing their albums. This had the effect of making fans feel like they were members of an exclusive club.[26] Performances would also extend out to 4 hours whereas most concerts by other artists during the 1960s would typically only average 45 minutes. The unwillingness by the band to play by standard industry rules also meant an uneasy relationship with the press, which later resulted in the eventual employment of a full-time publicist and only select interviews given by group members.

Led Zeppelin were originally scheduled to appear on The Rolling Stones Rock 'n' Roll Circus TV special filmed at Intertel Studios in December, however Mick Jagger felt their sound was too competitive for the line-up after hearing a demo tape of their first album, and replaced them at the last minute with Jethro Tull. On December 26, 1968 they began their first US tour with a concert at the Denver Auditorium in Denver, Colorado, before launching into a cross-country tour of venues handpicked by Grant from his experiences road-managing the Jeff Beck Group - five nights at the Whiskey A Go-Go in Los Angeles, four at the Fillmore West in San Francisco, three at the Boston Tea Party, supporting the likes of Vanilla Fudge, Iron Butterfly, and Alice Cooper.[27] Grant gave local FM radio stations white label copies of their début album in advance for rotation before the tour reached each city, ensuring promotion at a listener level. They were an immediate sensation and midway through that first US tour, on January 12, the group's début album Led Zeppelin, with its trademark Hindenburg cover art, was released in the US, and it ascended to Number 10 on the Billboard charts. British underground counter-culture newspaper, OZ, enthused, "it was one of those rare LPs that so defy immediate classification or description, simply because [they are] so obviously a turning point in rock".[28] They performed frequently, initially in clubs and ballrooms, then in larger auditoriums and eventually stadiums as their popularity strengthened. At the Fillmore East on January 31, Led Zeppelin's performance was so intense, and the audience reaction so fanatical, that the headliners Iron Butterfly delayed its own onstage arrival by 45 minutes in the hope that the crowd would calm down. Led Zeppelin never went out as a support group again.[29] On 21 March 1969, they made their only live UK TV appearance on a pilot BBC rock show, How Late It Is,[30] followed by a performance of "Dazed and Confused" on Supershow in Staines, London on March 25. As the group began its second US tour on 18 April, this time at the New York University Jazz festival, "Good Times Bad Times" made the US Billboard charts at Number 80. On 10 May, Led Zeppelin made its belated UK début and rose to a peak of Number 6 on the charts.[31] Over the summer of 1969 they played a number of prestigious gigs – the London Playhouse Theatre for BBC Radio's In Concert show (27 June), the Bath Festival of Blues and Progressive Music (28 June), The Pop Proms (29 June)[32] and the Newport Jazz and Blues Festival in the US during July.[33] Throughout this time they also played many BBC sessions, later compiled and released as the BBC Sessions double CD set.[34] These show them to have a repertoire not only rooted in the blues, but effortlessly able to incorporate influences from folk, jazz and world music. On 12 October, the band appeared at a "Sunday Lyceum" concert promoted by entrepreneur Tony Stratton-Smith, and received the then highest fee ever paid to a UK band for a one-off concert.[35]

Led Zeppelin II, recorded in various locations[36] as they criss-crossed the US during 1969, was the album which firmly established them as one of the world's biggest rock bands. Advance orders for the album alone topped 400,000 units and when it was released it became Atlantic Records’ fastest selling album at 100,000 copies a week.[37] Symbolically dislodging The Beatles' Abbey Road from the top of the charts on both sides of the Atlantic,[38] it remained in the US charts for 138 weeks and cemented their reputation as the world's most successful hard-rock artists. Its finest moment was arguably "Whole Lotta Love", with its timeless opening riff and experimental midsection. The song itself became a rock anthem and also appeared as a single in the US, where it rose to Number 4 despite the group's reservations.[39] Practically all of 1969 and the first few months of 1970 were spent touring. They played the Royal Albert Hall on January 9. On February 28, they changed their name to the tongue-in-cheek title of The Nobs after Eva von Zeppelin threatened litigation for using her family's surname, if they performed in Denmark.[40] She never followed through with her threat in any subsequent tours. Upon their arrival for their concert at Mid South Coliseum on 17 April, Mayor Henry Loeb of Memphis, Tennessee bestowed members of the band honorary citizenship of the city.[41]

Before recording their next album, Page and Plant spent a few idyllic weeks in 1970 writing in a rustic remote Welsh cottage named Bron-Yr-Aur, later immortalised in two song titles. Led Zeppelin III was more folk-based than its predecessors, but still had a high quota of hard rock songs such as "Immigrant Song" and "Out On the Titles". "Immigrant Song" was released as a single in the US, where it ascended to Number 16.[42] The album also contained some superb acoustic material, and appeared in a variegated sleeve featuring an inner rotating disc.[43] Though some music critic reviews were typically indifferent, sales were again outstanding and it topped the charts on both sides of the Atlantic. Début performances for the new songs came with a brace of Icelandic shows before Led Zeppelin headlined The Bath Festival of Blues and Progressive Music on June 27, with an audience of over 150,000 in attendance.[44] By now, with The Beatles having split and The Rolling Stones in tax exile, Led Zeppelin was indisputably the world's top rock group. This was confirmed on 16 September, when the band was voted Top Group in the annual Melody Maker poll, ending the Beatles' unbroken eight year reign with that magazine.[45]

Peak years

© Image: Atlantic Records
Four symbols as appeared on the album Led Zeppelin IV, representing (l. to r.) Jimmy Page, John Paul Jones, John Bonham, and Robert Plant.

On 5 March 1971, Led Zeppelin began a series of "thank you" club shows for its British fans in response to their support during the band's early performances in 1968. They agreed to play for the original admission fee for that year.[46] The tour started with the band's first concert in Ireland and in Belfast fans were given the honour of being the first to hear "Stairway to Heaven" performed live. Their tour of Italy was interrupted when a police-instigated riot on July 5, prematurely ended a concert at Vigorelli Stadium in Milan.[47] The untitled fourth album, known unofficially as Led Zeppelin IV and also as Four Symbols (Zoso.png) or Untitled, was released that year and continued the practice of coupling hard rock songs like "Black Dog" and "Rock and Roll" (which climbed to Numbers 15 and 47 respectively in the US) with subtler material such as "The Battle of Evermore", which featured Sandy Denny and reflected Plant's ongoing preoccupation with Celtic folklore,[48] and the ethereal "Going to California". The album also contained the band's 8 minute and 1 second magnum opus, "Stairway to Heaven", with its ballad-like verses and scorching lead break becoming the group's most identifiable anthem, which will populate "all time" song polls and radio airwaves for decades even though it was never officially released as a single. "Stairway to Heaven" is often quoted as being the most requested FM radio song of all time, and as a musical statement it encapsulated all the group's styles into one unified package. Led Zeppelin IV topped the album charts in the UK, but only reached Number 2 in the US, perhaps because of the radical decision not to list the band's name anywhere on the packaging.[49] The band not only wanted the album to be untitled, but wanted nothing written on it; no credits or any text anywhere on the album, on its inside or outside sleeves. They released the album with no indication of who they were in order to prove that their music was the sole focal point.[50] They were eventually talked out of it by Atlantic Records and there were credits added to the inside paper sleeve, but still, nothing was written on the front cover to identify the album or who put it out, and the album was left untitled by the band.

From late 1971 to all of 1972, the band spent months touring the world. Led Zeppelin played a charity concert at Hiroshima's Shiei Taiikukan on 27 September 1971, for victims of the World War II atomic bombing and were awarded Peace Medals and the Civil Charter by the city.[51] The band used Japan to try out as yet uncommitted to vinyl plus some unexpected cover versions. On 14 February, they were refused admission to Singapore because of their long hair which the band refused to cut.[52] They began their first and so-far only Australasian tour on February 16, culminating on a return trip to Bombay (Mumbai), India to record with local orchestras.[53] A planned concert at London's Waterloo train station had to be cancelled in July due to logistical problems involving conflicting train running times.[54] Before the band commences their 1972 summer tour of the US, Grant initiated the 90/10 policy on gate receipts with promoters and agents which becomes a standard percentage in the music industry, with almost no opposition due to the audience drawing power the band now had.[55] The drawing power was further confirmed when all 110,000 tickets for their 24-date December 1972-January 1973 UK tour sold out in just four hours.[56]

© Photo: ledzeppelin.com
Led Zeppelin at Madison Square Garden, July 1973, for the film The Song Remains the Same.

Houses of the Holy was released in April 1973 and again topped the album charts on both sides of the Atlantic the same month. This was arguably their most diverse album, with tracks ranging from high energy rock to reggae, funk and folky ballads. It went further with experimentation than previous releases, with expanded tracks and versatile use of synthesisers and mellotron orchestration. Highlights of the album include the gothic "No Quarter" and the ballad "The Rain Song". The striking orange album gatefold cover of "Houses of the Holy" featured images of children climbing up the Giant's Causeway in County Antrim, Northern Ireland, based upon Arthur C. Clarke's novel Childhood's End.[57] Again the band's name was absent from the front cover. It also marked the band's inaugural artwork with design company Hipgnosis. The month after its release, Led Zeppelin opened at the Braves Stadium in Atlanta, Georgia on 4 May, performing to over 49,236 people, the largest audience in that state's history. The following day, Led Zeppelin's concert at Tampa Stadium (now Houlihan's Stadium), Florida, on May 5, broke the US box office record, previously held by The Beatles for their 1965 Shea Stadium appearance. 56,800 people attended grossing for the band US$309,000.[58] For the first time and on subsequent US tours, the group avoids long trips to interstate venues by road, by leasing a full-sized Boeing 720B jet, nicknamed "The Starship".[59] In-line with an expanded stage show, the band's image also changed as members began to wear elaborate, flamboyant clothing. In July 1973 a series of performances at New York's Madison Square Garden was filmed for possible inclusion in a future movie. During the final night's performance, US$203,000 of the band's money from gate receipts went missing from a safety deposit box at the Drake Hotel. It was the single highest theft from a deposit box in Manhattan's history and was never recovered.[60] Over a million people saw their 34-date American tour, grossing over US$3 million. The band had begun on a project film during this tour and the extended 12 month break afterwards, at which time Robert Plant had minor vocal cord surgery and John Paul Jones considered leaving over the heavy touring schedule, but was persuaded to remain by Grant.[61]

As their five year deal with Atlantic Records was about to expire, on May 10, 1974 the band and their manager launched their own Swan Song Records label and secured a distribution deal via Atlantic, signing artists including Bad Company, the Pretty Things, Maggie Bell, Midnight Flyer, Dave Edmunds, Sad Café and Wildlife.[62] Swan Song also assisted in sponsoring the production of Monty Python's film The Holy Grail. The record label's logo lettering used two stylised white swans, was set with a painting called Evening: Fall of Day (1869) by William Rimmer, featuring a winged Apollo rising from the earth at sunset.[63] Extravagant launch parties were thrown at Chislehurst Caves in Kent (31 October), at New York's Four Seasons Hotel, and in Los Angeles[64] and then, in March 1975, a lavish die-cut packaged double album was released entitled Physical Graffiti. Containing tracks stretching back to the start of the decade alongside new material recorded at Headley Grange, this again exhibited their eclectic abilities, containing many fine songs, particularly the eastern inspired epic "Kashmir" and the funky "Trampled Underfoot", which climbed to Number 38 in the US. At one point Physical Graffiti, which topped the album charts on both sides of the Atlantic, was selling at the rate of 500 copies per hour in one New York store alone, and on 25 March all six Led Zeppelin albums were on the Billboard Top 200 album charts.[65] Led Zeppelin again toured the US in early 1975 and then in April, 51,000 tickets for three concerts at London's Earls Court sold out in two hours.[66] They ended up playing five four-hour shows there the following month accompanied by a display of laser beams, neon signs, coloured light show, dry ice, Ediphor screen and a 70,000 watt PA system not previously seen or heard on their previous UK tours.[67]

Latter years

By now though, their monetary success was becoming almost counter-productive and in June they were forced into tax exile in Switzerland.[68] After Earls Court, the band began a short overseas holiday with Page had flying to Marrakesh to meet up with Plant, who travelling with his wife Maureen and family. Veering off the tourist paths, Page and Plant rented a Range Rover and drove deep into Morocco. The mission was to discover street music, to soak up the experiences that might enhance the next album. They travelled through Ovazazatte, Zagora, Tagora, Tafraoute, the Atlas Mountains, moving north through Casablanca and Tangier with a plant to meet up with the rest of the band in Montreux, Switzerland for rehearsals for a projected tour of the United States. While on the return journey Page detoured to visit southern Italy while Plant and his family continued the holidayed in Greece. However, a serious car crash on a Greek island mountainside in which Robert Plant and his wife were badly injured on 4 August 1975, prevented any live appearances in the second half of the year. All tours were cancelled and Plant spent the rest of the year recuperating from his shattered elbow and ankle, first to the Channel Islands and then to Switzerland, as a result of that accident. Unable to return and stay at any length in the UK, the band reconvened in Malibu, California, where the forced hiatus allowed much of the material for their next album, Presence, to be composed. Presence was recorded within 18 days in November, at Musicland Studios in Munich, with Plant restricted to singing in a wheelchair, and again topped the album charts on both sides of the Atlantic on its release in April 1976.[69] The sound gravitated towards more straightforward, guitar-based arrangements, departing from the acoustic ballads and intricate keyboard work featured on their previous albums. Though it eventually did not sell as many units in total as the previous band releases, it contains two bona fide classics in the epic shapes of "Nobody's Fault but Mine" and "Achilles' Last Stand". Jimmy Page in later interviews has cited Presence as his favourite album.[70]

Their long-awaited film The Song Remains the Same was given a charity premiere at the Ritz Theatre in Manhattan on 20 October 1976, with proceeds going to the Save the Children Fund. Directed by Peter Clifton, it featured lengthy live footage alongside individual fantasy sequences: John Bonham raced a dragster, Robert Plant rescued a fair maiden, John Paul Jones appeared as a masked night rider, while Page climbed a Scottish mountain on the shores of Loch Ness in search of Father Time. A double soundtrack album featuring live versions of "Rock and Roll", "Dazed and Confused" and "Stairway to Heaven", was released the same month and predictably topped the charts on both sides of the Atlantic,[71] despite being far from the best recorded testament to their onstage talents circa 1973. Preparations began at Manticore Studios in January 1977, for their 11th tour of the US which started on 1 April, at the Dallas Memorial Auditorium in Texas, and was slated to extend for forty-nine concerts across America, for an estimated 1.3 million ticket holders. Due to aircraft engine problems, The Starship was replaced by a Boeing 707 dubbed Caesar's Chariot for all flights between cities. The tour included an extended acoustic set, and "Battle of Evermore" was performed for the first time live with John Paul Jones singing Sandy Denny's original parts. The band played before a crowd of over 76,229 at the Pontiac Silverdome in Michigan on 30 April, breaking Led Zeppelin’s own attendance record set in 1973,[72] followed by a six night stint at Madison Square Garden in June. Led Zeppelin were awarded an Ivor Novello Award for "Outstanding Contribution to British Music" on 12 May, but by late 1977 despite continuing to win awards Led Zeppelin had lost ground in the media spotlight particularly in the UK having been unable to tour for over 2 years. Following a performance at the "Day on the Green" festival in Oakland, Plant was informed while in New Orleans of the tragic death of his 7-year-old son Karac on 26 July from a respiratory infection.[73] Plant flew back to England in grief and the rest of the tour was cancelled which forced the band to take further unscheduled time off the road. Grant eventually persuaded Plant to rejoin the band, at a meeting at London's Royal Garden Hotel in April 1978, and in May 1978, they had reunited to rehearse together at Clearwell Castle, in the Forest of Dean. They then played a pair of warm-up shows in Copenhagen, followed by their last UK dates (their first since 1975) which took place on 4 and 11 August 1979, when they attracted over 380,000 people to the Knebworth festivals in Hertfordshire, with a 23 song set.[74]

© Photo: ledzeppelin.com
Led Zeppelin backstage at Knebworth Festival, August 1979.

Their penultimate studio album, In Through the Out Door, was very different in style to its predecessors being heavily influenced by Jones' songwriting and use of synthesisers, and recorded at Polar Studios in Stockholm during December 1978. The standout tracks were "In the Evening", "Carouselambra", "I'm Gonna Crawl" and the balladic tribute to Plant's son, "All My Love". The album was released packaged in a plain brown paper bag, with one of six different sleeves inside,[75] and débuted at Number 1 on the UK and US charts. As a result, Led Zeppelin's entire catalogue made the Billboard Top 200 album chart between the weeks of October 27 and November 3, breaking the band's similar previous feat in 1975.[76] In December 1979, Jones, Bonham, and Plant all performed at a London benefit charity for the United Nations, Concert for the People of Kampuchea. The band picked up 8 awards at the annual Melody Maker Reader's Poll in December before commencing rehearsals at The Rainbow Theatre in April, for a brief low-key European 14-day tour performing in Switzerland, Germany, Holland, Belgium, and Austria, undertaken in June and July 1980 with new tour manager Phil Carlo. The band adopted a playful and generous spirit about the tour, with Page even handling some of the stage introductions himself. Featuring a redolent back-to-basics set which opened with "Train Kept a Rollin'", and culminating at the Berlin Eissporthalle on July 7, 1980, where they concluded their set with a longer-than-usual version of "Whole Lotta Love".[77] It was coincidently twelve years to the day after The Yardbirds' (with Relf and McCarty) final show. On 24 September 1980, Led Zeppelin met at Bray Studios to begin rehearsals for an upcoming 19-date North American tour, promoted as "Led Zeppelin - The 80s: Part One", which included new songs added to the set such as "Carouselambra". The band's plan also included a return to the US West Coast in early 1981 and a UK tour in the spring, and the recording of a new, riff intense album. Their career was however brought to an abrupt finale when John Bonham accidentally asphyxiated in his sleep after a prolonged drinking session during rehearsals which ended at Page's Old Mill House, Windsor property on 25 September 1980.[78] Widely acclaimed as the greatest rock drummer ever, Bonham's unique sound would have been difficult to replace and the remaining members, having met at London's Savoy Hotel to discuss future plans, eventually announced the band's dissolution and the cancellation of a US tour, on 4 December 1980; "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."[79] To fulfil contractual commitments, the remaining members of the band decided to drop the option of a chronologically ordered live anthology in favour of a career-spanning out-takes collection called Coda, which appeared in December 1982. 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 percussion instrumental with electronic embellishments added by Jimmy Page, called "Bonzo's Montreux". With no longer a working band to promote, and Peter Grant in semi-retirement from the music industry, Swan Song Records was eventually wound up in late 1983.

Solo years and reunions

After the split, Plant, Page and Jones concentrated on developing their solo and production careers, though rumours of and actual reunions were never distant. In 1981, there were plans for both Page and Plant to team up with Alan White and Chris Squire of Yes to form XYZ (ex-Yes Zeppelin), but conflicting issues on who should manage the supergroup (Peter Grant or Brian Lane) and Plant's decision not to proceed, ended the project prematurely after a number of demos were recorded.[80] On 13 July 1985, the three remaining members of Led Zeppelin played a 20-minute set at the Philadelphia 'Live Aid' benefit concert at JFK Stadium, but were under-rehearsed and plagued by a lack of foldback.[81] Rehearsals for a projected reunion and world tour in January 1986, were cancelled after replacement drummer Tony Thompson broke his arm in a motorway accident on his way to Real World Studios, near Bath, on the second day.[82] In 1988, Page also contributed to Plant's Now and Zen track "Tall Cool One", which featured a medley of Led Zeppelin samples. There were also subsequent one-off reunions at the Atlantic Records' 40th anniversary concert at Madison Square Garden (14 May 1988),[83] with Jason Bonham filling his father's shoes on drums, and at Jason Bonham's own wedding reception (29 April 1990).[84] On 30 June 1990, Page joined Plant onstage at Knebworth Park for the Silver Clef winners charity concert, performing "Misty Mountain Hop", "Wearing and Tearing", and "Rock and Roll".

As producer, Page spent most of the 1990s remastering the entire Led Zeppelin back catalogue including the two volume Led Zeppelin Box Set and 3 disc Remasters set.[85] The Box Set set also included four previously unreleased tracks, including the song "Travelling Riverside Blues", with an accompanying video resulting in heavy rotation on MTV. In 1991, a reunion was discussed to promote these new compilation releases, involving drummer Mike "Puffy" Bordin, but Plant was not ready to commit.[86] Page and Plant participated in two invitation-only MTV Unplugged concerts on August 25 and 26, 1994.[87] The success of the venture later prompted the pair to undertake a year-long world tour with a Middle Eastern orchestra, comprising 115 concerts, reinterpreting Led Zeppelin songs.[88] Led Zeppelin was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1995[89] and received a Liftetime Achievement Award at the 42nd Annual Ivor Novello Awards in May 1997.[90] After many years away from the public spotlight, former manager Peter Grant passed away on 21 November 1995.[91] In 1998, Steve Albini produced an album of new Page-Plant compositions Walking Into Clarksdale, released with a low-fi production, to mixed reviews.[92] Plant parted company with Page during 1999 to concentrate on his solo career, going back to his earlier R&B and West Coast roots.[93] In October 1999, Page performed a series of shows with The Black Crowes recording an double album's worth of Led Zeppelin covers. Page has never ruled out reforming Led Zeppelin.

(CC) Photo: Robbie Fowler
A reunited Led Zeppelin for the Ahmet Ertegün charity tribute show at The O2 in London, December 2007.

The RIAA announced on 29 November 1999, that the band were only the third act in music history to achieve four or more certified Diamond albums.[94] VH1 named the group the #1 Greatest Artist of Hard Rock.[95] A lavish four hour retrospective double DVD of Led Zeppelin was issued in 2003, and swiftly became the best-selling music DVD of all time. At the same time a triple live CD, How the West Was Won, a set recorded in 1972 that is superior in performance over The Song Remains the Same, was released. It opens with the powerful "Immigrant Song" and contains a superb 24-minute version of "Whole Lotta Love" and many other classics from their first three albums. In February 2005, Led Zeppelin received a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award[96] and in 2006 was awarded the Polar Music Prize.[97] Led Zeppelin were formally inducted into the UK Music Hall of Fame in September 2006.[98] On 10 December 2007 the surviving members of Led Zeppelin reunited (along with former drummer John Bonham's son Jason) for the Ahmet Ertegün charity tribute show at The O2 in London.[99] The 16-song set was part of a benefit concert for the Ahmet Ertegun Education Fund, which provides scholarships for gifted children. According to Tixdaq, the Led Zeppelin reunion produced the highest average resale price (£707.97) for any concert ticket in 2007.[100] Rumours persist of a future world tour, with millions of dollars from promoters on offer. Led Zeppelin became the first band inducted into the people's choice Hall of Fame at WNCX in Cleveland, Ohio on 3 March.[101]

On 7 June 2008, 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", proceeded by "Ramble On". Dave Grohl has been a longtime Led Zeppelin fan.[102]. The BBC reported on August 26, 2008 that Page, Jones, and Jason Bonham have been recording material which may become a new Led Zeppelin project, although Robert Plant has not been mentioned yet.[103]


Cultural usage

Despite the public's ever changing tastes in musical styles, Led Zeppelin has managed to retain its popularity. The concert movie The Song Remains the Same is still a staple of midnight cinema screenings, and tunes like "Stairway to Heaven", "Kashmir", "Black Dog", Whole Lotta Love" and "Rock and Roll" are still in heavy rotation on classic rock broadcast playlists. In February 1989, Los Angeles radio station KLOS began an hour long regular broadcast of Led Zeppelin songs every night. On 1 January 1990, an FM radio station in St. Petersburg, Florida, WKRL, began broadcasting "Stairway to Heaven" for twenty-four hours as a prelude to an all Led Zeppelin format.[104] In 2005, the magazine Guitar World conducted a readers poll in which "Stairway to Heaven" was voted as having the greatest guitar solo of all time.[105] XM Satellite Radio launched XM LED on November 8, 2007, an artist-exclusive channel dedicated to Led Zeppelin. After much delay, Led Zeppelin's entire back catalogue was available for digital download via iTunes on 13 November 2007. Led Zeppelin has been the subject of many tribute CDs, notably Enconium: A Tribute to Led Zeppelin released by Atlantic Records in 1995. There have also been classical, reggae, jazz, heavy metal, and rockabilly artists who have also released tribute albums, and an all-"Stairway to Heaven" tribute CD by Australian ABC television programme The Money or the Gun. Studio band Far Corporation released their version of "Stairway to Heaven" which reached Number 8 on the UK singles chart, in 1985. Led Zeppelin has also been the subject of numerous cover bands, such as Lez Zeppelin, an all-girl tribute act.

The music of Led Zeppelin has been used on soundtracks, although the band has consistently been protective of issuing blanket licences. The first song to appear in any film was "How Many More Times", used in the Vietnam War-era movie Homer (1970), directed by John Trent.[106] "Immigrant Song" has been the most widely used track, appearing in School of Rock, Shrek the Third and One Day in September. Others include "Communication Breakdown" in Small Soldiers and "Babe I'm Gonna Leave You" in the television series One Tree Hill. Two films which have used the most number of Led Zeppelin tracks have been Dogtown and Z-Boys with "Achilles Last Stand", "Nobody's Fault but Mine", and "Hots on for Nowhere" and the Cameron Crowe movie Almost Famous with "That's the Way", "Tangerine", "Misty Mountain Hop", "The Rain Song", and "Tangerine". The theme song of long running British music television programme Top of the Pops used a cover of "Whole Lotta Love" by Collective Consciousness Society (CCS), which featured Alexis Korner.


Notes

  1. That Led Zeppelin is called one of the progenitors of this genre ignores the stylistic diversity of their entire catalogue. Plant has commented that it is unfair for people to typecast the band as heavy metal, since about a third of their recorded output was acoustic. This position is supported by numerous sources eg. Fast, Susan (2001) In the Houses of the Holy: Led Zeppelin and the Power of Rock Music, New York: Oxford University Press, p. 8. ISBN 0-19514-723-5.
  2. Led Zeppelin Takes Flight Once More (September 2007). Retrieved on 2008-02-01.
  3. Cash Box magazine artist biography (January 2006). Retrieved on 2008-02-01.
  4. RIAA Top Selling Gold and Platinum artists (February 2007). Retrieved on 2008-02-01.
  5. Clayson, Alan (2002). The Yardbirds: The Band That Launched Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck, and Jimmy Page, 1st Edition. San Francisco: Backbeat Books, p. 102. ISBN 0-87930-724-2. 
  6. Led Zeppelin Assorted Info (March 2008). Retrieved on 2008-03-14.
  7. Lewis, Dave (2004). Led Zeppelin: The Complete Guide to Their Music, 1st Edition. London: Omnibus Press, p. 82. ISBN 1-84449-141-2. 
  8. "Yardbirds Split", Melody Maker, 20 July 1968.
  9. Shadwick, Keith (2005). Led Zeppelin: The Story of a Band and Their Music 1968-1980, 1st Edition. London: Omnibus Press, p. 129. ISBN 1-87930-871-0. 
  10. Shadwick, Keith (2005). Led Zeppelin: The Story of a Band and Their Music 1968-1980, 1st Edition. London: Omnibus Press, p. 26. ISBN 1-87930-871-0. 
  11. Welch, Chris. "Robert Plant... Down to the Roots", Melody Maker, 12 September 1970, pp. 16-17.
  12. "Led Zeppelin story", Zig Zag, December 1970, p. 168.
  13. Dreja captured the photograph of Led Zeppelin's line-up for the back picture sleeve of their début album, and later worked with Page on the 1969 Philamore Lincoln album, The North Wind Blew South.
  14. Welch, Chris and Nicholls, Geoff (2001). John Bonham: A Thunder of Drums, 1st Edition. San Francisco: Backbeat Books, p. 75. ISBN 0-87930-658-0. 
  15. "P.J. Proby review", Disc, 12 October 1968.
  16. "Teens Club Announcement", Berlingske Tidende, 7 September 1968.
  17. Tolinski, Brad & Di Benedetto, Greg. "Light and Shade", Guitar World, January 1998.
  18. Fast, Susan (2001). In the Houses of the Holy: Led Zeppelin and the Power of Rock Music, 1st Edition. New York: Oxford University Press, p. 40. ISBN 0-19514-723-5. 
  19. "Led Zeppelin Debut", Melody Maker, October 26, 1968.
  20. "Yardbirds Change Name", Disc, October 19, 1968.
  21. Zig Zag December 1970, p. 169. Page said "I was actually interested in favour of keeping The Yardbirds together". Page and Grant had initially no intention of changing from the name The Yardbirds, for fear of alienating fans who had supported the group for so many years. However Dreja's departure and a lack of interest from the UK press and promoters who were not interested in seeing a band they considered past its prime, forced the issue. Page was also persuaded by the coincidental idea of the name Led Zeppelin reflecting the band's musical colouring of "heaviness" and "lightness" cf. Iron Butterfly.
  22. Shadwick, Keith (2005). Led Zeppelin: The Story of a Band and Their Music 1968-1980, 1st Edition. London: Omnibus Press, p. 36. ISBN 1-87930-871-0. 
  23. Official Atlantic press release, November 23, 1968.
  24. "Atlantic Rides $200,000 on Zeppelin, UK Act", Billboard, November 30, 1968.
  25. Altham, Keith. "Led Zeppelin Are Not Prefabricated", Top Pops, September, 1969.
  26. Fast, Susan (2001). In the Houses of the Holy: Led Zeppelin and the Power of Rock Music, 1st Edition. New York: Oxford University Press, p. 73. ISBN 0-19514-723-5. 
  27. "Led Zeppelin news", Disc, December 28, 1968.
  28. Dennis, Felix. "Led Zeppelin review", OZ, February 1969.
  29. Kirby, Fred. "Led Zeppelin Fly High, Iron Butterfly Too", Billboard, 15 February 1969, p. 22.
  30. Welch, Chris. "Jimmy Page Triumphs! Led Zeppelin Is a Gas", Melody Maker, 29 March 1969.
  31. "UK Chart", Record Retailer, 7 May 1969.
  32. "Festivals & Pop Proms", Disc and Mirror Review, 12 July 1969.
  33. Welch, Chris. "Zeppelin and Fleetwood Take Off with a Roar", Melody Maker, 5 July 1969.
  34. "Albums: BBC Sessions", Melody Maker, 29 November 1997, p. 44.
  35. "Zeppelin Show", Melody Maker, 4 October 1969.
  36. Welch, Chris. "Led Zeppelin and How They Made 37,000 Dollars in One Night", Melody Maker, 13 September 1969.
  37. "Zeppelin Tour news", Record Mirror, 18 October 1969.
  38. "Led Zeppelin Top in U.S.", Melody Maker, 31 January 1970.
  39. Welch, Chris. "Achtung Led Zeppelin", Melody Maker, 20 December 1969.
  40. Welch, Chris. "An Interview with Jimmy Page", Melody Maker, 28 February 1970, p. 12.
  41. "A Zeppelin That Didn't Go Down", The Memphis Press Scimitar, April 17, 1970.
  42. "Charts", Billboard, 25 April 1970.
  43. Hodenfield, Chris. "Led Zeppelin III review", Strange Days, 30 October 1970.
  44. "Five Encores for Zeppelin", Melody Maker, July 9, 1970.
  45. "Zeppelin Topple Beatles" Melody Maker 19 September 1970. Led Zeppelin #1 group, Robert Plant #1 male singer, Jimmy Page #2 guitarist, John Paul Jones #2 bass player, John Bonham #5 drummer, Jimmy Page #6 producer.
  46. Altham, Keith. "Zep Come to the People" Record Mirror 27 February 1971.
  47. "Uproar as Tour begins", Il Milanese, 6 July 1971.
  48. Shadwick, Keith (2005). Led Zeppelin: The Story of a Band and Their Music 1968-1980, 1st Edition. London: Omnibus Press, p. 159. ISBN 1-87930-871-0. 
  49. Shadwick, Keith (2005). Led Zeppelin: The Story of a Band and Their Music 1968-1980, 1st Edition. London: Omnibus Press, p. 151. ISBN 1-87930-871-0. 
  50. Fast, Susan (2001). In the Houses of the Holy: Led Zeppelin and the Power of Rock Music, 1st Edition. New York: Oxford University Press, p. 71. ISBN 0-19514-723-5. 
  51. Lewis, Dave and Pallett, Simon (2005). Led Zeppelin: The Concert File, Revised Edition. London: Omnibus Press, p. 68. ISBN 1-84449-659-7. 
  52. Boucher, Caroline. "Zeppelin Rising to New Heights", Disc and Music Echo, 12 February 1972.
  53. Tyler, Andrew. "Interview with Jimmy Page", Disc and Music Echo, 25 November 1972.
  54. Hollingworth, Roy. "Led Zeppelin: The Forgotten Giants?", Melody Maker, 1 July 1972, pp. 24-25.
  55. Shadwick, Keith (2005). Led Zeppelin: The Story of a Band and Their Music 1968-1980, 1st Edition. London: Omnibus Press, p. 171. ISBN 1-87930-871-0. 
  56. "Whoosh Zep Sell Out", Melody Maker, 18 November 1972.
  57. Lewis, Dave (2004). Led Zeppelin: The Complete Guide to Their Music, 1st Edition. London: Omnibus Press, p. 35. ISBN 1-84449-141-2. 
  58. "Houses of the Holy is Number 7", Disc and Music Echo, 19 May 1973.
  59. Shadwick, Keith (2005). Led Zeppelin: The Story of a Band and Their Music 1968-1980, 1st Edition. London: Omnibus Press, p. 203. ISBN 1-87930-871-0. 
  60. "Led Zeppelin Robbed of 203G: Rock Group's Hotel Box Rifled", New York Daily News, 30 July 1973.
  61. Lewis, Dave and Pallett, Simon (2005). Led Zeppelin: The Concert File, Revised Edition. London: Omnibus Press, p. 231. ISBN 1-84449-659-7. 
  62. Watts, Michael. "The Man Who Led Zeppelin", Melody Maker, 22 June 1974, pp. 36-37.
  63. William Rimmer: A Claim to Fame (September 2006). Retrieved on 2008-02-01.
  64. Lewis, Dave and Pallett, Simon (2005). Led Zeppelin: The Concert File, Revised Edition. London: Omnibus Press, p. 233. ISBN 1-84449-659-7. 
  65. Top 200 Album Chart Billboard 29 March 1975. Albums charted as follows: Physical Graffiti #1, Led Zeppelin IV #83, Houses of the Holy #92, Led Zeppelin II #104, Led Zeppelin #116, Led Zeppelin III #124.
  66. "Zep Tickets: We Were Fair", Melody Maker, 12 April 1975.
  67. Shadwick, Keith (2005). Led Zeppelin: The Story of a Band and Their Music 1968-1980, 1st Edition. London: Omnibus Press, p. 241. ISBN 1-87930-871-0. 
  68. Charlesworth, Chris. "An Interview with Robert Plant", Melody Maker, 14 February 1975.
  69. Lewis, Dave (2003). Led Zeppelin: The Tight But Loose' Files: Celebration II, 1st Edition. London: Omnibus Press, p. 41. ISBN 1-84449-056-4. 
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  71. Charlesworth, Chris. "Zeppelin Movie: Honest, Heavy, and Hot", Melody Maker, 30 October 1976, p. 1.
  72. Coleman, Ray. "Biggest of Them All", Melody Maker, 25 June 1977.
  73. "Tragedy Strikes Robert Plant", Melody Maker, 6 August 1977, p. 4.
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  75. Kozak, Roman. "Review: In Through the Out Door", Billboard, 1 September 1979, p. 3.
  76. Top 200 Album Chart Billboard 27 October 1979. Albums charted as follows: In Through the Out Door #1, Houses of the Holy #91, Led Zeppelin IV #101, Physical Graffiti #130, Led Zeppelin II #150, The Song Remains the Same #164, Led Zeppelin #174, Presence #183, Led Zeppelin III #189.
  77. "Led Zeppelin Storm Clouds Over Europe", Juke, 30 August 1980.
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  79. Swan Song press release, 13 December 1980.
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  82. Considine, J.D. "Tony Thompson: It Ain't Meat, It's the Emotion", Musician, March 1986, pp. 69-70.
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  92. Considine, J.D. "Page, Plant Keep Walking: Atlantic Set Fueled by Live Work", Billboard, 18 April 1998, p. 9.
  93. Lewis, Dave (2003). Led Zeppelin: The Tight But Loose' Files: Celebration II, 1st Edition. London: Omnibus Press, pp. 132-133. ISBN 1-84449-056-4. 
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