Led Zeppelin, The Ultimate Guide to Their Music &
Legend
During the 1970s, Led
Zeppelin was the definitive heavy metal group of the 1970s, a band that
attained legendary status among its millions of devoted followers (myself
included). In this Collectors Edition, Rolling Stone has
reached into its archives and chosen a series of feature articles, interviews,
photographs and album guides to create a compelling and highly readable
tribute.
Although this Edition
is primarily aimed at hard-core Led Zeppelin fans, it would appeal to any rock
fan (casual or hard-core) interested in knowing about the group’s roots and
what contributed to its enormous worldwide success.
For me, Led Zeppelin
was always about the music, and less about the band’s often-reported antics and
excesses on the road. Whether it was a hard-driving number like “Rock ‘n’
Roll,” a melodic ballad like “Thank You” or an audacious experimental piece
like “Kashmir,” Zeppelin boldly went where no band had gone before.
In these pages, both
Robert Plant and Jimmy Page come across as sensitive, passionate and articulate
when discussing their respective musical styles and influences. Here’s Jimmy
Page speaking to journalist Cameron Crowe in a RS interview from 1975:
“The term ‘genius’ gets used far too loosely in rock & roll. When you hear the melodic structures of what classical musicians put together and you compare it to that of a rock & roll record, there’s a hell of a long way rock & roll has to go. There’s a certain standard in classical music that allows the application of the term ‘genius,’ but you’re treading on thin ice if you start applying it to rock & rollers. The way I see it, rock & roll is folk music. Street music. It isn’t taught in school. It has to be picked up. You don’t find geniuses in street musicians, but that doesn’t mean to say you can’t be really good. You get as much out of rock & roll artistically as you put into it. There’s nobody who can teach you. You’re on your own, and that’s what I find so fascinating about it.”
For Led Zeppelin, it
was all about the musical innovation and following their bliss, at least in the
recording studio and during their live performances. This was no pop band
intent on repeating formulaic tunes with every new album. Rather, Robert Plant,
Jimmy Page, John Bonham and John Paul Jones were virtuoso performers who wanted
to reinvent themselves all the time; they seem not to have cared about
achieving top 40 status on any playlist (indeed, the band’s most famous
song, Stairway to Heaven, was never released as a single).
For Zeppelin fans, it
was about immersing yourself in the experience: listening to “Zeppelin IV” or
“Physical Graffiti” in a friend’s basement or in the car. The music was bold,
rapacious, rebellious, sexual and subversive. If you were listening to
Zeppelin, you were probably engaging in other recreational pursuits that
parents disapproved of. Zeppelin spoke to a generation that wasn't ready to cut
its hair and punch a clock. The band had attitude and the talent to back it up,
and that was a large part of its appeal. Zep was going to do things its way,
and to hell with what anybody thought.
For those young
enough to have enjoyed Led Zeppelin during the band’s prime, this Collectors
Edition will evoke memories of time spent listening to a band that became
synonymous with the 1970s counter-culture. For those who weren’t around back
then, the publication will provide a thrilling snapshot of the life and times
of one of the most creative, versatile and influential rock bands of all time.