Friday, October 10, 2014

Jimmy Page

Having written blogs on Deep Purple (1984-present), Black Sabbath without Ozzy and Ozzy after Black Sabbath, a stab at Led Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page, focusing on his career outside Zeppelin, might be long overdue.  Maybe not.  Anyhow.

Early Years
He was born on January 9, 1944, in London.  He taught himself and played in various bands, winding up in Neil Christian’s band the Crusaders from 1961-63.  After briefly quitting the music business for health reasons, he returned in the form of a session guitarist.  To name his session work would be dull, but his contributions include “I Can’t Explain” by The Who, “Heart of Stone” by the Rolling Stones, and extensive work with Roy Harper and Joe Cocker.   I don’t have the patience to collect Page’s session work per se, and a similar collection of pre-Deep Purple recordings by Ritchie Blackmore costs $200 used on Amazon.

Yardbirds
In 1965, he joined the Yardbirds, replacing Paul Samwell-Smith who had recently quit, briefly sharing guitar duties with Jeff Beck, who had replaced Eric Clapton.  The pair can be seen on stage together – off in the background in a scene – in the movie “Blow Up”, unremarkable except for this element.  Soon after, Beck himself quit, leaving Page as the only guitarist.  This lineup released Little Games, the last of the Yardbirds albums.  “White Summer” is the song on this album most reminiscent of Led Zeppelin, but his playing on the album is recognizable.  The band seemed to be moving to a more mainstream 60’s hard rock/psychedelic sound like Cream, away from the commercial pop of the mid-60s which caused Clapton to quit. 

            The stress of touring and the lack of success led the remaining members of the band to quit in 1968, leaving Page with the name and no band.   He then assembled session bassist John Baldwin, better known as John Paul Jones, and two unknowns, singer Robert Plant and drummer John Bonham, to form The New Yardbirds.  As most of you know, this band is better known as Led Zeppelin.

Post Zeppelin
After Physical Graffiti (1975), Zeppelin put out three albums:  Presence (1976), In Through the Out Door (1979), and Coda (1982), with Coda being a later release of outtakes.  However, this was a release by the band, not one of these unauthorized record company throw-outs without the band’s consent.  Although many Zeppelin fans may disagree with me, particularly about Presence, I consider them to be well below standard; I refer to them as the Last 3.  However, Page & Plant stand by Presence, and some of those tracks resurface on the pair’s more recent live collaborations.
 
In October 1980, John Bonham choked on his own vomit (no evidence of anyone else’s) and died.   This broke up Led Zeppelin, forcing the three surviving members to kill time before subsequent reunions.  Along the way, Bonham’s son Jason (born 1966, before Led Zeppelin came about) developed his chops in Airrace – who opened for AC/DC in 1984 – and playing on Jimmy Page’s solo album Outrider

After Zeppelin, Page did some movie soundtrack work:  Death Wish II, Scream For Help (w/John Paul Jones), and Lucifer Rising.   I find this stuff (e.g. BOC’s Bad Channels) to be mood music or elevator music, hardly worth listening to in its own right.  I’ve passed on collecting it.

Honeydrippers, Vol. 1. (1984).  Remarkably – though perhaps not too surprising – his earliest post Zep musical work was a collaboration with none other than Robert Plant.   This was a 50s-style band which didn’t last long.  I never bothered to snatch this up.  For that matter, I haven’t bothered to collect any of Plant’s solo work, although of the three surviving band members, Plant’s career has been by far the most successful. 

 The FirmThe Firm (1985), and Mean Business (1986).  This was a “supergroup” with Free/Bad Company singer Paul Rodgers, bassist Tony Franklin, and drummer Chris Slade (who later joined AC/DC).  The music is typical 80’s AOR fluff, but aside from that not particularly bad or mediocre.  The group actually toured their albums, but collectively agreed that they would only do two albums and a tour.  Rodgers later joined up with the surviving Queen members to resurrect that band, an experiment which didn’t last long.  Freddie Mercury was a tough act to follow, and I don’t believe anyone, even Adam Lambert, can really fill his shoes, though I can’t really fault Lambert, May, and Taylor for giving it a shot. 

Outrider (1988).  Technically this is Page’s only real “solo” album.  Jason Bonham plays drums; Robert Plant sings on “The Only One”.  One song, “Hummingbird”, is a Leon Russell cover.  This sounds very close to the Led Zeppelin we know and love.  As good? No, but no worse than the Last Three.

Coverdale/Page (1993).  Back when I was in high school, my buddy Sean C consistently disparaged Whitesnake, the band former Deep Purple vocalist David Coverdale formed after DP Mark IV finally disbanded in 1976.  His verdict was that Whitesnake was ripping off Led Zeppelin.  Now having heard all of Whitesnake’s albums - mainly the Bernie Marsden/Micky Moody era of that time – and all of Zeppelin’s output, I’d say there is a very modest sliver of truth to that assertion.  But it doesn’t look like Coverdale was copying Led Zeppelin itself, so much as the blues-rock source material; you could just as easily accuse him of ripping off Free or Bad Company.
            Be that as it may, Jimmy Page and David Coverdale did finally manage to make an album together.  And guess what – it’s not bad.  In fact, It’s pretty good.  I was surprised at how heavy and intense it was.  In fact, I put it above the Last Three and equal to anything he’s done post-Zeppelin. 

Jimmy Page & Robert PlantNo Quarter (1994) & Walking Into Clarksdale (1998).   After the Honeydrippers and “The Only One”, Page and Plant got together again.  “No Quarter” is a live album with some mediocre extra song-age thrown in.  John Paul Jones was not invited, and even miffed that they used HIS song, “No Quarter”, as the title, and even played it – in his absence!   I don’t blame him.  The performances were OK.  Any Zeppelin fan starved for Page/Plant live material after The Song Remains the Same can certainly enjoy this.
            Walking was actually all new studio material.  I thought it would be shitty, but then again, would that pair really deign to release crap in 1998 with their names on it?  No, I didn’t think so.  Rank it up there above the Last Three and below the prior Zeppelin. 

Jimmy Page & the Black Crowes, Live at the Greek (2000).  Jimmy played a one-off concert with the Black Crowes at the Greek Theater In L.A.  In addition to Zeppelin songs – including “Hey Hey What Can I Do” and “Nobody’s Fault But Mine” - they also played “Oh Well” (Peter Green’s Fleetwood Mac), “Shapes of Things” (Yardbirds/Jeff Beck), and a few other blues songs.  The Crowes do a fantastic job of replacing Plant, Bonham and Jones.  Consider this practically a de facto LZ live concert.  (Maybe the Crowes should do a show with Bobby Weir, Phil Lesh, Bill Kreutzman and Mickey Hart....)

Celebration Day (2007).  This is the most recent LZ live show:  Page, Plant, Jones and Jason Bonham at the 02 Arena in London, a one-off show which whetted our appetites, only to have Plant piss on our parade shortly thereafter and nix the idea of any tour.  This was meant as a tribute to Ahmet Ertegun, the founder of Atlantic Records, who died in 2006.  Record label executives are so frequently the bad guys in most band’s stories, that it’s remarkable – the exception that proves the rule – that this man was so well-liked among musicians.  I don’t think there are enough well-esteemed, deceased record label bosses to produce sufficient tribute concerts to constitute a proper tour.   Anyhow.
            It’s a CD/DVD combo.   Let me piss off Zeppelin fans further by saying this:  enough already, give Jason Bonham his due.  Yes, his father was a great drummer, up there with Moon (or maybe we should say, “down there with him now”).  But the “Kid” has been playing on his own for some time, and even contributed original drumming to Black Country Communion.  Jason does the job.
            The setlist was unremarkable, but I’d have pulled the two Presence songs, “For Your Life” and “Nobody’s Fault But Mine” and brought in “Over the Hlls and Far Away” and some other song.

Page vs. Plant.  I don’t know if Jimmy Page has his tombstone or mausoleum picked out yet, but if he did, I wouldn’t be surprised if it simply had his DOB, the date he died to be chiseled in later, and “ZOSO” as his name.  If we only remembered him as the lead guitarist of Led Zeppelin, he would be 100% fine with that.

            Plant, on the other hand, would probably NOT care to have the circular “plant” symbol from LZ IV on his tombstone.  His would probably state his full name with no mention of LZ.  He remains consistently aggressive in asserting his musical identity independent of Led Zeppelin.  No tour, no new LZ material, nothing – back to his solo career, much to Page’s immense frustration.   Although Page obviously hasn’t asked for my advice, I’d give it to him anyway:  screw Plant, assemble an all-star supergroup, and play whatever the hell you want.  Because I can’t see Page as simply touring with Jones, Jason, and another singer – no matter how talented – and calling it “Led Zeppelin.”  But it would serve Plant right if he did.  Let some other singer embarrass Plant and put his own stamp on Zep’s classics.  

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