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MR. JIMMY FILM DUE OUT ON DVD SOON – WITH ADDED EXTRA AUDIO COMMENTARY FEATURE/ REMASTERS BOX SET IT WAS 35 YEARS AGO/MORE REMASTERS MEMORIES/PRIORY OF BRION IN A TENT 26 YEARS GONE/WALKING INTO EVERYWHERE IN THE UK 1998/JOHNNIE WALKER LAST SHOW REMEMBERED /WH SMITH 51 YEARS AGO/DL DIARY BLOG UPDATE

29 October 2025 401 views No Comment
Mr. Jimmy film due out on DVD soon – added extra audio commentary feature recorded…
Mr. Jimmy film due out on DVD soon – added extra audio commentary feature recorded…
Following a DVD release in Japan, the acclaimed Mr. Jimmy film is now set for a worldwide DVD release -with an extra audio commentary feature that I’ve been involved in.
Here’s the story:
A few weeks back, the Mr. Jimmy film director Peter Michael Dowd got in touch to ask if I would like to be involved in supplying a commentary as an extra feature for a planned release of the film on DVD.
I was more than happy to do so and last Tuesday October 21 I met with Peter who flew over from Los Angeles to record the commentary.
The location was the excellent Audiohuas Recording Studio just off Portobello Road in London. The tech engineer Jay set up the film on a mixing desk so Peter and I could be recorded to talk over it.
We decided to do it in a podcast manner so as the film ran it’s two hour plus length we both commented on various aspects of the film itself and other related topics. It worked really well and apart from a couple of bloopers we did it all in a first take.
It was hugely enjoyable to watch the film again and be awed by Akio Sakurai’s total dedication to replicating the guitar playing of Jimmy Page and the music of Led Zeppelin.
The actual soundtrack itself is so impressive which alongside the Zep moments. cleverly deploys the likes of Muddy Waters, John Lee Hooker, Link Wray and Elvis to perfectly set the mood. Add to that some very impressive classical pieces from Vivaldi and Shostakovich.
So the audio commentary is complete and Peter is now working on completing the DVD content. Another extra feature will be the Q and A interview I hosted with Peter at the UK showing at Olympic Studios of the film back in October 2023. I am also suppling some sleeve notes for the DVD package.
The actual release date is yet to be set but Peter is hoping to release it this side of Christmas or early in the new year – more details to follow.
It’s been great fun to be involved in the Mr. Jimmy film again – Akio of course continues to wow audiences as part of the Jason Bonham Led Zeppelin Evening and his own Led Zeppelin Revival band and soon we will have his fabulous film available for all to see on DVD.
More on this as it unfolds…and keep an eye on the Mr. Jimmy film website at:
Here’s some pics from last week’s recording with engineer Jay.
Once it was all completed Peter and I celebrated appropriately enough in a nearby Japanese bar drinking Japanese lager – it tasted very good!
Dave Lewis – October 29 2025
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Led Zeppelin Remasters : 35 Years Gone…

Another anniversary the Remasters releases all of 34 years old this week. I absolutely loved that period – it was so incredible to see the resurgence of interest that surrounded them – here’s some 34th anniversary thoughts…

Led Zeppelin Remastered…it was 35 years ago… 

It’s amazing to think that there was a time back in the day, that the only way of hearing Led Zeppelin’s music was via the ten original albums – ie the eight original studio albums, The Song Remains The Same soundtrack and the posthumous collection Coda.

There were no greatest hits albums, no BBC sessions, no 1972 live albums and certainly no i-tunes, Spotify HD downloads and streaming.

True the Led Zeppelin catalogue had been released on CD – though  not from the original masters and transferred via analogue tapes. The results were mixed. I did a feature in Record Collector in early 1990 reviewing the original CD’s (I’ll need to dig that one out) ,blissfully unaware that Jimmy was about to overhaul the entire catalogue for CD.

Thus the arrival in October of 1990 of the five LP CD box set and double Remasters compilations was a very big deal indeed.

I wasn’t the only one I am sure, who had not paid much attention to the studio albums in recent years. My Zep listening time was taken up analysing the many Zep shows that were appearing on CD sets and the fresh outtakes that had surfaced.

The arrival of the Remasters was a revelation. Suddenly we all realised just exactly what it was that had made this band so special.

Lapsed fans got back on the wagon –a whole new generation of younger enthusiasts also jumped aboard. Overnight Led Zep’s stock shot up…and it never looked back.

The Remasters releases were absolute game changers in the way Led Zeppelin were viewed and appreciated.

I have very fond memories of this period  – it was the point where I realised their legacy was intact. It was fantastic to follow all the media buzz that went with it including Jimmy’s appearances on MTV and the promo videos for Travellin Riverside Blues and Over The Hills And Far Away.

Op LZ

In the Our Price record store I managed Bedford we really went to town – with pre release build up and in store displays. This activity resulted in the store racking up £10,000 worth of business on the box sets and double albums. I was later awarded a triple gold disc award by Warners in the UK. Here’s a pic of the shop window in November 1990.

Like I say, I was about to produce a book that emphatically chronicled the band’s music. The book Led Zeppelin – A Celebration published the next summer was very well received…and it set me on a mission to totally commit myself to chronicling the world of Led Zeppelin that has not let up for the past quarter of a century.

This is something I wrote at the time for Record Collector. I remember putting this together – the words came tumbling out such was my enthusiasm for it all – and it remains one of my favourite pieces of writing on the band.

I’ll be bringing out the Remasters box set vinyl and CDs to enjoy over this weekend  reveling in Jimmy’s vision of – as he put it ”The same picture with a different frame”

And what pictures they are….

DL

Here’s my feature that ran in Record Collector in December 1990…

LED ZEPPELIN REMASTERED…

DAVE LEWIS REVIEWS JIMMY PAGE’S DEFINITIVE COMPILATIONS OF ZEPP’S BACK CATALOGUE

Earlier this year, I summed up my feature in Record Collector on Led Zeppelin On CD by offering Atlantic Records the following advice: “In the light of the shortcomings of the Led Zeppelin CDs, it would be good to see Atlantic embark on a re-mastering job to eliminate some of the errors that have occurred. An even better idea would be for Jimmy Page himself to oversee such a project which could easily take the format of a special box set release. Atlantic Records take note!”

At that time, I was unaware of Atlantic’s plans to produce just such a set, so it came as a pleasant surprise to learn that my request was about to become a reality. The project began to take shape when Jimmy Page was approached by the label to remaster the original Zeppelin catalogue for a compilation release. Dissatisfied with the general reproduction of the available CDs, Page jumped at the opportunity to restore his old masters to the standard he envisaged. Studio time was booked at New York’s Stirling Studio in May, where Jimmy spent a week with engineer George Marino digitally transferring the material from, in most cases, the original two-track master tapes.

The project in mind was a multi-track box set release for which Page drew up possible track listings for the other two ex-members to sanction. “I really wanted to improve the release”, Page is quoted as saying on the officially press release; “basically it’s the same picture with a different frame”. John Paul Jones added: “The songs sound as fresh now as when they were first recorded, and the new positions in the running order seem to put them in a totally different light.”

The original concept was to package 54 remastered tracks in a deluxe box package with a 36-page book of photos and essays. Atlantic’s European distributors East West were supremely keen to also issue an edited version aimed at the mainstream market. And so a condensed version with 24 tracks on a triple album and 26 on a double cassette and CD was also prepared — for Europe only.

remasters music week

This release, under the title “Remasters”, formed the major spearhead of WEA/East West’s Christmas market campaign. After all the years of avoiding the greatest hits treatment, the Zepp catalogue received the full commercial push as East West undertook a massive marketing campaign to back to October 15 release of “Remasters”. Window displays were installed, including inflatable blimps which are sure to join earlier models as collectable Zep items. Mysterious teaser adverts appeared in the music press depicting the shadow of the Zepp airship looming over several international locations, recalling the similar obscure ads placed as a trailer for the band’s fourth album. Even a TV advertisement was prepared, set to appear on screens across the country in the run-in to Christmas.

COMMERCIALISE:

But East West did fail in the final quest to fully commercialise this “Remasters” package: they did not receive the blessing of Page, Plant and Jones to issue a U.K. single. The plan was to issue “Stairway To Heaven” on December 2 as a four-track CD single and 12″ picture disc, with “Whole Lotta Love”, “Immigrant Song” and “Good Times Bad Times”. Although the classic Zep anthem would have been a strong contender for the Christmas No. 1 spot, the no-U.K.-singles rule prevailed. This collection of tracks subsequently surfaced in two already well-in-demand U.K. promo items. The first is a four-track 10″ pressing (Atlantic LZ 2), housed in a black sleeve depicting the specially commissioned Mission Control-designed colour illustrations that mirror the images of the band’s famous four symbols. There is also a four-track promo CD single (Atlantic CD LZ 1), packaged in a cardboard oblong box. Both items are definitely prime additions to any Led Zeppelin rarities collection.

The condensed “Remasters” set duly surfaced on schedule, and entered the U.K. album chart at No. 10. As a layman’s introduction to the group, its track listing does include the majority of Zepp classics, though I was surprised to find that “When The Levee Breaks” and “The Ocean” — two tracks which have been heavily sampled by other artists, and have this found their way to the forefront of the Zepp canon over the last decade — had both been omitted. I personally would have viewed these tracks as more historically representative than lesser stepping stones such as “Celebration Day” and “Houses Of The Holy”

While there can be little complaint about the overall musical content of “Remasters”, or the typically offbeat sleeve design concept of the Zepp shadow looming over a mysteriously carved cornfield, the lack of any track details on the sleeve is a disappointment. Despite the fact that Atlantic’s press release for the condensed set promised “extensive sleeve notes” on the vinyl edition, purchasers of “Remasters” are afforded none of the intensive recording data to be found in the box set booklet. There is not even any indication as to which album each track came from. As the set is obviously aimed at the less committed fan, surely this would have been a simple device to draw attention to the entire Zep catalogue.

Unfortunately, omissions such as these present “Remasters” as something of a cold marketing ploy issued to cash in on the peak consumer period. Compared to the deluxe box set package, it certainly pales considerably. At nigh on £20 a throw, “Remasters” should have been presented with far more information, and some additional alternate photos. That’s particularly the case, given the fact that completist collectors will need this set as well as the extended box, as it strangely contains one remastered track not to be found anywhere on the box set — namely the first album opener, “Good Times Bad Times”. The fact that all the different formats of “Remasters” are scheduled to be deleted on March 31 1991 will also add to its desirability to the keen Zep enthusiast.

And now to the box set itself, simply titled “Led Zeppelin”. This is beautifully packaged in a strong 12″ box with a slightly different view of the ‘Zepp over cornfields’ scene. The accompanying 36-page book is also of superb quality and contains some wonderful photos. The three essays by noted American critics Robert Palmer (who coincidentally also wrote notes for the Rod Stewart “Storyteller” set), Kurt Loder and Cameron Crowe are admirable summaries of the band’s career. However, for all his “front row seats to the Zepp experience”, Crowe manages in the space of eight pages to document wrongly the date of the release of “Houses Of The Holy” (March ’73, not May), the date and location of their meeting with Elvis (L.A. in May ’74, not Las Vegas in 1972), the date they flew to Stockholm to begin recording “In Through The Out Door” (November ’78 not January), and the date of Live Aid (July ’85, not ’87).

While it’s great to see a full track rundown of when and where each track was recorded, some errors again creep in. Two of them can be put down to the confusion some researcher had about the different way dates are printed in the U.K. and U.S. — the recording date of the Albert Hall rehearsal take of “I Can’t Quit You Baby” was actually January 9 1970 (9/1/70 in U.K. usage) and not September 1 1970 (9/1/70 in American eyes). Similarly, the recording date of “Bonzo’s Montreux” becomes December 9 1976 instead of September 12. Elsewhere, printing gremlins creep in on the “Gallows Pole” entry which has it being recorded in 1972 and released on “Led Zeppelin 3” in 1970. I would also question the actual release dates^ of some of the albums in the U.S. discography — the soundtrack album, for instance, being a month out. This may seem like nitpicking, but I cannot be alone in finding such errors annoying, particularly as “Led Zeppelin” was designed as a definitive retrospective.

And the music? In compiling 54 tracks, Page was faced with the difficult task of knowing what to leave out. Obviously everyone has different favourites and a set list like this is always going to be disappointing. For me, the biggest letdown is the lack of tracks from “Physical Graffiti”, by their own admission Led Zeppelin’s premier achievement on record.

But what is included is a truly wondrous cross section of the musical diversity that coloured the Zeppelin catalogue during their 12-year reign. In remastering the tracks, Page has added a punch and clarity that the original CDs sorely lacked — without tampering with the original tapes, so there is no remixing here aside from the new Bonzo creation, which I’ll come to in a moment. The cleaning-up of the analog tapes also greatly helps the light and shade of tracks like “The Battle Of Evermore” and “Ten Years Gone”, while Page has restored the correct studio banter to the ending of “In My Time Of Dying”.

SURPRISES:

Some of the anomalies and surprises to be found in this mammoth collection include the fact that the timings of many tracks here are vastly different to the claims on the original albums. For instance, “Kashmir” (previously listed as 9’41”) now appears as a correct 8’31”, though the tracks are absolutely identical. The only piece amongst the 54 which I have noticed being different to the original is “Nobody’s Fault But Mine”. The “Remasters” take is 12 seconds longer than the “Presence” original due to the inclusion of an extra guitar riff chorus on the intro. Elsewhere, the three-second white noise count-in on “Immigrant Song” is deleted here, as is the eight-second intro to “Tangerine”. But the warming up of guitars on “Black Dog” is present, and sounds much more pronounced than before.

It’s interesting to hear familiar classics placed in a different light — “Heartbreaker” now segues instantly into “Communication Breakdown”, for example, rather than “Livin’ Lovin’ Maid”, while “The Song Remains The Same” drifts into “Ten Years Gone”. The sequencing of the tracks does, as John Paul Jones noted, put them in a new context.

Finally, some new delights. In merging John Bonham’s “Moby Dick” with his later “Bonzo’s Montreux”, Page has produced an affectionate tribute to the late drummer, achieved with Synclavier programming at Atlantic’s studios in New York earlier this year. Some might question whether he should have tampered with the originals, but the finished track mixes elements of Bonham’s developing technique over seven years. It’s also a joy to hear the “Zepp 3” leftover “Hey Hey What Can I Do” — a warm semi-acoustic groove previously only available on the B-side of the U.S./European “Immigrant Song” single, and on the long-deleted “New-Age Of Atlantic” sampler LP.

rem 1

Also included are two much-bootlegged BBC recordings, which sound superb. “Travelling Riverside Blues”, a Page/Plant arrangement of the old Robert Johnson blues classic, is a prime mid-’69 remnant with a spiralling Page slide guitar riff and some dominant Bonzo bass drum patterns — all now heard to their full effect for the first time. “White Summer/Black Mountain Side” comes from the live Playhouse Theatre show recorded on June 27th 1969, and brings back many nostalgic Zep memories.

Of course, there will be a school of thought that Page should have used this box set project to issue more unreleased gems — many of which have turned up on top quality bootleg CDs over the past year. There was also scope here for the much vaunted chronological live album idea which Page often hinted at in the latter Zepp era. Though there may be few fully-fledged studio tracks with finished vocals in the vaults, recent bootlegs have proved that there are some tantalising alternate takes which would have added spice to the set. “Led Zeppelin” is superb in its own right, but many enthusiasts will view it as a missed opportunity to hear more enlightening live and studio cuts. Certainly one CD of rare material would have made the whole thing much more worthwhile.

My personal choice of a bonus rare CD of material which is known to exist would have lined up like this: “Communication Breakdown” (live Royal Albert Hall, 1970); “Jenning’s Farm Blues” (electric studio rehearsal of “Bron Y Aur Stomp”, 1969); “Blues Medley” from the “Hats Off To Harper” session (1970); “No Quarter” (instrumental studio out-take, 1972); “Over The Hills And Far Away” (live in Dallas, 1975 U.S. tour); “Tangerine” (live, Earls Court 1975); “Trampled Underfoot” (live, Earls Court 1975); “The Song Remains The Same/Sick Again” (live, New York 1977); “Ten Years Gone” (live, New York 1977); “Train Kept A-Rollin’ ” (live, Zurich 1980); “All My Love” (alternate extended version, 1978). But maybe Jimmy is saving that lot for the “Re-Remasters”!

Overall, despite the misgivings about the track listing, some irritating errors in the booklet and the difficulty of pleasing collectors old and new, the “Led Zeppelin” box set is a worthy investment, and compares well with similar packages by other artists. Certainly, in restoring the Zeppelin catalogue to CD with the sound quality it deserves, Page has done a superb job. With the incredible resurgence of interest in the band in recent times — they must surely be the most popular defunct band outside of the Beatles — the set is sure to be in huge demand.

This collection will stand as a lasting testament to the sheer diversity of Zeppelin’s recorded work. It should also prompt re-examination of epic works such as “Achilles’ Last Stand” and “In The Light”. The latter track’s final few minutes, capturing Jimmy’s overdubbed guitar parts rippling across Robert’s chorus, the Jones drone and Bonzo’s timely hammering, is perhaps the most impressive section of the entire 54-track set. And it sounds glorious.

Will they reform? Will there be a live chronological video to supplement this release sometime next year? The remastered “Led Zeppelin” set should keep all Zepp fans riveted to their turntables as we await the next chapter in a story that is far from over.

Dave Lewis – October 1990

Dave Lewis is the author of a forthcoming book on Led Zeppelin titled “Led Zeppelin — A Celebration” (to be published by Omnibus Press, spring 1991).

First published in Record Collector December 1990


More Remasters Memories:

It was 35 years ago…

The scene in the Our Price record shop in Bedford that I managed  35 years ago – for on October 15, 1990 the first ever Led Zeppelin compilation set was released – the double album Remasters,.to be followed two weeks later by the 4LP/CD box set. It opened up Zep to a whole new market..and boy did we sell some Zep product as Colin Stonebridge, Justin Cromie and Jason Foster will remember…great music retail days they were…

It was 35 years ago 2:

The scene in the Our Price record shop window in Bedford on this day 34 years ago this month – for on October 15, 1990 the first ever Led Zeppelin compilation set was released – the double album Remasters..to be followed two weeks later by the 4LP/CD box set.

As I had a vested interest (I was writing the Led Zeppelin A Celebration book a the time) I made sure we racked up the sales – much of the window came from my collection – including that rather splendid Japanese poster of Jimmy Page on the right…all this contributed to me being awarded a triple gold disc by Warners for my efforts to ensure Led Zeppelin were right back at the forefront of record, CD and tape buyers…where they have remained ever since

It was 35 years ago 3:

Remasters Led Zeppelin Exclusive Our Price Bedford Memorabilia Pack:

To create something of an exclusive for buyers of the Led Zeppelin box set  at the Our Price  record shop I managed in Bedford we created a special Led Zeppelin memorabilia pack to give out to buyers of the set -100 only all individually numbered.

Under the title ‘Our Price Remembers Led Zeppelin’ the pack contained a number of facsimile reproduction Led Zep ads and cutting. These were drawn from my collection and I took them to the local photo copy shop Jaycopy (who had produced the early TBL magazines). It took hours of cuttings out to produce the 100 sets. I also wrote a three page 54 FACTS BEHIND THE TRACKS guide drawn from material in my then in progress Led Zeppelin A Celebration book the book – this was photocopied off my word processor. The outer envelope was designed by the then assistant manager at the shop Colin Stonebridge. This all went down very well with local buyers as we sold over 100 sets in the first week at £54 a throw.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The triple gold disc I was awarded by Warner Music in the UK for my contribution to the sales of the Remasters releases –notably the £54 priced 4CD/LP box set –in the Our Price Store I managed in Bedford we generated over £10,000 sales during the opening weeks of release… not bad for a store of just 980 square feet. Great retail days they were…

Dave Lewis – October 2025

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Priory Of Brion in a tent – It was 26 years Ago:

26 years ago on the afternoon of Sunday October 31st 1999, I found myself travelling in a taxi across the Leicestershire countryside seemingly lost. This was not a good situation as the prospect of seeing Robert Plant, who was performing in a tent in the vicinity in the next half hour was fast disappearing.

ashbyfolk

Earlier I had met the enigmatic and legendary Leicester based musician Kevin Hewick who was leading me with all good intentions on this wild goose chase(Hi Kevin!). He had heard that Robert and The Priory Of Brion were booked for an appearance at the Ashby Del La Zouch Folk Festival in a tent in Moira near Leicester. It sounded the perfect way to spend a Halloween afternoon.

This was an era when if Robert Plant was playing a gig, I would move heaven and earth to be there.

However our taxi driver host was finding said location very hard to locate. Where were sat navs when we needed them, or for that matter mobile phones?!

Anyway, thankfully it all came good – we found the venue and the tent with about fifteen minutes to spare…and on a pleasant Sunday afternoon Robert duly delivered one of the most captivating gigs I’ve ever seen. Witty, relaxed, reflective and singing with passion and verve the songs that as he put it, he’d had stored in his back pocket. It was an absolute joyous occasion. – pic below by Krys Jantzen.

Robert Plant in a tent on a Sunday afternoon….whatever next? How about Robert Plant on a Saturday night in a pub lounge bar because bizarrely that’s what was in store two weeks later when we saw him play at the Red Lion in Birmingham.

The Ashby Del la Zouch and Red Lion shows remain right up there in my all time best gig going experiences. I’d also like to mention that back then the wonderful much missed Hayley Martin was looking after the Our Price shop in Bedford that day enabling me to go on this mad escapade -one of many days that she did that for me . These memories would not have been possible without her loyalty and kindness.

Dave Lewis –  October 2025


TBL Archive:

THE WALKING INTO EVERYWHERE TOUR WATCH DIARY 

A look back to the Page & Plant activity from August to October 1998…

August was going to be a busy month. Page and Plant had already been confirmed as headliners for the Friday, August 28, Reading bill with additional European festival dates lined up alongside a date at Dublin’s The Point two days before Reading.

WEDNESDAY AUGUST 26 1998

Dublin

It’s pretty hectic down the front but stimulating to say the least as they leap into the set with abandon. No major changes early on, the initial highlights being a very fluent ‘No Quarter and the standout moment of the set ‘Shining In The Light’. This for me has entered the category that might loosely be dubbed “The new Zeppelin canon”. It’s the sort of thing that would have lit up the 1981 Zeppelin album had it been written then. And they perform it tonight with such spark, Plant with mike off and Jimmy skipping around towards the speeded-up finale.

‘Heart In Your Hand’ also shines tonight despite it’s low key nature. It’s sung intensely by Plant as if he is living every aching word. ‘Babe’ is its usual dynamic self and ‘How Many More Times’ swaggers along with an extended ‘In The Light’ middle section. ‘Most High’ is just that and there’s a no nonsense finale leaden with the classics that are ‘Whole Lotta Love’, ‘Black Dog’ and ‘Rock And Roll’.

“Maybe we’ll see you at one of those weddings,” is one of Plant’s final comments to the crowd – a reference to the informal live appearance they had made three weeks earlier in Co. Kerry at lighting designer Tom Kenny’s wedding.

Witnessing this show it’s apparent that there is now a real consistency of performance. Some 46 gigs along the way, this Page Plant tour has reached a real peak. In the current edition of Mojo, Matt Snow remarked that Page and Plant might well be the most exiting live rock band on the planet right now.

Tonight in Dublin that statement can be uttered with absolute conviction.

On the way out I see a guy who had been proclaiming The Edge as his hero earlier. “You were right!”’ he shouts over, “Jimmy Page is the one!”

FRIDAY AUGUST 28 1998

Reading Festival

Luckily the weather is favourable, not over sunny but no sign of rain. So anticipation is high as we mingle with the crowd underneath the giant stage. An American fan nearby is telling how effective they were when he caught up with the show in Philadelphia in the summer. “When did you last see them?” he asks… “Er, two days ago actually,” is my unintended conceited reply. Underneath the stars, the familiar Egyptian music booms out, they stride on and with no messing we are into ‘Wanton Song’. Adorned in familiar dark attire they look fit and eager to fulfil their bill topping status.

“We’re in the presence of legends!” is one excited teenagers repeated cry behind me. By the time they’ve romped into ‘Heartbreaker’ one thing clearly strikes me. This is a clear case of men against boys. I mean, really. For all the good intentions of the others on the bill, the experience and sheer power that these old veterans convey is startling. It makes for a great couple of hours. Sadly ‘Shining In The Light’ is dropped in favour of ‘Burning Up’ though it’s good to hear that again. The video screens to the left and right of the stage convey some great images, causing a shiver down the spine and clear memories of Knebworth when the violin bow appears to the left of me, high and mighty on the big screen. A ‘Babe I’m Gonna Leave You’ that touches the nerve ends and a sure fire ‘How Many More Times’ with a regal sounding ‘What Is’ insert, ‘Whole Lotta Love’ and encores of ‘Black Dog’ and ‘Rock And Roll’ are duly delivered in stadium filling soundscape mode. The reception across the darkness confirms that this has been a very shrewd decision. Reading rocked and it was great to be there to witness it.

And to top it all Wolves have taken the points at Watford as Plant remarks “It’s 2-0 down at Vicarage Road.”

PRE-UK TOUR AUTUMN SUMMARY

There’s absolutely no let up as we move into the autumn. The rumour machine has been in overdrive with news of secret warm-up dates slated for Brighton, Wolverhampton Civic Hall, Oxford… you name it. In amongst all the rumours there are plans for P&P to do some sort of show to tie in with a new sponsorship deal with Molson beer in Canada.

FRIDAY OCTOBER 30 1998

“Tomorrow it’s Barnsley at home”

Some days are very special in the Zepp related scheme of things, and this is definitely one of them. Aside from the events that will unfold in London tonight – at home in the morning I take a call from John Paul Jones, interviewing him for Record Collector.

The gig itself is at the University Of London Union. The audience is made up of about 300 Canadians who have scooped a prize to see Page and Plant in London, courtesy of Molson Beer. The remaining 200 are made up of various record company staff and invited guests. Very kindly, I have been invited and have been given passes for myself, Janet and a few others and in the afternoon, Janet and I travel to the Trinifold management offices in Camden to pick up.

The hall is situated deep inside the University building, very small, a main stage and an open plan hall that would accommodate only the first front block of Wembley Arena.

Down the front there are a few Canadians milling around. Few of them seem to be hard core fans and they are pretty laid back about it, though the presence of the English contingent soon ups the enthusiasm. In a year when I’ve enjoyed some very close associations in front of Page and Plant, this is an incredibly exciting way to round it all off. The place reminds me of the set-up at Leicester University when Plant played a warm up there back in January ’88. I consider that night one of the best evenings of live music I’ve ever witnessed. Tonight could be similar.

There’s a short pre-announcement from one of the University staff… and then, with no fanfare or Egyptian music, on they walk. “Welcome to the party,” says Robert as he adjusts the mike. Plant is in a light blue and white striped long sleeved shirt worn outside, Page in black, and it’s straight into ‘Wanton Song’. It was like seeing them at the local youth club. They might have performed slicker shows along the way but for sheer in-your-face out-an-out live experience this really was special. The fact that they get lost a little half way through ‘Heartbreaker’ matters little – this is spontaneous rock’n’roll, warts and all.

Watching Jimmy ring every last note out of the ‘No Quarter’ solo inspires simultaneous “Best since Earls Court” exclamations from Phil T and myself. ‘When The World Was Young’ is a stand out. From the first moment I heard it on the album this one begged for live performance and like all their great live deliveries they adapt it by adding various delightful twists and turns. Plant’s repeated “Wohoa” refrains before the chorus (not unlike the vocal “aha-ah” effect on ‘Achilles’) and Jimmy’s extended solo puts this track right up there with the best musical moments of the whole Page Plant reformation. The way the solo swells up and then levitates, spiralling upwards and out in a manner that was only hinted at on the album is simply awe inspiring.

Other notable moments: ‘Going To California’ with it’s ‘32-20 Blues’ insert, an intense ‘Heart In Your Hand’, ‘Babe I’m Gonna Leave You’ which has Plant nearly missing a cue and a strange incident when part of the lighting rig drops next to Charlie, much to Plant’s amusement. There’s also a stomping ‘How Many More Times’ with ‘Boom Boom’ insert. When they march off stage you get the feeling that there may be some set list surprises on the way.

And surprises there certainly were. When Phil Andrews takes to the keyboard when they come back on I was expecting ‘Thank You…’. Wrong. Come in ‘Misty Mountain Hop’, played for the first time since the opening night in the US back in May. A quick tune up from Jimmy and ‘Trampled Underfoot’, its first complete airing by Page and Plant since Hammersmith in 1988. And there’s new life in the old dog as Plant immediately takes up the challenge – throwing in a classic clenched fist shape each time the riff rolls around. A glorious noise to behold.

And if that wasn’t enough here comes an epic speech: “This is a new song, well not new, it’s just that we’ve never done it before and it’s incredibly old and there are bits of it we’re not liking that much yet… so we’ll see what happens!’’

Very soon I can trace out that revolving riff that lit up the opening track on side four of Physical Graffiti all those years ago. Robert’s opening line confirms it – “I received the message from my brother ’cross the water he sat laughing as he wrote the end’s in sight.”

A piece of Zeppelin history unfolds as Page and Plant perform the first ever a live version of ‘Night Flight’. Always one of my all time faves, I’ve waited nigh on 24 years to hear them play it on stage. Bedlam ensures. ‘Rock And Roll’ follows in a blur and they’re off. Not before Robert has reminded us that tomorrow is match day. “Thank you very much… it’s Barnsley at home tomorrow.”

Dave Lewis  October 1998

To Be continued…


Johnnie Walker – Both Sides Now

I’ve been reading the heartfelt and often heartbreaking book Johnnie Walker – Both Sides Now written by his wife Tiggy. It’s heartbreaking, heartfelt and ultimately inspiring account of Tiggy’s life with the great DJ and the last days of his life. It prompted me to look back on Johnnie’s final broadcast this week last year…

Johnnie Walker’s final Sounds of The 70s show…One year gone – Sunday October 26 2024

Just listened to to Johnnie Walker’s final Sounds of The 70s show and his final appearance on the radio.
At 79 he is stepping down due to ill health.…
The final show – so dignified, such humility, such wonderful stories and input from his beloved lady Tiggy – and of course impeccable music taste.
This was a final show of his favourites – many of them mine too and I’m sure yours…
Incredibly moving to hear his final words…
What an inspiration he has been over 58 years on the radio
I have my own personal memories of Johnnie. I was there when he introduced Led Zeppelin on stage at Earls Court on May 18 1975, I have a tape of him running down the album chart on his lunchtime Radio One show when Zep’s Presence entered the chart at number one in 1976. I was lucky enough to be interviewed by him when the Zep Concert File book came out in 1997.
Johnnie Walker – a treasured voice of our musical generation.
Thank you for all the great music….we will miss you…
Here’s the line- up of the final programme:
What Is Life – George Harrison
We Are Family – Sister Sledge
Giving it All Away – Roger Daltrey
Don’t Go Breaking My Heart – Elton John & Kiki Dee
Solsbury Hill – Peter Gabriel
Holly Holy – Neil Diamond
For a Dancer – Jackson Browne
Freebird – Lynyrd Skynyrd (Johnnie’s Juke Box entry)
If You’re Ready – (Come Go With Me) Staples Singers
Rod Stewart spoken tribute to Johnnie…
Sailing – Rod Stewart
Song For The Asking – Simon & Garfunkel
Shine Silently – Nils Lofgren
David Bowie interview clip
David Bowie – Drive in Saturday
David Bowie interview clip
Starman – David Bowie
Into The Valley – The Skids
Lou Reed interview clip
Walk On The Wild Side – Lou Reed
Father And Son – Cat Stevens
He’s Mistra Know it All – Stevie Wonder
It’s Only Rock’n’ Roll (But I Like it) – The Rolling Stones
I Can See Clearly Now – Johnny Nash
Amazing Grace Judy Collins
Link to listen here:

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It was 51 years ago today – October 28 1974…

It was 51 years ago today…

51 years ago today on the morning of Monday October 28 1974, aged 18 I parked my bike nearby and walked in to the WH Smith shop at 86- 88 High Street Bedford to begin work as a sales assistant on the record and tape department.
Thus began a 35 year career in music retail
Two years at the WH Smith shop in the High Street followed by nine at the Harpur Centre
Eighteen years as the manager of the Our Price Music shop in Bedford which changed its name to V Shop in 2000
Seven years at the Virgin Megastore in Milton Keynes which changed its name to Zavvi in 2008
I had left school at 15 with no qualifications and began working as a storeman at British Home Stores. I really enjoyed the job and it paid for my main hobby which was buying records.
However, I knew I wanted to work in music in same shape or form. My great friend Phil Harris worked at Carlows Records in town and as a frequent visitor, I thought that was a job I could do. A vacancy came up at WH Smith and I was on my way…
On that first day 50 years ago the records I recall selling are How Long by Ace, Everything I Own by Ken Booth which was number one singles at the time, plus Slade’s Far Far Away and David Essex Gonna Make You a Star. On album it was Mike Oldfield’s Tubular Bells , Rod Stewarts Smiler and Paul McCartney & Wings Band On The Run.
The department did well on the pop side as Smiths had begun a policy of discounting all the chart albums by 50p and singles were priced 45p
We also sold a fair bit of easy listening and classical – to be knowledgeable about the latter I had to navigate around the Gramophone Classical Catalogue in order to advice customers the best recordings of a certain symphony.
It wasn’t all rock’ n’ roll!
Two lovely ladies Dorothy Morris and Judy Abbot guided me in those early days – they were very bemused about my Led Zeppelin passion but were suitably impressed by my pop and rock knowledge. I do recall Judy saying to me that eventually my tastes would move from pop to the more grown up classical music. That never happened, though I can say selling a wide variety of music enhanced my appreciation of many genres of music – Miles Davis and Bert Bacharach being two prime examples.
This music retail career would lead me to work with so many great people, and meet my future wife the good lady Janet when she started working at Smiths in 1982 – we were married two years later.
There are so many fantastic people that I met and worked with throughout those 35 years including Andy Sturdy, Phil Hills, Rob Titley, Malcolm Farmer, Alan Webster, Jill Bailey, Andy Swann, Mike Clark, Wayne Breed, Barry Farnsworth, Pat O’ Reilly, Debbie O’ Reilly, Daryl Easlea, Mike Phipps, Chris Eden, Ricky Brody, Ian Webster, the late Leigh Eaton, Lisa Stanton, Vanessa, Vass, Stuart Walton, David Brett, Rob Jones, Colin Stonebridge, Justin Cromie, Kevin McCabe, Jason Foster, the late Hayley Martin, Lauren Wright, Rachel McGivern, Greg Chappell, Fleur Oleary, Dan Hailes, Dave Smith, Andy Carter, Ken Drewery, to name but a few.
I was also witness to many a sales phenomenon from the Bay City Rollers, Sex Pistols (not that Smiths would stock the album!), Band Aid, Frankie Goes To Hollywood, Elton’s Diana single, Stone Roses, |Oasis, Take That, Eminem etc -not to mention many a format come and go -cassettes, 8 track cartridges, mini disc, VHS, DVD etc…
After being made redundant in 2009, I was very fortunate to keep my word of music going. I had long since published my Led Zep magazine Tight But Loose (TBL) and written books on Zep so I decided to go self employed and work from home as a freelance journalist and author.
In the last 15 years I’ve self-published various Led Zep books and contributed to the likes of Mojo, Classic Rock and Record Collector. I did end the TBL mag in 2021 but I am still very busy on various projects not least my own memoirs – 40,000 words logged and I am only in 1975!.
I still constantly dream about being back in the shops and there’s no doubt my time in music retail left a deep impression. I of course am still a regular visitor to many a record shop and record fair and love buying records and CDs as much as I did selling them.
Music retail was very good to me – as I always say, it wasn’t just a job it was a way of life.
And it all started 51 years ago so – today so I took an early morning cycle up to the old WH Smith building at 86 – 88 High Street and took a couple of nostalgic photos. It’s now the site of the Bedford Learning Centre.
So here’s some then and now photos – there’s a couple of photos here of how it was back when I first started in the mid 70s. These were taken by Chris Frost and published in the Bedford Past and Present book by Richard Wildman. This shows the WH Smith frontage on the end of the run of shops and the side entrance which was in Lime Street. Then there’s a couple taken this morning at the same locations – all very nostalgic…
Dave Lewis October 2025.
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DL Diary Blog Update:

Thursday October 23:

A day of Who albums on the player here to mark 50 years to the day that I first saw them live on stage at the Empire Pool Wembley – first up the iconic Live at Leeds…
Thursday October 23:
Next up on a day of Who albums on the player to mark 50 years to the day I first saw them – the brilliant Who By Numbers…
Thursday October 23:
One more from The Who on the player here today – marking 50 years to the day when I first saw them live on stage – the 1978 Who Are You album – I am very much looking forward to the box set reissue which is released on Friday October 31….
Thursday October 23:
The latest issue of the always excellent Free Appreciation Society magazine (amazingly issue 180!) – edited by David Clayton arrived last week.
This issue focuses on the early post Free era and the release of The Free Story double album. It has an incredibly detailed round up of all the limited and overseas pressings of the album.
I bought the original UK Free Story back in 1974 – numbered edition number 34173 (the initial pressing was said to be in a run of 50,000.)
Having just read the mag, It was very timely that last Saturday on the Cambridge market record stall I came across the Canadian pressing of The Free Story double album in an alternate sleeve design.
£12? I’ll take it!
Here’s the details of how to obtain the highly recommended Free Appreciation Society magazine:
Thursday October 23:
It was 55 years ago this week…
The UK release of Led Zeppelin III this week in October 1970.
This was the first Led Zeppelin album I heard as it was released -such great memories. All of 55 years ago…
Over the years I’ve collected a fair few pressings – of course you can never have too many copies of this gem…
Friday October 24:
I was in the Ladbroke Grove/Portobello Road area of London earlier in the week. I took the opportunity to pop in to the always excellent Rough Trade West record shop.
This was the scene of our yearly visits to the shop on Record Store Day from 2011 to 2014 before Dec moved to Ireland.
Myself and fellow lifelong record collecting comrades Dec, Phil and the much missed late Tom Locke would convene at an early hour to get in line for the RSD goodies.
Here’s a pic taken earlier this week and some nostalgic pics from the 2011 Record Store Day at Rough Trade West – such great days with such great friends and one of them taken far too soon back in 2023…
Friday October 24:
Latest DL LP record acquisition:
I was in the Ladbroke Grove/Portobello Road area of London earlier in the week. I took the opportunity to pop in to the always excellent Rough Trade West record shop.
I’ve not been there since the last occasion we queued up for Record Store Day in 2014. It’s still a great shop with plenty of vinyl records to wade through and a superb selection of books. They also had some fab sale items and I picked up a very quirky one that was right up my street.
I’ve been a fan of the writer Ian Rankin’s Inspector Rebus books for years and I knew of Ian’s passion for music, records, and record shops.
However, I was unaware he had compiled a compilation on the Rough Trade label titled Behind The Counter with Ian Rankin.
Released in 2024 this is a fabulous package -2 LPs on green vinyl plus informative inserts detailed Ian’s passion for record shops and the cover of a young Ian in his bedroom surrounded by the free posters that came in the centre of Sounds music paper – this inspired many a memory for me as my own bedroom was adorned with such items back in the day.
One of the inserts is personally signed by Ian in a limited run. As for the music – an eclectic mix of Ian’s faves including John Barry (the great Theme from The Persuaders) , Brian Eno, The Cure, Joy Division, Roy Budd (the brilliant Get Carter main theme),Isaac Hayes, Simple Minds, Python Lee Jackson featuring Rod Stewart and more.
What a line up and in the sale reduced from £39.99 to £14.99. I’ll take it!
One of best finds of the year and what record collecting is all about – the thrill of finding that unsuspecting gem in the racks – and Behind The Counter with Ian Rankin certainly fits that bill…
Saturday October 25:
Great afternoon with Phil Harris in Milton Keynes – he spotted this Led Zep I Canadian pressing in the Off The Record shop which I was more than happy to shell out £20 for -top result !!
Wednesday October 29:

It’s a Happy Birthday to our great friend Brian Knapp.
Long time Zep fan and supporter of all my TBL mags and books and the biggest collector of Led Zeppelin memorabilia on the planet…Brian – Happy Birthday from Janet and I – have a great day !

Update here…

It’s a welcomed half term break for the good lady Janet this week before a busy November kicks in. It was great fun last week to meet with Mr. Jimmy director Peter Michael Dowd to record the DVD commentary for the Mr. Jimmy film – I’ve also been busy on collating the sleeve notes for the DVD package. More on all this as it unfolds.

Current DL Playlist:

Led Zeppelin – Led Zeppelin III – LP

Robert Plant – Saving Grace with Suzi Dian – LP

Badfinger – Magic Christian Music – LP

David Crosby – If I Could Only Remember My Name

Nick Drake – Five Leaves Left

Joni Mitchell – Blue

Thanks for listening 

Until next time…

Dave  Lewis – October 29 2025

TBL website updates written and compiled by Dave Lewis

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