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JIMMY PAGE COMMENTS ON BECOMING LED ZEPPELIN FILM/ DVD AND BLU-RAY SPRING RELEASE /COPENHAGEN 1979 STUNNING CINE FILM FOOTAGE SURFACES!/ LZ NEWS/PHYSICAL GRAFFITI IT WAS 50 YEARS AGO/ US TOUR 1975 SNAPSHOT/NEW YARDBIRDS BOOK/DL DIARY BLOG UPDATE

20 February 2025 1,214 views 2 Comments
Official Press Release:
BECOMING LED ZEPPELIN
JIMMY PAGE COMMENTS AFTER INCREDIBLE RESPONSE FROM FANS FOLLOWING FILM RELEASE
“humbling and inspiring”
17.02.2025 – Jimmy Page has commented on Becoming Led Zeppelin, the first officially sanctioned film on the iconic group.
Sharing his thoughts with the public on the film for this first time since its release in an Instagram post on his personal account, Jimmy said:
“In light of your incredible responses and the demand for the Becoming Led Zeppelin film from those of you that have either viewed it at the IMAX or during its general cinema release, I must say that feedback from fans is just humbling and inspiring.
Thanks to everyone for your enthusiasm — and here’s the trailer for those of you who haven’t seen it yet.”
Jimmy Page 1969 photo ©2025ParadisePicturesLtd
See more at:

Becoming Led Zeppelin – DVD and Blu-ray release due in the spring

It looks likely that Becoming Led Zeppelin will be available on DVD and Blu-ray later April – early May.

More on this via LZ News:

https://ledzepnews.com/2025/02/19/becoming-led-zeppelin-will-get-a-physical-release-in-april/

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After becoming Led Zeppelin – here’s another Led Zep visual treat…newly surfaced footage from 1979…

Led Zeppelin – Live in Copenhagen, Denmark (July 24th, 1979) – Super 8 film (NEW FOOTAGE)

The second of two warm up performances for the forthcoming Knebworth gigs at the Falkoner Theatre in Copenhagen

This a truly awesome find – here’s the info from Eric at LedZep Film

I am so excited to release 13 minutes of Super 8 film from one of Led Zeppelin’s best post-1973 shows and their last ever show in Denmark! It was a great day when my friend Mark Donahue from The Heart of Markness Podcast found a comment by Lennart Ström saying he filmed this show. The rest is history!

Special thanks to Mark and Lennart for making this happen, as well as Quazza from Reel Revival Film for the excellent scan and Nuff from ‪@ThePFRG for the stunning color correction.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qcJcIg2mUJo

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LZ News:
Here’s the latest round up from LZ News:

The latest ‘Becoming Led Zeppelin’ update

“Becoming Led Zeppelin” has been performing well at the box office, grossing more than $6 million worldwide.

The film had the largest ever opening weekend for an IMAX-exclusive music release, according to a press release issued by Sony Pictures on February 10.

“Becoming Led Zeppelin” also earned more on Monday than Sunday, the only film currently showing in the US to do so.

‘Becoming Led Zeppelin’ box office takings, using data provided by Box Office Mojo

In last week’s email, we mentioned how surprising it was that Jimmy Page broke Led Zeppelin’s silence about the release of “Becoming Led Zeppelin” by agreeing to a short interview with a freelance film writer that was published on February 7 by free UK newspaper The Metro.

On February 10, The Metro quietly updated the online version of that interview to add the information that the interview actually happened following the film’s Venice premiere in 2021 and it wasn’t a new interview with Page after all. Our assumption is that one of Page’s representatives contacted the newspaper asking it to clarify the story.

The filmmakers behind “Becoming Led Zeppelin” travelled to the US this week to continue the film’s press tour as the film expanded to more cinemas this week. They’ve given interviews to Tight But LooseRolling Stone, the BBCPeopleVultureUSA TodayNovaWCBS-FM95.9 The RatWORKSHE 95 and Cinema Daily,

We’ve updated our review round-up here to include the latest professional critics’ reviews of the film. This week, The New York Times published a review of “Becoming Led Zeppelin” in which the newspaper’s chief film critic falsely reported that the film contains footage of Led Zeppelin’s first performance.

Journalist and author of the 2008 Led Zeppelin biography “When Giants Walked the Earth” Mick Wall had a more sceptical take on the film, calling it “candyfloss” in an interesting podcast episode that included some insider information about his dealings with Led Zeppelin.

Brian Knapp, the well-known Led Zeppelin collector, will do a Q&A following a screening of “Becoming Led Zeppelin” on March 1 in Winchester, Virginia. According to the cinema website, Knapp worked as an “archival consultant” on the film.

In last week’s email, we asked how many of you had seen the film and how you rated it. Here are the results:

73% of the 507 LedZepNews readers who voted in last week’s poll had seen the film that week.

And most people who watched the film really enjoyed it.


The mystery of where Led Zeppelin first rehearsed together has been solved after 56 years

Since at least the 1990s, it has been widely believed that the basement of 39 Gerrard Street was the most likely location for the first Led Zeppelin rehearsal in August 1968.

In the past year, new research has begun to suggest that the rehearsal actually happened in a different building on the same street. LedZepNews has spent months looking into the topic with the help of author Mike Tremaglio who first suggested 19 Gerrard Street as an alternative location.

“Becoming Led Zeppelin” clearly states that 19 Gerrard Street was indeed the correct site for the first rehearsal. LedZepNews spoke to the film’s director Bernard MacMahon who confirmed that the location’s inclusion was based on “paperwork” accessed during the filmmaking process.

Our article digging into the site of the first rehearsal includes some photographs of the basement of 19 Gerrard Street, including some shots of the band Lifeblud recording there in 1971.

Here’s a bonus photograph of the basement taken by John Sivyer that didn’t make it into the online article:

(John Sivyer)


We published previously unseen photos from Hanover 1980

Led Zeppelin performing in Hanover, Germany on June 24, 1980 (Peter Soblik)

Earlier today, LedZepNews published 20 previously unseen colour photographs of Led Zeppelin performing in Hanover, Germany on June 24, 1980.

The photographs were taken by LedZepNews reader Peter Soblik who kindly allowed us to publish his images online for the first time. Thanks Peter!


Morrison Hotel Gallery holds Led Zeppelin photo exhibition

The Morrison Hotel Gallery has opened a new Led Zeppelin photo exhibition in Los Angeles and New York that will feature previously unseen photographs taken by Ron Raffaelli.

The exhibition will close on February 27, the company announced.


‘Whole Lotta Love’ was in the Nike Super Bowl ad

In case anyone missed it, “Whole Lotta Love” was the soundtrack for Nike’s Super Bowl ad that aired last weekend. It was the sports brand’s first Super Bowl ad in 27 years.


Auction watch

Our semi-regular auction watch features returns as we look at some interesting online auction listings for Led Zeppelin-related items.

An eBay seller in the US is selling a collection of around 100 Page and Plant VHS tapes, claiming they contain unseen footage. Here’s one of the sales listings which they claim contains “unreleased footage”.

A collection of four vinyl singles featuring a pre-Led Zeppelin Robert Plant that will be auctioned later this month (Griffin’s Auctioneers)

An auction house in the UK is selling a collection of four rare 1960s seven-inch vinyl singles, all of which feature Robert Plant from before his time in Led Zeppelin. The auction ends on February 25 and the collection of singles has an estimate of between £250 and £300, which feels pretty low for the contents of the lot.

This week, a rare poster for Led Zeppelin’s March 20, 1971 performance in Sutton Coldfield sold at auction for £4,500, significantly more than its estimate of between £600 and £800.

Jimmy Page

Jimmy Page and The Black Crowes announced their Live at the Greek box set

Almost a year after it was first mentioned, The Black Crowes and Jimmy Page have unveiled their remastered and expanded box set edition of the 2000 live album Live at the Greek.

The box set will be released on March 14 and will include 16 songs that weren’t on the original album, including an original song “Jam” and four other songs from a soundcheck.

The album will be released as a six-record vinyl box set, a three-CD edition and a two-record “Best of” vinyl version that is only available through the Black Crowes website.

The band’s official announcement of the box set falsely claims that some live performances on the new version of the album originate from an “August 1999” performance at Jones Beach. It’s likely they actually date from the July 10, 2000 performance at the venue.

The remastering of the album was carried out by Kevin Shirley, a return to the world of Led Zeppelin for the producer who mixed the original 2000 live album as well as How The West Was Won and worked on the 2003 Led Zeppelin DVD and the 2007 remastering of The Song Remains The Same.

This 2003 interview with Shirley is a fascinating look at his work with Led Zeppelin, but his collaboration with the band seemed to end around 2007. “I attended the O2 concert which was the last time I saw Jimmy Page in person, and that was on the stage. I haven’t spoken to him since,” Shirley told LedZepNews in 2018 after rumours surfaced that he was working on Led Zeppelin material.


A new Yardbirds biography was published

Peter Stanfield’s new biography of The Yardbirds

A new biography of The Yardbirds was published on February 1. The book has the excellent title “The Yardbirds: The Most Blueswailing Futuristic Way-Out Heavy Beat Sound” and was written by Peter Stanfield. Jimmy Page can be seen on the book’s cover.

Tight But Loose editor Dave Lewis said the book “contains a wealth of detail that brings clarity and focus to the often complex story of The Yardbirds”, according to the publisher’s website.

Upcoming events:

  • February – ‘Becoming Led Zeppelin’ will be released in Poland, Czech Republic and Slovakia.
  • February 20 – Lez Zeppelin guitarist Steph Paynes will give a Q&A following a screening of ‘Becoming Led Zeppelin’ in Bantam, Connecticut.
  • February 26 – ‘Becoming Led Zeppelin’ will be released in France, Belgium and Luxembourg.
  • February 27 – ‘Becoming Led Zeppelin’ will be released in Italy and The Netherlands and the Morrison Hotel Gallery Led Zeppelin photo exhibition will close.
  • March 1 – Brian Knapp will do a Q&A in Winchester, Virginia following a screening of ‘Becoming Led Zeppelin’
  • March 3 – ‘Becoming Led Zeppelin’ will be released in Denmark.
  • March 4 – The next issue of Classic Rock Magazine, containing an interview with the filmmakers behind ‘Becoming Led Zeppelin’, will be published.
  • March 14 – The remastered and expanded version of the Jimmy Page and The Black Crowes live album Live at the Greek will be released.
  • March 18 – ‘Becoming Led Zeppelin’ is likely to be released in Germany and Austria.
  • Spring 2025 – An expanded version of Live at the Greek, the live album featuring Jimmy Page and The Black Crowes, is due to be released.
  • May 3 – Robert Plant will perform with Saving Grace in Brussels, Belgium.
  • May 5 – Robert Plant will perform with Saving Grace in Eindhoven, The Netherlands.
  • May 6 – Robert Plant will perform with Saving Grace in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
  • May 8 – Robert Plant will perform with Saving Grace in Copenhagen, Denmark.
  • May 9 – Robert Plant will perform with Saving Grace in Malmö, Sweden.
  • May 11 – Robert Plant will perform with Saving Grace in Gothenburg, Sweden.
  • May 14 – Robert Plant will perform with Saving Grace in Oslo, Norway.
  • May 16 – ‘Becoming Led Zeppelin’ could be released in further cinemas around this date and Robert Plant will perform with Saving Grace in Stockholm, Sweden.
  • May 18 – Robert Plant will perform with Saving Grace in Tampere, Finland.
  • May 19 – Robert Plant will perform with Saving Grace in Helsinki, Finland.
  • May 21 – Robert Plant will perform with Saving Grace in Tallinn, Estonia.
  • May 23 – Robert Plant will perform with Saving Grace in Vilnius, Lithuania.
  • June – The book “Rock Visions”, which has a chapter on Led Zeppelin memorabilia, will be published.
  • July 10 – Robert Plant will perform with Saving Grace at Festival de Poupet in Saint-Malô-du-Bois, France.
  • July 13 – Robert Plant will perform with Saving Grace at the Lucca Summer Festival in Lucca, Italy.
  • July 17 – Robert Plant will perform with Saving Grace in Vienne, France.
  • July 19 – Robert Plant will perform with Saving Grace in Salon-de-Provence, France.
  • July 21 – Robert Plant will perform with Saving Grace at the Jazz in Marciac festival in Marciac, France.
  • July 23 – Robert Plant will perform with Saving Grace at Festival de Carcassonne in Carcassonne, France.
  • September 11 – The book “Valhalla!: The A to Z of Led Zeppelin” by Paul Brannigan will be published.
  • October – John Paul Jones’ song cycle for Dame Sarah Connolly will premiere in London.
  • That was our 380th email. Have any questions or feedback? Reply to this email and we’ll get back to you.Follow Led Zeppelin News on Twitter and Facebook to stay up to date on news as it happens, and check ledzepnews.com for the latest news.
  • Many thanks to James Cook 

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Physical Graffiti it was 50 years ago…

It’s been a week of here of celebrating the 50th anniversary of  Physical Graffiti  and I’ve been playing various versions of the album and rounded up the reviews and wallowed in the sheer nostalgia of such a great period so here’s various snapshots of what I have felt and still feel about my favourite album of all time – and maybe yours too…

I recently had a major cover story feature published in Record Collector – if you have yet to catch up woth it – here’s the info:

22 January 2025
New issue of Record Collector with 50th Anniversary Led Zeppelin Physical Graffiti cover feature out this week...
Back in early September last year, Paul Lester the editor of Record Collector got in touch to ask me if there was much scope on a feature marking 50th anniversary of the release of Led Zeppelin’s Physical Graffiti.
My reply was yes there was a lot of scope and we began formulating ideas for a major front cover feature.
The were a fair few twists and turns along the way and I’ve lived with all this quite intensively since October. In early December I visited the Record Collector offices to meet with Paul plus designer Val Cutts and we worked out how we would fill the planned 14 pages we had at our disposal.
It all began to take shape in the last month when the designed pages were sent over to check.
The end result of this work can be seen from this Thursday Janaury 23 when this new issue goes on sale.
This is the first major Led Zeppelin feature in Record Collector since the August 2018 issue when Mike Tremaglio and I compiled the 50 Greatest Zep Concerts feature around the time of the publishing of our Evenings With Led Zeppelin book. As usual I asked Mike to act as a consultant on this latest Zep feature and his advice was invaluable.
So here’s what’s in store:
The centrepiece is a 4,000 word essay by yours truly on the complex making of Physical Graffiti and how they mined their studio archive to extend the project to 15 songs.
There’s an additional side story about the day I bought Physical Graffiti back in February 1975
Plus a playlist of the albums that Led Zep took influence from when constructing the songs that made Physical Graffiti such a landmark release.
Add to that a superb overview by noted journalist David Stubbs of how the epic double album stands up in today’s modern market and why it still induces shock and awe some 50 years on.
There’s also a two page spread of Physical Graffiti related memorabilia collated by myself, the renowned Zep vinyl collector Nick Anderson and Zep memorabilia expert Mark Mcfall of the website https://zepfan.com/
To round it off, Nick Anderson has compiled an extensive two and a half page selected Physical Graffiti discography.
The great cover shot of Jimmy Page on stage during their American tour in early 1975 was taken by Larry Ratner who produced the Live Dreams photo book back in 1994. More of Larry’s rarely seen photos are included in the feature.
All in all, this is a comprehensive summary of what many consider to be Led Zeppelin’s definitive work.
The varied content will shine an enlightening spotlight on what it was that made Physical Graffiti such a monumental release – and why 50 years on it’s held in such high esteem….
We hope this cover story feature will take you back to this very special Led Zeppelin release all of 50 years ago with renewed perspective..
The new issue is available in the shops in the UK and online via Record Collector from this Thursday.
This issue is in the shops now and can also be ordered via the Record Collector website at the link below:

https://recordcollectormag.com/issues-list

UPDATE JANUARY 23:

  

New issue of Record Collector with 50th Anniversary Led Zeppelin Physical Graffiti cover feature out now…

As can be seen the new issue of Record Collector is on the shelves now..

Having been on this particular Record Collector journey since last September it was a great feeling to go into WH Smith this morning and see the end result.

This is the first major Led Zeppelin feature in Record Collector since the August 2018 issue when Mike Tremaglio and I compiled the 50 Greatest Zep Concerts feature around the time of the publishing of our Evenings With Led Zeppelin book. As usual I asked Mike to act as a consultant on this latest Zep feature and his advice was invaluable.

It’s been a joy to work on all this with the Record Collector team including editor Paul Lester and designer Val Cutts plus Zep vinyl expert Nick Anderson. We are all very pleased with the end result.

The aim of this 14 page Record Collector feature is to l take you back to this very special Led Zeppelin release all of 50 years ago with renewed perspective..

So my advice is invest in this new issue and get ready to pull out that celebrated double album and fully immerse yourself in the world of Physical Graffiti…

Dave Lewis  – January 23 2025

Right..let’s go ten years back to the 2015 reissue and how it was celebrated on the TBL website……

So some DL thoughts:

To backtrack : My Physical Graffiti:

Physical Graffiti. The very title indicated something mysterious and special when I first saw it announced in the NME in late ’74. Then there was the waiting. Ah yes the waiting. Initially it was set for November 29th 1974. That date passed and nothing. Then it was going to be January 10th 1975 and so it went on until finally on a grey February morning, I took receipt of the record boxes delivered that day at WH Smith where I worked. And there in a parcel marked WEA/CBS Distribution was a box full of that beautiful double album. Had it out of the box immediately –took it down the pub lunchtime to show Dec, oh yes this was the big one – a massive outpouring of new Zeppelin music.

It ushered in a memorable year that would peak with those five glorious days in May. Since then Physical Graffiti has been a constant in my life. Not long after its release, the WEA rep kindly gave me the original sleeve artwork mock up which still takes pride of place in my collection. On holiday in Spain that year I could not resist handing over a pocket full of pesetas for the Spanish pressing. I have it on cassette and 8 track cartridge. When I first got a CD player in 1988 it was the first CD I purchased.  The emergence of the Tangible Vandalism rehearsals bootleg in the early 80’s was a shot in the arm in a less than vibrant Zep period, and the first time I heard the 33 minutes of outtakes that surfaced in 1997 remains one of my most memorable listening experiences.

Then there have been the numerous live Graffiti moments -selections from Physical Graffiti played live over the years have also provided some of my all time fave gig going moments.

Ten Years Gone and Sick Again at Knebworth, Trampled Underfoot at Leicester University in ’88, Kashmir at MTV Unledded, The Wanton Song at Later With Jools, Night Flight at the ULU in ’98 , In My Time of Dying at the 02 Reunion.

On Saturday February 22nd 1975  Alan Freeman previewed five tracks from the album. The previous night I’d had the Old Grey Whistle Test taped on a cassette to hear the previews of Houses Of The Holy and Trampled Underfoot. I was out at the Rainbow grooving to Black Oak Arkansas at the time.

On that Saturday Alan aired Custard Pie, Night Flight, The Wanton Song, Down By The Seaside and Sick Again in that sequence with no break. As Robert uttered the opening line ‘’I received a message from my brother across the water he sat laughin’ as he wrote the ends in sight’’ I remember exclaiming ‘’Oh that voice!’’ in excited wonderment.

In today’s internet driven world of instantly accessible everything, it’s easy to forget the impact a mere record could have.

A mere record? Physical Graffiti was and could never be a mere anything.

It’s a living breathing masterpiece.

So happy 49th birthday Custard Pie, The Rover, In My Time Of Dying, Houses Of The Holy, Trampled  Underfoot, Kashmir, In The Light, Bron Yr Aur, Down By The Seaside, Ten Years Gone, Night Flight, The Wanton Song, Boogie With Stu, Black Country Woman and Sick Again.

These 15 performances continue to enrich my life and thousands of others across the globe.

To backtrack : Their Physical Graffiti:

FEB 26 FIVE

In the scheme of things the timing on the recording of this album was just so right.

There was nothing like the pressure they had in following Zep IV with Houses Of The Holy. The lukewarm press reaction to Houses would only spur the four  to greater on stage heights. The touring period from March in Europe through to the lengthy US jaunt in the summer of ’73 saw Led Zeppelin perform to overflowing audiences with increasing confidence.

There may have been a period of burn out following the US tour – the initial sixth album sessions were scrapped due to John Paul Jones illness/reticence – but it can be clear that the vigour and vitality they displayed during that US tour was more than in evidence when they came to park Ronnie Lane’s mobile studio outside Headley Grange in early 1974.

The decision to work at their own space with no pressure of a tour to prepare was a crucial one. Jimmy’s wry comment that ‘’1974 didn’t really happen’’ was a something of a smokescreen – as creatively it very much did happen and it would set the seal on a six month period in 1975 that would see them conquer America yet again and present five shows at London’s Earls Court that really did capture them at the peak of their powers.

All this and Physical Graffiti too. A double album idea that Page had been eying for some time  as he commented recently:‘’ I hoped it was going to be a double album because other people had put out double albums and I thought it would be good to do that. I knew that we already had material left over the material was coming out and it was clear that we were working towards a double. I did want to do a double album that would really show a working band at a really creative process”.

The eight recordings honed at Headley Grange were merged within seven older tracks held over from previous albums. We now know that had been the clear intention with Houses Of The Holy as Page recently revealed ‘’ It was left off the Houses Of The Holy album on purpose. It was saved for whatever the next album was going to be which turned out to be Physical Graffiti’’. The rest…they were never mere leftovers as such a thing did not exist. These were quality ideas ready to be unleashed

All that was required was a final mix and a song selection and sequencing. This is where Physical Graffiti really triumphs

You could just never envisage Physical Graffiti not being played in the sequence that Jimmy Page prepared back in 1974. .

It’s akin to a whole symphony greater than the sum of its parts – take any song away and it loses its thread.

So let’s be under no illusion, the arrival of this new remastered reissue is principally all about those 15 tracks – the Companion Disc is of course a very  welcomed dessert but the main course kicks right off with track one side with a chew of the Custard Pie and closes with the brutal last gasp salute of Sick Again.

And that my friends, is the way to listen to Physical Graffiti – there’s no cherry picking required. It’s the whole first course in one sitting and no messing. That is the way it should be.

This is no mere nostalgia trip. Physical Graffiti could be no mere anything. It’s a living breathing beautiful sounding testament to the sheer greatness of Led Zeppelin.

Every facet of the spectrum beautifully detailed – every moment wonderfully sequenced.

Moments to marvel at ….

Custard Pie

Just so much raunch to the riff and John Bonham’s jigging hi hat driving it all the way through… and the solo cuts in across the speakers with so much verve and swagger.

The Rover

Utterly fucking sensational. The drum sound – on first play it took my breath away simple as that.

In My Time Of Dying

The forcefulness of that opening drum part…it has to be heard to be believed. The clarity of the bottleneck parts – we are right there in that hall in Headley. The echo on the first solo…glorious.

Houses Of The Holy

So much brightness and colour in the lyrics and performance.

Trampled Under Foot

Jones’s clavinet all the way through – pure musical arranging brilliance.

Kashmir

The moment they come out of the middle sequence and that elongated Plant howl…oh yes!

In The Light

We now know how much work went itto n this with varying tempo changes. The closing two minutes with Page’s multi overdubbing cascading around Bonzo’s drumming might be the best two minutes of their recorded career – here it sounds utterly sensational. As does the opening drone.

Bron Yr Aur

Acoustic perfection…

Down By The Seaside

Love the keyboard sound from JPJ, now even more accented.

Ten Years Gone

The intro – totally stunning…

Night Flight

”Oh mama well it must be time….”  what a vocal.

The Wanton Song

The way they come back from the Leslied guitar effect solo back into the riff.. masterful.

Boogie With Stu

The percussion at the beginning now more powerful than ever.

Black Country Woman

The mandolin so precise.

Sick Again

The final onslaught from John Bonham ..oh yes!

The Companion Audio Disc:  

FEB 26 FOUR

Brandy & Coke (Trampled Under Foot – Initial Rough Mix) 5.39:

To me this has the feel of of a radio friendly single mix – and hearing Brandy & Coke aka Trampled Underfoot in this way makes  Zep sound like the greatest singles band ever. Imperious funk meets revved up riffing with refreshing clarity…

Sick Again (Early Version) 2.22:

There’s a also a delightful ‘’wooshing’’ effect on the riff at 0.55. Overall this flexing of the riff foundation brings out the melodic tendencies of Page’s plangent riffing. You really want this to go on for another ten minues. Wonderful work in progress riff exercise for a sometimes underrated part of the Graffiti wall..not anymore..

In My Time Of Dying (Initial Rough Mix) 10.48:

A cleaner intro – the vocal coming in with added clarity to the version we know. Double tracked at times. The delicacy of the bottleneck parts are more evident. Jonesy’s bass accentuated behind the bottleneck riff parts is also high in the mix. As it moves into it’s stride, Robert’s vocal are striking clear and crisper providing a real live in the studio atmosphere. Mesmerisingly spacey mix of a towering performance…

Houses Of The Holy (Rough Mix With Overdubs) 3.51:

What we have here is a rough mix with overdubs and it’s a fascinating listen – Robert’s initial vocals have less echo and are pleasingly upfront and clear. Bonzo’s cowbell is much more pronounced in this mix.  The backing vocal ”oooh oooh” is also higher in the mix and you can clearly hear a tambourine as additional percussion towards the close. Jimmy had yet to layer on his solo and it fades at 3.51. Bright and breezy mix of one of their most commercial outings…

Everybody Makes It Through (In The Light Early Version/In Transit) 6.29:

The complete alternate version that was previously bootlegged on the Physical Graffiti outtakes that surfaced in 1997.

A totally different work in progress arrangement with John Paul Jones’ Elizabethan harpsichord keyboard sequence being later replaced by the drone links.  The closing moments from 5.42 to 6.29  with John Bonham’s relentless drum fills are some of the very best applied to any Led Zeppelin track. Those that have heard it before already will know this is a phenomenal piece – those that haven’t… well the pleasure will be all yours -it’s just sensational. An unabashed joy from start to finish – this pleasingly inventive initial arrangement adds new colour to the canvas of one of their finest achievements …

Boogie With Stu (Sunset Sound Mix) 3.39:

The mandolin is well to the fore in this mix – you can hear the precise plucking right from the off while the piano and vocals are both further back in the mix. A barrelhouse of mandolin and piano led fun…

Driving Through Kashmir (Kashmir Rough Orchestra Mix) 8.41:

That intro is immediately grandiose -the vocal remains in the centre of the mix while in the riff parts and the  strings are more prominent. From 4.06 to .25 it sounds altogether crisper and chunkier and all beautifully dramatic and the closing orchestral overdubs are clearer going into the fade. Progressive rock in the true sense of the word and this mix is further confirmation of the fact that this composition remains the pride of Led Zeppelin…

Summary:

Put simply – the paintwork on this particular piece of graffiti remains as fresh as ever… 49years on it sounds magnificent…

Dave Lewis -February 2015

Physical Graffiti Week – my Facebook posts:

Wednesday February 21:

Kicking off a week here of celebrating the 49th anniversary of the release of Led Zeppelin’s Physical Graffiti – my all time favourite album.

So on the player the Tangible Vandalism double album bootleg which has various rehearsals from the recording sessions at Headley Grange in early 1974.

When I first got this in the early 1980s it opened up a new level of appreciation for Physical Graffiti. You can clearly hear the seeds of greatness being planted…what a creative Zep period it was….more celebrations of Physical Graffiti to follow…

Thursday February 22:

DL/TBL Physical Graffiti throwback…celebrating the release of Led Zeppelin’s Physical Graffiti 49 years ago this week…

On the player – Mojo proudly presents Physical Graffiti Redrawn…

The excellent various artists album made available to mark the 40th anniversary and reissue of Physical Graffiti in the April 2015 issue of Mojo as a cover mount CD or mail order 2 LP set – the vinyl version is superbly packaged and includes a repro Zep Earls Court 1975 poster.

The entire double album is re- presented in full with performances from White Denim, Blackberry Smoke, The Temperance Movement and Laura Marling and more …all adding to the celebration of my favourite album of all time…

Thursday February 22:

DL/TBL Physical Graffiti throwback…celebrating the release of Led Zeppelin’s Physical Graffiti 49 years ago this week… retro advert – ‘’Zeppelin Crazy’’ – what a headline – I vividly remember buying this issue of Melody Maker – the anticipation was building….

DL/TBL Physical Graffiti throwback…celebrating the release of Led Zeppelin’s Physical Graffiti 49 years ago this week…

Friday February 23:

 

DL/TBL Physical Graffiti throwback…celebrating the release of Led Zeppelin’s Physical Graffiti 49 years ago this week…

On the player –the brilliant Companion Audio LP from the Led Zeppelin Physical Graffiti 40th anniversary super deluxe box set. This includes Everybody Makes It Through the fantastic early version of In The Light…

Friday February 23:

DL/TBL Physical Graffiti throwback…celebrating the release of Led Zeppelin’s Physical Graffiti 49 years ago this week…

It was nine years ago today – the release of the fantastic Physical Graffiti 40th anniversary reissue on Monday February 23 ,2015 and I spent the day in London reveling in it all…

Here’s the scene in HMV in Oxford Street with my very good friend Dec.

It was fitting he should be there on the day of this reissue appearing as 40 years back in 1975 almost to the day, I was with Dec when the Physical Graffiti album was released.

It was also our last meet in London before Dec moved to Ireland…a day of high emotion all round…

 

Friday February 23:

TBL Physical Graffiti throwback…celebrating the release of Led Zeppelin’s Physical Graffiti 49 years ago this week… it was eight years ago today – the release of the fantastic Physical Graffiti 40th anniversary reissue Monday February 23 2015.

Part of the record company promotion for the reissues was to create strategic stencils advertising the albums on random pavements around central London.

Seven years ago today it took a fair bit of walking before I came across the Physical Graffiti stencil just off Wardour Street – fittingly really as it was not far from the old Marquee club where Zep played some of their earliest gigs in 1968…

Friday February 23:

DL/TBL Physical Graffiti throwback…celebrating the release of Led Zeppelin’s Physical Graffiti 49 years ago this week…

It was nine years ago today – the release of the fantastic Physical Graffiti 40th anniversary reissue Monday February 23, 2015.

I spent the day in London reveling in it – I decided to take in a couple of Zep London landmarks – this is in Gerrard Street where the four members who would become Led Zeppelin convened at number 39 in August 1968 to conduct their first rehearsal…

Friday February 23:

DL/TBL Physical Graffiti throwback…celebrating the release of Led Zeppelin’s Physical Graffiti 49 years ago this week…

It was nine years ago today – the release of the fantastic Physical Graffiti 40th anniversary reissue Monday February 23 2015.

I spent the day in London reveling in it all and I decided to take in a couple of Zep London landmarks.

This is in Windmill Street off Tottenham Court Road where in early December 1968, the four members of Led Zeppelin convened for a photo session at the offices of the Impact Agency.

The photographer Dick Barnatt also took a photo of them leaning against a Jaguar car. When I interviewed Dick for the TBL mag in 2013, he thought the car may have belonged to John Bonham but he wasn’t sure.

It’s an iconic group photo and it was great to be in such an historic Zep landmark on the day of the 40th anniversary reissue of Physical Graffiti nine years ago today…

Saturday February 24:

On the player loud and proud ..what else…Led Zeppelin Physical Graffiti as released 49 years ago today. I purchased it from WH Smith’s where I worked on the record department – and got to keep the press release we had sent to the shop as well

This is the original copy I purchased back in 1975 and It still sounds amazing – as it would – it’s my favourite album of all time. A few pops and crackles only adding to its authenticity

Over the 15 tracks this double album contains every aspect that made Led Zeppelin so special…then, when I was 18 years old and now  I am 67… for me they are, were and always will be the best…

 

Saturday February 24:

DL/TBL Physical Graffiti throwback…celebrating the release of Led Zeppelin’s Physical Graffiti 49 years ago this week…

Loading up the 2 CD edition of Physical Graffiti in the double jewel box. This was one of the first Zep CD transfers by Barry Diament at Atlantic Studios.

I have a bit of an affinity for this version as it was one of the first CDs I ever purchased after I got a CD player in 1988.

Back then I was very excited to be playing my fave album of all time on this new compact disc format.

However, it was not the greatest quality transfer and I was a bit disappointed to say the least to find the studio dialogue segment after In My Time of Dying (‘’Cough’’) completely omitted – it’s been reported that Diament has claimed he was not responsible for the edit and worked from the tapes Atlantic supplied at the time.

These early transfers were done without any band involvement and Jimmy would take control again in May 1990 when he began a remastering project at Sterling Sound with George Marino engineering – the initial results being the Remasters and 54 track box set issued in October of that year.

I did a feature on the Led Zeppelin catalogue on CD published in July of that year for Record Collector, unbeknown that Jimmy was working on the remastering – my review of Physical Graffiti was quite kind to the 1987 version awarding an eight rating for CD sound quality.

There would be better versions on CD ahead but back in 1988 it was a thrilling novelty to hear Physical Graffiti on the new digital format…

Saturday February 24:

DL/TBL Physical Graffiti throwback…celebrating the release of Led Zeppelin’s Physical Graffiti …

You can never have too many copies of Led Zeppelin’s Physical Graffiti …and I have a few…

 

 

 

 

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TBL Led Zep ’75 Snapshot: 

Led Zep Houston 1975 by Mark Bowman Images Edit 2

THURSDAY FEBRUARY 27 ,1975

HOUSTON, TEXAS

SAM HOUSTON COLISEUM

Set: Rock And Roll/Sick Again/Over The Hills And Far Away/In My Time Of Dying/The Song Remains The Same/The Rain Song/Kashmir/No Quarter/Trampled Underfoot/Moby Dick/Dazed And Confused (inc. Woodstock)/Stairway To Heaven/Whole Lotta Love – The Crunge – Black Dog.

This one from the late much missed Mark Bowman – he also took the pics here from that night.

Background Details; After Robert and Jimmy spent a holiday in Dominica for 10 days, while Jonesy and Bonzo flew home to their families, a well rested Led Zeppelin, Peter Grant and the crew reconvened in Houston, Texas to start the second leg of the 1975 USA tour on February 27th, 1975.

This night was special as it was the first live show after the US release of the eagerly anticipated double LP, Physical Graffiti.  By all accounts, they played a ferocious show that night that clocked in at nearly 3 hours and 45 minutes.  Reporters mentioned in the newspaper the next day that the “kids went crazy”, and the crowd definitely spurred the band to greater heights that night…   One concertgoer mentioned – “This was the FIRST concert I have ever been to where the live sound in the arena was equal to greater than the sound on the Led Zeppelin studio recordings that were recorded so well…”

Robert mentioned to the crowd that “we were off for a few days, but we’re back, well rested and in our glory.!”  Very prophetic, looking back 40 years later….  Unfortunately, no bootleg recordings have ever surfaced of this particular show to document the power they were playing with that night, so it just will remain a very special evening for the ones who were there….

First Hand View from Mark Bowman:

JP and JPJ Houston 1975 by Mark Bowman

The beauty of this show – there was none of the violence and aggression from the fans that had marred some of the earlier dates in the Eastern US gigs on the 1st leg.  Robert specifically commented about how the crowd had a “very happy and a good feeling vibe” that night for the band, which kept them focused on the task at hand….which was to rip the roof off the arena that evening.  I only had a little Kodak 110 Instamatic camera with me at the time, so all my photos are grainy and low resolution.  You still get the general idea by looking at them – but what I would have given to have my 35mm with me that night to truly capture this incredible evening.  It turns out to be the only time I ever saw the mighty Led Zeppelin perform live…  As fantastic as it was to attend the reunion O2 show in London in 2007, this gig was the COMPLETE package….  It is burned into my memory banks for life. Mark Bowman

 


New Yardbirds book out now…
The Yardbirds
The Most Blueswailing Futuristic Way-Out Heavy Beat Sound
By Peter Stanfield
Shows how British pop trailblazers The Yardbirds helped to shape rock music.
”The Yardbirds were trailblazers in the rapid development of pop music in Britain between 1963 and 1968. With members including Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck and Jimmy Page, they helped to set the basic template of what has been known ever since as rock music, and gave rise to one of the most commercially successful bands of all time: Led Zeppelin. Peter Stanfield situates the band in the evolution of British R&B and the tumult of the psychedelic era. Obsessively detailed about both the band and 1960s pop culture, this is the book fans of the Yardbirds have always needed.”
I had an advance copy of this book and was more than happy to endorse it. It’s an excellent account that contains a wealth of detail that brings clarity and focus to the often complex story of The Yardbirds.
Highly recommended – and available now

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DL Diary Blog Update:

Friday February 14:

It was 51 years ago…

On the player the very fine Roy Harper Valentine album. I purchased this at WH Smith in Bedford the day it came out on February 14 1974. The back cover has the inscription ‘’Dedicated to Bonzo, Jimmy, John Paul and Robert…

That evening Roy played a celebrated gig at London’s Rainbow Theatre –I missed out on tickets for this so the album was the next best thing –here’s the gig gen via the TBL archives…

 

THURSDAY FEBRUARY 14 1974 – LONDON RAINBOW THEATRE

Jimmy Page, Robert Plant and John Bonham are all in attendance for Roy Harper’s St. Valentine’s Day concert. Jimmy, resplendent in a Chinese jacket decorated with hummingbirds, joins Roy’s all star band comprising Keith Moon (drums), Ronnie Lane (bass) and Max Middleton (keyboards) for numbers including ‘Same Old Rock’ (playing a Martin acoustic), ‘Male Chauvinist Pig Blues’ and ‘Home’ (playing the Gibson Les Paul) and ‘Too Many Movies’. ‘Home’ includes a cameo appearance from John Bonham who comes on strumming an acoustic guitar, dressed in a red jacket and black tights and sporting a pork pie hat. Finally, Robert Plant strolls on at the end to act as MC to declare to the crowd: “Ladies and Gentlemen – Roy Harper!!”

Some of this set was later issued on Roy’s ‘Flashes From The Archives Of Oblivion’ double album. Harper dubbed this one-off line-up as The Intergalactic Elephant Band.

Jimmy Page: “We maybe played a few wrong notes here and there, but what the hell -the spirit of the thing was great.”

Friday February 14:

Remembering the late great Roy Williams on the occasion of his Birthday-the long-time front of house sound engineer for Robert Plant and many others – and an integral part of the Midlands music scene for many decades. He was also such a great support to all my TBL activities.

He was the Midlands man of music, a man of extreme loyalty and a man of immense kindness… he is much missed and will always be remembered and loved by all who were lucky enough to know him…

RIP Roy…and thanks for making the music sound so good…

 

Friday February 14:

 

Loading up the truly excellent Led Zeppelin Few Hours With St. Valentine 3 CD set which is part of the rather splendid 6 CD bootleg box set Throwing The Wild Seeds – Nassau Coliseum 1975 Complete Tapes.

This is the February 14 performance as recorded 50 years ago today – a blistering set and my, they were on top of their game on this Valentines night…

Saturday February 15:

 

It’s a Happy Birthday to our very good friend  Mr Steve Livesley.

Lifelong Bury FC fan, fellow record collecting comrade ( his generosity in searching out items for myself and many others is immense) and all round top man –  Happy Birthday from Janet and I and have a great day Steve…

Saturday February 15: 

Latest DL LP record acquisitions…
A very nice collection of original Frank Sinatra LPs on the Capitol and Reprise labels acquired for me via my fellow record collecting comrade and Birthday boy Steve – you gotta love a bit of Frank – cheers Steve!

Saturday February 15:

Saturday is platterday…on the player the excellent 1979 Bad Company Desolation Angels album -this one a rather splendid Japanese promo pressing on the Swan Song/Warner-Pioneer label.
Bad Co are one of the nominations for entry in to this year’s Hall Of Fame – long overdue recognition…

Sunday February 16:

It’s a Happy Birthday to Mr Melvyn Billingham – long TBL supporter and all round top man – he has been a great support to us here with many a kind word – Happy Birthday from Janet and I and have a great day mate…

Sunday February 16:

It’s a Happy Birthday to Mr Mike Tremaglio…

Incredible Led Zep researcher, long time TBL supporter and co- author of the amazing Evenings With Led Zeppelin book we created and had published in 2018 and then in a revised and expanded version in 2021…

Mike is a joy to work with and an all round top man and is always a great support to us here…Happy Birthday from Janet and I and have a great day Mike…

Sunday February 18:

It’s a Happy 92nd Birthday to the great Yoko Ono…
On September19, 1988 I was lucky enough to meet and interview Yoko when she attended the press launch of the John Lennon Imagine Exhibition at the Business Design Centre in Islington London.
I was there reporting it for the weekly pop column I wrote at the time for The Bedfordshire Times.
Yoko was very gracious and to be talking to the wife of John Lennon was an incredible thrill …it will all be in the DL memoirs…
Monday February 17:

Recent DL CD box set acquisition.

This was a very good find while I was in Milton Keynes for the Becoming led Zeppelin film last week.

I’ve been looking for this set for a good while..

Bob Dylan The Original Mono Recordings -this is an eight CD box set with the Dylan 1960s albums up to John Wesley Harding all in reproduction miniature sleeves.

Back in the 1960s albums were mixed primarily for mono as stereo was still in its infancy so this was the format  these albums were meant to be heard.

I got it for a bargain £40 from the excellent Off The Record shop in aid of Willen Hospice situated in the MK centre. The shop is packed with LPs, CDs, books and musical instruments and well worth a visit if you are in the area.

I’ve seen this set for double the price so I was well pleased to pick this up – it can join the The Beatles, Rolling Stones and Miles Davis mono CD box sets I have.

It will also be the perfect way to zone in on the early Bob Dylan catalogue as we are aiming to see the No Direction Home biopic film this week

Wednesday February 19:
How does it feel to have seen the Bob Dylan biopic A Complete Unknown at the excellent Odyssey cinema in St Albans this afternoon with the good lady Janet? Pretty fantastic – the film is brilliant…
Update Here:
It was very sad to hear the passing of Rick Buckler on Tuesday . Such a vital ingredient to The Jam’s sound and what a band they were…
On a brighter note -with half term upon us, it was good to get out to see the Bob Dylan biopic which Janet and I really enjoyed. Of course, there’s still the ongoing afterglow of the Becoming Led Zeppelin film – and if that wasn’t enough the emergence of that Copenhagen 1979 cine footage has been quite astonishing. These really are great days to be a Led Zeppelin fan
All this Zep film activity has slowed down work on the DL memoirs which i am aiming to get back to next month.
Thanks for listening

Until next time…

Dave  Lewis –  February 20  2025 

TBL website updates written and compiled by Dave Lewis

Follow TBL/DL on Facebook:

https://www.facebook.com/tightbutloose.loose

 

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2 Comments »

  • Dean said:

    As a Zeppelin collector since 1982 I was expecting a lot of new footage for BLZ, I did watch it twice but nothing really new in the doc that hasn’t been seen before. The story was told before. It was sort of let down for me.

  • Zolias said:

    February 27 – ‘Becoming Led Zeppelin’ will be released in Brazil(IMAX) and in March 2025(Normal Cinemas)

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