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SAVING GRACE IN STOCKTON/LZ NEWS/TBL ARCHIVE SPECIAL – LED ZEPPELIN IV – 53 YEARS GONE /NEW ORDER BOOK LAUNCH/THE QUIREBOYS AT ESQUIRES/BOB DYLAN AT THE ROYAL ALBERT HALL/ DL DIARY BLOG UPDATE

14 November 2024 908 views No Comment
Robert Plant Presents Saving Grace  featuring Suzi Dian -in Stockton-on-Tees- November 6 2024
On the spot Report by Hiroshi:
The day after I saw Bob Dylan’s scintillating and inspiring performance as ever in Edinburgh on his Rough And Rowdy Ways World Wide Tour, I took a train to Stockton-on-Tees, another rather obscure destination that is a typical choice of Saving Grace’s tour stops. Pre-Zep, Band Of Joy days are here again.
The Globe, though, hosted quite a few hit makers in its long-running history, including The Beatles and The Rolling Stones. On the walls of the bars the visitors can see the photos of them taken by a local photographer. One panel described that the first of the two times The Beatles played the theatre was November 22, 1963 — the day John F. Kennedy was assassinated. The two events were etched together in the minds of the Stockton people, a local folklore.
Now onto the show. In my report for TBL on the Saving Grace show in Blackburn, March 29 this year, I wrote;
“In my humble opinion, the evolution of Saving Grace reached the culmination with the Fall tour 2023, which was encapsulated in the final, long overdue addition of four Led Zeppelin songs to the setlist.
“The Blackburn show was the first occasion that I felt Saving Grace offered little beyond what I already knew.”
On the stage of the Stockton Globe, which was one of the postponed dates from the Spring, Robert Plant’s current musical task force boldly ventured on a new endeavour — the addition of cellist Barney Morse-Brown. The drone the instrument delivered tinged the now familiar tunes with a different resonance. Neither Suzi nor Robert played bass any more. And I was treated to four songs I had not heard at the previous shows. I miss The Rain Song and the ever-charming show closer, And I Bid You Goodnight, among other songs that are dropped, but it is a price to pay. Yes, the evolution has restarted in this new ensemble. The show lasted for 1 hour and 30 minutes.
As for the audience, it was the most reserved of the Saving Grace concerts I had attended so far (seven including this one). There were some quiet moments in between songs after the applause. An old man sitting in front of me on the balcony gave a loud, inept shout through the void, “Come on, Zeppelin!” Undeterred, Robert carried on with his usual quips and weird sense of humour, which draw laughter from the overall sedate crowd. A fair number of people stood up and gave a cheer to the performers at the end of the show, but a mass standing ovation that was observed at almost every show before didn’t happen here.
The man soldiers on no matter what.
Many thanks to Hiroshi for that report and pics.

Robert Plant Presents Saving Grace featuring Suzi Dian

Stockton  – November 6 2024

Here’s three more pics from the Stockton gig by Jonathan Brown..

LZ News:

Here’s the latest round up of news via the Led ZepNews Update:

Led Zeppelin

A poster for ‘Becoming Led Zeppelin’ emerged online

It seems a preview screening of “Becoming Led Zeppelin” was held at an IMAX screen this week and one attendee accidentally released the film’s IMAX poster before they were supposed to.

LedZepNews spotted the poster’s emergence online and we published it here. Shortly after we published our article, the poster was wiped from social media. Lucky we caught it!

The IMAX promotional poster for ‘Becoming Led Zeppelin’ that leaked online this week

So far, the marketing campaign for “Becoming Led Zeppelin” seems to be slow to get off the ground. The new trailer has been showing in US cinemas for more than two weeks but hasn’t been officially released online, leaving thousands of fans watching a fan-filmed, low quality version on YouTube. And now a poster has been leaked before any official reveal.


NYPD file on Peter Grant’s 1973 scuffle with a photographer revealed

At 12.20am on July 30, 1973, hours after the theft of $180,000 in cash from Led Zeppelin’s safe deposit box in New York’s Drake Hotel was discovered, the band’s manager Peter Grant got into a scuffle with a newspaper photographer who was outside the hotel covering the theft.

It has taken us almost a year, but we finally managed to get the New York Police Department to release its one-page file on the incident which led to Grant’s arrest following a press conference later that day.

The file seems to confirm a newspaper report that photographer Charles Ruppmann was ordered to turn over his film containing photos of the members of Led Zeppelin to Grant after being pushed and shoved by him.

Our full investigation into the Drake Hotel robbery has been updated here to add more information about this incident.


Empress Valley bootlegs LedZepNews

Japanese bootleg label Empress Valley’s latest release Osaka Daze

Japanese bootleg label Empress Valley has a surprising source of material for its latest bootleg release: LedZepNews!

The label’s latest bootleg release uses our August article revealing 142 previously unseen photos of Led Zeppelin performing in Tokyo in 1972 to form a new photo book it has packaged with a CD.

We’ve even spotted that Empress Valley copied and pasted text from one of our articles on to the cover of its new CD.


We published the full transcript of the full 1972 radio interview with John Bonham and Robert Plant

The filmmakers behind “Becoming Led Zeppelin” make extensive use of a 1972 Australian radio interview with John Bonham and Robert Plant to bring Bonham’s voice into the film.

Despite the new trailer’s claim that the interview hasn’t been heard before, it’s been widely available online and as a vinyl bootleg.

After we spotted last week that the audio of Bonham in the film’s trailer had been misleadingly edited to cobble together a quote from four different clips, we decided to publish a transcript of the entire interview online here.


Auction watch

Led Zeppelin performing in the US in 1975, likely in Long Beach, California on March 11, 1975 (eBay/BladesandLove)

A previously unseen photo of Led Zeppelin performing in the US, likely the March 11, 1975 Long Beach, California show (thanks LedZepFilm!), was listed on eBay this week and promptly sold. It had a pretty expensive buy it now price of $199.99.

Robert Plant

Robert Plant is still on tour with Saving Grace

Robert Plant played two shows in the UK with Saving Grace this week: November 5 in Harrogate and November 6 in Stockton.

For both performances, the band was joined by cello player Barney Morse-Brown. It seems the addition of Morse-Brown and his cello may not be a permanent change, however, after band member Suzi Dian referred to him as a “guest” in an Instagram post.

Saving Grace also changed the setlist during the band’s November 5 show, its first performance in the UK following the recent tour of continental Europe.

The band added a cover of the Martha Scanlan song “Higher Rock” into the setlist along with the Levon Helm song “Move Along Train”, the Ted Darryl song “She Cried” and added a cover of Plant’s song “The May Queen”.

Plant mentioning on stage on November 5 that the band has recorded a cover of “Higher Rock”, a hint at a possible Saving Grace album in the future.

Here’s a video of the full November 5 show in Harrogate:

Here’s Plant backstage with support act Robert Vincent on November 6:


Robert Plant signs 100 more Teenage Cancer Trust prints

Robert Plant has signed 100 more limited edition prints for Teenage Cancer Trust. These prints are a different version of a previously released signed poster.


Robert Plant endorses Cat Zeppelin

Robert Plant holding one of the Cat Zeppelin T-shirts (Instagram/marina_lodi18)

Robert Plant has endorsed a new line of merchandise branded “Cat Zeppelin” which is being sold to help generate money to care for stray cats in Italy.

A post shared by @marina_lodi18

LedZepNews spoke to Marina, the organiser behind the project. “I’ve decided to use my creativity and created a cartoon cat character to raise funds and help the stray cats in my city,” she said.

“Fate brought me to meet Mr. Robert Plant, who was incredibly kind and spontaneous posing for a picture with my and supporting my project,” she added.

The project aims to provide veterinary care, food, shelter, and sterilization programs to cats in Piacenza, Italy. You can purchase Cat Zeppelin products online here.


Robert Plant had a couple of drinks

Robert Plant was photographed with celebrity chef Marco Pierre White on November 8 after heading to the Bellmans Cross Inn for a pint of beer and a glass of chianti, the pub posted online.


Robert Plant went to see The Cult

Robert Plant went to see The Cult perform in Wolverhampton on November 2 and was photographed backstage with drummer John Tempesta.

A post shared by @johntempesta

Upcoming events:

  • November 13 – The Playing For Change album Songs For Humanity, featuring John Paul Jones on a cover of “When The Levee Breaks”, will be released.
  • November 23 – Robert Plant will perform with Saving Grace in Woking, UK.
  • November 24 – Robert Plant will perform with Saving Grace in Southend, UK.
  • December – Gibson is expected to release regular production models of its replicas of Jimmy Page’s 1969 Gibson EDS-1275 double neck guitar.
  • December 4 – The auction for Bob Ludwig’s test pressing of Led Zeppelin II will end.
  • Late 2024 / Early 2025 – Jimmy Page’s amp company Sundragon will release its new Nymph amps
  • 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.
  • March 21 – The book ‘Led Zeppelin – Whole Lotta Love: A People’s History’ will be published.
  • 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’ is likely to be released in 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.
  • 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 366th 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 for his continued excellent LedZep News coverage. 


TBL Archive Special:

Led Zeppelin IV – 53 years gone…

November 1971 /Led Zeppelin IV 

53 years ago this month the fourth Led Zeppelin album emerged in a slightly mysterious manner with that enigmatic sleeve. I vividly remember the excitement and anticipation of the album in the music press that month. In fact the November 6 1971 issue of Melody Maker was something of an historic issue because it contained the first UK sighting the four individual symbols that would make up the title of Led Zeppelin’s fourth album. Each symbol was featured on the end of a page – a series of teaser adverts for the forthcoming album though nobody really knew it. Now I had read a recent interview with Jimmy Page in which he had explained the album title would be made up of four runes – I did notice those symbols in that issue thinking they looked very odd – but I did not realise these were the very symbols that would become such an integral and lasting image of the band.

 

71-11-13-pg-16

It was about to get even more exciting for me with the prospect of attending the November 21 Wembley Empire Pool show. Tickets a mere 75p! It’s fair to say that this advert announcing the second date was something of a life changer for me – as things were never quite the same in our house after what I witnessed on that cold November Sunday evening all of 52 years ago.

This wasn’t just a band…

Led Zeppelin IV… 

Of all their records, Led Zeppelin’s fourth album, released in late 1971, remains their listened to and  admired work, and with sales of 38 million and counting it is also far and away their most successful. Featuring both the often maligned Stairway To Heaven and the widely admired ‘When The Levee Breaks’, the set is without question the most accessible of their catalogue and it continues to attract new listeners by the week. Few albums in the history of rock can rival its influence.

The fact that much of the album was made in a mysterious, run-down, 18th century workhouse in the middle of rural Hampshire only adds to its legacy. It’s the product of a band given absolute musical freedom to do as they wished in an environment that encouraged the development of their ability to blend acoustic and electric influences within a rock framework, which they did more successfully than any other act before or since.

As a complete work it remains their most focused statement. From Page’s unimpeachable riffs, through Jones musical invention and Plant’s clarity of vocal to that titanic John Bonham drum sound – Led Zeppelin IV still emits a freshness that belies its age.

Dave Lewis – November , 2023 


More Four at 52

This one from 2021…

OFFCIAL PRESS RELEASE NOVEMBER 8, 2021:

(aka Led Zeppelin IV)

Celebrates 50 Years

It’s Been A Long Time Since I Rock And Rolled…

Untitled, undeniable, and unstoppable. Led Zeppelin’s fourth studio album, better known as Led Zeppelin IV, arrived 50 years ago on November 8, 1971.

Led Zeppelin IV remains one of the most creatively influential and commercially successful albums in the history of music. As an artistic statement, the record struck a chord that continues to resonate globally among music fans while inspiring generations of musicians.

Commercially, Led Zeppelin IV is a juggernaut, selling more than 37 million copies worldwide. In the U.S., the album was recently certified 24x platinum by the RIAA, ranking as the fifth best-selling album of all time as well as the best-selling album by a British artist (tied with The Beatles aka The White Album). Outside America, the album is certified diamond in Canada (x2); multi-platinum in Australia (9x), the U.K. (6x), and France (2x); platinum in Argentina, Brazil, Italy, Norway, Poland, and Spain; and gold in Germany (3x).

Led Zeppelin IV also topped the album charts in the U.K., Canada, and the Netherlands, and peaked at #2 in Australia, Denmark, France, Sweden, as well as the U.S., where it remains the best-selling album of the band’s catalog.

Before the success and accolades of 1971, the band first spent the fall and winter of 1970 writing and recording Led Zeppelin IV, with early recording sessions beginning in London at Island Studios in December 1970. A month later, the band moved to Headley Grange, a country house in Hampshire, England. They converted the house into a recording studio and used the Rolling Stones Mobile Studio to record most of the album’s basic tracks with engineer Andy Johns, who also engineered some of Led Zeppelin II and III.

Jimmy Page, who also produced the album, says: “After the brief stay that Robert and I had at Bron-Yr-Aur cottage [while working on Led Zeppelin III], I could see a situation where we all resided at Headley Grange and had a recording truck. I was keen on this whole idea of using it as a workplace so you could concentrate totally on the effort of making the music, while residing at the location.”

“It was all a bit experimental,” John Paul Jones says. “But it was the first time we’d actually stayed together. Before, we were recording in studios…and it was always hotel, studio, hotel, studio. We’d never been in one place and had recording facilities there. So that was really a new way of working for us, and I think it was a really good way. We just had this huge old room with a big fireplace with all the equipment set up. And you could just wander down and start stuff up if nobody was there, or if somebody else would turn up, there would be a bit of jam. There was music making in some way all the time, which, as you can see by the result, worked out pretty well.”

This unconventional (for the time) approach gave the group more freedom to capture spontaneous performances and moments of inspiration. Of the writing of “Stairway To Heaven”, Robert Plant recalls:

“I was sitting next to Jimmy in front of the fire at Headley Grange. He’d written this chord sequence and was playing it to me. I was holding a pencil and paper and suddenly my hand is writing the words ‘There’s a lady who’s sure all that glitters is gold…’ I sat there, looked at the words and almost leaped out from my seat. Looking back, I suppose I sat down at the right moment.”

The band also found ways to use the acoustics of Headley Grange to their advantage. Most famously, drummer John Bonham was recorded playing “When The Levee Breaks” in the formal entrance hall of the house using microphones hanging nearby in a flight of stairs. Today, it is one of the most-famous drum sounds in the world and has been sampled countless times by artists across multiple genres including Beyoncé, Beastie Boys, Massive Attack, J. Cole, Björk, and Eminem.

When the basic tracks for the album were finished, the band returned to London to record “Stairway To Heaven” and added overdubs to the Headley material at Island Studios. Soon after, Page traveled to Los Angeles to work on the initial mix of the album at Sunset Sound studios before later returning to Island Studios for additional mixing. The final mix was then delayed until July to accommodate the band’s spring and summer tours.

One of the most memorable parts of the album artwork was the four symbols used on the inner sleeve and album label to represent the four band members.

“There was a really nice little book of signs and symbols,” John Paul Jones says. “So, we decided to choose our symbols from this book appropriate to each member. So, Bonzo [John Bonham] and I dutifully went away, and we actually chose symbols which were kind of the opposite of each other graphically, which was quite strange. And then, of course, Robert and Jimmy designed their own. They all had their own personal meanings.”

Famously, the untitled album was issued with no text on the front or back covers, including the band’s name or an album title – a radical idea at the time.

“After the release and success of the third album, we were still getting negative reviews about the albums and concerts in certain trade journals in America,” Page recalls. “And even after the third album, it was being said that we were ‘a hype’ and one thing and another. It was slightly aggravating. It seemed as though it would be an interesting proposition to actually put out an album with no information on it at all…and see how it would sell.”

“The cover means whatever people want to read into it.” said John Bonham around the album’s release. “For me it means: ‘I’d rather live in an old house than a block of flats.’ My personal view is that the album is the best thing we’ve ever done. I love it. It’s the fourth album and it’s the next stage we were in at the time of recording. All the albums have been different and to my mind this is the best and that’s not trying to be big-headed or flash.”

ABOUT LED ZEPPELIN

In 1968, Jimmy Page formed Led Zeppelin, one of the most influential, innovative and successful groups in modern music, having sold more than 300 million albums worldwide. The band rose from the ashes of The Yardbirds, when Page brought in Robert Plant, John Bonham, and John Paul Jones to tour as The New Yardbirds. In 1969, Led Zeppelin released its self-titled debut. It marked the beginning of a 12-year reign, during which the group was widely considered to be the biggest and most innovative rock band in the world.

Led Zeppelin continues to be honored for its pivotal role in music history. The band was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1995, received a Grammy® Lifetime Achievement Award in 2005, and a year later was awarded with the Polar Music Prize in Stockholm. Founding members Jimmy Page, Robert Plant and John Paul Jones – along with Jason Bonham, the son of John Bonham – took the stage at London’s O2 Arena in 2007 to headline a tribute concert for Ahmet Ertegun, a dear friend and Atlantic Records’ founder. The band was honored for its lifetime contribution to American culture at the Kennedy Center Honors in 2012. In January of 2014, the band won their first ever Grammy award as Celebration Day, which captured their live performance at the Ertegun tribute concert, was named Best Rock Album.

Led Zeppelin IV – 53 years gone…

Led Zeppelin - Led Zeppelin IV

To mark the 53rd anniversary of the release of Led Zeppelin IV here’s a TBL archive feature – first compiled for TBL issue 15 though not used at the time – it eventually appeared in the my Celebration II – The Tight But Loose Files book.

The Making Of Led Zeppelin IV – Part One:

On the evening of Saturday, September 19, 1970, the four members of Led Zeppelin took a final bow before leaving the stage of New York’s Madison Square Garden. It signalled the end of a massively successful US tour, their two performances at the Garden alone netting each of them around $30,000 – not bad for six hours work. Their second album had been a fixture on the album charts on both sides of the Atlantic, racking up sales of over a million in both territories. The previous June the group’s bill topping appearance at the Bath Festival had cemented their reputation on home soil. Readers of the then hugely influential Melody Maker had just voted them as the top act in their annual pop poll, ending years of dominance by The Beatles.

There was simply no doubt about it. Led Zeppelin were now the biggest band in the world.

Then came the backlash…

In early October their eagerly awaited new album, Led Zeppelin III, hit the stores. Its bold agenda in combining the familiar, trademark heavy rock dynamics with more acoustic textures confused both the public and press alike. Headlines such as “I… 2… 3 Zep weaken” were rife as this new direction confused and, to some degree disappointed, critics.

Though Zep III sold well initially it did not to have the across-the-board appeal of their first two albums. Never entirely at ease with the press, Page and Plant were particularly sensitive to the criticism. “The headlines are saying Zep goes soft on their fans or some crap,” remarked Plant to Record Mirror at the time. “The point is when you begin a new album you never knew how it’s going to come out.”

For Page the third Zeppelin album signalled the beginning of a new era. “There is another side to us. This album is totally different to the others and I see this as a new direction.”

Plant again: “Now we’ve done Zeppelin III the sky’s the limit. It shows we can change, we can do things. It means there are endless possibilities. We are not stale and this proves it.”

Brave fighting talk – but quite how their following would react long term to this new direction was at the time still in question. After the initial glow of success they were at something of a crossroads, making their next album crucial. Page later reflected: “With Zep III we thought we’d made a great album – in fact we knew we had. At the time, though, it was said we had started playing acoustic instruments because Crosby, Stills & Nash had just come through and we were ripping them off. I know the record company expected us to follow up ‘Whole Lotta Love’. But we never made a point of trying to emulate something we had done before.”

Sensibly they took their time in recording the crucial fourth album. To recharge their batteries manager Peter Grant refused all offers to tour over the coming months. This included turning down flat a cool one million dollars to appear on a New Year’s Eve I concert to be relayed across the world via satellite. Years later | Peter Grant noted: “I got approached for the band to perform a show in Germany on New Year’s Eve 1970 that would be relayed to American cinemas. The offer got up to a million dollars but I found out that satellite sound can be affected by snowstorms so I said no. The promoters couldn’t believe it, but it just wasn’t right for us.”

Aside from a day out in October to accept a clutch of gold discs from a Parliamentary Secretary for their part in sustaining the country’s healthy balance of exports, the group laid low.

In late October Page and Plant returned to the idyllic cottage half way up a mountain in South Snowdonia known as Bron Yr Aur. It was here that earlier in the year they had conceived many of the songs for Zep III. This return visit again found them ensconced around the open fire with acoustic guitars in hand preparing material for the next record.

They already had a backlog of completed and work-in-progress ideas, amongst them a lilting, Neil Young-influenced: titled ‘Down By The Seaside’, ‘Hey Hey What Can I Do’, a semi-acoustic country stomp and, in the same vein, a song called Poor Tom’. ‘The Rover’, then an acoustic idea with idealistic lyrics, was another song waiting to be honed. John Paul Jones had been working on a brooding keyboard piece that would later emerge as ‘No Quarter’, while Page had began demoing a lengthy instrumental track which started off tranquil but built to a crescendo. We all know how that idea flourished, initially they considered a double album, and Page even toyed with the bizarre idea of issuing the album as four separate EPs. After the Zep III backlash they were immensely keen to lay down some fresh new material.

In December they booked initial studio sessions at Island Studios. The Basing Street location was fast becoming the most in-demand studio in London and they had recorded much of Zeppelin III there the previous May. Page, though, was also looking to record on location with The Rolling Stones’ newly built mobile recording unit. “We started off doing some tracks at Island then we went to Headley Grange, a place we had rehearsed at. We took The Stones’ mobile. It was ideal.  As soon as we had an idea we put it down on tape.”

Headley Grange, a largely derelict 18th century manor house, was situated in deepest Hampshire. A three-storey stone structure built in 1795, it was once a workhouse known as Headley Poor for the aged and infirm, and in 1870 it was bought by builder Thomas Kemp who converted it to a private residence and. renamed it Headley Grange.

In the wake of the ‘getting it together in the country’ trend that acts such as Traffic had pioneered in the late Sixties, the place  began to be used as a rehearsal venue for the likes of Fleetwood  Mac and Genesis. It was Fleetwood Mac who suggested the premises to Page.

Plant reflected: “Most of the mood for the fourth album was brought about in settings we had not been used to. We were living in is falling down mansion in the country. The mood was incredible.”

So on a cold January morning early in 1971, accompanied by a handful of roadies plus engineer Andy Johns (brother of noted producer Glyn Jones who had worked on the first Zeppelin album), Page, Plant, Jones and Bonham convened on the old workhouse to set up and record material for their fourth album. Parked outside was the Stones’ mobile studio looking not unlike some vintage army intelligence unit.

Engineer Andy Johns recalled the idea behind going there in an interview with Guitar World: “I had just done Sticky Fingers with the Stones and we’d used the mobile truck on that. So I believe 1 suggested using the truck to Jimmy. We had used Mick’s house at Stargroves but Jimmy didn’t want to stay there because Mick wanted too much money. Then Jimmy found this old mansion so we brought the truck there.” They did eventually record at Stargroves the following year for the Houses Of The Holy album.

John Paul Jones has less positive memories of their stay at the Grange. “It was cold and damp. I remember we all ran in when we arrived in a mad scramble to get the driest rooms. There was no pool table or pub. It was so dull but that really focused your mind on getting the work done.”

On hand to monitor the recordings was Ian Stewart. Stu, as he was affectionately known, was a long time backroom associate of The Rolling Stones – and had even been in an early line up of the group prior to Andrew Oldham grooming the younger band members for success. Stu was an accomplished jazz and blues pianist, and his battered old upright piano was packed alongside the Zep gear in preparation for the likelihood of a jam session or two. The relaxed nature of the whole set up deemed this inevitable.

zep 1971 photo call

Early on during the warm up sessions, John Bonham began banging out the cymbal led introduction to Little Richard’s ‘Keep A Knockin”. Ian Stewart joined in the fun, adding a Jerry Lee Lewis barrelhouse piano backdrop. Jones and Page picked up the mantle, adding Scotty Moore-like guitar runs from the, golden era of Sun Records. Plant soon cut in with a vocal line, but instead of tripping effortlessly into one of the many rock’n’roll standards that they performed live on stage he screamed out nondescript lyrics built around a chorus of “It’s been a long time since I rock-‘n’ rolled”. Within minutes they knew they had something, as Page remembers: “We were doing something else at the time but Bonzo played the beginning of a Little Richard track. We had the tape running and I started doing that part of the riff. It ground to a halt after 12 bars but we knew we had something – Robert came in with the lyrics and within 15 minutes it was virtually complete.”

To be continued…

Dave Lewis

LED ZEPPELIN IV WHAT THE PAPERS SAID

A guaranteed million seller well before release, perhaps in theory even before it was recorded, this long awaited fourth Zeppelin album is of greater importance than their controversial third LP. If Zep III gave the first indications that their music was by no means confined to power rock then this new album consolidates their expanding maturity. The eight cuts here follow through with unbridled confidence, expounding in greater details the ideas formulated on the previous album. Once again Led Zeppelin is airborne and the flight course looks very favourable. Roy Carr, New Musical Express

It might seem a bit incongruous to say that Led Zeppelin, a band never particularly known for its tendency to understate matters, has produced an album which is remarkable for its low keyed and tasteful subtlety. But that’s just the case here. The march of the dinosaur that broke the ground for their first epic release has apparently vanished. Taking along with it the splattering electronics of their second effort and the leaden acoustic moves that seem to weigh down their third album. One of the ways in which this is demonstrated is the sheer variety of the album. The got it down all right – this one was gold on the day of release. Not bad for a pack of Limey lemon squeezers. Lenny Kaye, Rolling Stones

After such a long wait one had begun to get a little worried about Led Zeppelin’s fourth album. What had gone wrong? After such a time lag and such mounting expectancy could it still be good? The answer is yes. It is brilliant. It is by far their best album to date, and has a depth and maturity to it which can only result from recording and performing experiences. It has many moods and many styles and seems far more emotionally loaded than any of their other albums – they seem to convey wisdom through experience into their music now. Caroline Boucher, Disc and Music Echo

LED ZEPPELIN IV –

zep4-12

RARER THAN HENS…

THE ULTIMATE RARE PRESSINGS

Research by Nick Anderson:

Led Zeppelin IV was originally released in the UK on 19 November 1971 on the red and plum Atlantic label which was distributed by Polydor Records. Due to various labelling mistakes there are minute details to look out for when identifying genuine early pressings. Here is a summary of what to look out for:

1) Atlantic/Polydor 2401012 – red/plum labels, first pressing, first labels (£300)

The text “Led Zeppelin” is positioned towards the bottom of the label, below the track listing.
The “Under licence from Atlantic Recording Corpn., U.S.A” text is above the white line in the red part of the label.
Full publishing credits were omitted – only ‘Kinney Music Ltd’ is listed.
The first labels have an “Executive Producer: Peter Grant” credit.
“Misty Mountain Hop” is spelled correctly.
Side one has ‘’Pecko Duck’’ etched into the run out groove and side two has ‘’Porky’’ etched into the run out groove, which are the signature marks of English cutting engineer George Peckham. The vinyl matrix numbers are the earliest A//3, B//3
2) Atlantic/Polydor 2401012 – red/plum labels, first pressing, first labels with correction stickers (£150)

A “Led Zeppelin” sticker is placed in the top half of the label underneath the ‘Four symbols’ and above the “Atlantic Recording” credit,
A “Kinney Music Ltd/Superhype Music Inc. Produced by Jimmy Page” sticker is placed over the original Led Zeppelin, producer and executive producer credits on the lower half of the label.
3) Atlantic/Polydor 2401012 – red/plum labels, first pressing, second labels (£100)

The “Led Zeppelin” credit is printed in the top half of the label.
The “Atlantic Recording” credit is moved into the central white band.
The full “Kinney Music Ltd/Superhype Music Inc” credit is included.
The Peter Grant credit is removed.
“Misty Mountain Hop” is misspelled as “Misty Mountain Top”.
4) Atlantic/Polydor 2401012 – red/plum labels, first pressing, third labels (£65)

The fourth variant red/plum label is the same as the corrected third variant, but with the “Misty Mountain Top” misspelling corrected to “Misty Mountain Hop“.

5) Atlantic/Polydor 2401012 – red/plum labels, first pressing, fourth labels, stickered sleeve (£75)

Some corrected plum/red 2401012 fourth label pressings came with a sticker (white with red printing) on the sleeve with the Atlantic logo, K50008, audio information and record label credits. This was outstanding stock acquired by the Kinney group from Polydor and duly stickered on the sleeve with the new Kinney catalogue number – see details below

Note – the inner sleeve on all original pressings is a buff colour matt finish with flip over back. Later issues had no flipover back and for a brief time switched to white.  The gatefold outer sleeve is a matt finish – later issues have a sheen.

6) In 1969, Warner Bros.-Seven Arts was sold to the Kinney National Company. Kinney (later to be known as Warner Communications) combined the operations of all of its record labels. The following year, Kinney bought Elektra Records and its sister label Nonesuch Records, and assembled the labels into a group known as Warner-Elektra-Atlantic, also called WEA for short, or Warner Music Group. In early 1972 the distribution of the Atlantic label in the UK was switched from Polydor Records to the newly formed Kinney set up under the WEA (Warner/Elektra/Atlantic) banner. All catalogue numbers were changed to a simple K prefix and number with Led Zeppelin IV taking on the new catalogue number of K50008 with green and orange labels. Of note to collectors here is Atlantic K50008 – green/orange labels, second pressing, first labels, transitional stamper (£75)

This pressing has dual matrix numbers – both the first pressing 2401012 and later K50008 matrix numbers are included in the run-out grooves.
The ‘Four symbols’ are omitted from the label.
“Misty Mountain Hop” is again misspelled as “Misty Mountain Top”.

In the UK, a pressing plant error resulted in a few hundred pressings of Led Zeppelin IV appearing on the Asylum label. This again occurred in 1972 when distribution of the Atlantic label was switched to the Kinney stable under the WEA imprint (Warner, Elektra, Atlantic). Asylum was an offshoot of the WEA set up and most notably The Eagles’ label. Thus, Asylum Zep IV UK pressings on the K50008 catalogue number are highly prized amongst collectors and are valued at around £150.

Amongst the many worldwide pressings of Led Zeppelin IV, a handful of highly prized rare pressing variations have surfaced.

zep-four-pressing-two

In the late 1970s, Dave Sands, a young apprentice builder working at Jimmy Page’s home, was handed a unique promo pressing of Led Zeppelin IV by the guitarist himself. ‘’I was 19 and working as an apprentice builder for a local Sussex building firm,’’ recalls Dave. In the spring of 1978, we undertook some work to build a recording studio for Jimmy Page at his Plumpton home. While we were there Jimmy gave me a t-shirt and a batch of albums. The t-shirt was from their 1977 US tour, while the albums included Led Zeppelin II (the rare pressing which has Lemon Song listed as Killing Floor), Led Zeppelin III and IV, Houses Of The Holy, Presence, The Song Remains The Same, and the first Detective album issued on Swan Song. All were on the usual Atlantic and Swan Song labels except the Led Zeppelin IV album (this appears on a plain cream label with track listing).

Jimmy’s generosity put Dave in possession of a unique Led Zeppelin IV promo pressing. This copy has the same typography and label design used for the advance US promo Atlantic pressings sent out at the time of the album’s release but, significantly, the label is a distinct yellow colour as opposed to the more common white label US promos. It comes packaged in what appears to be a mock up single sleeve. The back cover has the same design as the officially released inner sleeve with track listings. The front cover has the symbols and track listing printed on the front cover unlike the wordless standard sleeve design. The regular US white label stereo promos go for around £100, so this rare version obtained directly from Page himself is of much greater value and would easily triple in value at auction.

Another very rare pressing anomaly occurred in Canada where a unique gold and black vinyl multi coloured pressing of the fourth album surfaced a few years ago. This is almost impossible to value as it has not changed hands since it was discovered, but it is fair to assume that should it come onto the market it would be likely reach a price up to £1,000.

Rare pressings guide Compiled by Nick Anderson

Tuesday November 12:
To Rough Trade East record shop last night for the launch of Dec Hickey’s remastered edition of his book ‘From Heaven to Heaven: New Order Live – The Early Years (1981-1984) at Close Quarters’, published via Damaged Goods Books.
This is the third edition of the book which first appeared in 2010.
The launch took the format of an In Conversation panel discussing their New Order experiences in their early days followed by Dec’s book signing session.
The panel line up consisted of Dec plus Jon Wozencroft from the Touch record label and a long time Joy Division/New Order chronicler, Guardian music critic and author Dave Simpson and Jon Marsh former lead singer of The Beloved ( they had top ten hit sin the 1990with Sweet Harmony) and respected club DJ and another big New Order follower from the early days.
It was great to see many veteran Bedford New Order fans from the 1980s who witnessed New Order along with Dec as he describes it on the book’s back cover ‘’With the greatest buzz in our hearts’’
The new edition of the book is a fabulous package expertly designed by Mick Lowe who I worked with on many a TBL magazine and book. It includes a seven inch single containing an interview Dec conducted with New Order’s Bernard Sumner in 1983.
The book itself reveals in forensic detail, how Dec followed New Order in their formative years as he travelled the length and breadth of the UK never missing a gig from 1981 to 1984.
The gig to gig diary format works brilliantly – the book is a unique snapshot of the rise of the post punk electronic music movement that New Order pioneered.
Hats off to Dec and Ian at Damaged Goods for producing this new edition and for a great launch night at Rough Trade East…
The book can be ordered at this link:
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My thoughts on The Qureboys at Bedford Esquires – November 13 2024…
To the always excellent Esquires venue in Bedford for a special night with The Quireboys.
This was a special fundraising gig for the much loved musician Luke Bossendorfer. Luke was in a number of Bedford bands way back and had a stint in The Quireboys himself when they reformed in the early 2000’s.
Luke moved to Los Angeles and was back at Esquires earlier in the year with his band The Long Shadows. It was a great night but very sadly, more recently Luke has suffered serious health issues after being diagnosed with a brain tumour. He is in need of much medical help and this gig has been arranged to help with that.
Support act Willie Downing went down very well – his quirky 70s sounding self penned songs carried a Billy Joel and Jeff Lynne influence. Willie was back on stage to join the main act later. He is also booked for another appearance with his full band next February.
Before The Quireboys came on stage Luke’s mum and dad got up to say a few words. It was heart rendering to here of Luke’s plight and how brave and positive they are being in dealing with it all. I had a big lump in my throat as they left the stage and I certainly wasn’t the only one.
Opening with Jeeze Louise from their new album Wardour Street, the band were simply on fire. This new revamped line-up includes Thunder’s Luke Morley on guitar and he was outstanding throughout. Animated bassist Nigel Mogg was the perfect foil for Spike and Harry James on drums kept it loud and powerful. As mentioned Willie Downing played keyboards.
As for Spike, he was as irrepressible as ever. His stage manner is highly derivative of Jagger and Rod (no bad thing in itself) but he brings his own charm to the proceedings, That cheeky grin, the between song humour and the mic kicking antics make him a magnetic and engaging front man.
There were lovely words about Luke, a nod to Scottish rocker Frankie Miller before the compelling Raining Whiskey from the new album and various references to ex member, the late Guy Bailey.
They mixed old favourites such as Sweet Mary Anne, Hey You, and 7 O Clock with new songs You and I, Myrtle Beach and Like it or Not. Highlight of the night for me was an impassioned delivery of King of New York.
They left the crowd breathless with a four song encore topped by an anthemic I Don’t Love You Anymore.
In reality nothing could be further from the truth. The Esquires crowd and me included, loved every minute of this special appearance.
Now here’s a thing. I never got to see The Faces play live back in their heyday but if I had, they would have had to be on top of their game to be as impressive as The Quireboys were last night.
Yes, they were that good… and Luke they did you proud…
Dave Lewis – November 13 2024

 

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My thoughts on…
Bob Dylan at the Royal Albert Hall – November 13 2024

The first Bob Dylan album I bought with hard earned cash was Self Portrait. The 1970 covers based double album mish mash that confused his audience and critics alike.It prompted the writer Greil Marcus to open his review of the album in Rolling Stone magazine with the immortal line ‘’What’s this shit?’’

Maybe I was easily pleased aged 16 but I actually loved it so you could say I am used to Bob Dylan’s artistic quirks. I might add the second Bob Dylan I purchased not long after, was the legendary bootleg Live at the Royal Albert Hall 1966 so that put my particular credibility way back up.

The fact is the career of Bob Dylan has been fascinating me for the past 55 years and it continues to do so.

In recent years, my appreciation of Bob Dylan’s studio work has centered on the superb Bootleg Series of retrospective releases – including the magnificent Blood On The Tracks set.
I loved his 2020 album Rough And Rowdy Ways – a record of reflection for the confused times of the pandemic.

As for live shows, I am proud to say I saw Bob at Blackbushe in 1978 and a few times after that. However, I have not seen him play live since the Tom Petty tour in 1987.

In recent years I’ve been trying to rectify that and I did try to get tickets for the Palladium shows a couple of years back but missed out. When this current tour was announced I very much fancied the Royal Albert Hall and was lucky to pick up a ticket for the Wednesday night show when 400 hundred odd tickets were released after the initial sell out.

So to the always magnificent Royal Albert Hall with my good friend Lee -our third night out in a row this week.
After last night’s blast of rock,n’roll with The Quireboys, it was time for some rough and rowdy ways with Bob Dylan.

The nearby Queens Arms pub was packed with many a Bobcat to be seen. It was great to meet TBL reader James Corby over from Malta for, as he put it ‘The pilgrimage’. Now that is a good word to describe a Bob Dylan concert. It really is a pilgrimage with fans coming in to London from far and wide. We sat next to a chap who had travelled from Reykjavik and had been the previous night and was now ready for another evening with Mr Zimmerman.

A word about the policy to lock all mobile phones in special pouches as to make them unusable during the show. It actually worked quite well and it was quite refreshing to see a mobile free zone.

Having got tickets late we took what we could and this meant being in as they call it Choir East, with limited leg room. This is a behind the stage view looking out to the crowd but it was actually a great vantage point overlooking the stage with good visibility of the band and set up. We incurred none of the low lighting issues I’ve seen on a few posts.

So at 8pm the band sauntered on as did the 83 year old Bob Dylan -just slightly waveringly. Smart jacket, black trousers with a stripe no hat revealing a good head of hair. There was an air of the veteran troubadour about him and this is where it got very exciting. The band line up included Doug Lancio – acoustic guitar, electric guitar,Tony Garnier – bass guitar and Jim Keltner – drums. The latter a veteran of many sessions including George Harrison’s Living In The Material World album.

I realised I was now firmly in the presence of the legend. The man who sang in this very hall back in 1966, The man who said ‘’Great to be here sure is’’ at the Isle of Wight in 1969, the man who George Harrison brought on stage at the Concert for Bangla Desh with the words ‘’Like to bring on a friend of us all Mr Bob Dylan’.’ The man who came on with a top hat at Blackbushe, The man responsible for a vast catalogue of songs unsurpassed in the history of popular music.

Ah yes the songs…to paraphrase the great Eric Morcambe, with Bob it’s sometimes a case that he plays ’’All the right notes but not necessarily in the right order.’’

Dylan has long since had a reputation for changing the arrangements of his songs so I knew what to expect and I would say the majority of fans in the packed hall did too. So when the band kicked off with a rambling All Along The Watchtower it was no surprise that it may have taken a fair few of the assembled a minute or two to recognise it.

I can say it did sound very good with the slick band providing the platform for Bob to work his lyrics around. At this point we should mention the voice. Now a deep toned burr not dissimilar to that of Tom Waits. Sometimes semi spoken. As for his stage persona, he strummed a guitar a little initially when sat at the piano but mainly he took to standing at the piano as he sung, sometimes drifting off to near the drums. He also took to leaning on the piano to sing looking at what could have been a lyric book to prompt him. There was little interaction with the crowd as is his way.

Next up It A’int Me,Babe -a magnificent rendition with an impassioned vocal performance, perhaps his best of the night. I Contain Multitudes and False Prophet from the Rough And Rowdy Ways album worked well, the latter the type of timeless R and B chug and groove that Bob is a master of conjuring up.

When I Paint My Masterpiece saw the first emergence of the harmonica which was rapturously received.

Then there was something of a dip. Four in a row from Rough And Rowdy, namely Black Rider, My Own Version Of You,To Be Alone With You and Crossing The Rubicon. All melancholy crooned affairs that offered little variety. Looking out in to the crowd, I sensed they were getting a little restless.

What we need was a Bob banger and it arrived in the guise of Desolation Row. I say guise as this was vastly different from the flowing version on Highway 61 Revisited. Instead, it was a rather meandering effort.

It was back to Rough And Rowdy Ways for Key West (Philosophers Pirate) a warm pleasure with the singer off in search of love and inspiration on’ ’That pirate radio station coming out of Luxemburg’’

Watching The River Flow followed and was somewhat unrecognizable. I was hoping the ghost of the late great Leon Russell, might float down to bring some semblance of order to the 1971 hit single he produced. It lacked the swagger and verve of the original.

It’s All Over Now Baby Blue was taken at a slow place and was well received. Another three songs off Rowdy Ways took us on to the home straight.

I’ve Made Up My Mind To Give Myself To You was another highlight. The tender nature of his vocal was achingly beautiful, so fragile and delicate – it moved me greatly and no doubt many others in attendance.
Mother Of Muses another semi crooned vocal led to the R and B stomp of Goodbye Jimmy Reed – up tempo and bluesy with a roller-coaster Rainy Day Women strut about it.

Finally a sweet and stately Every Grain Of Sand and he was gone…

Summary: Overall there was much to enjoy and be moved by. At times ,the idiosyncratic nature the arrangements became a challenge but that’s the way it is with Bob Dylan. He does things his way. It was never going to be a hit laden affair but what this night at the Royal Albert Hall turned out to be was an intimate encounter with one of the truly legendary performers of our times.

To paraphrase one of his own, ’’He’s got everything he wants, he’s an enigma and he don’t look back’’.

Sharing the air with the enigma that is Bob Dylan last night at the Royal Albert Hall was an absolute privilege…

Dave Lewis – November 14 2024

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DL Diary Blog Update: 

Thursday November 7:

On the way to London to meet with Mr Dec Hickey – marking her Birthday today with some Joni for the journey… rather splendid…

Thursday November 7:

Great to be with the esteemed Dec Hickey in the TBL office also known as The Spice Of Life…

Thursday November 7:

While in London with Dec yesterday, we had a look at the recently opened new Rough Trade record shop at 24 Denmark Street. Fairly compact lay out over two small floors. Mainly new vinyl and a lot of it – a little bit bland in the layout but early days yet. It’s certainly another good location for record browsing in central London…

Friday November 8:

While it was sad to see Guitar Player cease physical publication to go online, I am glad to see Guitar World still active.
Guitar World have covered Zep and Jimmy Page extensively over the years and here’s a pic of a few issues from the many I’ve collected.
Editor in chief Brad Tolinski has conducted many an insightful interview with Jimmy – some of which were collated for his excellent book Light & Shade -Conversations with Jimmy Page…

Saturday November 9:

Saturday is platterday – as I have A rendezvous with the master next Wednesday at the Royal Albert Hall, time to reacquaint myself with the excellent 2020 Bob Dylan album Rough And Rowdy Ways – a fair bit of this is in Bob’s current setlist…

Saturday November 9:

Saturday treat at the Slide Record Shop
Every record tells a story…
In a recent Mojo issue, their monthly Buried Treasure review in which the spotlight shines on an undiscovered or lost album, featured Juliet Lawson’s album Boo. Mojo described it as a” rediscovered jewel. An abstract painting in folk-rock clothing.”
On further investigation I knew this album was going to be right up my street.
Issued in 1973 Boo was the confident debut of a young British artist and featured twelve of Juliet Lawson’s own compositions. In the same wave of early 1970s English singer-songwriters such as Nick Drake, Vashti Bunyan, Christine McVie and despite being described at the time as ‘Britain’s answer to Joni Mitchell, Boo was to prove her only major label release with limited commercial success.
Over the next 50 years the album’s reputation has slowly grown and is today an expensive and collectable item.
I was therefore well pleased to see that the much respected Soul Jazz label had recently reissued the album under the title Boo – The Early Recordings 1971 -1973. It was on my wants list to buy.
I was even more pleased when going through the new release racks in the Slide Record shop this morning to find a copy of this Juliet Lawson reissue.
The first pressing of the vinyl edition of the album also comes with a bonus 7” single featuring two early demo tracks, produced by ex-Yardbirds founder Paul Samwell-Smith, who also produced Carly Simon and Cat Stevens.
Upon purchasing the album, imagine my surprise when Warren told me Juliet had been in the shop to inform them of this release and actually lives in Bedford. Indeed her website reveals that as well as being a singer songwriter, Juliet is a painter and stages art exhibitions.
Juliet is also lined up for a gig in Bedford later this month. More details of the album and Juliet’s activities at this link…
Thanks as ever to Warren and Nerys at Slide Record Shop.

Monday November 11:

It’s a Happy Birthday to our very good friend Mr Billy Fletcher – Led Zep connoisseur, long time TBL supporter, ardent Glasgow Rangers fan and all round top man – Happy Birthday from Janet and I Billy – have a great day mate!

Monday November 11:

It’s a Happy Birthday today to the great Yardbirds member and photographer Chris Dreja.
Back in August 2015, I was lucky to meet and chat with Chris at the Led Zeppelin From The Beginning 1963 – 1975 Photo Exhibition at Proud Gallery in Gallery:
I interviewed Chris for the TBL mag about his group photo that adorns the back cover of the Led Zeppelin 1 sleeve. The pic here shows me with Chris admiring that iconic photo…
Monday November 11:
In Rough Trade East in London for Dec’s book launch -could not resist this one John Lennon Plastic Ono Band for £24.99 -Ill take it – Buy more Play more!
Wednesday November 13:
It was great to bump in to TBL reader James Corby in the Queens Arms last night all the way over from Malta to attend the Bob Dylan gig at the Royal Albert Hall…
Update here:
An incredibly busy week here with three nights out in a row – I cant remember the last time I did that.
As can be seen above – ever it was great to share and revel in this life of music at Dec’s New Order book launch, The Quireboys fundraising gig at Bedford Esquires and at the Royal Albert Hall last night to see Bob Dylan.
Thanks for listening 

Until next time…

Dave  Lewis – November 14 2024

TBL website updates written and compiled by Dave Lewis

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