Email This Post Email This Post
Home » Featured, TBL News

JIMMY PAGE ON THE OCCASION OF HIS BIRTHDAY/ EXCLUSIVE TBL 38 INTERVIEW EXTRACTS/ 25 COMPANION DISC MOMENTS PLAYLIST

9 January 2017 2,880 views 5 Comments

On the occasion of his birthday….

Jimmy Page is 73 today (January 9th).

In a career that has spanned over six decades – he has simply written the rule book on the art of rock guitar.

From monolithic riffing to bombastic solos. From simple acoustic beauty to vast guitar instrumental orchestration. Jazz, classical and Eastern influences, blues, 50s rock’n’roll and psychedelic – he has turned his hand to all these varying styles over the years. At times his playing may seem sloppy and seemingly undisciplined but that is all part of the attraction. Always inventive and with a brilliant ear for production values, Jimmy Page is the epitome of the phrase ‘’Tight But Loose’’ that he coined to describe Led Zeppelin’s music.

‘’Less solos?’’ he once questioned when quizzed about the lack of guitar heroics on the Walking Into Clarksdale album. ‘’I guess it depends whether you think of a song as an excuse to play a solo at some point, or as a journey you travel on with the guitar’’

During the past two years, he has unlocked the Zep archive to bring us yet more delights and remastered the catalogue with a diligence that has further enhanced his reputation as the sonic architect and master studio producer.

To mark his birthday, here are extracts from the interview I conducted with Jimmy in October 2014 – first published in TBL issue 38: This was an interview surrounding the release of the Led Zeppelin IV and Houses of The Holy reissues – it took place at the Gore Hotel Kensington on October 8, 2014.

Jimmy Page Interview for TBL 38:

A warm autumn Thursday afternoon. I am in the South Kensington area of London. Earlier that morning, on the recommendation from my good friend, Krys Jantzen, I’d popped into the John Varvatos store in Conduit Street just off Regent Street.

This is the high fashion outlet that recently opened with a major launch attended by Jimmy Page, Ringo Starr, Iggy Pop, etc in attendance. Jimmy has also done modelling for the Varvatos brand. A most impressive store it is, too – a sort of Hard Rock Café meets high fashion. It has a variety of rock’n’roll posters on display, books, limited edition guitars and the type of rock’n’roll clothing finery that the likes of Jimmy, etc can be seen in. In effect, it rocks… although at a high ticket price. It’s a great shop with a great atmosphere – a destination place for anyone visiting the area. Oh, and it sells vinyl, no bad thing in my book, of course. The photos of Zeppelin and Jimmy that adorn the walls are something of a scene setter for what I am in town for. I also take the playing of Dancing Days over the shop’s PA as a very good omen.

Back in Kensington and just past the Imperial Museum I notice a plaque commemorating the first Queen gig in July 1970. It strikes me there really should be a plaque in the capital to represent Led Zeppelin. In fact they could do worse than to place it around the corner at the Royal Albert Hall. For inside that hallowed building (the one, naturally, I have just paid homage to), on the night of January 9th 1970 Led Zeppelin came of age, with a remarkable and much chronicled performance – and a very fine way for the guitarist to have spent his 26th birthday.

Nearly 45 years on, just down the road from Albert’s place, the very same guitarist is waxing lyrical about the achievements of the very same group.

Jimmy Page has spent the day giving media interviews on the subject of the soon to be released second series of reissued and remastered Led Zeppelin albums – namely, Led Zeppelin IV and Houses Of The Holy, and his soon to be published photographic autobiography.

I am here representing the TBL magazine fulfilling one of those media slots.

So yes, at last, the opportunity has arisen to conduct a formal interview withJimmy Page. A long held ambition of mine is about to fulfilled.

I’ve been reading interviews with Jimmy Page for nearly 45 years. Many memorable ones spring to mind – Richie Yorke’s encounters in 1970 and 1971, Chris Welch’s various Melody Maker chats, Nick Kent for the NME, the Knebworth ‘79 interview with Chris Salewicz in the same paper, and much later, Jimmy’s conversations with Mick Wall in Kerrang! and Classic Rock.

Jimmy has always been a good interviewee with a lot to say. Another interview that springs to mind is Cameron Crowe’s 1975 on tour rap with Jimmy for Rolling Stone. Back then, in the pre TBL days, holed up in my Zep bedroom den and devouring every interview as a passionate teenage Zep fan, the idea that I might one day fire the questions at Jimmy was pretty inconceivable.

So, on the one hand it does feel like I am about to have my own Almost Famous moment, in the way that Cameron Crowe is depicted in the film. On the other, it’s perfectly logical that a specialist Led Zeppelin magazine would seek to interview the band members.

John Paul Jones has been very forthcoming in that department, but it has not been so easy in the case of Robert Plant and Jimmy Page. Robert remains elusive but the quest for Jimmy is about to reach fruition.

So, how did this all come about? Well, the genesis of what will be mainly a talk about the latest Led Zep reissues, stretches back to a chat I had with Jimmy back in January 2013 at the Olympia Record Fair. He informed me then that he was working on the remastering of the Led Zeppelin catalogue. In fact, he was viewing a few of the studio bootlegs on some of the stalls and it was evident he was assessing what was out there as reference to his own archive findings.

It was then that I suggested an interview regarding all this for the TBL magazine would be of much interest to the readership. Jimmy agreed, and the plan he initially came up with was that we should perhaps get together for an interview after the first releases came out. He felt it ‘’would give us plenty of scope.’’

Later in the year, at the November Olympia Fair when I launched my Then As It Was, Led Zeppelin at Knebworth book, Jimmy was more than happy to talk on the progress of the project – revealing that each album would have a separate disc with alternate versions. “Each of the companion discs will be like looking through a portal and seeing where we were at during that particular stage’’, he told me, adding, very enthusiastically, ‘’The version of Since I’ve Been Loving You is so dramatic.”

Since then of course, many things have happened involving this project. I have been lucky enough to attend the two Olympic Studios playbacks and the Paris Olympia launch, with Jimmy undertaking a promotional campaign to enlighten the world’s media of this Zep reissue programme of quite massive proportions.

I duly kept out of the way in requesting an interview around the time of the first three reissues but it was always been at the back of my mind that, come the release of the next two (Led Zeppelin IV and Houses Of The Holy), I should strike. With a little help from one or two friends in high places and the Warners/Rhino/Outside guys, I’ve been added to the press pack line-up over two days of interviews taking place on October 1st and 2nd. I have been allocated a half hour slot at 3.30pm.

Now, I’ve been lucky enough to have had a fair few informal chats with Jimmy over the years – stretching back to 1980 and the Over Europe tour in Cologne, Frankfurt, Mannheim and Munich, in the Swan Song office in September later that year (a week before it all ended), in Swan Song to talk about the Coda album in the spring of 1982, backstage at Robert Plant’s Wembley Arena show in 1985, on tour with Robert in 1995 and 1998 and at various record fairs in recent years.

Up until now though, I have never conducted a one-on-one formal interview – and yup, I’m nervous. In fact very nervous . The sheer magnitude of what I am about to undertake is hitting home to me. Informal chats are one thing, a one on one interview conversation is something much more substantial. A quick pre interview pint is called for and I retire to the Queens  Arms pub nearby, scene of more than one TBL pre-gig meet, notably that bizarre Teenage Cancer charity gig in early February 2002, when Jimmy and Robert appeared separately on the same bill.

I’ve diligently prepared a host of questions with the central theme of Led Zep IV and Houses Of The Holy, and a list of things extracted from an ongoing file I’ve had under the title ‘Questions I’d love to ask Jimmy Page’. Given the time restraints, I know the latter may have to wait for (hopefully) another time. No matter, finally I am here to interview him, and that represents a long time coming major coup for the TBL mag.

Unsurprisingly, things are running late as I arrive at the very plush Gore Hotel. BBC Online are filming an interview with Jimmy, and Michael Hann from the Guardian is yet to go in for his spot. There are already two other journalists in the queue behind me.

No time for nerves now. I am led into the extremely plush sitting room where Jimmy is conducting the interviews on his own. He greets me amiably, dressed in usual black attire and scarf (instant mental flashback at this point: Jimmy on stage at the Indianapolis rehearsal in 1975, in polka dot scarf).

Seated opposite each other, on extremely comfortable sofas, I set up my recording gear – digital dictaphone and back up cassette recorder( analogue rules!)

So I’m finally face to face with Jimmy Page one on one. And the opening words have to be…

So, shall we roll it, Jimmy?

DL: Just to backtrack to the first three reissues. La La was a real surprise. Why was it unfinished at the time?

JP: It was unfinished because there wasn’t any guide vocal that went on it from Robert. However, there are lots of overdubs on it, there’s acoustic guitar, lead guitar, all manner of stuff. And at the end there’s wah wah and echoplex bottleneck stuff. I mean there’s a lot that’s gone in to it but in a very short space of time. The recording process was done with ruthless efficiency. There wasn’t any hanging around and going down the pub and coming back, it was just full on commitment. So that was approached in exactly the same way. It was one of those things we put together in the studio. It had not had a previous run through or rehearsal, so you wouldn’t have expected Robert to know what to add. So, at the time, you might have heard, there was a guide vocal put on by John Paul Jones going ‘’la la la la.’’

DL: So that’s where the title comes from?

JP: Yeah, whatever the working title was, John Paul Jones did a ‘’la la’’ over the top, then it became La La, but it’s not something you could actually put out like that at the time.

DL: So there was a tape with him doing that guide vocal?

JP: After all the overdubs were on, he said, ‘’I’ve got a melody idea’’ and that was the ‘La La’ piece. It’s good though. It’s almost like one of those old ska things. It’s not a ska rhythm but it’s all that weaving around. I’m pleased we found it.

DL: Have there been things that you thought were in the tape archive that you could not locate?

JP: What do you mean, like Jennings Farm Blues? I knew that had been nicked. I tell you what I didn’t think I had. I didn’t think I had what was going to be the overture for The Song Remains The Same. I didn’t think I had that, I thought that had got nicked along with the Bombay sessions and all of that. I mean I did have stuff that got lifted right back in the day – the analogue tapes disappeared. But I did have that. It was for my own reference with all the guitars on it. It wasn’t a detailed mix but it’s got all the elements on and that’s what’s important really – I was shaping it all up.

DL: Am I right in saying that you used Fleetwood’s Mac’s Oh Well as a template for the vocal arrangement in Black Dog?

JP: Not really. We called it ‘call and response’. It was the way to approach the riff really.

DL: The version of Stairway To Heaven on the companion disc has a certain majesty about it. That’s from the Sunset Sound mix that was unused at the time?

JP: Yeah, and I’ve used the Misty Mountain Hop Sunset Sound version as well on the companion disc.

DL: So, why was the Sunset Sound mix of the album not used at the time?

JP: What happened with the Sunset Sound mix was this. Andy Johns and I went over to Sunset Sound in Los Angeles to mix the fourth album there, because of the facilities they had. They had natural echo chambers. I knew they had natural echo chambers at EMI, for example, but you couldn’t get in there. There was so much music that I liked that had come out of Sunset Sound, and it was a result of the limiters, the compression and the echo chambers – like the Byrds’ stuff, that was all done there.

I was keen and Andy was, too. There was also extra things that later came out on Physical Graffiti that we did at Headley at the time of recording the fourth album. There was Night Flight, Boogie With Stu, obviously, and Down By The Seaside – they all got mixed at Sunset, too. Going To California was mixed at Sunset but Battle Of Evermore wasn’t, that one didn’t go there for a mix but all the other things we did at the time we mixed there.

You might have heard this – and as a myth or rumour – but when we actually arrived, as were going through the airport, there’s an earthquake going on and when we get to the hotel room I was tired, but I felt the bed shaking, so I called Andy up and as I do, the bed’s juddering. I called him and said ‘’Are you ok?’’ and he said there’d been more tremors soon.  We were due to go into the studio that night and, no word of a lie, I said to Andy there’s no way we are mixing Going To California until the end, because the lyrics mention an earthquake!

DL: The mountains and the canyons did start to tremble and shake – quite literally!

JP: Yeah! So anyway, so these mixes were done and the best way to describe it is that it was at the real audiophile end of the studio. It wasn’t limp, it was so powerful, the playbacks on their monitor system. We had accentuating highs and real deep lows on the low end of it.

So when we came back with these tapes to Olympic, we played them in the listening room through these little Tannoy speakers and the whole of the frequency range suddenly disappeared into the middle. And it was like ‘Oh god.’ And you have to understand, at the time there was talk of tapes getting damaged in transit and tapes getting wiped. It was like ‘Has something happened?’ as opposed to going ‘Wait a minute.’ The logical side of this is that the monitor system at Sunset was just totally different. It was a bit of a worry and a bit of a shock but I knew the mixes were good. It comes to the point where Levee Breaks – which is on the companion disc as the English mixed version – well, at the time it couldn’t replicate what’s going on with the depth, the density and the sort of menace that is there on the Sunset Sound mix. So the Sunset Sound mix got slipped on to the fourth album! I actually thought the Sunset mixes were pretty good, so we have got the opportunity now to hear three of those mixes, because we’ve got the original Levee and we’ve got Misty Mountain and Stairway on the new releases.

DL: It’s interesting to hear the acoustic outro to Over The Hills And Far Away on the companion disc version. How did you eventually come up with the reverb ending?

JP: I had the idea for it in my head, but the only way was to fade the track down and have the nakedness of the clavinets sort of thing going on. It’s just an experiment but I knew what I was trying to do. The mix you hear now, I hadn’t got to investigate it yet. So this version is a reference – it’s like a Post-it note. Then the whole thing changed – like the keyboard part, that isolated instrument, that was a really good way to end it. Like I said, what you’re hearing on the companion disc version, of over The Hills And Far Away – it’s like a Post-it note. That’s a good way to describe it.

DL: Did you consider using an alternative D’yer Mak’er mix, as that track is missing in the companion disc line up?

JP: The reason it’s not on there is there just wasn’t another mix that turned up. There wasn’t a rough mix from Stargroves. That’s all there was to it.

DL: The instrumental No Quarter really brings out the prowess of the group, musically. Did it feel as though you were breaking new ground at the time with that arrangement?

JP: Yes, for sure. John Paul Jones had the verse of No Quarter. The opening passage and the verse, that’s what he had with No Quarter. To move it from just having a verse to having that chorus and the riff that comes into the chorus, and then going back into the verse… well, it’s got this real movement to it and it’s absolutely classic. I knew it was so atmospheric and spooky. I knew something like that would work.

It was the same with Four Sticks as well. It’s abstract, it was going into the world of abstract, and that was really marvellous. That was what is what was so good about the band. There are these different character statements. They are called the songs but they are really character statements and they are all so different to each other. You can see how far we were pushing things.

DL: It’s so apparent how Houses Of The Holy is so different, in terms of the sound and general texture of sound to Led Zeppelin IV, isn’t it?

JP: Yes, that was always intentional – the fact that every album would be so different, and not just in as much as the actual content but the whole atmosphere.

DL: Looking ahead, what is the plan for the Coda companion disc which provides quite a lot of scope I would think?

JP: I can’t give much away at this point. Let’s say that if you think of what the original concept of Coda was in the first place, then I’m going to extend that.

DL: Are there any plans to release further Led Zeppelin live sets?

JP: Well, I remember talking to Ahmet Ertegun many years ago. I said to him about putting out bootlegs and he liked the idea of having bootlegs of the bootlegs, he thought that was fun… but it didn’t really come to much. Everyone would have thought ‘Yeah, that’s a good idea’. You just see what’s voted the top ten bootlegs and you just put them out. I know it’s been done now by other acts but at the time I thought of it, nobody had actually done it. A lot of ideas I had did not necessarily come to fruition and that was one of them.

DL: So you could put out something like Japan 1971?

JP: I could, but I’ve been doing so much Led Zeppelin work… and it’s not just compiling it , but it’s promoting it. That all takes time. I mean I’m not 40-years old or even 50-years old – where I can say ‘I’ve got at least another 25 years’. I maybe don’t have another 25 years and it comes to the point where you look at everything you’ve got and for me the website was the first thing I needed to do. The website was going to loop and deal with the history, if you like, up to the point there’s a history. That was important, just because, again, it was like nobody had done anything like that. Nobody had done a website that caught up and came round upon itself and looped.

The other thing that is important to address is the duality of Led Zeppelin and the duality is, there’s the studio recordings and there is live concerts – so I wanted to initially redress the balance, and this is what we’ve done with the first three albums. It took the first three albums to come out for people to understand what the game plan. I wanted to bring it back into the studio. When people start listening to the studio stuff afresh… and they are given all this new information, too. It’s like ‘Wow’. So, it’s great to turn people on to it.

For me, it’s for the fans. It’s about all the people along the way who have listened… not just heard it, but listened to Led Zeppelin. I’m really happy to be able to put this stuff out.

DL: I know one of your great pastimes is record shopping. What inspired you to get back to collecting LPs again?

JP: Like you!

DL: Indeed!

JP: Probably when my children grew up… because what doesn’t mix is children and vinyl! All of us fathers know this. When our vinyl is in easy reach and becomes in easy reach of children. Children and vinyl don’t mix, so I kept having to shift it up a level. Then it got put away, and then there was separation, divorce or whatever. So, once I got back into my own space Dave, I thought ‘Right, I’m going to get my records out and I’m going to listen to them again’. It’s like meeting old friends again and ‘Yeah’ it’s great. I’m my own man, I can play records when I want, I can watch TV when I want. I can do what I like now, so I’m going to make sure I’m going to resuscitate my vinyl collection! There’s a lot of stuff in there. I’ve got Led Zeppelin white labels and all the stuff you would salivate over.

DL: What has been the latest addition to the collection?

JP: It was a Velvet Underground LP – Ross picked it up for me.

With things running so late, I am not surprised when, after about twenty minutes, head consultant to the reissue project, Robin Hurley pops his head around the door to signal I have five minutes left. Robin appears again. ‘’Sorry to have to do this to you of all people, Dave, but we need to move on’’.

DL: So Jimmy, final thoughts for the fans on the forthcoming Led Zeppelin IV and Houses Of The Holy reissues…

JP: Basically, these scheduled releases of Led Zeppelin – of which there’s been three out already, and there’s going to be Led Zeppelin IV and Houses Of The Holy coming up soon, and of course all the rest of the catalogue will come out in due course… all of it has new information that people wouldn’t have heard before. In fact, they wouldn’t have heard it on bootleg before – at least a major percentage of it. Well, I’ve put it this way before but it’s absolutely true. It’s like a portal, it’s like a view point into that time when those recordings were made for those particular albums, those classic albums. And I knew right from the beginning, in thinking about this project, that it was for you, the fans. Because we sort of understand the difference between just hearing Led Zeppelin and really listening to it. I knew that people with that level of understanding would really get off on it, hearing all of these different versions and things that they haven’t heard before.

And that is where we have to leave it…

Questions such as, was Slush the working title of The Rain Song, and a couple of Mike T. requests – could he once and for all confirm or deny whether The Yardbirds played their very last gig in Montgomery, Alabama or in Luton, and does he remember playing Las Vegas at the Ice Palace with Zep – and a fair few others will have to wait for another day.

There’s just enough time to hand over to Jimmy an album I’ve brought along for him – The Everly Brothers’ Two Yanks in England. ’’Oh, that’s the one with the Hollies on” says Jimmy, astutely. And he should know… he played on it.

Very graciously, Jimmy signs my Feather In The Wind book (again putting in the number as 666) and my copy of the reissued Led Zeppelin 1 (‘’Dave, the start of it all. Zep 1!’’). I also showed him a photo of him and I from Feather In The Wind, taken on June 18th 1980, before the Cologne gig. ‘’Oh that a Brazilian football shirt I’ve got on there’’ he notices.

As we both posed for a ‘then and now’ photo, he laughed, ‘‘We look a whole lot younger then!”

Younger then and older now, but neither of us any less fervent for the band – his band, that really is a way of life.

‘’Thanks for all your enthusiasm, Dave’’ is his parting shot. No, Jimmy… thank you for all yours…

Back out in the bar area, as the next journo is ready to go in. I clock a look at the framed pics of the food splattered Rolling Stones, taken in this very building at their Beggars Banquet album launch back in 1968.

Then a walk across the road and a final glance over at Albert’s place. It’s been a long day and maybe it’s all in my head but I’m sure I could hear the strains of an instrumental version of Stairway To Heaven, (ala the Arms arrangement) coming from within the confines of this lovely old building.

That night at the Royal Albert Hall back in 1983 signalled something of an artistic rebirth for the man. During our interview earlier, hearing his desire to get back out there and be seen to be playing again, well, I have a feeling another rebirth is on the way. In fact, it strikes me that the grand old building would be and appropriate setting for such a return. Here’s hoping.

Jimmy Page: Reference- master, re- charger and re-energiser of the flame. That much I know, because he has just told me himself…

Dave Lewis. October 8th, 2014.

With thanks to Robin Hurly, Chris Goodman and Ross Halfin.

The full interview is one of the highlights of TBL issue 38 – still available to order at a bargain price at the link below.

http://www.tightbutloose.co.uk/magazine-orders/tbl-38-latest-issue-with-exclusive-tbl-jimmy-page-interview-and-much-more/

………………………….

To further mark Jimmy’s birthday, below is a round up of 25 examples of his genius that have emerged on the Companion Discs that have accompanied the Led Zeppelin reissues.

More moments of guitar artistry to marvel at and yet more reasons why for me, and countless thousands of fans the world over, Jimmy Page remains (as that flag out in that field near Stevenage once proclaimed) the true Lord of the strings….

Long may he reign…

Dave Lewis  – January 9, 2017.


…………….

25 key Jimmy Page Performances from the Led Zeppelin Companion Disc Reissues:

Play them today and all week!

Sugar Mama (Alternate mix from the Companion Disc to Coda)

Clock the genius at: 2 minutes and 23 seconds to the close at 2.50 as Jimmy chugs his way on off down the highway.

 

I Cant Quit You Baby (From the Live In Paris Companion Disc to Led Zeppelin 1)

Clock the genius at: 3 minutes 12 and that amazingly fluid solo run.

 

How Many More Times (From the Live In Paris Companion Disc to Led Zeppelin 1)

Clock the genius at: 6 mins 40 as he goes into the Whole Lotta Love riff behind the Oh Rosie section, then adds some slashing chords into The Hunter.

 

La La (Intro/outro rough mix – from Companion Disc to Led Zeppelin II)

Clock the genius at: 0.52 and the arrival of the acoustic motif and then into a scintillating riff part behind Bonzo’s drum fill.

 

Livin Lovin Maid  (Backing track from the Companion Disc to Led Zeppelin II)

Clock the genius at: 1.07 as he comes out of the pause and then slams into the chorus.

 

Bring It On Home (Rough mix from the Companion Disc to Coda)

Clock the genius at: 00 – 0.35 and that chaotic opening as Jimmy battles with the riff against Robert’s harmonica wailings.

 

Were Gonna Groove (Alternate mix from the Companion Disc to Coda)

Clock the genius at: 1.16 through to 1.50 as he applies all manner of slashing chord effects.

 

Since I’ve Been Loving You (Rough mix of first recording from the Companion Disc to Led Zeppelin III)

Clock the genius at: from 00.1 to 1.11 -marvel at the sheer subtlety of this intro.

 

Jennings Farm Blues (Rough mix from the Companion Disc to Led Zeppelin III)

Clock the genius at: 3.22 as the overdubs and riffs take it all off into another tangent within a framework (as the late Howard Mylett would describe it….)

 

Poor Tom (instrumental mix form the companion disc to Coda)

Clock the genius at: 0.14 through to 0.36 as the acoustic guitar overtones kick in.

 

St Tristens Sword (rough mix from the companion disc to Coda) 

Clock the genius at: From 3.12 to the close at 5.41 where he overlays a very James Burtonesque solo.

 

Going To California (Mandolin/guitar mix from the Companion Disc Led Zeppelin IV)

Clock the genius at: 2.57 as acoustic guitars and mandolin merge for the outro.

 

If It keeps On Raining/When The Levee Breaks (rough mix from the Companion Disc to Coda)

Clock the genius at: 3.10 to 3.50 as he scrubs out what will later be a chiming fanfare.

 

When the Levee Breaks (Alternate UK mix from the Companion Disc to Led Zeppelin IV)

Clock the genius at: And talking of which – at 2.06 the arrival of a fanfare crescendo of guitars.

 

The Song Remains The Same (Guitar overdub reference mix from the Companion Disc to Houses Of The Holy)

Clock the genius at:0.57 as the multi overdubbing shines through brightly – dazzlingly so.

 

Over The Hills And Far Away (Guitar mix backing track from the Companion Disc to Houses Of The Holy)

Clock the genius at: 3.55 as the acoustic coda adds an alternate spin on a familiar ending.

 

Walters Walk (Rough mix from the Companion Disc to Coda)

Clock the genius at: That riff as it kicks in for the final time from 2.17 to the fade at 3.19

 

Desire/The Wanton Song (Rough mix from the Companion Disc to Coda)

Clock the genius at: 2.29 to 3.01 as he lays down the rhythmic base for which he will later overdub the solo.

 

Sick Again (Early version from the Companion Disc to Physical Graffiti)

Clock the genius at: from 0.48 though to 0.56 as that descending chord sequence merges with a zip across the speakers.

 

Brandy and Coke/Trampled Underfoot (Initial rough mix from the Companion Disc to Physical Graffiti)

Clock the genius at: 2.13 to 3.00 as he holds down an incessant riff for JPJ to build his clavinet solo around – further guitar embellishments would follow for the released version.

 

Everybody Makes It Through/In the Light (early version/in transit from the Companion Disc to Physical Graffiti)

Clock the genius at: 5.14 to the close at 6.27 – more foundations for the guitar army to be constructed around.

 

Two Ones Are One/Achilles Last Stand (Reference mix of work in progress from the Companion Disc to Presence)

Clock the genius at: The entry of that first string bending solo that stretches 3.44 through to 6.15 – utterly magnificent.

 

10 Ribs & All/Carrot Pod Pod (Pod) (Reference mix of work in progress from the Companion Disc to Presence)

Clock the genius at:1.27 when he delicately enters proceedings with John Bonham. Poignant…

 

In The Evening (Rough mix of work in progress from the Companion Disc to In Through The Out Door)

Clock the genius at:The crunch of the solo at 3.46 and on into the pastoral JPJ led keyboard sequence. Just glorious.

 

Blot/I’m Gonna Crawl (Rough mix of work in progress from the companion disc to In Through The Out Door)

Clock the genius at: At 2.40 where Robert’s cry of ”hit me” leads into a solo that winds up at 3.02 having twisted and turned in all the right places.

…………….

Happy Birthday Jimmy from all of us to you…

Dave Lewis, January 9 ,2017 

……………………………..

Until next time – have a great week…

TBL Website updates compiled by Dave Lewis

with thanks to Gary Foy and James Cook

Follow TBL/DL on Facebook:

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

The TBL/DL Facebook page has regular updates and photos – be sure to check it out.

And follow TBL/DL on Twitter.

 

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (2 votes, average: 5.00 out of 5)
Loading...

5 Comments »

  • Peter said:

    Thank You Dave for giving it 🙂

  • Larry said:

    Happy 73rd birthday to The Man!

    I don’t think one will find a lot of resistance in this space as to the impact Jimmy Page has had on rock music, and certainly not from Mr. Lewis!

    The name of Dave’s magazine/website comes from a quote from Page himself (I believe in 1977) when he said of the band, “We were tight, yet loose. Loosely tight.” And by that point, indeed they were. And it was all part and parcel of their incredible journey. ‘Nuff said.

    All the best Jimmy and thanks for all the great music throughout your career!

  • Ray said:

    Happy Birthday to the great man, everything he as done as been a major part of my life, since I was 14 years old back in 1971.

  • Jeff D said:

    Happy birthday, Mr. Page.
    I hope there are many, many more healthy and productive years in your future.
    “Thank You” for everything you’ve accomplished for the sheer joy and inspiration it has brought to so many.

  • Alessandro Scali said:

    Has this space become the Van Halen Appreciation Society? or a subsidiary of ROLLING STONE Magazine? What’s this rubbish about Jimmy Page being sloppy and
    undisciplined? or Led-Zeppelin being shamelessly derivative?(Quote From the
    Concert File) You sir, should be the counterpart to Jimmy Page and Led-
    Zeppelin detractors and that doesn’t mean you’ll lose any credibility in the
    process.Jimmy Page is indeed the most amazing guitarist in the history of popular
    music or at least of the Rock subgenre,the master’s career as a session musician,his stint as a Yarbird,Led-Zeppelin’s glorious official catalogue and bootlegs,The Firm,Outrider,Coverdale-Page,Page-Plant ,etc. are reasons enough to
    consider him the greatest.On the occasion of The Master’s 73rd birthday I wish Jimmy Page,The Greatest Instrumentalist/Composer/Producer ever,happiness and good health.

Leave your response!

Add your comment below, or trackback from your own site. You can also subscribe to these comments via RSS.

Be nice. Keep it clean. Stay on topic. No spam.

This is a Gravatar-enabled weblog. To get your own globally-recognized-avatar, please register at Gravatar.