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EARLS COURT AT 50 TBL KINGS HEAD PUB MEET /EARLS COURT MAY 17 & 18 1975 – IT WAS 50 YEARS AGO/EARLS COURT CHAPTER FROM A CELEBRATION II/ HEATHROW 48 YEARS GONE/BEATLES FIXING A HOLE PODCAST/DL DIARY BLOG UPDATE

15 May 2025 590 views No Comment

 

TBL Celebrates Led Zeppelin at Earls Court at 50 – Saturday May 17 2025 at the Kings Head pub Earls Court:

This month marks the 50th anniversary of the epic run of five concerts Led Zeppelin performed at Earls Court on the nights of May 17,18,23,24 and 25.

To celebrate this momentous anniversary I am having a TBL pub meet in London this Saturday May 17 2025 – 50 years to the day of the first Earls Court show.

The location is:

The King’s Head, Earl’s Court, 17 Hogarth Place, Earl’s Court, London, SW5 0QT

We will be in there from 1 pm so come and join us

The pub is less than five minutes away from the Earls Court tube station.

it’s situated nearby the Earls Court Road tube exit

I went to check the pub out on Wednesday. It’s not a sports bar so there will be no interruption from the FA Cup final.

It’s an excellent spacious pub with bar meals available.

The plan is to meet with likeminded fans on what will be an historic Zep anniversary.

This is a great opportunity to revel in the glory of this band who continues to bring great joy to us all -not least with the recent Becoming Led Zeppelin screenings.

If you are planning on attending can you e-mail ne to confirm at davelewis.tbl1@ntlworld.com

I look forward to seeing all that can make it along

Here’s the pub details:

https://www.kingsheadearlscourt.co.uk/

 I look forward to seeing all that can make it along and I’ll have further details as it unfolds.
Dave Lewis – May  2025
IT’S THAT TIME OF YEAR AGAIN…
Note below the NME’s May 17 issue centre spread below compiled by the late Roy Carr and the late legendary Howard Mylett. I thought I knew a bit about Led Zeppelin until I met dear Howard…

may 17

TBL Celebrates the 50th anniversary of Led Zeppelin at Earls Court:

Turning the clock back  50 years:  Saturday May 17th 1975:

Setlist: 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/Tangerine/Going To California/That’s The Way/Bron-Y-Aur Stomp/Trampled Underfoot/Moby Dick/Dazed And Confused (inc. Woodstock)/Stairway To Heaven/Whole Lotta Love – Black Dog.

May 17th a dull rainy Saturday. Left Bedford around 4pm on the train and met my soon to be girlfriend Fiona ( we had been friends for the past few months and became exclusive as they say, not long after seeing all five Earls Court shows – we still in touch all these years later) in London for the long awaited return. I’d been counting the days down since March and now here we were hours from seeing and believing. We were inside the arena from around 7pm and the next hour was a slow one – I’d brought a programme and t.shirt. The programme with the illuminating text from Tony Palmer really whetted the appetite and had some amazing photos.

Finally when the stage burst into action following Bob Harris’s intro just after 8pm, well it was the moment my life switched into colour after the previous 18 years had been viewed in grainy black and white.

We had a good view high up to the right looking down towards Jimmy’s side. They were a little nervous and it was evident Jimmy was having lead trouble in Rock And Roll, but once they settled in it was all and more I’d hoped for. The video screen high above the stage was something I’d never seen at a gig before and I found myself gazing in awe at the memorable images flashing on screen- and wishing it was being broadcast on TV.  I’d played Physical Graffiti non stop since it had come out so seeing In My Time, Kashmir and Trampled played live was just awe inspiring. Tangerine was an unexpected treat as was the whole acoustic interlude. Having no idea what the set list would be  only added to the pure wonderment of seeing Led Zeppelin live before my very eyes.

Initial opening night impressions:

John Bonham’s incredible drum sound, Robert’s warm rapport with the crowd and the way he totally dominated the stage.. After this somewhat shaky start they quickly regained confidence and the new numbers from Physical Graffiti, In My Time Of Dying and Kashmir set the standard. The latter’s Eastern-sounding riff rose into a thick, booming sound that reverberated throughout the entire arena. As the tapes of the shows so vividly reveal, that booming sound was very much an Earls Court characteristic, a sound so solid that when Page laid down a chord you could practically lean on it.

EC jr2

The marathon Dazed and the laser lights shooting through Jimmy’s violin bow. By the evening’s end the early nerves had all but evaporated, to be replaced by a relaxed atmosphere which found JPJ playfully offering a few bars of The Teddy Bear’s Picnic as Robert introduced ‘Stairway To Heaven. Plant was now regularly adding the line “That’s all we got” to the final verse prior to Page’s solo. Whole Lotta Love  featured a few riffs from The Crunge prior to Jimmy’s theremin battle. An unsurprisingly nervous start but with plenty to build on.

We got back to Bedford at 2am and I was already counting down the hours to when we would be back in their company again.  There were just 18 hours to tick off.

The Led Zeppelin Earls Court experience was underway…and boy life was good…

Dave Lewis – May 16 2025

“Apart from The Who and The Stones I can’t think of many bands who could have put on anything like it. During moments like Trampled Underfoot it seemed the whole stage was just going to fall forward and crush everybody in the hall.” Charles Shaar Murray, New Musical Express.

may 18

TBL Celebrates the 50th anniversary of Led Zeppelin at Earls Court:

Turning the clock back 50 years…

Sunday May 18, 1975

Setlist: 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/Tangerine/Going To California/That’s The Way/Bron-Y-Aur Stomp/Trampled Underfoot/Moby Dick/Dazed And Confused (inc. Woodstock)/Stairway To Heaven/Whole Lotta Love – The Crunge – Black Dog.

In the morning I’d got the Sunday Observer with the colour supplement magazine with that Tony Palmer feature in.

”Led Zeppelin bigger than The Beatles?” proclaimed the front cover. What a compliment…and a rightful accolade.

On the train at 5pm in the afternoon with fellow fan Nic and his girlfriend.

Hung outside Earls Court amongst the the programme sellers and poster stalls before the show -bought a bootleg badge which was as big as a dinner plate. Wore it with pride for years!

The second night saw them settled into the run. Over The Hills And Far Away developed into an early set template on each successive night. Loaded with rock steady authority, with Page at his most spontaneous, supplemented by  Bonham and Jones holding down the bottom line, and hinting at the rhythmic tempos they would develop for Candy Store Rock on the Presence album. Page’s double-neck guitar poses during The Song Remains The Same and would give the attendant photographers plenty of famous images while The Rain Song saw the guitarist draped in blue light, casting another memorable portrait, a solitary figure in the spotlight ringing out some sweet familiar notes. Add to that an intensive and incessant In My Time Of Dying (Plant’s ”I must have done somebody good” line resounded in my ears all the way home).

ec no quirter

The outstanding performance of May 18, though, was No Quarter as immortalised on the subsequent Red Devil vinyl bootleg. Never before had JPJ immersed himself in this showpiece with such subtlety and grace, the defining moment being the point where he came out of the classical sequence, at around 3mins 45, to play a cluster of descending notes that rippled from the grand piano and into the Earls Court air.

The acoustic section found Plant at his loquacious best, unfolding tales of the origins of Going To California (“So we went to Wales and when we got there we wrote songs about California”) and That’s The Way (“So we were sitting on a grassy bank looking across the unspoiled countryside”). Dazed And Confused was also developing its own unique Earls Court quality. Page’s delicate, melodic guitar passages leading into Woodstock remain an evocative reminder of the times that still brings on the chill every time I hear the tape 50 years on.

During Whole Lotta Love they kicked into the rhythm of The Crunge as they had done briefly the previous night but now further developed Plant’s echoed “I’m just trying to find the bridge” lines. A crunching Black Dog brought show number two to a close after some 195 minutes on stage.

We just managed to get the last train back and in for 2.30am. Two down and incredibly…three still to go!

Dave Lewis – May 18 2025

“In six and a half years Led Zeppelin have grown to be the biggest band in the land and judging by the excellence of their performance at Earls Court, one of, if not THE most exiting live act in the world. I guess I came on the right night. It’s difficult to describe the magic or atmosphere of that Sunday. It was one of those gigs that will remain scarred on my brain forever.”

The late Pete Makowski, Sounds.

More Earls Court Archive next time…


And sticking with Earls Court…the book…

Still readily available …

Five Glorious Nights – Led Zeppelin At Earls Court May 1975

A photographic record compiled by Dave Lewis (Rufus Publishing)

In May 1975, Led Zeppelin performed five momentous concerts at the Earls Court Arena in London to a combined audience of 85,000 fans. This was a band  at the peak of their powers slaying the sold out audiences with a nightly marathon three and a half hour presentation of light, sound, power and energy.

There’s no doubt that Led Zeppelin’s Earls Court appearances represented a career high for the band and four decades on, are still held in the highest esteem by the vast following.

Five Glorious Nights –Led Zeppelin at Earls Court May 1975 captures the sheer visual magnificence of the band though the images of some of the finest rock photographers of the era who were right there on the spot to capture rock history.

Compiled by renowned Zep authority Dave Lewis, this new 320-page revised and expanded edition offers a permanent visual record of a band at their absolute zenith – in a setting that truly justified their status as the world’s greatest live attraction. The book features over 250 black and white and colour photos plus over a 100 memorabilia images.

It comes in two versions – the standard edition is a 230mm square hardback format in a printed sleeve with slip case and four prints and is on sale on the day for a bargain £50.

There’s also an exclusive Leather and Metal Edition, measuring a huge 375mm square, bound in recycled burgundy leather and supplied in a hand-made aluminum slipcase with a reproduction show poster. Only 100 of these are available and includes the standard edition.

More details at:

https://www.rufuspublications.com/rufusbooks/Led-Zeppelin/

Some feedback from satisfied readers:

This is a magnificent celebration of Led Zeppelin’s stratospheric five evenings at Earls Court in May 1975. The different size format works superbly and takes us on a fantastic journey across nights seldom seen and the additional Adrian Boot photos from 23 May are sensational.

Ian Saikia – UK 

Led Zeppelin functioned on a different level in their live performances, that level reached a pinnacle in May 1975 with five nights at London’s Earls Court arena. Dave Lewis has put together a beautiful photographic chronicle of those nights. Packed full of rare photographs, memorabilia and more. Five  Glorious Nights Revised and Expanded perfectly preserves those legendary evenings with Led Zeppelin.

Ed Ortiz – US

Led Zeppelin Five Glorious Nights – Revised & Expanded Edition- is a complete privilege to have received. The book drives me directly into Earl’s Court. A  riveting and a compelling account of the legendary Led Zeppelin shows. The images and descriptions create a vision of the prestigious evenings that took place in 1975. “Just a little world to get lost in occasionally” as Robert Plant stated.

Wanda Wooten – US

And the press view…

Noted Zeppelin archivist Dave Lewis has compiled a lavish mostly chronological photographic record of their 1975 shows. Revamped with a host of new photographs. What shouldn’t surprise but actually does, is just how beautiful page and Plant were. 

John Azlewood – Classic Rock 

 

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MORE EARLS COURT:

Here’s a chapter on Led Zeppelin at Earls Court that was published in my  Celebration II -The Tight But Loose Files book by Omnibus Press in 2003… 

LED ZEPPELIN AT EARLS COURT 1975

WHY EARLS COURT WAS THE GREATEST SERIES OF CONCERTS LED ZEPPELIN EVER PLAYED

                                                                                         

“Improvisation – guitar Jimmy Page, drums John Bonham, John Paul Jones bass guitar. Just a little world to get lost in occasionally. It only takes about 20 minutes to plot around the time signatures.” – Robert Plant, May 24, 1975

So spoke Robert Plant from the stage of the Earls Court Arena after a performance of ‘Dazed And Confused’ that had spanned some 26 minutes.

Just a little world to get lost in… and almost 30 years ago there was ample opportunity to get lost in the world of Led Zeppelin as they performed five marathon concerts at London’s Earls Court.

Now there might be a school of thought that this era of three-hour plus sets represented all that was overblown about Zeppelin and indeed rock music itself in the mid-Seventies. Twenty-minute drum solos, marathon guitar solos, massive arenas and big light shows were all a long way from those innocent days of the Lyceum Ballroom and the Marquee, and such excesses would soon inspire the back-to-basics punk and new wave explosion that was around the corner.

But Led Zeppelin at Earls Court was absolutely of its time; a moment in time that captured the very essence of the power and influence the group held over its audience at this point in their career. Those of us who were lucky enough to be there – and indeed those that have since carefully studied the case history of Earls Court via the numerous bootlegs – will testify to their brilliance on those memorable May days. The sheer scale of what Led Zeppelin had become seemed to inspire an arrogance within the group that in turn led to their performing a series of shows that, as Plant was keen to explain, mirrored every colour of their musical spectrum. “We intend to take you through some of the colours… we’ve explored the prism and we’ve developed music along the lines of colours, some of them bright and some of them dark,” he told the audience on the final night.

Arrogant or not, the sheer gargantuan scale of Earls Court was perfect for Zeppelin in 1975. It was the ultimate demonstration of just how far they had progressed in the space of six and a half years; from humble post-Yardbirds beginnings to massive acceptance in America and their standing as Britain’s most successful group of the era. It also cemented the loyalty of their British fans.

Unlike The Beatles, Led Zeppelin were not and never would be mainstream heroes. Their music was never intended for an across-the-board audience. They were a cult, albeit a massive one, and like all cults they were a secret society, one that in their case attracted young, long-haired, mostly male followers who read about them avidly in the music press and took them very seriously indeed. The national tabloid press never understood them and, by and large, ignored them, it being assumed by the editors of such papers, probably correctly, that their readers simply weren’t interested.

Similarly, Led Zeppelin never appeared on TV or in the singles charts, manager Peter Grant having long ago decided that such popular media exposure was both unnecessary and, indeed, somehow demeaning. It was a doubly wise decision, not only placing Zeppelin on a pedestal occupied by no-one else but also creating the necessary vacuum in which the Led Zeppelin cult could flourish: a variation on the old showbiz maxim ‘keep ‘em wanting more’.

In today’s maze of mass communication, in which access to rock performers ranges from MTV to MP3 downloads, it seems extraordinary to consider that for a large part of the audience at Earls Court the only previous visual image they would have had of Led Zeppelin was from the pictures that appeared in the weekly music press. There were no videos in 1975 and even the pictures of the group that appeared on the covers of their albums were slyly obscured.

Though with a nod towards whimsical irony they named their music publishing arm Superhype, the massive success they now enjoyed had been built the hard way, on sheer word of mouth, on handed-down enthusiasm for their live concerts and the quality of their albums. If you were a Zeppelin fan there were no half measures. It was an all encompassing passion. Every album they released – and every move they made – became a part of your life. To be part of their world was to be part of a very special elite, and Earls Court offered the perfect platform for every lucky attendant to revel in that status.

It’s significant that at the time there was very little carping about their decision to play just three London dates in 1975. Fans accepted that the whole Led Zeppelin operation had become too large for a UK tour around the usual, theatre-style venues. To use a now familiar maxim – Led Zeppelin no longer played concerts, they staged events. Plant had hinted as such in interviews early in the year. Talking in January to Bob Harris on the BBC’s Whistle Test, the only TV show on which Zep might appear, albeit never live, he stated: “What we want to do in England, if we can find the right venue and I think we possibly can, is turn it into something of an event and go to town on it in true style.”

In a clever advertising strategy that incorporated British Rail and their ‘Zeppelin Express’, the concerts were promoted in adverts that displayed the links to London’s Earls Court arena via BR’s Inter City train services, thus explaining how Earls Court was easily accessible from all parts of the country. The difficult bit was actually obtaining the tickets. The three original dates sold out within a day of box offices opening around the country on March 15.

A further two dates for the preceding weekend of May 17/18 were added and they too sold out instantly. This prompted the noted critic and film maker Tony Palmer, in a very perceptive feature in The Observer magazine on May 18, 1975, to state that: “Statistics are always misleading. With Led Zeppelin statistics are irreverent – except that they are truly astonishing. Last night they gave the first of five concerts at London’s Earls Court arena. Total seats 85,000. No pop group in history, no entertainer, no film star, no opera singer has ever attracted such an audience.”

 

There are many reasons why Earls Court represented an all time high for the group.

For a start, unlike the rather nervous, tentative approach to Knebworth four years later, Led Zeppelin approached the run of Earls Court concerts at the very top of their game. When the dates were announced in mid-March the group were on the final stretch of their first American tour for two years. The tour had encountered problems early on in January when Page injured a finger just prior to the opening dates and Plant contracted flu in the chilly midwest. The first gigs were compromised by these setbacks but by the time they reached Madison Square Gardens on February 3 they were back on the rails, the fingers on Page’s left hand having recovered sufficiently to enable him to play ‘Dazed And Confused’ for the first time this tour. Eleven days later, at the Nassau Coliseum, they turned in a superb performance, ‘No Quarter’ taking on the improvisational free-form approach that would light up Earls Court. Towards the end of March they hit a real roll, putting together a string of consistently excellent performances, notably in Long Beach, Vancouver and Seattle. By now they were inserting a version of ‘Woodstock’ in the ‘Dazed’ interlude, another highlight of the forthcoming Earls Court run.

The American tour wound up with three performances at their spiritual home, the LA Forum. During these dates there was a hint of Earls Court fashion on parade, with Plant adopting the dark blue Miss Selfridge cut-off blouse and Page premiering the dragon-emblazoned suit trousers. On March 27, as the band shuffled off stage for the final time in America that year, Plant excitedly exclaimed: ‘If there’s anyone here from England – well we’re coming back, baby!”

Another key ingredient to the success of Earls Court was the stage presentation overseen by technician Ian Knight. The vastness of the 17,000 capacity arena offered the perfect opportunity to bring to the UK the so-called American show, all 40 tons of it, including a custom built 80 x 40 foot stage set up with black backcloths shielding over 300 flashbulbs that would ignite simultaneously as they returned to the stage for encores. Then there were the pioneering laser effects, designed to pierce through the air just as Page branded the violin bow during ‘Dazed’.

Also ahead of its time was the use giant Ediphor video screen  suspended high above the stage, at cost of £10,000, that allowed every one of the 17,000 present a clear view of the action. There were concerns over the acoustics of the hall, promoter Mel Bush having been on the end of criticism when David Bowie had played the venue in 1973 (though there were no such problems when Slade played the same venue a week later). Having learnt from that experience and the fact that Zeppelin employed the best sound system in the world, courtesy of the Showco team from Dallas, he was confident that everyone in the audience would hear and see the group in the best possible setting.

Then there was the set list. Initially developed for the American tour to present a cross section of their progress to date, it included material from the newly released Physical Graffiti, ‘Sick Again’, ‘In My Time Of Dying’, ‘Kashmir’ and ‘Trampled Underfoot’ all offering live evidence of the potency of a new record that included 15 recordings spread across a double album. If Earls Court represents a live peak, then Physical Graffiti stands alongside it as their definitive recorded statement. On stage, numbers such as ‘Trampled Underfoot’ and Kashmir’ developed beyond their studio counterparts to take on a new life of their own, just like previous great Zep live creations. The only disappointment was that they did not introduce more numbers from the album on stage, ‘The Wanton Song’ being dropped after a few airings early on the US tour and ‘Custard Pie’ not making it out of rehearsals.

They also reinstated the acoustic section last heard in America in 1972. Gathered together closely at the front of the stage, seated on chairs, the group offered ‘Going To California’, ‘That’s The Way’ and ‘BronY Aur Stomp’, bringing an intimacy to the proceedings that belied the huge setting and accentuating the rapport between artists and audience.

Then there was the reinstating for Earls Court only of ‘Tangerine’, performed as a four-part harmony piece – “We can do ‘Bus Stop’ by The Hollies next time” quipped Plant on May 18 – and the overall sequencing of the show, whereby marathons such as ‘No Quarter’, ‘Moby Dick’ and ‘Dazed And Confused’ were strategic placed so as to sustain the momentum. ‘Moby Dick’ may have been long and indulgent but there were no mass walkouts. It was accepted it for what it was, an integral part of Led Zeppelin and a showcase for Bonzo and his craft. ‘Stairway To Heaven’ was now the rightful finale to every show and still sung by Plant as though he meant every word.

It would have been easy for them to simply re-enact the US set list for these UK shows. The fact that they actually came up with an exclusive repertoire says much for the high regard they placed on these Earls Court shows. Never before had they had such a vast array of material at their disposal, and never before (or again) would they present it so intelligently.

 

Led Zeppelin’s shows at Earls Court were among their most photographed ever, justifiably so since in 1975 they were certainly at their most photogenic. Zeppelin’s reputation may have been built more on their music than the clothes they wore but they didn’t ignore the sartorial side of things completely. The mystique that developed from their lack of media exposure led to an element of mystery about their actual appearance. Magnified by the use of a video screen, the way they looked and dressed at Earls Court became ingrained on the minds of those in attendance and in turn by the appearance of countless shots that have appeared in books and magazines ever since.

Page’s dragon suit and flailing black hair radiated a demonic quality evident in his every twist and turn across the stage. The suit reflected Page’s other worldly image as never before. His face covered in a tangled mass of damp curls, his fingers leaping from fret to fret, he seemed so fully immersed in his playing that it was difficult not to be overwhelmed by the sheer charisma of a genius of the electric guitar in his absolute element.

Equally in his prime was Jimmy’s foil, Robert Plant. The singer dominated proceedings over the five nights with a confidence and cheeky arrogance that reflected the whole upbeat camaraderie within the group. Aside from one night when he pulled out the wraparound, long sleeved attire he’d used on the US tour, he chose a Miss Selfridge cut-off that exposed plenty of chest and wore his blonde hair long and loose. His vocal strength that required none of the stimulus of the electronic harmoniser that was predominant in later years.

Always a more than competent master of ceremonies, at Earls Court Plant took on the added role of group raconteur, conjuring up various witticisms and telling a series of little stories about the group’s history: “Bonzo refused to join us because he was getting £40 with Tim Rose,” he said on May 24. “I had eight telegrams sent to the Three Men In A Boat pub in Walsall where Noddy Holder was our roadie… nobody would believe The New Yardbirds…” and about Earls Court itself: “It’s such a pleasure to be playing to so many peoeple in England all at one time – we couldn’t make Nottingham Boat club this time” (May 17) and “The equipment you see now amassed above our heads in a rather precarious position took three weeks to get through customs, so were really pleased not only to be here and able to play but to have all the equipment to give you our best” (May 18).

There was a high quota of soccer references: “Jimmy McCalloig’s has left the stage” (May 24) and “The Welsh, who nearly beat Scotland yesterday!” (May 18), and a few typical swipes at the press: “Charles Shaar Murray wherever you are – keep taking the pills” (May 25). There was mention of their children: “Tonight there is a lad watching his dad who is a remarkable drummer. He is better than 80% of rock group drummers today. So Jason Bonham this is your dad John Bonham!” (May 24) and “Well, Carmen here it is, a song to a little girl who sits there probably wondering what it’s all about. In fact to all our kids who come and see us and sit and go ‘oh really’. But what’s it all about so where is the bridge. Well Carmen, here’s your chance to find out where the bridge is and if you know, will you let us know after the show?” (May 25). The group were about to go into self imposed tax exile and Plant was obviously none too happy at the high earnings tax he and the group were obliged to pay, so Chancellor Denis Healey didn’t escape his sharp tongue: “Somebody voted for someone and now everyone’s on the run” (May 25) and “You know Denis – no artists in the country anymore – he must be ‘Dazed And Confused’!”

Listening to these comments almost 30 years later adds much to the period feel of Zeppelin in 1975. Robert Plant talked a very good show every night in Earls Court adding much to the rapport between the group and their audience.

As for Jones, his fashion sense was as bizarre as ever, risking Plant’s caustic wit with that fancy Spanish jacket complete with onions on the shoulders and sporting a pair of platform shoes that Noddy Holder would have been proud of. His playing, particularly on ‘Kashmir’ and ‘No Quarter’ was exemplary, even by his high standards. Rarely if ever did those two compositions sound as impressive as when they were performed at Earls Court.

A beardless Bonzo, retaining his sideboards and sporting a new smarter haircut, looked well up for it, respondent in embroidered T-shirt. His no-nonsense cut and thrust approach to the familiar Perspex drum kit was the driving force of Earls Court. Interviewed by Chris Welch just after the gigs he was obviously proud of the way his band handled these UK dates. “I really enjoyed those concerts,” he admitted. “I thought they were the best shows we’ve ever put on in England. I always get tense before a show and we were expecting trouble with such a huge audience. But everything went really well. I also thought the video screen was well worth doing. It cost a lot of bread but you could see close-ups you’d never be able to see normally at a concert.”

So they had the confidence, they had the look, they had the lights, they had the set list. All they had to do was deliver. And deliver they did.

TO BE CONTINUED…

————————————————————————————————————————–

And then two years later this happened…

TBL Archive : Heathrow Airport – 48 years Gone:

48 years ago on Tuesday May 17,1977 , I awoke with the day’s mission being to hook up with the members of Led Zeppelin – and incredibly that is exactly what happened.

As this story that appeared in TBL issue 18 explains, any plans to actually go out and see them perform live in America had been thwarted by a serious lack of funds. My then wages of £22 per week earned working on the record and tapes department at WH Smith in Bedford was never going to get me to Madison Square Garden.

As a mad keen fan of just 20 years old, I knew there had to be another way to see them. With invaluable help from Unity McClean at the Swan Song office, I hatched a plan to go to Heathrow Airport to wave them off as they began the second leg of the tour.

I got the idea from all those newsreel films of The Beatles being waved off from airports by loads of screaming girls. I did not envisage too many screaming girls being there but I did think it was a relatively feasible way of seeing them.

Unity very kindly supplied me with the timings and so it was on Tuesday May 17, I set off from Bedford to achieve my quest. I stopped off at the Swan Song office to catch up with Unity. I even got involved in running a few errands – not uncommon whenever I visited. I was dispatched to the local Kings Road newsagent to buy copies of the first day’s edition of the Evening Standard. This was to check that they had carried an apology for a mistaken identity story involving a false Robert Plant story they had run with the previous day.

Unity was well pleased to find it in there and immediately biked over a copy to Peter Grant. Back in the office Unity gave me various photos to get signed. I then took the tube to Hatton Cross and boarded a bus from there to get to the terminal. Back then there was no direct tube line into Heathrow.

I arrived at Heathrow just after 4pm. A couple of Welsh fans Russ Rees and Peter Jones (who I am still in touch with) were also there. Outside the main doors John Bonham was holding court by one of the limos chatting to Richard Cole. John Paul Jones arrived wearing a union jack cardigan – it was the Queen’s Silver Jubilee year and patriotism was well high. Unity later told me Jonesy had laughed when he had seen the pics I took as the jacket had fallen to pieces soon after.

Robert kept up the royal theme wearing a badge of the Queen. Robert arrived soon after looking every inch the rock god. The first photo shows me following him across the road -Robert carrying his own luggage –  he only had to ask and I’ve gladly helped him out !

The mood was very upbeat and friendly. I talked to Robert about how the tour was going and he relayed how much they were enjoying it. A roadie came in on the conversation and Robert mentioned how much he liked Maria Muldaur’s Midnight At The Oasis song.

Robert and JPJ were more than happy to sign my photos and pose for a pic. I’m carrying the photos I took along and look at those badges – dinner plate size! I’m wearing the jacket I regularly wore for work.  I look as proud as a peacock and that’s exactly how I felt. It was just incredible to be in their company – my idols right next to me!

Robert kept on joking about Jimmy’s whereabouts as he was running late. ”Where’s Patti Page ”? he kept repeating. Jimmy arrived in a Range Rover driven by his driver Rick Hobbs. He looked a little unsteady in a white suit but soon began joking and chatting with the others. I chatted to him for a couple of minutes.

I finally left them as their flight was called around 6pm. it was an absolutely thrilling experience and I made my way back to Bedford in something of a daze. I was due to play in a Wallbangers football match that night but arrived too late -not that it mattered too much as we won 11-0!

The next day I relayed these tales to my Mum and Dad and then girlfriend Fiona. In the morning I was back behind the counter selling records at WH Smith while Led Zeppelin took to the stage in Birmingham Alabama. There’s some amazing cine film of that gig and when I watch it I always marvel at the fact that I was one of the last people to talk to them in England before they left for yet another trail blazing tour of America.

Exactly two years to the day of the first Earls Court concert, I had experienced yet another incredible occasion in their company. Like all these occasions, it enhanced my enthusiasm to follow this group and it’s music with increasing passion love and devotion.

46 years on from that remarkable experience, that passion love and devotion remains ever strong….and that afternoon in Heathrow Airport is a memory that shines ever brightly…and one of many that will be in my planned DL memories book for sure…

Dave Lewis – May 15 2025

Thanks to Russ Rees and Peter Jones for the photos.  

DL Diary Blog Update:


TBL Snapshot…this month in 1975…

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The Beatles Fixing a Hole Podacast:

Paul Humbley has been in touch with an update on his excellent Beatles podcast…

Episode 7: Getting Back To Get Back

On their return from India in the spring of 1968. The Beatles set about recording the ‘White Album,’ a collection of 30 songs, many of which were written in Rishikesh.

In between these 6 months of recording sessions, they released their 18th single ‘Hey Jude’ and launched their own record label Apple.

In episode 7 of Fixing a Hole we look at the 2021 Peter Jackson documentary ‘Get Back’. Which tells the story of why following this intensive period of work, John, Paul, George, and Ringo decided that 6 weeks after the release of the ‘White Album’, they would go back into the studio and write, rehearse, and perform 14 new songs in January 1969.

(Click on the link below to download)

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1b5nJjrFCytYzxx-VGEV0wVYBtsxT1E8l/view?usp=drive_link

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DL Diary Blog Update:

Saturday May 10:

Great to see Phil Harris, Cliff Hilliard and Ian Dixon for a half time drink in between visits to the Bedford VIP record fair…

Saturday May 10:

In the pub after the Bedford VIP record fair where I was well pleased to find a copy of the 1970 compilation album The Age of Atlantic – this one the 1972 Kinney K label pressing –  £5 ? I’ll take it !

Sunday May 11:

DL CD charity shop finds…
Now this was a bargain crop I was alerted to yesterday – 3 for £1 oh yes – I’ll take £4’s worth!
Thanks to Pete B

Sunday May 11:

TBL celebrates the 50th anniversary of Led Zeppelin at Earls Court – 6 days to go…the countdown is on…
50 years on, my devotion remains the same…
Here’s a recent DL Zep bootleg purchase. I am well pleased to be in receipt of this new CD box set set – number 186 of 200.
Led Zeppelin Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machine:
13 CD box set of soundboard and audience recordings covering nine of their performances in 1969 – as they became Led Zeppelin.
In fact this set acts as an unofficial soundtrack to the Becoming Led Zeppelin film era. Great package with a 16 page booklet plus written commentary on each show.
I am very much looking forward to wading through this set in the coming days leading up to the Zep at Earls Court 50th anniversary…

Tuesday May 13:

TBL celebrates the 50th anniversary of Led Zeppelin at Earls Court – 4 days to go…the countdown is on.
50 years on my devotion remains the same…
Sorting out some cassettes and came across these original Led Zep tapes – back then in the early 70s, I had my own numbering system for each cassette I received – it went up to about a 100 then I lost count…I probably still have around 600 Zep cassettes – there’s many a memory of hearing these gems for the first time…

Tuesday May 13:

Great to be back working with TBL designer Mick Lowe on a few things today at the StudioMix cabin…

Wednesday May 14:

Great night out watching the new John Lennon film Borrowed Time at the genesis cinema in Whitechapel. Pic here with the director Alan G. Parker and Ian Abrahams and Mick Bulow…
Wednesday May 14:
Back to the site of the Earls Court Arena sadly long gone…it was emotional…
Update here:
A busy week of prep for the Saturday pub meet that as can be seen above included a trip back to Earls Court to check out The Kings Head pub –
While I was there I had look around where many a lasting memory was made all of 50 years ago.
Sadly, the Earls Court Arena was demolished some years back – here’s a pic from 2010 before the builders moved in.
All these years on, those Zep at Earls Court memories are as vivid as ever and I am looking forward to being immersed in them in the coming days and sharing the experience..…
Thanks for listening

Until next time…

Dave  Lewis –   May  15  2025

TBL website updates written and compiled by Dave Lewis

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