I can count on the fingers of one
hand the number of times I have encountered the three surviving members of Led
Zeppelin since I left Melody Maker in
1977. I spoke to Jimmy at John Entwistle’s memorial service and at the opening
of Jim Marshall’s photo exhibition a few years ago, and had a nice chat with
John Paul at a party that followed the unveiling of Jimi Hendrix’s Blue Plaque
in Brook Street in 1997. I saw all three at a meeting in a London Hotel I
attended concerning Music Sales’ acquiring the rights to their sheet music in
2008, and this was the only time I was reacquainted with Robert, who failed to
recognise me. He began a conversation about Derby County FC and I had to point
out that I wasn’t Roy Hollingworth – a big Derby fan – but Chris Charlesworth who
once followed Leeds United. He apologised for getting us mixed up and was on
his way and I haven’t seen him since, though I did attend a concert of his at
the Kentish Town Country Club back in the nineties.
Like
most music journalists I found Robert to be the most congenial member of Led
Zeppelin during their pomp. He was happy to be interviewed at any time and
always spoke well, and unlike the others never seemed to look on the press as
potential adversaries. There was none of the distrust that I detected from
Jimmy and John Bonham (and Peter Grant), or the indifference I felt from John
Paul, who was never unfriendly but simply didn’t seem interested. No, Robert
was the acceptable face of Led Zeppelin and I came to like him a lot.
I
still do. His most recent album Lullaby
and… The Ceaseless Roar, released in September, is a joy, another step of
his long exploratory journey as his own man, and a glance at the instrumental
credits assures us that the journey is continuing apace: bendirs, djembe,
tehardant, tabal, kologo, ritti and Fulani vocals are among them. I haven’t a
clue what any of these instruments are, but I do know that they make a beautiful
noise.
These
days Robert resembles a shaggy old lion, and he seems almost embarrassed by the
image he presented in the seventies, the lecherous rock god with a suspiciously
large bulge in his jeans who promised to bestow us with every inch of his love.
Long believed to be the stumbling block as regards a Led Zeppelin reunion of any permanence, he
hasn’t quite put his past behind him but it’s far from his prime concern, as it
is for Page. The music on Lullaby…
contains only the tiniest trace of Led Zeppelin – a snatch of lyric here, a
rousing electric guitar there – which I think he does as a bit of a tease. For
the most part, though, it’s an adventurous and unpredictable mix of folk rock,
mostly self-penned and mostly easy on the ear yet never
bland.
Folk
rock is perhaps too loose a term. Robert has long been a supporter of, and collaborator with, the Afro Celt Sound System and, like Peter Gabriel whose Box Studio near Bath was where this album was recorded, is clearly drawn to music of the Third World. The unusual instrumentation gives many of the
songs an African feel, and Robert's voice has a breathy, tranquil quality that flips between soothing and haunting. Two songs have a confessional feel: in ‘A Stolen Kiss’, a deep and stately
piano ballad, and ‘House Of Love’, a lovely rolling pop song with prominent
bass, we are given to assume that he is writing about the break up of his relationship with the
country singer Patti Austin with whom he made a home in Texas for a while before returning
to the UK sadder but wiser. The most impressive piece is ‘Embrace Another Fall’
with an ominous texture and rhythmic African drums controlling the tempo until
the song breaks out with arena-style rock guitar before closing with a verse from an old Welsh folk song, ‘Marwnad
yr Ehedydd’, sung by guest vocalist Julie Murphy in the language of the land of
our fathers. It’s very impressive.
Elsewhere
Robert continues the Led Zeppelin tradition of unearthing old blues by
rearranging Leadbelly’s ‘Poor Howard’ as a bluegrass romp with pizzicato banjo
that brings to mind a square-dance in the saloon of a 19th
century mid-western town, and while opener ‘Little Maggie’ has echoes of the
same, there’s something far more portentous in its electronic backdrop, a touch
of Kraftwerk I thought, and mournful violin.
It
would be remiss of me not to mention that, by and large, the textures of Lullaby… are not dissimilar to Raising Sand, the superb Grammy Award
winning record that Robert made with Alison Krauss in 2007. It’s more
adventurous, for sure, but if you liked that and want to accompany the golden voiced Plant on his restless quest to bury the past, you’ll like this, probably all the more so.
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