The first music interview I ever did, in March 1969, about 14 months before
I joined Melody
Maker, was with Jimmy Page and John Paul
Jones, for the Bradford Telegraph & Argus which had appointed me their pop correspondent. Coinciding with the UK release of their first album, it was only on the phone, with JP and JPJ talking
to me from London, and I guess they’d been cornered by their PR and talked to a
dozen or more hacks like me from the provincial press in the course of one
morning.
In the light of what Led
Zeppelin would become and how they would figure in my world when I joined MM,
it seems strangely clairvoyant now that of all the groups I could have
interviewed in this way, it turned out to be Zep. I can’t remember interviewing
any other acts on the phone, though I did stories on Joe Cocker and The Move
while I was on the T&A. I hadn’t even heard their first album, and the
interview was fairly slight. Led Zep’s PR had sent me a press release, but no
LP, and I’d read this before talking to JP and JPJ. Of course I hadn’t a clue
what they sounded like or what they would become. By the time I actually met
them, backstage at the Bath Festival in June of 1970, they were massive. Later
that same year they would win the MM poll for best
British group, toppling The Beatles, and I remember chatting with them at the
ceremony held in the Savoy Hotel on the Strand. I never mentioned how I’d
interviewed them for the T&A though.
My short story about Led Zeppelin was published on April 1, 1969, and the only clue as to who had written it was ‘CC’ at the end. It has a rather naïve charm about it, and it seems I felt the need to put Led Zeppelin in quotation marks because it was such an unusual name.
My short story about Led Zeppelin was published on April 1, 1969, and the only clue as to who had written it was ‘CC’ at the end. It has a rather naïve charm about it, and it seems I felt the need to put Led Zeppelin in quotation marks because it was such an unusual name.
The idea of individual musicians
getting together to form a “supergroup” was started by Cream, who have now
disbanded, but four more “advanced pop” exponents have got together with a
similar idea.
Former
Yardbird and session guitarist Jimmy Page and three other experienced pop men
have just finished a successful tour of the States and their new album,
released only a week ago, is selling well.
With
the unlikely name of “Led Zeppelin” they specialise in progressive pop. Jimmy
tells me he hopes progressive pop will catch on but unless the BBC give it air
time it will be difficult going.
“People
are beginning to accept the idea of sitting listening to a group instead of
dancing but there are no decent halls in this country where the audience can
sit. The Albert Hal is the most diabolical place. It is acoustically useless.”
Jimmy
has scant respect for young groups with pretty faces who learn to play their
guitars after their records are in the charts. “The only people they are
fooling is themselves,” he says. “I know they are making money. They must know
in their own minds they are just putting on a ‘con’ trick.”
Bass
player is John Paul Jones who once played with former Shadow Jet Harris when he
teamed up with drummer Tony Meehan. He has also done session work with Donovan
and the Stones and appeared at the Talk Of The Town backing Dusty Springfield.
John
Paul says that when Led Zeppelin started to play a number they are not quite
sure how it would end up. “The number can go off at a tangent, with different
tempo changes. We can improvise and it can be very interesting.”
Of
pretty groups with no musical ability he says: “If they turn out a product and
the public likes, then obviously there is a demand for them. We would not
appeal to the same audience and would not dream of playing anything like that.”
The
other two members of Led Zeppelin are vocalist Robert Plant and, who used to
sing with Alexis Korner, and drummer John Bonham, who accompanied Tim Rose on
his 1968 British tour.
Led
Zeppelin won’t be making any singles but what out for their albums on the LP
charts. C.C.
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