Few British rock stars have been as meticulous with regard to their property portfolio as guitarist Jimmy Page, the mastermind behind Led Zeppelin. From his Thames-side boathouse in Pangbourne to Deanery Gardens in Sonning via Tower House in London’s Holland Park, multi-millionaire Page has shown exquisite taste, his keen appreciation for historic architecture rivalled only by George Harrison’s acquisition and restoration of the magnificent Friar Park in Henley. The only blip on Page’s residential landscape seems to have been Boleskine House on the shores of Loch Ness which Page purchased more with an eye for the notoriety of a former owner than any aesthetic appeal.
Born in Heston in 1944, Page spent his formative years in
Epsom, with the family moving to 34 Miles Road when their only child James Patrick
was eight. Page lived here until 1967 by which time he had accumulated enough funds
from his session work to put down the deposit on the £6,000 house in
Pangbourne. “Parked beautifully on the leafy
banks of the River Thames, the dwelling was all windy passages and mysterious,
angular rooms, leading to a quite beautiful lower level where a boat was
moored, ready for instant take-off,” wrote Martin Power in his Page biography No Quarter: The Three Lives of Jimmy Page.
It was here that in July 1968 he would play host to a young singer from the
Midlands whose three-day stay led to his houseguest, name of Robert Plant,
becoming the singer in Led Zeppelin.
Pangbourne
With the revenues from the first two Led
Zeppelin albums now sitting in his bank account, Page acquired Boleskine House
on the south east side of Loch Ness in 1970. Once the home of Aleister Crowley,
the slightly sinister mystic, painter and writer, it was situated near Foyers
Bay and in poor condition. “It was in such a state of decay that
nobody wanted it,” Page later told Led Zeppelin archivist Howard Mylett. “It’s
an interesting house and a perfect place to go when one starts getting wound up
by the clock.”
By the time Page acquired
Boleskine he had already become fascinated by Crowley, buying up Crowley-related
ephemera that included private manuscripts, first editions of books, artwork,
items of clothing and ceremonial vessels. Allegedly built on the
site of a 10th Century Kirk (Scottish church) that according to
legend “had been burnt down with its congregation”, the house was shunned by
locals, as was a nearby graveyard. Crowley bought the ‘Manor of Boleskine and Abertarff’ in 1899, believing that
its secluded location was
eminently suitable for the staging of magical rituals, some of them erotic in
nature. In the fullness of time Page would open a book shop in North Kensington
called Equinox that was devoted to these interests. “There was not one bookshop
in London with a good collection of occult books,” Page said, “and I was so
pissed off at not being able to get the books I wanted.”
Boleskine
Up
in Scotland Page endeared himself to the locals in 1979 by opening the new
Phillip’s Harbour at Harrow, near Caithness, which he visited with the
unrealised intention of opening a recording studio up there. Although he did
some restoration work at Boleskine he sold the house in 1992 for £250,000,
largely because he rarely had time to visit. The subsequent owners opened it as
a hotel, then resold it in 2002 to a private buyer. In 2015 Boleskine was badly
damaged in a fire and now awaits repair work.
Page’s next real home after Pangbourne was
Plumpton Place, a Grade II Elizabethan Manor House in its own grounds near
Lewes in East Sussex. Page acquired the property in 1971, shortly after the
birth of his first daughter Scarlet, and owned it until 1985. With parts of the
property dating from the 16th Century, it benefitted from
improvements by renowned British architect Sir Edwin
Luytens, and comprised six
bedrooms, a large library and a 48ft long sitting room, all surrounded by a
moat and lakes, not to mention two small cottages close by and a three-bedroom
mill house with its own working water wheel. Plumpton Place was the setting for
the segment in the Led Zeppelin movie The
Song Remains The Same wherein Page sits with his back to camera playing a hurdy-gurdy
alongside a moat as a pair of black Australian swans swim by. The sequence that
follows, in which Page climbs a hill in a hooded red robe, was filmed at
Boleskine.
Plumpton Place
With
Plumpton Place located 67 miles south of London,
Page was always going to need a London base and this turned out to be The Tower
House on Melbury Road in west London’s affluent Holland Park. Designed and
built between 1875 and 1881 to the exact specifications of renowned architect
William Burges, Tower House – now a Grade I listed building – was a testament
to the French Gothic Revival style that had enjoyed a brief upsurge in
popularity throughout Victorian Britain. With its red brick facade, Cumbrian
green slate roof, tracery windows and prominent cylindrical tower marking it out
from the surrounding houses, it had enjoyed a rich history of ownership before
Page arrived. These included esteemed archaeologist Richard Popplewell-Pullan,
two army colonels and Poet Laureate Sir John Betjeman. “I don’t see how anyone
can fail to be impressed by its weird beauty,” said Betjeman “[or] awed into
silence from the force of this Victorian dream of the Middle Ages.”
After a brief period of neglect, Tower House was given a
facelift in the mid-sixties by Lady Jane Turnbull, the daughter of the 9th
Earl of Stamford, whose portrait hung in the National Portrait Gallery. In 1969
Lady Turnbull sold it for £75,000 to Irish actor, singer and bon vivant Richard
Harris. “I loved the eccentricity of it,” Harris said at the time. “It was
built by Burges who also built Cork Cathedral and it was the focal point of
Kensington for me when I arrived in London.” An astute home owner who profited
from buying, renovating and then quickly selling properties, Harris nonetheless
lingered in the house even though he believed that ghosts of children who
previously lived there inhabited certain rooms. To soothe their restless spirit,
he bought them toys. “I love ghosts,” he said of his nightly visitors. “I
depend on them to guide me through.” Harris brought in Burges’ original
decorators Campbell Smith and Co. to restore its stone and plasterwork but in
1972 sold it for £350,000 to Page who outbid David Bowie, another rock star keen
to inhabit its peculiar magnificence.
Tower House
Page’s new acquisition boasted unusual inner decorations that
mirrored his own particular interests in arcane, Gothic and Pre-Raphaelite design.
Its painted ceilings depicted astrological signs, the sculpted mantelpiece in
the library formed the Tower of Babel at its centre and elsewhere could be
found murals, detailed woodwork, carvings and other objects of art, pagan or
otherwise. It was built for exploration. “I was still finding things 20 years
after being there,” Page told the BBC
News Online in 2012, “a little beetle
on the wall or something like that. It’s Burges’ attention to detail that is so
fascinating.”
On October 15, 1979, a
23-year-old friend of Page died at the guitarist’s house in Plumpton Place, and
his demise triggered Page’s decision to put the house on the market, although
it wouldn’t actually change hands until the mid-eighties. However, his next country
home, Old Mill House at Clewer near Windsor, would also become the scene of a
tragedy for this was where Led Zeppelin drummer John Bonham died on September
25, 1980. Page bought the three-storey residence from British actor Michael
Caine for £900,000, largely because it was close to a studio he had acquired at
nearby Cookham, and would live there with American Patricia Ecker whom he
married in 1986 and who would bear him a son, James Patrick III. (Page later
married Jimena Gómez-Paratcha who bore him two further children, a girl born in
1997 and a boy two years later, but they were divorced in 2008.) Old Mill House
was sold in 2008.
Old Mill House
In the meantime Page had
purchased another country property that in terms of prestige and architectural
splendour was a match for Tower House. This was Deanery Gardens, also known as
The Deanery, at Sonning near Reading, another Grade I listed building of
significant historical importance and, like Plumpton Place, designed by Sir
Edwin Lutyens. Financed by Edward Hudson, the owner of Country Life magazine, it was completed in 1901 and has changed
hands several times in the last 100 years. Built in Lutyens’ Tudor
Arts-and-Crafts style, it comprises two stories in brick with exposed timbers
that surround a courtyard with an archway leading to the extensive grounds. Planted
by the noted British horticulturalist Gertrude Jekyll, the gardens incorporate
ornate curved steps, elevations, swimming pools, an orchard, herb beds and a
croquet lawn. Although The Deanery is in the centre of the village, close to
the Bull Inn and St Andrew’s Church, it is surrounded by high brick walls and extremely
secluded. Neighbours include George and Amal Clooney and illusionist Uri Geller,
and until Page acquired the property it was open to the public.
Deanery Gardens
The only hitch in Page’s enviable
property portfolio seems to be an ongoing dispute with his neighbour in Holland
Park. The mansion next door to Tower House, Woodland House, was bought in 2013
for £17.5 million by singer Robbie Williams after the death of its previous
owner, film director Michael Winner. Evidently its 46 rooms were insufficient
for Williams’ requirements and the former bad boy of Take That planned to
excavate its grounds to create further subterranean rooms and the building of a
recording studio. Claiming that such building work might disturb the
foundations of Tower House and expose his property to the public, Page
recruited architects and structural engineers to support his case and won a
partial reprieve that forced Williams to change his specifications. Ironically,
considering the volume at which Led Zeppelin used to perform, builders at the
site have been fined for making excessive noise. At the time of writing construction
work appears to have been delayed at Woodland House and the Tower – believed to
contain the dazzling dragon suits that Jimmy Page wore on stage – remains
intact, as proud and lofty a symbol of Led Zeppelin’s stature in the rock world
as any rock star mansion anywhere.
(All photos taken from the internet.)
Fascinating piece, well researched & written.
ReplyDeleteMany thanks,
Gus x.
You cant chooses your parents or your neighbors
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Williams is a jumped up Butlins redcoat
ReplyDeleteNicely written, accurate piece and a pleasure to read - thank you.
ReplyDeleteSpotted mention of Richard Hell on your biog. Saw him with the Void Oids at Bristol Exhibition Centre supporting The Clash, supported by The Loos, 5 November 1977. What an unparalleled night that was.
The article presents very interesting options for retro houses, in which there are many old design solutions, in which, at the present time, there is no need. For example, locally with ordinary lamps and huge windows, it would be nice to install Cloud Ceilings, since this thing solves lighting problems, and in general a great option that pleasing to the eye
ReplyDeleteIf it wasn't for Williams, there would never have been Stairway to heaven whole lotta love ..kashmir ..since I been loving you , Black dog ..acchilles last stand because Williams wrote the songs for page to use in led Zeppelin.
ReplyDelete