Seeing Robert
Plant referred to as Bob is as rare as seeing Bob Dylan referred to as Robert, but
in Led Zeppelin: The Day I Was There
Derek Thomas, who was 14 at the time, recalls that in 1965 ‘Bob’ Plant was
fronting a band called Black Snake Moan at St John’s Hall, Stourbridge. “Bob
was always around,” he says. “If there were any local gigs on with local
musicians up would pop Bob and he’d take over lead singing or join the band. I
even saw him at a New Year’s Eve gig at Dudley Town Hall. Roy Harper was there,
all nice and gentle, and up pops Bob. At the end of the evening he and Roy were
singing ‘Auld Lang Syne’ to us.”
It is anecdotes such as this that make these
‘I Was There’ books published by This Day In Music such fun to read. Following
on from The Beatles, Stones, Who, Bowie, Dylan, Springsteen, Pink Floyd and
Hendrix, TDIM now brings us this one on Zep, compiled by Richard Houghton but
in reality written by fans for fans. The books all follow the same format, with
several hundred attendees writing about shows they’ve seen, and there is no
question that in their own way they tell a story, not just of the story of the
act in question, which is self-evident, but a story of devotion that, in some
cases, is not just extraordinary but also life affirming in an era when rock
music seems to matter less and less to its innate constituency.
Pleasingly, this new addition to the series
opens with a handful of pre-Zep gigs by ‘Bob’ Plant in a band or two around the
Midlands, and the Yardbirds, featuring Jimmy Page, in the USA (though,
strangely, not the UK), right the way through the Led Zep years (and slightly
beyond) to June 30, at Frankfurt, on their final European jaunt in 1980, a tour
misleadingly described as ‘disastrous’ on the back cover copy. While certainly not
in the same league as the barnstorming tours of the early seventies, ‘Zeppelin
Over Europe 1980’ was a genuine attempt to rediscover their roots, cut down on
the excess and somehow find their way back into a rock world that had changed
irrevocably since the setbacks that caused the group to withdraw from the arena
after the debacle of Oakland, July 23 & 24, 1977. Now that really was a ‘disaster’.
Many, though not all, of the gigs that
I saw are included in the book so it’s nice to read reports from fellow
attendees whom I never knew, especially Sharon who hitched from Wales to the Bath
Festival in 1970 and mentions she was also present at a ‘horrendous’ festival
in Yorkshire the same year. That must have been Krumlin where I saw Elton for
the first time. Sharon and I are in total agreement re both events. Andy, who
was at the Marquee on 23 March, 1971, a show I reviewed for Melody Maker, doesn’t mention how packed
it was, and neither Ian not Dee, who saw the Alexandra Palace show on 22 December,
1972, mention the atrocious sound. A shame the publishers were unable to find
anyone who in October 1972 was at Montreux Casino where, in hindsight, the two concerts
I saw rank as my best ever Zep encounter. The wearing and tearing that bedevilled
Led Zep in January 1975 – Plant’s throat problems and Page’s injured finger –
concur with my memories of these shows, along with the restoration of normal
service by the time they reached New York and Madison Square Garden by February.
I saw the group from the floor a few rows back at the same Garden in June 1977,
when I went as a mere spectator, not as an MM
critic, my 12th and final Zep show and the first time I didn’t take
notes, so it’s nice to read what those around me thought.
What does come across by reading all
these accounts of shows is not so much the performance reviews, which are
uniformly positive, but the extreme tests of endurance that many fans had to
undergo to obtain tickets and travel to the venues. Queueing overnight,
hitching and experiencing bad weather outdoors or insufferably crowded stadiums
are all borne with a shrug, as if nothing is too awful to bear for a glimpse of
Zep in action. Only football teams generate more loyalty from their fans but
football teams are transient, changing every season with players coming and
going all the time. Certain older rock groups are slowly doing the same thing,
of course, but modern ticketing – let’s not talk about the prices here – stadium
layout and improved seating make life far more comfortable for the 21st
Century rock fan. So spare a thought for Jen who queued for eight hours for
the Leeds Uni show in March, 1971, and tells us she would have queued for eight more
hours had it been necessary. That’s dedication for you.
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