Showing posts with label Bron-Y-Aur Stomp. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bron-Y-Aur Stomp. Show all posts

Thursday, July 20, 2023

On this day 20 July

 Once upon a time, a long time ago, Jimmy Page first discovered that Robert Plant could sing

1966 20 July The Yardbirds Stourbridge, England at Town Hall
♪ Happenings Ten Years Time Ago (Yardbirds) Soundcloud

2010 20 July On This Day Jimmy Page interview for Guitar Aficionado Magazine

  • 1966 The Yardbirds-Stourbridge, England at Town Hall
  • 1967 The Yardbirds - Denver, CO at Lakeside Amusement Park
  • 1969 Led Zeppelin - Warrensville Heights, OH at MusiCarnival
  • 1973 Led Zeppelin - Boston, MA at Boston Garden
  • 1977 Led Zeppelin - Tempe, AZ at A.S.U. Activities Center Arena
  • 1995 Page & Plant Unledded Tour - Dublin, Ireland at The Point Theatre
  • 2010 Guitar Afficionado Magazine interview with Brad Tolinski

1969 Led Zeppelin, Warrensville Heights (Cleveland) at MusiCarnival (Photo K Katzan)
1968:
Jimmy Page and Peter Grant checked out Robert Plant performing with a band called Hobstweedle (a.k.a. Obs-tweedle) at a teachers training college near Birmingham.  Chris Dreja was with Page and Grant.

1973:
The Boston Garden was one of the venues for Led Zeppelin's North American Tour after the release of Houses of the Holy. The crowd was rowdy and Plant's voice was strained. He tried to quiet things down several times but nothing helped so several songs were cut from the setlist and there were no encores. Again.

1977:
"Shambolic" is a word I learned from Jimmy Page, and it is a word that applies to the Tempe show, which also had several songs cut from the setlist.

1977 Jimmy Page/Led Zeppelin, Tempe, AZ

♪  Led Zeppelin (Warrensville Heights/Cleveland OH at MusiCarnival, 20 July 1969) 

Saturday, September 2, 2017

To be or to have been



Lots of grumbling out there about how Jimmy Page hasn't put out new music as he said he would. But this blog post isn't about Jimmy Page. Sorry.

This blog post is about putting out music when you don't have any music to put out.

It's about Robert Plant's putting out a new album that astounds me... not because I think it's so great but because of what I consider to be mistaken reviews.

Sacrilege or legit criticism?
Note: this blog post a statement about my musical tastes - your experience may differ.

I want to assure you my intent is not to dis Robert Plant. My aim is to present a criticism of music and it is criticism I'd apply to any musician. 

It's my opinion that when an artist stops growing but keeps putting work out, he or she becomes an entertainer. The painting, the writing, the music, whatever it is, becomes marketable product, not art. For those of us who take our art seriously, that's a fatal flaw.

That doesn't make the product bad, it just means that it's no longer art. It's the difference between, say, Monet and Keane. Between Shakespeare and Patterson. Between Beethoven and Bieber. Art endures. Entertainment is fleeting. The works of great artists are beloved for centuries because there is timeless value to those works. The works of great entertainers last until public interest moves on because the values are based on current cultural conditions. Over time great entertainment is reduced to items of historical note.

Robert Plant was a great musician back in the day. But to have been a great musician doesn't make him one anymore.  I have a hard time with his work being considered the art it was. To me his work has left the ranks of timeless art and become popular entertainment.

That's not a bad thing, in itself. It's just not my cup of tea. 

Art = creativity

Those who've been reading this blog for a while know that I consider magic to be the power to change reality through acts of creation. Art is an act of creativity and therefore a kind of magic. That's how I have approached the work of Jimmy Page, and that's how I approach any music or other art.
That's why I have a hard time with Robert Plant's work these days.
Of course I listened to Carry Fire because I hoped maybe he had put out something new. But no. About the most entertaining aspect of this album has been the reviews. Here are some actual words used by reviewers of, for instance, one of the tracks, Bones of Saints:
"thunderous"
"rocking"
"lights a fire in the sky"
"a high-energy new blues-rock"
"a propulsive, rockabilly-style riff with a cinematic mid-song vocal"
Really? Do these people not hear what is or do they hear through the filter of what has been? Are their minds so clouded with Mr. Plant's past (with Led Zeppelin) that they can't hear with the ears of today? Thunder compared to what? Lighting a fire in what sky? High energy? Huh?

Those reviewers are confusing music with poetry. Robert Plant has given himself over to words at the expense of music. Fine. Let the reviewers review the lyrics, because the music is just plain bleh.

So okay, maybe this is unfair criticism. Maybe I haven't moved on with Mr. Plant to this post-Zeppelin era in which he is so attracted to world music. I love rock music above all but I have no problem with world music. Rock music with the influences of other cultures can be fascinating (Kashmir, anyone? Or how about Bron-Y-Aur Stomp? The Battle of Evermore?) But...if I wanted to listen world music it wouldn't be Mr. Plant's version.
Why? Because he doesn't use world music -- or any music -- to express anything new. It's the same music that varies in details only. It's different lyrics rather than different music. To me Mr. Plant's music since Led Zeppelin sounds all the same. Like he's latched onto one motif that lets him create new lyrics -- which he's very good at. The formula sells a lot of albums but it means Robert Plant can't move on artistically. His work is nice but it's boring. You've heard one song, you've heard them all unless you listen closely to the words.

Words aren't music.

On the other hand, if the object is to be an incredible entertainer, then Robert Plant has got the formula down.


Art vs entertainment

I'm not talking about Robert Plant's technique or even his voice. Voices go with age and abuse, and Robert Plant's not the only one whose voice has gone. Lots of singers start to sing in lower keys because they can't reach the highs anymore (Elton John), or cover their croaking with instruments or sing on in a parody of Bob Dylan anyway because they just don't care (Roger Waters).

It's okay to listen with a musically non-critical ear to the singers we love -- of course it is!  But that's not the problem here.

I could listen to Mr. Plant's post-Zeppelin work in spite of his voice. But I can't listen to the same-old-same-old. Robert Plant has become the Margaret Keane of his field... along with the majority of today's musicians.

To me the mark of a great artist is when he or she can continue to grow. This doesn't mean changing a signature style (although that can happen), but rather developing artistic statements that reveal new depth of experience -- either the artist's or the world's. Those statements change as the artist gains skill, or maturity, or enlightenment.

Artistic growth is the difference between art and entertainment.

It's not easy to grow artistically.  And it's not necessarily fun, particularly when the world is watching and listening with expectations, particularly when the artist has had great success doing something and the world is clamoring for more of it.

But what sells or is popular or garners great reviews is not a measure of good art. Art tells us something new about reality. The greater the art, the deeper it is, the more fundamental the message. The greatest art creates a new reality for those who can experience it.

Maybe I'm shallow. Maybe Robert Plant has found a way to bring poetry to a public that isn't much into poetry. More power to him. But to call it music, what he does?

No.


Tuesday, May 17, 2016

On This Day 17 May

"Robert Plant... a jester at the wheel of some fearsome juggernaut, offering sly asides and poetic ruminations between moments of terrible power."
~ Chris Welch

1975 17 May On This Day Earls Court Day One
  • 1968 Yardbirds - Tacoma WA at University of Puget Sound
  • 1969 Led Zeppelin - Athens OH at O. U. Convocation Center
  • 1975 Led Zeppelin - London, Day 1 of 5 at Earls Court Exhibition Centre
  • 1986 The Firm - Dallas TX at Reunion Arena
  • 1995 Page & Plant - Inglewood CA at The Forum
  • 2003 the double DVD set ‘Led Zeppelin’ was released with six tracks from Earls Court May 24 and 25 shows.
1975:
Interestingly, the photo for the On This Day image for Earls Court (above) is from Knebworth, not Earls Court. The band had transported their whole 40-ton stage and light show from the US and a huge screen was installed above the stage for Earls Court. While there were laser effects it wasn't until 1977 that the pyramid effect was used and 1979 that the the bow itself had a laser as in this photo [read more on Led Zeppelin use of lasers].   

Earl's Court, 1975: Three shows sold out in just a few hours (May 23, 24 and 25) before two additional shows were added (May 17 and 18).

1975 19 April NME announcement of two additional shows

Five nights of Led Zeppelin, with each show clocking in at over three hours. Talk about endurance. Many still consider these shows to be Led Zeppelin's best ever performances.

1975 May Earls Court stage set

1975 May Earls Court stage set

1975 May Earls Court - Jimmy Page playing Black Dog


1975 May Earls Court Jimmy Page acoustical set
1975 Earls Court

1975 May Earls Court "...moments of terrible power" (Chris Welch quote)



♪  Bron-Y-Aur Stomp (Led Zeppelin, Earls Court 1975) YouTube
♪  Stairway to Heaven (Led Zeppelin, Earls Court 17 May 1975) YouTube
♪  Soundcheck / Kashmir - no guitar (Page & Plant, Inglewood Forum 1995) YouTube
♪  Full set (Page & Plant, Inglewood Forum 1995) YouTube playlist

♪ Mage Music 1 playlist at YouTube
♪ Mage Music 2 playlist at YouTube
♪ Page & Plant playlist at YouTube

Wednesday, December 2, 2015

On This Day 02 December

If you were at the 2012 Kennedy Center Honors, whose hand would you want to shake first: the President's or Jimmy Page's?

2012 02 December  Led Zeppelin Kennedy Center Honours (published 2020)



1965 02 December On This Day Jimmy Page started using his Danelectro in the studio

  • 1965 Jimmy Page with Donovan – Sunshine Superman
  • 1966 The Yardbirds - Barea, OH at Baldwin Wallace College
  • 1971 Led Zeppelin - Bournemouth, England at Starkers Royal Arcade Ballrooms
  • 1971 Black Dog/Misty Mountain Hop single released (US)
  • 1983 Jimmy Page ARMS Charity Concert Tour - Daly City, CA at Cow Palace (day 2) 
  • 1998 Page & Plant - Oberhausen, Germany at Oberhausen Arena
  • 2012 Led Zeppelin, Kennedy Center Honors, Washington DC 

1966 02 December On This Day Jimmy Page & Donovan record Sunshine Superman

1961 Danelectro

1965 Jimmy Page in studio session

2002 Jimmy Page, Nicko McBrain & Michelle Collins at Jimmy Page's Xmas fundraiser for ABC/Task Brazil 

2012 John Paul Jones, Robert Plant, Jimmy Page at Kennedy Center Honors

2012 Jimmy Page, John Paul Jones, Robert Plant at Kennedy Center Honors




♪  Sunshine Superman (Donovan feat. Jimmy Page, 1966) YouTube
♪  1971 Black Dog (Led Zeppelin, Basic Track With Guitar Overdubs 2014 remaster) YouTube
♪  Bron-Yr-Aur Stomp (Led Zeppelin, Bournemouth 1972) YouTube
♪  City Sirens (Jimmy Page, ARMS US Tour, Cow Palace 02 Dec. 1983) YouTube
♪  Bird on a Wing (Jimmy Page, ARMS US Tour, Cow Palace 02 Dec. 1983) YouTube
♪  Good Night Irene (Jimmy Page, ARMS US Tour, Cow Palace 02 Dec. 1983) YouTube
♫  President Obama's tribute to Led Zeppelin - The 35th Annual Kennedy Center Honors 2012
♫  Led Zeppelin - The 35th Annual Kennedy Center Honors 2012


Wednesday, November 25, 2015

On This Day 25 November

His old stomping grounds
1988 24-25 November On This Day Jimmy Page/Outrider at Hammersmith Odeon
♪ Wasting My Time (Soundcloud)

  • 1971 Led Zeppelin - Leicester, England at Leicester University  
  • 1988 Jimmy Page  Outrider Tour - London, England at Hammersmith Odeon
  • 1998 Page & Plant - Montpellier, France at Le Zenith de Montpellier 

1971 Led Zeppelin at Leicester, England

1988  Jimmy Page/Outrider, Hammersmith Odeon London

1988 Jimmy Page, Hammersmith Odeon (Ross Halfin photo)



♪  Bron-Yr-Aur Stomp (Led Zeppelin, Leicester 1971) YouTube
♪  That’s The Way (Led Zeppelin, Leicester 1971) YouTube

Monday, July 20, 2015

On This Day 20 July

1966 20 July The Yardbirds Stourbridge, England at Town Hall
♪ Happenings Ten Years Time Ago (Yardbirds) Soundcloud

2010 20 July On This Day Jimmy Page interview for Guitar Aficionado Magazine

  • 1966 The Yardbirds-Stourbridge, England at Town Hall
  • 1967 The Yardbirds - Denver, CO at Lakeside Amusement Park
  • 1969 Led Zeppelin - Warrensville Heights, OH at MusiCarnival
  • 1973 Led Zeppelin - Boston, MA at Boston Garden
  • 1977 Led Zeppelin - Tempe, AZ at A.S.U. Activities Center Arena
  • 1995 Page & Plant Unledded Tour - Dublin,Ireland at The Point Theatre
  • 2010 Guitar Afficionado Magazine interview with Brad Tolinski

1969 Led Zeppelin, Warrensville Heights (Cleveland) at MusiCarnival (Photo K Katzan)
1968:
Jimmy Page and Peter Grant checked out Robert Plant performing with a band called Hobstweedle (a.k.a. Obs-tweedle) at a teachers training college near Birmingham.  Chris Dreja was with Page and Grant.

1973:
The Boston Garden was one of the venues for Led Zeppelin's North American Tour after the release of Houses of the Holy. The crowd was rowdy and Plant's voice was strained. He tried to quiet things down several times but nothing helped so several songs were cut from the setlist and there were no encores.

1977:
"Shambolic" is a word I learned from Jimmy Page, and it is a word that applies to the Tempe show, which also had several songs cut from the setlist.

1977 Jimmy Page/Led Zeppelin, Tempe, AZ

♪  Full show (Led Zeppelin, Cleveland 1969) YouTube
♪  Over The Hills and Far Away (Led Zeppelin, Boston Garden 1973) YouTube
♪ Bron-Y-Aur Stomp (Led Zeppelin, Tempe 1977) YouTube


♫  Jimmy Page interview in Guitar Aficionado Magazine by Brad Tolinski

Sunday, May 17, 2015

On This Day 17 May

"Robert Plant... a jester at the wheel of some fearsome juggernaut, offering sly asides and poetic ruminations between moments of terrible power."
~ Chris Welch

1975 17 May On This Day Earls Court Day One
Interestingly, the photo for the On This Day image for Earls Court (above) is from Knebworth, not Earls Court. The band had transported their whole 40-ton stage and light show from the US and a huge screen was installed above the stage for Earls Court. While there were laser effects it wasn't until 1977 that the pyramid effect was used and 1979 that the the bow itself had a laser as in this photo [read more on Led Zeppelin use of lasers].   

Earl's Court, 1975: Three shows sold out in just a few hours (May 23, 24 and 25) before two additional shows were added (May 17 and 18).

1975 19 April NME announcement of two additional shows

Five nights of Led Zeppelin, with each show clocking in at over three hours. Talk about endurance. Many still consider these shows to be Led Zeppelin's best ever performances.

♪ Bron-Y-Aur Stomp YouTube
  • 1968 Yardbirds,Tacoma, Washington at University of Puget Sound, Memorial Fieldhouse
  • 1969 Led Zeppelin, Athens, Ohio at O. U. Convocation Center
  • 1975 Led Zeppelin, London, England - Day 1 of 5 at Earls Court Exhibition Centre
  • 1986 The Firm Dallas, Texas at Reunion Arena'
  • 1995 Page & Plant - Inglewood, California at The Forum
  • 2003 the double DVD set ‘Led Zeppelin’ was released with six tracks from Earls Court May 24 and 25 shows.

1975 May Earls Court stage set

1975 May Earls Court stage set

1975 May Earls Court - Jimmy Page playing Black Dog


1975 May Earls Court Jimmy Page acoustical set
1975 Earls Court

1975 May Earls Court "...moments of terrible power" (Chris Welch quote)