Monday, April 20, 2015

On This Day 20 April

On this day in 1977 Led Zeppelin played the Riverfront Coliseum in Cincinnati, and on this day in 1985 The Firm played the same venue.

20 April On This Day published on jimmypage.com 2019

20 April On This Day published on jimmypage.com 2014


20 April On This Day published on jimmypage.com 2013 
I'm not as fond of The Firm as I am of other of Jimmy Page's work.  I have never felt that Paul Rodgers, excellent singer that he is, ever let go of himself enough to fall into the magic.  Not that I don't listen to The Firm anyway!

On This Day 20 April:
  • 1968 - The Yardbirds- Arlington Heights,IL/The Cellar
  • 1977 - Led Zeppelin - Cincinnati,OH/Riverfront Coliseum
  • 1985 - The Firm - Cincinnati,OH/Riverfront Coliseum
1968 20 April Yardbirds in Arlington Heights IL


♪  Led Zeppelin (Riverfront Coliseum, Cincinnati OH 20 April 1977) YouTube
 ♪  Whole Lotta Helter Skelter (Led Zeppelin/Beatles mashup 2012) YouTube


Sunday, April 19, 2015

On This Day 19 April

On April 19, 1969 the incredible Led Zeppelin II was recorded at Olympic Studios.




  • 1967 Jimmy Page - A Degree of Murder Soundtrack released 
  • 1968 Yardbirds - Blue Village Teen Club, Westmont Illinois
  • 1969 Led Zeppelin - Olympic Studios, begins recording Led Zeppelin II
  • 1977 Led Zeppelin - Riverfront Coliseum, Cincinnati, OH
  • 1985 The Firm - Kentucky Fair & Exposition Center, Louisville, Kentucky


1967
The soundtrack for A Degree of Murder was composed, produced, arranged, and played by Brian Jones, and features Jimmy Page on guitar.

Jimmy Page in Rolling Stone issue #1171:  "Brian knew what he was doing. It was quite beautiful. Some of it was made up at the time; some of it was stuff I was augmenting with him. I was definitely playing with the violin bow. Brian had this guitar that had a volume pedal-he could get gunshots with it. There was a Mellotron there. He was moving forward with ideas."


1969
Needless to say, this was and is an album beyond belief, after Led Zeppelin's first album, itself beyond belief. For a band to have put out two albums of such high quality, with such a variety of approaches to music, one right after the other, was an obvious indicator that this was no ordinary group of musicians but a creative force the likes of which the world had never seen before.
On this day also for Jimmy Page:


1977
"Jimmy Page, the guiding genius behind the Zep, composer, collaborator, creator, leader and lead guitarist, is perhaps the best in the business. His range on the lead guitar can go from classical to acoustical to extraterrestrial."  [K.Williams/April 1977/News Journal]


♪  

Mage Music on Facebook @MageMusicTheMusicOfJimmyPage

Saturday, April 18, 2015

On This Day 18 April

On April 18 1993 Jimmy Page and David Coverdale were interviewed on Enëmmän tätä, Fin-TV, as part of the press junket for EMI promoting the Coverdale Page album.

1993 18 April - Coverdale-Page interviewed on Finnish TV
  • 1968 Yardbirds - Winona State College, Winona Minnesota 
  • 1985 The Firm - The Omni, Atlanta
  • 1993 Coverdale/Page - Enëmmän tätä, Fin-TV interview

1993

I have to say, the 1993 Coverdale-Page is a fantastic album, totally underrated by those who can't get over that Jimmy Page could do something musically exciting without Robert Plant (no offense to Mr. Plant). David Coverdale brings the kind of gutsy, ballsy full commitment to the music of a song, not just to lyrics, that brings out the best in Jimmy Page and this album reflects it.

I love every song on this album. This the work of musicians who've got some miles behind them, and hard living has tempered their souls. You can hear it in the music. This is what blues is about. Coverdale-Page has an authenticity that can't be denied.

Yeah, yeah, I know that Mr. Coverdale might have let being on the stage with Jimmy Page get to his head, but forget that and listen to the music. The magic is there, people.

2019 addendum:  The album has only gotten better over the years. 

Friday, April 17, 2015

On This Day 17 April

Jimmy Page moonlights from art school, plays harmonica!

1964 17 April -  'Hush Your Mouth' by Mickey Finn and the Blue Men was released

  • 1969 Led Zeppelin - Club Lafayette, Wolverhampton England
  • 1970 Led Zeppelin - Mid-South Coliseum, Memphis TN
  • 1977 Led Zeppelin - Market Square Arena, Indianapolis, IN
  • 1988 Jimmy Page with Robert Plant - Hammersmith Odeon, London
  • 1994 Jimmy Page - Alexis Korner Memorial Concert, Buxton Opera House, Derbyshire, England

1964
Mickey Waller (1947 – 2013), a.k.a. Mickey Finn, was an English guitarist, founder of Mickey Finn & The Blue Men (not to be confused with the Blue Man group).  While Jimmy Page didn't get credit as a session man or a full-time member of the band, he did play on a few of their records.

This is one of the sessions I did whilst I was still at art school and on this I played harmonica. Mickey Finn and the Blue Men had applied a blue beat rhythm to the Jimmy Reid song 'Hush Your Mouth'. I had done other recordings with this band: the guys were cool and were always good to play with.
On this day in 1960, Eddie Cochran died in a road traffic accident in Chippenham, Wiltshire. RIP.
Soundcloud  Hush Your Mouth


Thursday, April 16, 2015

On This Day 16 April

In 1965 Jimmy Page played guitar for Lulu and the Luvvers' cover of the Rolling Stones' song, Surprise, Surprise, released on April 16 of that year.  Lulu Kennedy-Cairns,  a Scottish singer, is known for To Sir with Love from the film of the same name and for the title song to the James Bond film The Man with the Golden Gun.
1965 16 April Jimmy Page guitar on Lulu's cover of Surprise, Surprise

  • 1965 Lulu and the Luvvers - Surprise, Surprise released (feat. Jimmy Page, guitar)
  • 1969 Led Zeppelin - Toby Jug, Tolworth England
  • 1970 Led Zeppelin - Roberts Stadium, Evansville IN
1965

LULU RELEASED 'SATISFIED' / 'SURPRISE SURPRISE'
Today sees the release of 'Surprise Surprise' / 'Satisfied'. I played guitar on 'Surprise Surprise', a Rolling Stones song recorded by Lulu. It would have been done at Decca Number 2 Studios in West Hampstead, London.
♪ Surprise, Surprise (Lulu, feat. Jimmy Page guitar) YouTube



Wednesday, April 15, 2015

On This Day 15 April

The Yardbirds (Jimmy Page, Keith Relf, Jim McCarthy and Chris Dreja) played three shows in Denmark on April 15, 1967.  The three concerts totaled just over one hour's worth of playing.  No doubt the travel took longer than that.

On This Day 15 APR 1967 - Yardbirds play 3 shows in Denmark

  • 1967 Yardbirds - Denmark (3 shows)
  • 1977 Led Zeppelin - St Louis MO 
1967

 "...warming up for a distant American Tour. It was a similar strategy to be deployed less than 15 months later for the New Yardbirds/Led Zeppelin.
"The picture shows the Vox Electric 12 string guitar that I was to use on Yardbirds 'Tinker Tailor' and Led Zeppelin 'Thank You' recordings."
Additional photos of the Holte Hallen show by Jørgen Angel


Tuesday, April 14, 2015

On This Day 14 April

Led Zeppelin appeared on BBC Radio's Top Gear 14 April 1969

Led Zeppelin at BBC Radio's Top Gear 14 April 1969

  • 1967 Yardbirds - Vesterhavshallen Fredericia Denmark
  • 1967 Yardbirds - Teatersalen, Ringkjobing Denmark 
  • 1968 Yardbirds - Sun Island Park, NY USA 
  • 1969 Led Zeppelin - BBC Radio
  • 1970 Led Zeppelin - Civic Center, Ottawa ON

1969

This was probably the first Led Zeppelin version of Dazed & Confused recorded for BBC radio, and certainly the first audition panel for Led Zeppelin. 
The setlist is:
  • I Can't Quit You Baby
  • Communication Breakdown
  • Dazed & Confused
The trial broadcast was then sent to the production panel.  Audition report.

These studio sessions and a live concert recorded for the BBC resulted in the multi-disc album, the BBC Sessions released November 1997, which was compiled and mastered by Jimmy Page.  The first disc contains material from four different 1969 BBC sessions; the second contains most of the April 1971 concert from the Paris Theatre in London; the third disc was only included in a limited run of album releases and features interviews from 1969, 1976/1977, and 1990.

Session one
John Peel's Top Gear
Venue: Playhouse Theatre, Northumberland Avenue, London
Recording date: Monday 3 March 1969
Original broadcast: Sunday 23 March 1969 (in a show with sessions from Free, the Moody Blues and Deep Purple)
Tracks: Disc 1; 1, 2 and 4. Also included a version of "Communication Breakdown".
Producer: Bernie Andrews
Engineer: Pete Ritzema
Tape operator: Bob Conduct

Session two
Alexis Korner's Rhythm and Blues, (BBC World Service)
Venue: Maida Vale Studio 4, Delaware Road, London
Recording date: Wednesday 19 March 1969
Original broadcast: Monday 14 April 1969
Tracks: "I Can't Quit You Baby", "You Shook Me" and "Sunshine Woman". The session was wiped or lost by the BBC, although recordings survive on bootlegs. The show was re-run later in 1969, adding the recording of "What Is And What Should Never Be" from the June 16 session.
Producer: Jeff Griffin

Session three
Chris Grant's Tasty Pop Sundae (although originally commissioned for Dave Symond's Symonds On Sunday show)
Venue: Aeolian Hall studio 2, Bond Street, London
Recording Date: Monday 16 June 1969
Original Broadcast: Sunday 22 June 1969
Tracks: Disc 1; 3,5 and 10. The session also included a prototype version of "What Is and What Should Never Be".
Producer: Paul Williams

Session four
John Peel's Top Gear (Double recording session)
Venue: Maida Vale studio 4, Delaware Road, London
Recording date: Tuesday 24 June 1969
Original broadcast: Sunday 29 June 1969
Tracks: Disc 1; 6-9. (track 8; Travelling Riverside Blues, is the same version that appears on the reissued/remaster of Coda as a bonus track)
Producer: John Walters
Engineer: Tony Wilson

Session five
One Night Stand
Venue: Playhouse Theatre
Recording date: Friday 27 June 1969
Original broadcast: Sunday 10 August 1969
Tracks: Disc 1; 11-14. Also included a version of "Dazed and Confused", plus "White Summer"/"Black Mountain Side" (which was released on the 1990 Led Zeppelin boxed set.)

Session six
In Concert (Emcee John Peel)
Venue: Paris Theatre, Lower Regent Street, London
Recording date: Thursday 1 April 1971
Original broadcast: Sunday 4 April 1971
Tracks: Disc 2; all tracks. Also included a version of "Communication Breakdown" and "What Is and What Should Never Be". The "Whole Lotta Love" medley has had "For What It's Worth", "Trucking Little Mama" and "Honey Bee" edited out, shortening the medley by about 7 minutes.
Producer: Jeff Griffin
Engineer: Tony Wilson

 ♪ BBC Sessions - YouTube