| Jimmy Page |

|
| Background information |
| Birth name |
James Patrick Page |
| Born |
January 9, 1944 (1944-01-09) (age 63) Heston, Middlesex, England |
| Genre(s) |
Hard rock, Heavy
metal, Blues-rock,
Folk
rock, Rock
and roll |
| Occupation(s) |
Musician
Songwriter
Producer |
| Instrument(s) |
Guitar |
| Years active |
1957 – Present |
Associated
acts |
The
Yardbirds
Led Zeppelin
The Honeydrippers
The Firm
Coverdale-Page
Page and Plant
XYZ |
| Notable instrument(s) |
1959
Sunburst Les Paul
1958 Honeyburst Les Paul
Gibson EDS-1275
Fender Telecaster
Danelectro
3021 |
James Patrick "Jimmy" Page, OBE (born 9 January 1944) is an English guitarist, composer and record
producer. He began his career as a studio session guitarist in London
and was subsequently a member of The
Yardbirds, from late 1966 to 1968, before founding English rock
band Led Zeppelin. Page is
credited as a forefather of heavy metal by not only turning up the
accepted volume of the electric guitar but also with his anthemic riffs
and meticulous studio production.
In 2003, Rolling Stone
magazine ranked him #9 in their ranking of the 100
Greatest Guitarists of All Time.
Page also has the distinction of having been inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of
Fame twice as a member of both The Yardbirds and Led Zeppelin.
|
Contents
- 1 Formative
years
- 2 Session
player
- 3 The
Yardbirds
- 4 Led
Zeppelin
- 4.1 Influence
- 4.2 Music
composition
- 4.3 Music
production techniques
- 4.4 Drug
use
- 5 Post-Led
Zeppelin career
- 6 New
album
- 7 Personal
life
- 8 Tributes
- 9 Pre
/ Post Led Zeppelin discography
- 10 Guitars
- 10.1 Electric
guitars
- 10.2 Acoustic
guitars
- 10.3 Other
instruments
- 10.4 Collection
- 10.5 Signature
models
- 11 Legal
Action
- 12 References
- 13 Further
reading
- 14 External
links
|
Formative years
A young Jimmy Page
Page was born in the west London suburb of Heston, which
today forms part of the London Borough of
Hounslow. His father was an industrial personnel manager and his mother
was a doctor's secretary. In 1952 they moved to Miles Road, Epsom. Jimmy Page
first picked up the guitar when he was 12 years old and although he
took a few lessons in nearby Kingston,
was largely self-taught. His early influences were rockabilly
guitarists Scotty Moore and James
Burton, who both played on recordings made by Elvis
Presley, and Johnny Day, who played
guitar for The Everly Brothers. The Presley
song "Baby Let's Play House" was an early favourite on one of his first
electric guitars, a second hand 1959 Futurama Grazioso. Page's musical
tastes also encompassed acoustic folk playing, particularly that of Bert
Jansch and John Renbourn, and the blues
sounds of Elmore James and B.B. King.
At the age of 14, Page appeared on Huw Wheldon's All
Your Own talent quest programme in a skiffle band, a
popular English music genre of the time. Page said in an interview with
Guitar Player
magazine, "There was a lot of busking in the early days, but as I say, I
had to come to grips with it, and it was a good schooling."
Page left school at age 14 to pursue music, and after brief
stints backing Beat poet Royston Ellis and singer Red E. Lewis,
Page he asked by singer Neil Christian to join his band The
Crusaders. Page toured with Christian for approximately two years and
later played on several of his records, including the November 1962
single, "The Road to Love".
During his stint with Christian, Page fell seriously ill with glandular fever and
couldn't continue touring. While recovering, Page decided to put his
musical career on the shelf and concentrate on his other love,
painting. He enrolled at Sutton Art College in Surrey.
Session player
While still a student, Page would often jam on stage at The
Marquee with bands such as Cyril Davies' All Stars, Alexis
Korner's Blues Incorporated and
with guitarists Jeff Beck and Eric
Clapton. He was spotted one night by John Gibb of The
Silhouettes, who asked him to help record a number of singles for EMI, including "The
Worrying Kind". It wasn't until an offer from Mike Leander of Decca
Records that Page was to receive regular studio work. His first session
for the label was the recording "Diamonds" by Jet
Harris & Tony Meehan which went to
Number 1 on the singles chart in early 1963.
After brief stints with Carter-Lewis and
the Southerners, Mike Hurst's group, and Mickey
Finn and the Blue Men, Page committed himself to full-time session
work. As a session guitarist he was known as
'Little Jim' so there was no confusion with Big
Jim Sullivan i.e. 'Big Jim'. Little Jim's studio output in
1964 included Marianne Faithfull's "As
Tears Go By", The Nashville Teens' "Tobacco
Road", The Rolling Stones'
"Heart of Stone" (alternate version), Van
Morrison & Them's "Baby
Please Don't Go" and "Here Comes the Night", Dave Berry's "The Crying Game" and "My Baby
Left Me", and Brenda Lee's "Is It True". Under the
auspices of producer Shel Talmy, Page contributed to The
Kinks' 1964 debut album (although, despite rumours to the
contrary, he did not play any of the guitar solos);
and he sat in on the sessions for The Who's first single "I Can't
Explain" (although his guitar parts may not appear on the final mix),
but he played on the B-side "Bald Headed Woman". In 1965, Page was
hired by Rolling Stones manager Andrew
Loog Oldham to act as house producer and A&R man for the
newly-formed Immediate Records label, which
also allowed him to play on and/or produce tracks by John
Mayall, Nico,
Chris
Farlowe and Eric Clapton. Page also
formed a brief songwriting partnership with then romantic interest, Jackie
DeShannon. He worked as session musician on the Al Stewart
album Love Chronicles
in 1969. He also played guitar on five tracks of Joe
Cocker's debut album, With a
Little Help from My Friends.
Although Jimmy Page recorded with many now-famous musicians,
many of these early tracks are only available through bootlegged
copies, several of which were released by the Led Zeppelin fan club in
the late 1970s. The records released by the fan club include many
otherwise unreleased live Led
Zeppelin recordings. One of the rarest of these is the early jam
session featuring Jimmy Page playing with Rolling
Stones guitarist Keith Richards, featuring a
cover of "Little Queen of Spades" by the late blues legend Robert Johnson.
The Yardbirds
Jimmy Page (second from left) with The Yardbirds in 1966
-
In late 1964 Page was approached about the possibility of
replacing Eric Clapton in The
Yardbirds, but he declined the offer out of loyalty to his
friend, Clapton. In February 1965 Clapton quit the Yardbirds, and Page
was formally offered Clapton's spot, but because he was unwilling to
give up his lucrative career as a session musician, and because he was
still worried about his health under touring conditions, he suggested
his friend, Jeff Beck, fill the position. On
May 16, 1966, drummer Keith
Moon, bass player John Paul Jones,
keyboardist Nicky Hopkins, Jeff
Beck and Page recorded "Beck's Bolero" in London's IBC
Studios. The experience gave Page an idea to form a new supergroup
featuring Beck, along with The Who's John
Entwistle on bass and Keith Moon on drums, however the lack of
a quality vocalist and contractual problems brought the project to a
halt.
Within weeks, Page was again offered a spot in the Yardbirds
and at first played bass guitar with the group after the
departure of Paul Samwell-Smith,
before finally switching to twin lead guitar with Beck when Chris
Dreja moved to bass. The musical potential of the line-up
however was scuttled by interpersonal conflicts caused by constant
touring and a lack of commercial success, although they released one
single, "Happenings Ten Years
Time Ago". (While Page and Jeff Beck played together in The
Yardbirds, the trio of Page, Beck
and Eric
Clapton never played in the original group all at the same
time. The three guitarists did appear on stage together at the ARMS
charity concerts in 1983.)
After Beck's departure, the Yardbirds remained a quartet. They
recorded one album with Page on lead guitar, Little
Games. The album received indifferent reviews
and was not a commercial success, peaking at only number 80 on the Billboard Music Charts.
Though their studio sound was fairly commercial at the time, the band's
live performances were in total contrast with this, becoming heavier
and more experimental. These concerts featured musical aspects that
Page would later perfect with Led Zeppelin, most notably performances
of Jake
Holmes' version of "Dazed and Confused".
Despite the departure of Keith Relf and Jim
McCarty in 1968, Page wished to continue the group with a new line-up
to fulfill unfinished tour dates in Scandinavia. He recruited vocalist Robert
Plant and drummer John Bonham, and was contacted by John
Paul Jones who asked to join, to which Page agreed. During the
Scandinavian tour the new group appeared as "The New Yardbirds", but
Keith Moon, the drummer of The Who, suggested that Jimmy
Page's new band would go over like a "Lead Zeppelin." Jimmy Page stuck
with that name to use for his new band. The band later changed it to
"Led Zeppelin," to stop a mispronounciation of "Leed
Zeppelin."
Led Zeppelin
-
Page (centre bottom) with a young Led Zeppelin, 1968.
Influence
Page's past experiences both in the studio and with the
Yardbirds were very influential in contributing to the success of Led
Zeppelin in the 1970s. As a producer, composer, and guitarist he
helped make Led Zeppelin a prototype for many future rock bands, and
was one of the major driving forces behind the rock sound of that era,
influencing a host of other guitarists. For example, his speeded up,
downstroke guitar riff in "Communication Breakdown" is
cited as guitarist Johnny Ramone's inspiration for his
punk-defining, strictly downstroke guitar strumming, while Page's
landmark guitar
solo from the song "Heartbreaker" has
been credited by Eddie Van Halen as the inspiration
for his two-hand tapping
technique after he saw Led Zeppelin perform in 1972. Page's solo in the
famous epic "Stairway to Heaven" has been
voted by readers of various guitar magazines, including Guitar
World and Total
Guitar as the greatest guitar solo of all time,
and he was named 'Guitarist of the Year' five years straight during the
1970s by Creem
magazine.
Music composition
For the composition of the bulk of Led Zeppelin songs, Page
adopted his trademark Gibson Les Paul guitar and Marshall
amplification, although he also often used a Supro amplifier
and a Telecaster
guitar in the recording studio. His use of the
Sola Sound Tone Bender Professional MKII fuzzbox ("How
Many More Times"), slide guitar ("You
Shook Me", "Dancing Days", "In
My Time of Dying"), pedal steel guitar ("Your Time Is Gonna Come", "Tangerine",
"That's
the Way" and for effect at the very end of "Over the Hills and Far
Away"), and acoustic guitar ("Gallows Pole", "Ramble On")
also demonstrated his versatility and creativity as a composer.
Page is famous for playing his guitar with a violin
bow, as on the songs "Dazed and Confused", "How
Many More Times" and in the interlude of "Whole
Lotta Love". This was a technique he developed during his session days,
although strictly speaking he was not the first guitarist to use a
violin bow, since Eddie Phillips of The Creation had done
so prior to Page. On MTV's
Led Zeppelin Rockumentary, Page said that he
obtained the idea of playing the guitar with a bow from David
McCallum, Sr. who was also a session musician. Page used his Fender
Telecaster and later his Gibson Les Paul for his bow solos.
On a number of Led Zeppelin songs Page experimented with
feedback devices and a theremin. He used a Wah-wah
pedal but not always in the traditional way of rocking it back and
forth as done by Jimi Hendrix and other contemporaries;
instead, he put it fully forward in the treble position to get a
sharper tone.
Music production techniques
Page is widely credited for the innovations in sound recording
he brought to the studio during the years he was a member of Led
Zeppelin. During the late 1960s, most British music producers placed microphones
directly in front of amplifiers and drums, resulting in
the sometimes "tinny" sound of the recordings of the era. Page
commented to Guitar World magazine that he felt the
drum sounds of the day in particular "sounded like cardboard boxes."
Instead, Page was a fan of 1950s recording techniques; Sun
Studios being a particular favorite. In the same Guitar World
interview, Page remarked, "Recording used to be a science," and
"[engineers] used to have a maxim: distance equals depth." Taking this
maxim to heart, Page developed the idea of placing an additional
microphone some distance from the amplifier (as much as twenty feet)
and then recording the balance between the two. By adopting this
technique, Page became one of the first British
producers to record a band's "ambient sound" - the distance of a note's
time-lag from one end of the room to the other. This technique was
constantly adapted and developed, to the point where he placed
microphones in hallways, which is how he achieved the distinctive drum
sound for "When the Levee Breaks".
For the recording of several Led Zeppelin tracks, such as "Whole
Lotta Love" and "You Shook Me", Page additionally
utilised "backward echo" - a technique which he
is widely believed to have invented himself whilst with The Yardbirds
(he had originally developed the method when recording the 1967 single "Ten
Little Indians").
This production technique involved hearing the echo before the main
sound instead of after it, achieved by turning the tape over and
employing the echo on a spare track, then turning the tape back over
again to get the echo preceding the signal.
Page has stated that, as producer, he deliberately changed the
audio
engineers on Led Zeppelin albums, from Glyn Johns
for the first album, to Eddie Kramer for Led
Zeppelin II, to Andy Johns
for Led Zeppelin III
and later albums. He explained that "I consciously kept changing
engineers because I didn't want people to think that they were
responsible for our sound. I wanted people to know it was me."
Drug use
Page's drug
use during his time with Led Zeppelin has, over the years, been a
controversial subject. Page himself has admitted to heavy use of drugs
throughout the 1970s. In an interview he gave to Guitar
World magazine in 2003, he stated that:
| “ |
I
can't speak for the [other members of the band], but for me drugs were
an integral part of the whole thing, right from the beginning, right to
the end. |
” |
In 1973 Led Zeppelin's main choice of drug was cocaine, with
Page, along with tour manager Richard Cole and drummer John
Bonham, becoming regular users.
After the band's concert tour of the United States in
that year, Page told Nick Kent:
| “ |
Oh,
everyone went over the top a few times. I know I did and, to be honest
with you, I don't really remember much of what happened. |
” |
In 1976,
Page began to dabble in heroin, a fact attributed to Richard Cole,
who stated that Page (as well as himself) was taking the drug during
the recording sessions of the album Presence
in that year, and that Page admitted to him shortly afterwards that he
was addicted
to the drug.
By 1977, Page's heroin use was beginning to hamper his guitar
playing performances, as exhibited on a number of Led Zeppelin bootleg
recordings from their 1977 tour of the United
States, by which time the guitarist had lost a noticeable amount of
weight. During the recording sessions for In Through The Out Door
in 1978, Page's diminished influence on the album (relative to bassist
John Paul Jones) is partly attributed to his ongoing heroin addiction,
which resulted in his absence from the studio for large periods of time.
Page reportedly kicked his heroin habit in the early 1980s.
In a 1988 interview with Musician
magazine, Page took offence when the interviewer noted that heroin had
been associated with his name, and insisted that "I'm not an addict,
thank you very much."
Post-Led Zeppelin career
Led Zeppelin disbanded in 1980 following the death of drummer John
Bonham at Page's home, The Old Mill House at Clewer in Berkshire.
Page made a successful return to the stage with the A.R.M.S. (Action
Research for Multiple Sclerosis) charity
series of concerts in 1983 which honoured Small
Faces bass player Ronnie Lane, who suffered from
the disease. A 1984 video of a London A.R.M.S. concert was released
featuring two songs from Page's work on the Death
Wish II soundtrack, featuring Steve
Winwood on vocals, and an onstage jam of "Layla" reunited Page
with Yardbirds
guitarists Jeff Beck and Eric
Clapton. During the tour Page looked extremely thin and
frail. According to the book Hammer of the Gods,
Page reportedly told friends that he'd just given up heroin after seven
years of use.
Page next linked up with Roy Harper for an album (Whatever Happened to
Jugula?) and occasional concerts, performing a
predominantly acoustic set at folk festivals under various guises such
as the MacGregors, and Themselves. In 1984, Page recorded with former
Zeppelin vocalist, Robert Plant as The Honeydrippers. He
also teamed up with Paul Rodgers of Bad
Company and Free fame to record two albums under the
name The Firm. The first album
was the self-titled The Firm,
followed by Mean Business
in 1986. Popular songs included the commercially successful
"Radioactive", and "Closer", which employs a horn section to subtle
effect. The cover version of "You've Lost That
Lovin' Feeling" featured vocals by Paul Rodgers but was never released
as a single. The album peaked at #17 on the Billboard's Pop Albums chart.
Various other projects soon followed such as session work for Graham
Nash, Box of Frogs, the Rolling Stones (on
their 1986 single "One Hit (to the Body)"), and Robert
Plant, a solo album Outrider,
a collaboration with David Coverdale in Coverdale-Page,
and a live album and tour with The Black Crowes. In addition, he
also collaborated with director Michael Winner to record the Death
Wish II and subsequent Death
Wish 3 soundtrack, released in 1982 and 1985
respectively.
The surviving members of Led Zeppelin re-formed in 1985 for
the Live
Aid concert with both Phil Collins and Tony
Thompson filling drum duties. However, the band considered their
performance to be sub-standard, and were one of the few Live Aid acts
to refuse permission for their segment to be included in the 20th
anniversary DVD release of the concert. In 1986, Page reunited
temporarily with his Yardbirds bandmates to play on several tracks of
the Box
of Frogs album Strange Land.
The band also re-formed for the Atlantic Records 40th Anniversary show
on 14 May, 1988. Page, Plant and Jones, as well as John
Bonham's son Jason Bonham closed the 12-hour show.
The band have also played together at various private family functions.
In 1990, a Knebworth concert to aid
the Nordoff-Robbins Music Therapy Centre and the British School for
Performing Arts and Technology saw Plant unexpectedly joined by Page to
perform "Misty Mountain Hop", "Wearing
and Tearing" and "Rock and Roll".
In 1994, Page reunited with Plant for the penultimate
performance in MTV's
"Unplugged"
series. The 90-minute special, dubbed Unledded,
premiered to the highest ratings in MTV's history. In October of the
same year, the session was released as the CD No
Quarter: Jimmy Page and Robert Plant Unledded,
and in 2004 as the DVD No
Quarter Unledded. Following a highly successful
mid-90s tour to support No Quarter, Page and Plant
recorded 1998's Walking into Clarksdale.
Since 1990, Page has been heavily involved in remastering
the entire Led Zeppelin back catalogue and is currently participating
in various charity concerts and charity work, particularly the Action
for Brazil's Children Trust (ABC Trust), founded by his wife
Jimena Gomez-Paratcha in 1998. In the same year, Page played guitar for
rap
singer/producer Puff Daddy's song "Come
with Me," which heavily samples Led Zeppelin's "Kashmir"
and was included in the soundtrack of Godzilla.
The two later performed the song on Saturday
Night Live. In 2001 he made an appearance on
stage with Limp Bizkit frontman Fred Durst
and Wes
Scantlin of Puddle of Mudd at the MTV Europe
Video Music Awards in Frankfurt, where they performed a version
of Led Zeppelin's "Thank You".
In 2005, Page was awarded the Order of the British
Empire in recognition of his Brazilian charity work,
made an honorary citizen of Rio de Janeiro later that year, and
was awarded a Grammy award.
In November 2006, Led Zeppelin were inducted into the UK
Music Hall of Fame. The television broadcasting of the event
consisted of an introduction to the band by various famous admirers, a
presentation of an award to Jimmy Page and then a short speech by the
guitarist. After this, rock group Wolfmother played a tribute to Led
Zeppelin, playing the song "Communication Breakdown".
On 6
January 2007,
Page was featured at #19 on Channel 4's The Ultimate Hellraiser, a
countdown of music's top 25 who "lived the rock 'n' roll lifestyle".
The show's reason for featuring Page was almost exclusively attributed
to the groupies who toured with Led Zeppelin. In addition, many of John
Bonham's antics (for example driving a motorcycle down a hotel
corridor) were blamed on Page.
New album
In 2006, Page attended the induction of Led Zeppelin to the UK
Music Hall of Fame. During an interview for the BBC for said event, he
expressed plans to record new material in 2007, saying "It's an album
that I really need to get out of my system... there's a good album in
there and it's ready to come out" and "Also there will be some Zeppelin
things on the horizon".
Personal life
- Jimmy Page is a respected expert on the life and work of William Burges and
contributed to a new book about the influential architect.
In 1972 Page bought, from Richard Harris, the home which Burges
designed for himself in London, The Tower House. "I had an interest
going back to my teens in the pre-Raphaelite movement and the
architecture of Burges," he said. "What a wonderful world to discover."
The reputation of William Burges (1827-1881) rests on his extravagant
designs and his contribution to the Gothic revival in architecture in
the nineteenth century.
- From the mid 1970s to 2004 Jimmy owned 'The Mill House',
Mill Lane, Windsor, UK - formerly the home of actor Michael
Caine. Fellow Led Zeppelin band member John
Bonham died at the house in 1980.
- Page has dated a number of famous groupies, such
as Pamela Des Barres and Bebe Buell.
- Page appreciates "Weird Al"
Yankovic. Although refusing to let Yankovic create a polka with all Led
Zeppelin songs in it, he did allow Weird Al to use the riff of "Black
Dog" in his song Trapped in the Drive-Thru.
Weird Al has also performed a straight cover of "Whole Lotta Love" at
many live shows.
- Page is a fan of Chelsea FC.
- Page's daughter, Scarlet Page, is a respected
photographer. Her mother, Charlotte Martin, is an ex-girlfriend of Eric
Clapton.
Occult connections
Page had a fascination with the poet, novelist, artist,
occultist and founder of Thelema, Aleister
Crowley. He bought Crowley's rural retreat, Boleskine
House, which is on the banks of Loch Ness in Scotland,
though he no longer owns the property having sold it to a descendant of
the original owner in the late 1980s. Page's collection of Crowleyana
is considered to be the most significant in private hands: paintings by
Crowley from Page's collection were displayed at a critically acclaimed
exhibition at the October Gallery, London, in 1998.
In the early 1970s, Jimmy Page owned an occult bookshop and
publishing house, "The Equinox Booksellers and Publishers" in
Kensington High Street, London, eventually closing it as the increasing
success of Led Zeppelin resulted in his having insufficient time to
devote to it. The company published a facsimile of Crowley's 1904
edition of The Goetia. The
seriousness of Page's intent was demonstrated by the dustwrapper being
printed on the notoriously fragile camel hair paper of the original.
What made people particularly curious about Page's interest in
the occult was the appearance of four symbols on the jacket of Led
Zeppelin's fourth album. It was generally accepted that the four
symbols represented each member of the band. During tours and
performances after the release of Led
Zeppelin IV, he often had zodiac symbols
embroidered on his clothes (referred to as his "Dragon Suit", it
included the signs for Capricorn, Scorpio and Cancer which are Page's
Sun, Ascendant and Moon signs, respectively) along with the so-called "ZoSo" symbol (
). This fuelled the curiosity of many fans who went to great lengths to
find out what the symbols meant. The source of the ZoSo symbol itself
is no longer a mystery but the meaning of it still is; it originated in
'Ars Magica Arteficii' (1557) by J
Cardan, an old alchemical grimoire, where it has been identified as a
sigil
consisting of zodiac signs. The sigil is reproduced in "Dictionary of
Occult, Hermetic and Alchemical Sigils" by Fred Gettings, published in
1982 by Routledge & Kegan Paul (see here). The symbol is used to
represent the planet Saturn for purposes of magic. Page is a Capricorn,
a sign ruled by Saturn, and the Z-like symbol is distinctive as a
common astrological mark for Saturn. The "oSo" portion is similar to
the alchemic symbol for mercury, also associated with Saturn. In
cabalistic or hermetic study, knowledge seekers look to the god Mercury
(Hermes, see the Hermetica) for guidance and light. It had
previously been conjectured that the ZoSo symbol was derived from
various other occult and mystical sources, most notably The Kabbalah, a
stylised "666" from Aleister
Crowley's Equinox publication or from Austin
Osman Spare's "Zos Speaks", but these are now considered to be probably
incorrect. It has also been alleged that the symbol is merely a doodle
that Page scribbled while on the telephone. Page will still not comment
on the symbol's meaning.
The artwork inside the album cover of Led Zeppelin IV is from
the traditional Rider/Waite Tarot card design for the card called "The
Hermit". Page transforms into this character during his segment of the
movie "The Song Remains the Same".
Original pressings of Led Zeppelin III included the phrases
"Do What Thou Wilt" and "So Mote It Be", inscribed on the record
itself. The first phrase is derived from an important tenet of
Crowley's philosophy of Thelema: "Do what thou wilt shall be the
whole of the law. Love is the law, love under will." The second is the
Masonic and pre-modern protestant version of "Amen".
The artwork for the Swan Song Records label (see here), which was a record label
launched by Led Zeppelin on May 10, 1974, as a vehicle for the band to promote its
own products. The Swan Song company logo, depicting a writhing winged
man (sans genitalia) in the sky, was based on Evening, Fall of Day (1869) by
painter William Rimmer, featuring a picture
of the mythological Greek god of light and reason, Apollo, although
often it is misinterpreted as the classical Greek hero Icarus,
who flew too close to the Sun, or Lucifer, a fallen angel who was cast out of
heaven and then became Satan.
During the time of the PMRC (Parent's Music Resource Center) hearings
of the 1980s, there were some accusations claiming the song "Stairway
to Heaven" had satanic
reverse-audio messages (known at the time as "backwards
masking") in the verse that starts with the line 'If there's a bustle
in your hedgerow'.
Page was commissioned to write the soundtrack music for the
film Lucifer Rising
by another occultist and Crowley admirer, underground movie director Kenneth
Anger. Page even allowed Anger to film a portion of this movie in the
basement of Tower House (Page's London residence). In the end Page only
produced 23 minutes of music which Anger felt were useless. Anger
claimed Page took three years to deliver the music, and the final
product was only 23 minutes of droning. On top of that, the director
slammed the guitarist in the press by calling him a "dabbler" in the
occult and a heroin addict. Anger accused Page of "having an affair
with the White Lady" and being too strung out on drugs to complete the
project. Page countered claiming he had fulfilled all his obligations,
even going so far as to lend Anger his own film editing equipment to
help him finish the project. Page's music was dumped eventually and
replaced by a version completed in 1980 from prison by Bobby
Beausoleil, a Charles Manson family member and
convicted murderer. Bootlegs of Page's soundtrack for the project exist
and were highly prized by Page's fans until an album, also titled
"Lucifer Rising", was released by Boleskine House Records on June 19,
1987. The blue vinyl disc contains all 23 minutes of the soundtrack
music that Page provided for the movie. The introduction to Led
Zeppelin's song "In the Evening" is said to be taken from the
unfinished soundtrack, most of which was recorded by running a guitar
through a synthesiser.
Tributes
- In 2001 he was voted London's greatest guitarist in Total
Guitar magazine's poll of the greatest 12
British guitarists.
- In 2003, Rolling Stone
magazine named him number nine on their list of the "100 greatest
guitarists of all time".
- Page's solo in "Stairway to Heaven" was voted the
greatest guitar
solo of all time in a Guitar World
magazine readers' poll.
- Clive Winston, a character in the PS2 and Xbox 360 game Guitar
Hero II, wears clothes resembling Page's "Dragon Suit" used in Led
Zeppelin's 1973 concerts as well as playing guitar solos with a violin
bow when Star Power is activated, in a tribute to Jimmy.
- Also in Guitar Hero II, an achievement in the
Xbox
360 version of the game is titled the "Page and Plant Award", given to
two players who can hit 100% of the notes in cooperative mode.
- Page is mentioned in the Paul
McCartney and Wings' song "Rock Show" with the line: "What's
that man movin' 'cross the stage? It looks a lot like the one used by
Jimmy Page. It's like a relic from a different age. Could be...Oo-Ee..."
- Page is also mentioned in the Everclear
song "A.M. Radio" with the line: "I remember 1977 / I started going to
concerts and I saw the Led Zeppelin / I gotta guitar Christmas Day / I
prayed that Jimmy Page would come to Santa Monica and teach me to play"
- Jimmy is mentioned in the song "The New Style" by US
rap/rock pioneers The Beastie Boys, with the line:
"If I played guitar I'd be Jimmy Page, the girlies I like are
underage." The second half of the couplet is perhaps an acknowledgement
of Page's relationship with Lori Maddox, a fourteen-year-old groupie at
the time she met Page, who was 28 himself.
- Musician Ryan Adams mentions Jimmy Page in most of
his live concerts. Ex. During the song "Cherry Lane", rather than
saying "am I missing a page?" he says, "Where the fuck is Jimmy Page?"
- Page is mentioned by surname in the Neil Young
song "Downtown" from his album "Mirrorball", in the lyrics: "...Led
Zeppelin on stage / there's a mirrorball twirlin' / and a
note from Page..."
Pre / Post Led Zeppelin
discography
- Guitar Boogie
Jimmy Page, Jeff Beck, Eric
Clapton blues album (1971)
- Special Early Works (1972), 1965 session
recordings with Sonny Boy Williamson
- Death Wish II Soundtrack
(1982), US #50
- The Honeydrippers:
Volume One (1984), with Robert
Plant
- No Introduction Necessary (1984), 1968
session recordings feat. John Paul Jones
and Albert
Lee
- Whatever Happened to
Jugula? (1985), with Roy
Harper
- The Firm
(1985)
- Mean Business
(1986)
- Strange Land
(1986), with Box of Frogs
- Lucifer Rising
(1987)
- Outrider
(1988), US #26
- Coverdale-Page
(1993)
- No
Quarter: Jimmy Page and Robert Plant Unledded
(1994)
- Walking into Clarksdale
(1998), with Robert Plant
- Jimmy Page and The Black Crowes -
Live at the Greek (2000), US #64
- Last Man Standing
(2006) - Jimmy Page guests on the first track, 'Rock and Roll' of this
album by Jerry Lee Lewis.
Guitars
Electric guitars
- 1959 Botswana Brown Fender
Telecaster Given to him by Jeff Beck, originally Olympic
White then stripped and hand painted with dragon
- 1958 Gibson Les Paul Standard (No. 1)
- 1959 Gibson Les Paul Standard (No. 2) Given to
him by Joe Walsh
- 1960 Danelectro 3021
- 1967 Vox 12-String
- 1960 Black Gibson Les Paul Custom -
stolen in 1970
- Rickenbacker 12 String
- 1971 Gibson EDS-1275 (used for playing "Stairway
to Heaven", "Celebration Day", "The
Rain Song" and "The Song Remains
the Same" live)
- 1973 Gibson Les Paul Standard
- 1964 Lake Placid Blue Fender
Stratocaster
- 1966 Cream Fender Telecaster
- 1959 Fender Telecaster
- 1965 Fender Electric XII (12-String)
- 1977 Gibson RD Artist
- Gibson
SG (Very seldom used, 80s tour)
- Another Gibson doubleneck guitar was given to him after he
agreed to allow the company to reproduce his original EDS-1275. The
guitar was picked by Page out of numerous others after he struck one
chord. Page declared "This is it, this is the one!" The guitar was
marked (beforehand) #1.
Acoustic guitars
- Gibson J-200
- Martin D28 Acoustic
- Gibson Everly Brothers Model Acoustic
- Giannini 12-String Acoustic
- Harmony Acoustic
- Washburn 12 String Acoustic
- Ovation 1994 Double Neck Acoustic
- Andy Manson custom Triple Neck Mandolin, 12 string
& 6 string acoustic
Other instruments
- Gibson Mandolin
- Fender 10-String 800 Pedal
steel guitar
- Cello
Bow
- Theremin
- Banjo
Collection
Jimmy Page is reputed to own in excess of 1500 different
guitars. Page revealed this rough estimate to BBC
Radio Two presenter Stuart Maconie in June 2005.
Due to the fact the guitar was too heavy for him, one of Jimmy
Page's Les Paul Custom "Black Beauty" is
now owned by Dan Hawkins of The
Darkness.
It is not the same Black Beauty that was stolen from him in 1970.
Signature models
Gibson released Jimmy Page Signature
Les Paul and most recently the Jimmy Page Signature
EDS-1275.
Legal Action
Page's most recent public appearance was in a Glasgow
courtroom. The guitarist has been giving testimony and observing
evidence on behalf of Led Zeppelin against an
alleged boot-legger. Robert Langley is charged with, and denies, 12
counts of producing and selling products without copyright
permission.
Page was shown 100s of CDs and DVDs, ranging from his solo material to
his time in Led Zeppelin and The
Yardbirds, which Langley was allegedly selling in Scotland
during 2005. Many contain footage and audio from Page's personal
collection, stolen from his home in the early 1980s.
The goods were found on sale as far away as New York,
where shop-owners thought they were official. Page later said "If you
have something like this that appears legitimate then it is just not
right". Page concluded his day in court by greeting waiting fans and
signing autographs.
References
-
100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time.
Rolling Stone Issue 931. Rolling Stone.
-
http://www.rockhall.com/hof/inductee.asp?id=141
-
http://www.rockhall.com/hof/inductee.asp?id=216
-
Interviews - Guitar Player magazine - July
1977. Achilles Last Stand (2006-01-26).
Retrieved on 2007-01-06. “there
was a lot of busking ...”
-
Tolinski, Brad, and Di Bendetto, Greg, "Light and Shade", Guitar
World, January 1998.
-
Tolinski, Brad, "The Greatest Show On Earth, Guitar World,
July 2003; re-published in Guitar Legends Magazine,
Winter 2004, p. 72.
-
Cole, Richard (1992) Stairway to Heaven: Led Zeppelin
Uncensored, New York: HarperCollins, ISBN
0-06-018323-3, pp. 220. 249-250, 255.
-
Case, George, "Jimmy Page: Magnus, Musician, Man", Hal
Leonard Books 2007; excerpt printed in Guitar World,
May 2007, p. 52.
-
Cole, Richard (1992) Stairway to Heaven: Led Zeppelin
Uncensored, New York: HarperCollins, ISBN
0-06-018323-3, pp. 322-326.
-
Aizelwood, John, "Closing Time", Q Magazine Special
Led Zeppelin edition, 2003, p. 94.
-
Stephen
Davis (1995). Hammer of the Gods (LPC), 316-317 ISBN 033043859-X.
-
Led
Zep's Page Joins Limp Bizkit's Durst And Puddle of Mudd's Scantlin On
Stage. Yahoo (2001-10-11). Retrieved on 2007-02-17. “Led
Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page made a surprise appearance on stage with
Limp Bizkit frontman Fred Durst and Puddle of Mudd leader Wes
Scantlin at the MTV Europe Video Music Awards in Frankfurt, Germany on
Thursday (8
November). The trio performed Zeppelin's classic tune, "Thank You."”
-
Jimmy Page given OBE for charity work.
CBC.ca Arts. CBC (2005-12-14). Retrieved on 2007-01-06. “Led
Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page has been made an Officer of the Order of
the British Empire, but not for his music.... The Queen bestowed the
OBE on the 61-year-old rocker at Buckingham Palace on Wednesday to
recognise his work with poor children in Brazil.”
-
Zeppelin's Page made Rio citizen. BBC
News. BBC (2006-09-22). Retrieved on 2007-01-06. “Led
Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page has been made an honourary citizen of
Brazilian city Rio de Janeiro for his work helping its street children.”
-
[1]
-
[2]
-
Rock legend's pilgrimage to castle.
BBC News. BBC. Retrieved on 2007-02-17. “A
fan of the Victorian architect's work, Page lives in the house which
Burges designed for himself in London and allowed it to be featured in
a new book on Burges.”
-
Celebs. Your Chelsea.
Chelsea Football Club. Retrieved on 2007-01-06. “Jimmy Page ... Led
Zepplin [sic]”
-
Page wins popular vote in Brit guitar poll.
Top40-Charts.com. Rolling Stone (2001-06-20).
Retrieved on 2007-01-06. “Page
won the Greater London spot ... topped all vote-getters for the mythic
Prime Minister position.”
-
The 100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time.
Rolling Stone. Rolling Stone. Retrieved on 2007-01-06.
-
100 Greatest Guitar Solos. About:Guitar.
The New York Times Company. Retrieved on 2007-01-06. “1. song: Stairway to
Heaven / guitarist: Jimmy Page”
-
Bacon,
Tony. Electric Guitars:The Illustrated Encyclopedia.
Thunder Bay Press, pg. 121. ISBN
978-1-59223-053-2.
-
[3]
-
http://www.roadrunnerrecords.com/blabbermouth.net/news.aspx?mode=Article&newsitemID=77618
-
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/glasgow_and_west/6917449.stm
-
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/glasgow_and_west/6917449.stm
Further reading
- Carson,
Annette (2002). Jeff Beck: Crazy Fingers. Backbeat
books. ISBN
0-87930-632-7.
External links
| v • d • e Led Zeppelin
|
| Jimmy Page •
Robert
Plant • John Paul Jones •
John
Bonham
Discography
Studio
albums: Led
Zeppelin • Led
Zeppelin II • Led
Zeppelin III •
(Led Zeppelin IV)
• Houses
of the Holy • Physical
Graffiti • Presence
• In Through the Out Door
Live
albums: The Song Remains
the Same • BBC Sessions
• How the
West Was Won
Compilations: Coda
• Box Set
• Profiled
• Remasters
• Box Set 2
• Complete
Studio Recordings • Early
Days: Best of Led Zeppelin Volume One •
Latter
Days: Best of Led Zeppelin Volume Two •
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|
| v • d • e The Yardbirds |
| John Idan
• Ben King
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| Keith
Relf • Paul Samwell-Smith • Top
Topham • Eric Clapton • Jeff
Beck • Jimmy Page
• Rod Demick • Ray Majors • Laurie Garman • Alan Glen • Gypie Mayo |
| Discography |
| Studio albums:
Roger the Engineer
• Little Games • Blue
Eyed Blues • Birdland |
| Live albums:
Five Live Yardbirds
• Sonny Boy
Williamson and The Yardbirds • Live Yardbirds:
Featuring Jimmy Page • Blueswailing '64
• Yardbirds Reunion Jam
Vol II • Live At B.B. King Blues
Club |
| Compilations:
For Your Love
• Having a Rave Up
• The Yardbirds Greatest
Hits • BBC Sessions
• Ultimate! |
| Songs:
"I
Wish You Would" • "Good Morning Little Schoolgirl" • "Boom
Boom" • "For Your Love" • "Heart
Full of Soul" • "My Girl Sloopy" • "Evil
Hearted You" • "I'm a Man" • "Train
Kept A-Rollin'" • "Shapes of Things" • "Over Under Sideways Down" •
"Happenings Ten Years
Time Ago" • "Little Games" • "Ha Ha Said the Clown" • "White
Summer" • "Ten Little Indians" • "Goodnight Sweet Josephine" • "Think
About It" • "Dazed and Confused" |
| Related
articles |
| Box
of Frogs • Cream • The Jeff Beck Group • Led
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