Stairway To Heaven (43 page)

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Authors: Richard Cole

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In late February 2001, we left for New York for the band's appearance on
Total Request Live
on MTV. Then there were shows in Atlanta, Gettysburg, Seattle, and Canada, after which we finally escaped the snow (thank God!) for a flight to Cancun for MTV's
Spring Break
and five days in the sun. Three of the band members—Seth, Doug, and Trouble—flew their girlfriends to Cancun, knowing they would soon be spending a lot of time on the road away from their ladies. Next we caught a plane to Europe for promotion, TV appearances, and live shows (one of which MTV taped) in five countries. In Europe, “Butterfly” was the number one record in most of the cities we visited, and we collected even more gold records. For the most part, it was all work and no play, but the band members were riding a tidal wave of excitement that kept their energy levels soaring. For me, I had not experienced anything quite like this since the days of Led Zeppelin.

We finally made our way back to L.A., regained some strength, and then the band performed at the ESPN Awards at the Universal Amphitheater, where my old pals, Black Sabbath with Ozzy Osbourne, were also on the bill. A week later, our bus rolled out of Los Angeles at 2
A.M
. to Phoenix for the first stop of another five weeks of performances in the U.S. The Phoenix show was with Linkin Park, and then we began another headline tour with Saliva and Stereo Mud. In midtour, we flew on a private jet back to L.A. to shoot the video for the band's new single, “Revolving Door.” (So many girls had been hired to appear in the video that the set looked like Caligula's palace!) Two days later, we flew to Nashville for the first of more concert dates, eventually completing the tour in Birmingham, Myrtle Beach, and Chicago—and then went back to Europe for another ten grueling days of promotion and shows. And the tours go on….

 

As for Led Zeppelin, I haven't seen much of the three surviving band members lately, although I do bump into them from time to time. Since the first edition of the book was published, they have remained active to one degree or
another. Plant and Page, of course, released
Walking into Clarksdale
in 1998, and performed in a long-awaited reunion tour. They also appeared on MTV's
Unplugged
in 1997. Jimmy toured, and performed with the Black Crowes as recently as the year 2000, although some of their dates had to be canceled because of Pagey's ongoing back problems.

John Paul has kept as busy as he's wanted to, arranging and composing classical music and motion picture scores, and producing albums for Heart and Ben E. King. He has also done arranging for artists such as R.E.M. and Peter Gabriel.

Led Zeppelin did reunite onstage when they were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1995, but the surviving members of Zeppelin have all moved on, and times change. When Page and Plant released their joint CD, Robert told
Time
magazine that although the “best place to find us is in a bar,” he admitted that they no longer partied as hard as they once did. “We control it now,” he said. “Before, it was rather amorphous—we couldn't stop it.” I'm glad we've all grown up a little.

The Zeppelin music itself lives on. In 1997, the Recording Industry of America certified ten of Led Zeppelin's albums as multiplatinum, with cumulative certified sales totaling nearly 64 million copies. Two years later, just one of those albums—
Led Zeppelin IV
—had racked up certified sales of 21 million. Each new generation of young people seems to embrace Zeppelin as their own, and thus the band's CD sales continue to soar. Only the Beatles have sold more albums than Zeppelin.

 

Since my days with Led Zeppelin, Crazy Town has really been the first hugely successful band I've worked with from its beginning. It's been wonderful to see this young band take off so fast and go so far, but times are certainly different now than in the Zeppelin era. I remember how Led Zeppelin worked themselves to death for almost two years, making the first album for $2,500 and financing the first tour out of the pockets of Jimmy, John Paul, and Peter. From the start, they owed nothing to anyone, including their record company, and were on their way to the bank after the first U.S. tour. Because Zeppelin never made TV appearances, the band's live shows were instant sellouts the moment they were advertised. By contrast, the cost of making videos is so high these days, and the exposure on MTV can become so saturated, it's a lot harder now for bands to get ahead financially early in their careers.

For me, it's still fun being on the road, working with a band like Crazy Town with a great management team and record company behind them, even if the rigors of touring does knock the crap out of me at times. It's a much better life than I would have had if I had not been a skillful enough liar to get my first job with Ronnie Jones and Mick Eves back in 1964. As I write this,
I've spent the last thirty-eight years working with some wonderful bands, and I've profited from the valuable advice of great managers like Peter Grant and Sharon Osbourne.

Next it's off to Europe for a three week record promotion trip, followed by Ozzfest. I'm looking forward to spending time with Sharon Osbourne and Ozzy, along with my old band, Black Sabbath, at Ozzfest, as it's always nice to see old friends with whom you have history in these days of revolving bands. Then, for me, it's back to working on my movie script about how to make rock stars, with writer Christopher Crowe and Julie Anne Park at Paramount Pictures.

What could be better than sitting on the balcony of the Embassy Suites in Myrtle Beach, watching the waves crash on the shore while I type this chapter? For a while, I can even forget that I am really fifty-five years old, not twenty-five—and I'm still having the time of my life.

—Richard Cole
June 2001

Album, year of release, and contents:

Led Zeppelin
, Atlantic Records, 1969

“Good Times Bad Times,” “Babe I'm Gonna Leave You,” “You Shook Me,” “Dazed and Confused,” “Your Time Is Gonna Come,” “Black Mountain Side,” “Communication Breakdown,” “I Can't Quit You Baby,” “How Many More Times.”

 

Led Zeppelin II
, Atlantic Records, 1969

“Whole Lotta Love,” “What Is and What Should Never Be,” “The Lemon Song,” “Thank You,” “Heartbreaker,” “Living Loving Maid (She's Just a Woman),” “Ramble On,” “Moby Dick,” “Bring It On Home.”

 

Led Zeppelin III
, Atlantic Records, 1970

“Immigrant Song,” “Friends,” “Celebration Day,” “Since I've Been Loving You,” “Out On the Tiles,” “Gallows Pole,” “Tangerine,” “That's the Way,” “Bron-Y-Aur Stomp,” “Hats Off to (Roy) Harper.”

 

Untitled
, Atlantic Records, 1971

“Black Dog,” “Rock and Roll,” “The Battle of Evermore,” “Stairway to Heaven,” “Misty Mountain Hop,” “Four Sticks,” “Going to California,” “When the Levee Breaks.”

 

Houses of the Holy
, Atlantic Records, 1973

“The Song Remains the Same,” “The Rain Song,” “Over the Hills and Far Away,” “The Crunge,” “Dancing Days,” “D'yer Mak'er,” “No Quarter,” “The Ocean.”

 

Physical Graffiti
, Swan Song, 1975

“Custard Pie,” “The Rover,” “In My Time of Dying,” “Houses of the Holy,” “Trampled Under Foot,” “Kashmir,” “In the Light,” “Bron-Yr-Aur,” “Down by the Seaside,” “Ten Years Gone,” “Night Flight,” “The Wanton Song,” “Boogie with Stu,” “Black Country Woman,” “Sick Again.”

 

Presence
, Swan Song, 1976

“Achilles Last Stand,” “For Your Life,” “Royal Orleans,” “Nobody's Fault But Mine,” “Candy Store Rock,” “Hots On for Nowhere,” “Tea For One.”

 

The Song Remains the Same
, Swan Song, 1976

“Rock and Roll,” “Celebration Day,” “The Song Remains the Same,” “Rain Song,” “Dazed and Confused,” “No Quarter,” “Stairway to Heaven,” “Moby Dick,” “Whole Lotta Love.”

 

In Through the Out Door
, Swan Song, 1979

“In the Evening,” “South Bound Saurez,” “Fool In the Rain,” “Hot Dog,” “Carouselambra,” “All My Love,” “I'm Gonna Crawl.”

 

Coda
, Swan Song, 1982

“We're Gonna Groove,” “Poor Tom,” “I Can't Quit You Baby,” “Walter's Walk,” “Ozone Baby,” “Darlene,” “Bonzo's Montreux,” “Wearing and Tearing.”

 

Led Zeppelin
, Atlantic Records, 1990 (digitally remastered, boxed set)

“Whole Lotta Love,” “Heartbreaker,” “Communication Breakdown,” “Babe I'm Gonna Leave You,” “What Is and What Should Never Be,” “Thank You,” “I Can't Quit You Baby,” “Dazed and Confused,” “Your Time Is Gonna Come,” “Ramble On,” “Travelling Riverside Blues,” “Friends,” “Celebration Day,” “Hey Hey What Can I Do,” “White Summer/Black Mountain Side,” “Black Dog,” “Over the Hills and Far Away,” “Immigrant Song,” “The Battle of Evermore,” “Bron-Y-Aur Stomp,” “Tangerine,” “Going to California,” “Since I've Been Loving You,” “D'yer Mak'er,” “Gallows Pole,” “Custard Pie,” “Misty Mountain Hop,” “Rock and Roll,” “The Rain Song,” “Stairway to Heaven,” “Kashmir,” “Trampled Under Foot,” “For Your Life,” “No Quarter,” “Dancing Days,” “When the Levee Breaks,” “Achilles Last Stand,” “The Song Remains the Same,” “Ten Years Gone,” “In My Time of Dying,” “In the Evening,” “Candy Store Rock,” “The Ocean,” “Ozone Baby,” “Houses of the Holy,” “Wearing and Tearing,” “Poor Tom,” “Nobody's Fault But Mine,” “Fool In the Rain,” “In the Light,” “The Wanton Song,” “Moby Dick/Bonzo's Montreux,” “I'm Gonna Crawl,” “All My Love.”

The pagination of this electronic edition does not match the edition from which it was created. To locate a specific passage, please use the search feature of your e-book reader.

“Achilles Last Stand,”

Air India

Alcohol and drug use

See also specific people
among fans

in Australia (1972)

cocaine

heroin

in Ireland

in Japan

during United States tour (Jan. 1969)

Alice in Chains

“All My Love,”

Almost Famous,

Anderson, Ian

Anger, Kenneth

Astrid

Atlanta Stadium

concert in

Atlantic Records

conflicts with

fortieth anniversary concert at

Madison Square Garden

Auckland (New Zealand) hotel incident in

motorcycle incident

1972 performance in

Australia

tour of

motorcycle incident

police raid

“Babe I'm Gonna Leave You,”

“Baby, Let's Play House,”

Bad Company

“Baja,”

Baker, Ginger

Band of Joy

Bangkok

refusal of entry into (1972)

1971 visit to

1972 visit to

Bangs, Lester

Bannister, Freddie

Barclay, Eddie

Barclay Records

Baretta, John

Barsalona, Frank

Bart, Lionel

Bassett, Terry

Bath Festival (1970)

“Battle of Evermore, The,”

Beatles, the, xxi

Beck, Jeff

Bell, Maggie

Berry, Chuck

Bindon, Johnny

“Black Mountain Side,”

Black Sabbath

Black Uhuru

Blow–Up
(film)

Blue Flames, xvii

Bodger, Chris

Bombay

1971 visit to

1972 recording session in

1972 visit to

Bonham, Jason

Bonham, John (Bonzo)

alcohol and drug use by

blackouts and disorientation

heroin

automobile accident of (1977)

background of

cars and

death of

as drummer

financial matters and

fishing at Edgewater Inn (Seattle)

formation of Led Zeppelin and

funeral for

girls and at Copenhagen sex club

handcuffing episode

mischief and pranks

Alvin Lee, incident involving

bugging of technician's bedroom

Chuck Berry, incident involving

Copenhagen art gallery incident

(1970)

demolishing his hotel suite

(1977)

Edgewater Inn (Seattle) incident

(1970)

George Harrison incident

Grant's son, incident involving

gun–pointing incident

Jeff Beck, incident involving

kicking dents into Rolls–Royce

motorcycle incident in

Auckland

pissing in his pants

restaurant incident involving

Dublin (1971)

shitting incidents

shitting–in–shoe incident

(1971)

staged “séance,”

throwing hotel refrigerator into

the ocean

throwing television sets out of

hotel window

urinating on a disc jockey in

Tokyo (1971)

Volkswagen incident in Iceland and (1970)

old cars and

Plant and

ranch of

as songwriter

Starship
bathroom incident

United States tour (Jan. 1969) and

United States tour (Apr.–May

(1969) and

during United States tour (1975)

Untitled
album and

Bonham, Pat

Bonham, Zoe

Bootleggers

Boston Garden

performance at

Boston Tea Party

performance at

Braunn, Erik

Brevitz, Marshall

“Bring It On Home,”

“Bron–Y–Aur Stomp,”

Browne, Carol

Brutsche, Rusty

Buell, Bebe

“Butterfly,”

Callaghan, Jim

Calmes, Jack

Canary Islands, Cole's vacation in

“Candy Store Rock,”

Carnegie Hall (New York City)

performance at

“Carouselambra,”

Carpenter, Karen

Carson, Phil

Japanese tour (1971) and

Caster, Cynthia P.

Cavern Club

CBS Records

Château Marmont (Los Angeles)

Christian, Dick

Christian, Neil

Clapton, Eric

as performer

Clifford, Doug

Clifton, Peter

Cocaine

Coda
(album)

Cole, Claire

Cole, Marilyn

Cole, Richard

after Led Zeppelin's demise

alcohol and drug use by, xx

cocaine

heroin

overdoses

arrested in Rome

background of

cars and

construction work and

death of mother

Downey and

Elvis Presley and

family of

Fem 2 Fem and

first job with a band

fishing at Edgewater Inn (Seattle)

girls and

handcuffing episode

Shark Episode

strippers

Thee Experience (Los Angeles), incident at

imprisoned in Italy

marital problems

vacation in the Canary Islands

marriage

mischief and pranks

Copenhagen bathroom incident

(1971)

ledge–walking incident in Paris

as messenger

motorcycle accident in

Auckland

punching incident at Nobody's

(New York City)

tearing dress off Cole's girlfriend

New Vaudeville Band and

petty cash account and

Plant and

in prison

released from prison

robbery from Drake Hotel

safe–deposit box

sobriety and

as tour manager

for Black Sabbath

for Black Uhuru

for Crazy Town

for Eden

for Eric Clapton

for Fu Manchu

for the Gipsy Kings

for Lita Ford

for Miriam Makeba

1974 offer by Peter Grant

for Ozzy Osbourne

for Paul Rodgers

for the Quireboys

for Three Dog Night

wedding to Tracy

Cole, Tracy

Collins, Patsy

Collins, Phil

“Communication Breakdown,”

Concerts West

Condliffe, Brian

Cooper, Alice

Cooper, Robert Gaines

Copenhagen

art gallery incident (1970)

1970 concert in

sex clubs in

Coulson, Clive

Country Joe and the Fish

Crawford, Chris

Crazy Town

Cream

Crowe, Cameron

Crowe, Christopher

Crowley, Aleister

“Crunge, The,”

Crusaders, The

Daltrey, Roger, xx

Danova, Caesar

Dautrich, Bill

“Dazed and Confused,”

Death threats against members of

Led Zeppelin

DeForest, Bob

Denny, Sandy

DeVita, Dan

Dinah Shore Golf Classic

Disc jockeys

Dobson, Jim

Donovan

Dorman, Lee

Douglas, Michael

“Down by the Seaside,”

Downey, Robert, Jr.

Dreja, Chris

Drug and alcohol use.
See
Alcohol and

drug use

Drugs

“D'yer Mak'er,”

Dylan, Bob

Earls Court (London)

performances at

Eden

Edgewater Inn (Seattle)

fishing at

1977 stay in

Edmunds, Dave

Entwistle, John, xx

Equipment

Ertegun, Ahmet

Estrada, Bob

Eve, Mick

EZEE Hire

Fallon, B. P. (Beep)

Fame, Georgie, xvii

Fansdrug use by

Milan riot

Untitled
album and

Federal Bureau of Investigation

(FBI)

Fem 2 Fem

Fernando, Jenny

Fillmore East (New York)

May 1969 performance at

1969 performance at

Fillmore West (San Francisco)

performances at

Firm, the

Flock, the

FM radio stations

“Foggy Day in Vietnam, A,”

“Fool in the Rain,”

Ford, Lita

Fox, Mitchell

France

concerts in

“Frank Barsalona,”

“Friends,”

Fromme, Lynette “Squeaky,”

Fu Manchu

“Gallows Pole,”

Gautier, Benoit

Gay bars

Geraldo Rivera show

Germany

tour of

Gipsy Kings

Girls

See also under individual names

in Bangkok (1971)

at Copenhagen sex club

Great Dane incident

handcuffing episode

during 1973 United States tour

during 1975 United States tour

1977 United States tour and

Phil Carson incident in Kyoto

Shark Episode

strippers

Thee Experience (Los Angeles), incident at

Goldberg, Danny

“Good Times Bad Times,”

Gradaloni, Julio, Bonham's death and

Graham, Bill

1977 performances and

Graham Bond Organization

Grande Ballroom (Detroit)

performance at

Grant, Gloria

Grant, Peter

Grant, Peter
(continued)

alcohol and drug use by Led

Zeppelin and

Atlantic Records and

Australia and New Zealand tour

(1972) and

background of

Bath Festival (1970) and

Beep hired as publicist by

Bob Dylan and

Bonham's death and

Bonham's mischief and

Bonzo and

Earls Court performances (1975) and

electrocution of Les Harvey and

financial matters and

concert offers after release of

Led Zeppelin II

percent demand

petty cash account

Gloria (wife) and

Japanese tour (1971) and

movie project and

New Vaudeville Band and

1974 offer to Cole

no–rain policy of

North American tour (1970) and

Oakland incident involving son of

personal characteristics of

Return to the Clubs tour (1971) and

Swan Song and

United States tour (Jan. 1969) and

United States tour (fall 1969) and

United States tour (1970) and

United States tour (summer 1972) and

United States tour (1973) and

robbery from Drake Hotel safe–deposit box

United States tour (1975) and

the Yardbirds and

Zeppelin name controversy and

Grant, Warren

Greenberg, Jerry

Harris/Meehan Group

Harrison, George

Harrison, Patti

Harvey, Les

Hawaii

visit to

Headley Grange

Hefner, Hugh

Herman's Hermits

Heroin

High Numbers

Hinton, Mick

Hobbs, Rick

Hoffmann, Jeff

Hong Kong

visit to

Honolulu

stay in

“Hots On for Nowhere,”

“Houses of the Holy,”

Houses of the Holy
(album)

Houston

performance in

Howard Stern show

“How Many More Times,”

Hulett, Tom

Hutton, Danny

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