How did four masters of their craft come together to form arguably the greatest hard-rock band of all time? That’s the focus of the new documentary Becoming Led Zeppelin. As the title indicates, the ...
If there’s a music chart somewhere in the world dedicated to specifically rock and roll, there’s a good chance that Led Zeppelin finds a home on it regularly. The legendary group isn’t ...
In its way, the rise of Led Zeppelin was just as inexorable as the above-mentioned artists’: They formed in August of 1968 and less than 18 months later, their second album had replaced the ...
The first-ever authorised Led Zeppelin documentary film is out in cinemas this weekend featuring Robert Plant, Jimmy Page and John Paul Jones as talking heads. Titled Becoming Led Zeppelin ...
READ MORE: Led Zeppelin: “We couldn’t do reunion unless the singer was there. Quite clearly we’re there, but he’s not…” To construe as a bad omen that none the three surviving members who were ...
If you’re someone who treasures the music of Led Zeppelin more than you’re interested in the legend—or the gossip, or the dirt, or whatever you want to call it—of Led Zeppelin, this movie is ...
Despite his comical tiff with Peter Grant, Dylan has remained on good personal terms with the rest of his fans in Led Zeppelin. It just so happens that they arrived at a time when the original ...
There are many wonderful things about the new Led Zeppelin documentary ... Britain was small, parochial and black and white. America by contrast was large, expansive and drenched in primary ...
In a coldly lit Paris TV studio in 1969, Led Zeppelin blast through Communication Breakdown as if trying to tear down the whole edifice of Western civilisation. In tie-dye t-shirt and tight red ...
Robert Plant was always going to be the hardest to crack. In 1969, Led Zeppelin became the biggest band in the world on their own unprecedented terms. No interviews. No promo films. No nonsense.
Featuring Jimmy Page, Robert Plant, John Paul Jones and John Bonham. Written by Bernard MacMahon and Allison McGourty. Directed by Bernard MacMahon. 121 minutes. Opens Friday on Toronto-area ...
If Led Zeppelin started with a question, that question might've been: “What if the blues was really, really loud?” And you’d think that might have occurred to someone before. But not like this.