To Thread - Forum Home

The Mudcat Café TM
https://mudcat.org/thread.cfm?threadid=84613
72 messages

Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?

13 Sep 05 - 12:16 AM (#1562459)
Subject: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: Lonesome EJ

In the mid-1960s, I was first taught to love the native Blues music of America by five Englishmen who gave these blues their own guitar-and-harmonica driven spin...the Yardbirds. Keith Relf, Jim McCarty, Chris Dreja and Eric Clapton cranked For Your Love into the airwaves of my hometown, and everything seemed to change. Later Clapton would leave to be replaced by Jeff Beck, and Jimmy Page joined on bass. Through this period, the band mingled updated classic blues like Smokestack Lightnin with newer proto-psychedelic material like Shapes of Things, but credited the blues material, as did the Stones, Beatles, and other British pop-blues groups, to the original composers.
When Page gained ascendancy in the band, things began to change. In other words, lyrics, titles, guitar parts, entire songs were lifted from their underpriveledged composers and ascribed to Page/Plant/Jones/Bonham. Page didn't restrict his theft to the old timers of the blues, however. He consistently stole concepts, techniques and songs from his former bandmates and from other bands that he toured with. Dazed and Confused was the work of a blues artist Page saw in New York. The Yardbirds covered this song live for several years before it emerged on Led Zepplin as an "original" composition. He sued to keep a pre-1968 Yardbirds version from being released. The entire acoustic intro to Stairway to Heaven was stolen from Spirit's Taurus after Zeppelin toured with them.
If you are interested in Page, Zeppelin, the Yardbirds, or rampant acts of plagiarism, see this article. Really pretty entertaining stuff.


13 Sep 05 - 04:22 AM (#1562531)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: Le Scaramouche

Rampant plagiarist, it's true, but not without blues precedents.
What did Tom Lehrer say?
Plagiarise, plagiarise,
Let no-one's work evade your eyes


13 Sep 05 - 05:46 AM (#1562561)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: Kenneth Ingham

In the linked article it says that Babe I'm Gonna Leave You is credited to Bredon, Page etc. May I point out that this is only the case on recent CD issues. On the original vynyl and early CDs there is no mention of Bredon.

I saw Robert Plant at Canterbury Fayre a couple of years ago and he openly said that they ripped off most of their songs not thinking that anybody would notice. He went on to credit the original composeres for most of his set which included the most well known Zep ripoffs. Fair play Robert - you obviously don't care now cos you're stinking rich and most of the original writers have snuffed it anyway!


13 Sep 05 - 08:02 AM (#1562626)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: Mooh

Not to defend Page et al, because they weren't completely innocent, but all music is derivative, and blues is and was a common people's music. They were going a little further than their forebears perhaps, but that seems to be the natural state of evolution in music. That there are legal checks and balances that have stepped in is good, and some of the damage has been rectified, payments made, however late.

For the record, the folks who Page ripped off got their music from somewhere too, and not always credited.

Peace, Mooh.


13 Sep 05 - 08:53 AM (#1562672)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: GUEST,Fullerton

A couple of years ago i found a website called the roots of Led Zeppelin.

I've searched for the site today but I think its down.

It gave little snippets of ripped off riffs and there were dozens of them.

It also claimed that they were at the receiving end of, I think, more than fifty legal cases. And it cost them very dear.

Willie Dixon is certainly is a great deal better off than if they had cleared the use of his material beforehand.

As are many others.

And many Lawyers, I'm sure are very grateful to them.

Curiously Led Zeppelin have not seem to have lost their taste for litigation as they are involved with several legal cases downloading and copyright breaches.


13 Sep 05 - 09:18 AM (#1562693)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: mack/misophist

In one of the many biographies of Pablo Picasso he is quoted as saying "People never show me their work because they know if I see anything good, I'll steal it."


13 Sep 05 - 09:48 AM (#1562709)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: Blackcatter

Don't forget about record producers and the owners of the record compaines. They are just as much at fault (if not more) for allowing bands to plagiarize. Certainly, they're the ones who profit the most and have the ultimate say as to what appears on an album and in the credits.

Yes, blame the artist, but it might be chalked up to partial ignorance, but corporate greed cannot be excused.


13 Sep 05 - 09:56 AM (#1562718)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: GUEST,Mr Happy

& wasn't there a similar case recently levelled against George Harrison for his alllegely stolen intro riff for 'My Sweet Lord'?


13 Sep 05 - 10:06 AM (#1562721)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: GUEST,Art Thieme

Finding and using has always been a part of the concept of the oral tradition in the folk revival as I knew it. We wanted to use the music we heard, and so we did just that. It was the way it was done then. Bits and pieces we heard and used became the cliches within our works that made/created our personal styles. We were too broke to pay much for anything. So we made our music, we made our livings --- and that was enough.

Art


13 Sep 05 - 10:21 AM (#1562726)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: Le Scaramouche

Yes, but the problem with Page seems to be wholesale lifting and then claiming the credit.


13 Sep 05 - 10:43 AM (#1562746)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: Chris in Wheaton

How about the Beach Boys using Chuck Berry licks?
Or the Kingston Trio taking Tom Dooley and other songs?
I'd guess this is still going on.
If all musicians were angels, we wouldn 't need lawyers!
Chris in Wheaton


13 Sep 05 - 11:16 AM (#1562769)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: C-flat

One of the most amazing acts of plagarism is Mark Knopflers "Brothers in Arms". Take a listen to Snowy Whites' "Bird of Paradise" that was released two years earlier.
Wether it was subliminal or intentional, who knows, but I don't recall there being a case about.
Maybe there was and I missed it?

C-flat.


13 Sep 05 - 11:33 AM (#1562776)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: mooman

Having jammed with Snowy (a very fine player) long ago I'll definitely have a listen to that C-flat!

Peace

moo


13 Sep 05 - 12:18 PM (#1562804)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: Le Scaramouche

I could be getting confused because of the opening line of Brothers in Arms, but it always reminds of the melody for Mist Covered Mountains of Home.
Didn't the Kingston Trio credit Tom Dooley as trad arr?


13 Sep 05 - 01:13 PM (#1562835)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: John MacKenzie

Jimmy Page used to be my neighbour when he bought Boleskine House the old home of Alasteir Crowley.
Giok


13 Sep 05 - 01:14 PM (#1562838)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: GUEST,woodsie

Come on! Bird Of Paradise itself is a straight rip-off of hendrix's "Little Wing"


13 Sep 05 - 01:17 PM (#1562839)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: Leadfingers

The 'Fans' are as bad as any one else - How often do you hear a song introduced and credited to 'The Singer' with NO mention of who actually wrote the words and music !!!!


13 Sep 05 - 01:21 PM (#1562844)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: John MacKenzie

Songs are like Biros the good ones are called by the name of the originator, others by the name of the singer who had the hit with them.
But a vacuum cleaner still sucks the same as a Hoover.
Giok


13 Sep 05 - 01:28 PM (#1562852)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: Little Hawk

I never could stand most of Led Zeppelin's music anyway...just not my style, I guess. They sound like the apotheosis of the dumb, pretentious, overblown male ego gone wild to me. (and I am male) I frankly detest most of their big hits.


13 Sep 05 - 03:12 PM (#1562922)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: Grab

I found a preview of the first 30 seconds of "Bird of paradise". I can hear one similar riff in that , but it's a fairly simple phrase that fits a very common chord progression, it's in a different place in the song, and it's in a different tempo. And I agree with woodsie, the song sounds like a Hendrix "tribute". I can't say much more though, since I don't know how the rest of the song goes.

Graham.


14 Sep 05 - 07:38 AM (#1563404)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: Grimmy

Here's another impressively looong list of songs that Mr Page 'composed'.


14 Sep 05 - 10:32 AM (#1563517)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: Le Scaramouche

What on earth do they mean by this?

"Bring It On Home" - the first section is an uncredited cover of the Willie Dixon tune (as performed by the imposter Sonny Boy Williamson).


14 Sep 05 - 04:03 PM (#1563741)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: fat B****rd

Well.....if you're gonna steal, steal from the best.


14 Sep 05 - 05:21 PM (#1563792)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: GUEST,Houston_Diamond

I can't agree with you more.

I'm a fan of Howlin' Wolf which seems to have been an artist reproduced closely note for note by Led Zeppelin.

But I don't care as I like the blues and I'm happy that it's being kept alive (even when they take the credit for it themselves!!!).

Speaking of Howlin' Wolf the 1970 album 'The London Sessions' include the artists Eric Clapton, Rolling Stones Bill Wyman and Charlie Watts, with Stevie Winwood providing keyboard overdubs which has to be a must album to any blues(or Zeppelin) fan.

Howlin' Wolf was in his early sixties and in poor health when he recorded 'The London Sessions'. Despite this, Wolf still manages to rock the house with a great collection of songs that he'd made famous, plus covers of Willie Dixon's.


14 Sep 05 - 08:04 PM (#1563892)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: M.Ted

People seem to think that "Stairway to Heaven" was a straight ripoff of Spirit's "Taurus"--well, it is similar to one part, but you have to be thinking about it to even notice it--However, the famous and much abused intro is pretty much note for note the same as the intro to Jobim's "Manha de Carnival"--

As shifty, lowlife, and litigation prone as all this lifting makes Page seem, nonetheless, he added or changed something that made all of this music completely enthralling to your average metalhead--in fact, by playing this music, he created metalheads--mind you, I am not necessarily a big Page fan, but whatever he did brought all that stuff across in way that no one else had done--that's why he made the big bucks--


14 Sep 05 - 11:48 PM (#1563987)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: Mooh

M.Ted...Was that a movie theme, or am I thinking of something else?

Peace, Mooh.


15 Sep 05 - 01:12 AM (#1564014)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: Lonesome EJ

Well. Maybe Jimmy was simply paying tribute to the music of men he admired very much. Page was and is a student of the blues. He is certainly shown to have borrowed phrases and segments of entire songs from the pioneers. Wouldn't it have been an even greater tribute to assign their authorship and pay some small portion of the profit he derived from borrowing their intellectual property? It speaks volumes about his ethics, don't you think? The fact that he had to be sued in order to do the right thing says even more.
Personally I have always liked Zeppelin, and I think Page is one of the great rock guitarists. But I have to say that I think there is a difference between the kind of borrowing that goes on as part of the folk tradition, and what Page did. Page was not ignorant of his sources, as the article clearly points out.


15 Sep 05 - 04:48 AM (#1564082)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: 'those feet in ancient times

I dont agree with Fat B******d when he says if youre going to steal (musically I hope he means) steal from the Best, I think theres more to had from John Faheys approach which was When you steal steal from obscure sources


15 Sep 05 - 04:49 AM (#1564083)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: Le Scaramouche

Best doesn't always mean 'famous'.


15 Sep 05 - 07:44 AM (#1564161)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: s6k

WHO CARES JUST LISTEN TO HOW GOOD ZEPPELIN WERE


15 Sep 05 - 09:38 AM (#1564222)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: M.Ted

No question at all, LonesomeEJ--you are exactly right. Mooh-"Manha de Carnival" was from the film'"Black Orpheus"--in fact, just to confuse things, a lot of musicians used to call it Black Orpheus(not sure about nowadays)-- the confusion being that Samba de Orfeo came from the same film--it was hard to keep the names straight, though easy enough to tell the songs apart--


15 Sep 05 - 01:52 PM (#1564409)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: Le Scaramouche

S6k, you'd care if Jimmy Page heard something you wrote and claimed it for himself.


15 Sep 05 - 10:42 PM (#1564800)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: Mooh

M.Ted...Thanks.

Been listening to even more Zep than usual because of this thread. Bonzo was so good! Him and Charlie Watts and Keith Moon define rock drums to me. Refined and primitive all at once.

Peace, Mooh.


15 Sep 05 - 11:08 PM (#1564806)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: Lonesome EJ

Mooh, you're right about Bonham. The drum part on Black Dog is probably the most brilliant in rock. Bonzo plays as if he is keeping beat to an entirely different song than the rest of the band is playing. At first it seems jarring, then like a tug of war between giant ogres, then everything smacks together in a perfect driving cohesion. Sure, Jimmy and Bob probably stole the lyrics to that one too. "I don't know, but I been told/ Big legged woman aint got no soul" doesn't sound like a lyric a couple of Brits would coin.
The drumming on When the Levee Breaks is also amazing. Apparently, Bonham set up his kit in the stair well of a large old English manor house while the drum microphones were hung over the third floor rail.


16 Sep 05 - 09:53 AM (#1564864)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: Paco Rabanne

So what's new? We ALL KNOW that Bob Dylan ripped off his entire act and reportire from the genius Donavan!!!!


17 Sep 05 - 07:49 AM (#1565437)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: s6k

Not to mention Martin Carthy, his entire career is one big RIP OFF of the genius that is William Shatner


17 Sep 05 - 10:42 AM (#1565528)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: Le Scaramouche

NOOOO we do not want anouther Shatner thread!!!!!


18 Sep 05 - 08:59 AM (#1565955)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: Mooh

Lonesome EJ...and Four Sticks! Geez, what a monster! Mooh.


19 Sep 05 - 12:02 AM (#1566406)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: GUEST

...and the reason why they were so good is because it was a group effort. You had one guy with a unique voice, a killer guitarist and a rock solid accomplished drummer with a singularly defined style, coupled with a bassist who could add bottom to a band that was heavy on 'bottom,' - it all came together in just the right measure for success.

The effect wouldn't have been the same if one of those elements were missing, which the group wisely recognized by disbanding when Bonzo passed away.


19 Sep 05 - 04:48 AM (#1566476)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: GUEST,who

"Zeppelin's roots in the blues are enough to disqualify the music as being "metal."

But Black Sabbath also has its roots in the blues.


19 Sep 05 - 10:35 AM (#1566637)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: GUEST

not with those "E-D-E" progressions ...irrespective of Iommi's almost exclusive use of the minor pentatonic scale ...


19 Sep 05 - 01:34 PM (#1566750)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: M.Ted

Led Zepplin was the original heavy metal group- Lead being, a heavy metal--and heavy metal is, more or less, blues with the shuffle ironed out, or, as some have called it, blues without soul. Still, there is plenty of controversy as to the nature of heavy metal. I submit, from the webpage Is Silver a Heavy Metal?



>Historically, There is no Consensus on a Scientifically Valid Definition of Heavy Metal

>"There is a tendency, unsupported by the facts, to assume that all so-called "heavy metals" and >their compounds have highly toxic or ecotoxic properties. This has no basis in chemical or >toxicological data. Thus, the term "heavy metals" is both meaningless and misleading."

>- John H. Duffus, The Edinburgh Centre for Toxicology, Scotland, "Pure and Applied Chemistry" >74, 793–807



>A few thoughts by Stephen J. Hawkes of Oregon State University, Department of Chemistry, >demonstrate an interesting perspective:

>"The metals that I have seen referred to as heavy metals comprise a block of all the metals in >Groups 3 to 16 that are in periods 4 and greater. This seems to be a definition that should be >generally useful. It may also be stated as the transition and post-transition metals. These acquired >the name heavy metals because they all have high densities, but the usefulness of the term is >related to their chemistry, not their density.


No mention of the E to D chord changes--


19 Sep 05 - 01:43 PM (#1566753)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: GUEST

Old Robbo has gone all folksy rootsy now. And the circle is complete?


20 Sep 05 - 10:53 AM (#1566814)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: GUEST

Metallica or any of the metal bands around today seem to be way removed from the blues progressions, so I don't see the connection. I think of metal as having more of a classical influence, introduced by the likes of people like Ritchie Blackmore. Or demonic roots as in Black Sabbath. Led Zeppelin isn't a metal band to me....hard rock, yes...psychedelia, occasionally. Metal, no.


20 Sep 05 - 04:17 PM (#1567082)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: M.Ted

They may not play 12-bar blues progressions GUEST, but the music form is based on blues leads and bass figures--no way you can escape from it, and no reason you'd want to--


20 Sep 05 - 08:20 PM (#1567255)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: GUEST

but they do play 12-bar blues progressions .... what is "Rock 'n' Roll?" .... which was my point to begin with ...their music was too derivative of the blues to be metal, and that was what this thread was about to begin with ....


20 Sep 05 - 09:10 PM (#1567307)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: M.Ted

I meant the other guys that you mentioned. All Heavy Metal is heavily derivative of the blues. Bottom line is that the music and instrumental technique was all stolen from black people.


21 Sep 05 - 08:16 AM (#1567571)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: GUEST

"All heavy metal is heavily derivative of the blues" .... we'll have to agree to disagree. I don't hear a derivation of the blues in bands like Anthrax or Cannibal Corpse, or Scorpions even...even though the guitarists in those bands might fall into a riff built around the blues scale occasionally.


21 Sep 05 - 07:47 PM (#1568030)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: M.Ted

We can disagree, I have no problem with that--I will say though that blues isn't about "blues scales" or 12 bar progressions--it's the ideas and the technique for playing them that come from the blues--


21 Sep 05 - 10:12 PM (#1568122)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: Goose Gander

Then what precisely are the "ideas and techniques for playing them" to which you refer?


22 Sep 05 - 10:14 AM (#1568405)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: Mooh

Blues plagiarist is nearly an oxymoron.

Page can't be all that bad, he just got some award in Rio for humanitarian work of some sort. Remember, when much of the rip-offs happened, these guys were young, naive, drugged, full of themselves, and not capable of great business and ethical decisions. Not living in the real world didn't help them, but even Keith Richards managed to acknowledge his sources.

I wonder what they'd do if they could do it all again?

Peace, Mooh.


22 Sep 05 - 10:16 AM (#1568407)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: M.Ted

The basics of metal guitar all come from blues guitar--same for rock--simple as that. You want lessons?


22 Sep 05 - 10:32 AM (#1568411)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: Goose Gander

No, I don't need lessons. Even as a teenage would-be guitar hero I quickly figured out there was a clear difference between blues-based hard rock like AC/DC and the (apparently) more classically influenced compositions of the aforementioned Richie Blackmore not to mention Iron Maiden and (even more far removed) Slayer. I'm sorry, but the blues influence just isn't there. The guy who gave me lessons played in a metal band, and he borrowed material from flamenco music, fusion jazz but never the blues.

Unless playing with a plectrum and using barre chords and single-note runs are soley derived from the blues, then I really don't think that "the basics of metal guitar all come from blues guitar."


22 Sep 05 - 10:53 AM (#1568434)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: GUEST,Euro metal

ALL heavy metal is stolen from the Blues..


is it ?.. bollocks !!!!!..


..what a narrow minded mean-spitited pointless prejudiced assertion..


can just as easily make a case that ALL heavy metal
is derived from european polka..


22 Sep 05 - 01:25 PM (#1568507)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: M.Ted

The basics of metal guitar all come from blues guitar--same for rock--simple as that. You want lessons?


22 Sep 05 - 01:42 PM (#1568513)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: Goose Gander

We heard you the first time, care to respond to our points?


22 Sep 05 - 01:44 PM (#1568518)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: Le Scaramouche

Ah, with the Scorpions it depends what years. In the 70s their lead guitarist (I've stupidly forgotten his name) combined two styles, classical and Hendrix-style blues. Michael Schenker was also heavily blues-based. Which brings up the subject, did they credit their sources?

Iron Maiden and Mettalica both were heavily influenced by Thin Lizzy early on, who did blues a-plenty, but they (Maiden and mettalica) certainly moved on.

Saying that all the music and technique were stolen from black people is narrow-minded. Shall we acuse them of stealing from the Spanish and Germans?


22 Sep 05 - 02:09 PM (#1568539)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: Goose Gander

That was Ulijon Roth who played those wild, drug-induced (?) classical-psychedelic-blues guitar lines on early Scorpions LPs. My friends and I called him "Uli", and he definately had a sound of his own, regardless of who influenced him. From whom did 'steal' the the classical influence?

To directly lift words and melodies from another musician's composition without giving credit is indeed theft. To absorb influences from antecedent forms and to make something new out of this is the essence of creativity. Big difference between the two.

Yeah, Thin Lizzy definately took a lot from the blues. I wonder, was Phil Lynott stealing from himself?


22 Sep 05 - 02:21 PM (#1568548)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: Le Scaramouche

Yeah, Uli. Can't sing to save his life, but what a guitarist.
Oops, I wasn't clear enough. I ment did the Scorpions in their 80s phase credit sources, because several songs are almost note-for-note of melodies like Black Velvet (not the trad) or Skynyrds' Simple Man. Uli didn't steal, he drew from influences to make his own stuff. Sorry about the confusion.
Phil (my favourite) was one of the most creative musicians ever, IMHO.


22 Sep 05 - 02:33 PM (#1568560)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: GUEST,Tunesmith

A few years ago, Merseyside DJ/Rock Writer, Spencer Leigh, had an on-going feature on his Radio Merseyside show wherein listeners would write in informing Spencer of songs that they thought were "ripping off" earlier songs. One such song was Fleetwood Mac's " Albatross", which it seems is very much like a Chuck Berry song. Being very astute, Spencer wondered why Chuck hadn't caused a fuss about the matter, and suggested that maybe Chuck had "borrowed" his version from an earlier source. Sure enough, another listener suggested that a 1940s tune by T-Bone Walker was Chuck inspiration!


22 Sep 05 - 03:46 PM (#1568619)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: GUEST,German Techno Metalhead

Rammstein .....


blues !!??????


22 Sep 05 - 04:15 PM (#1568626)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: Le Scaramouche

Less said about Rammstein the better.


22 Sep 05 - 05:47 PM (#1568680)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: GUEST

Yeah - the first thing that conmes to my mind when Yngwie Malmsteen tears into a solo is, "My God, he's channeling the spirit of Robert Johnson!!"


02 Feb 07 - 06:17 PM (#1956057)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: Murray MacLeod

All Jimmy Page fans really should watch this little gem:

A very young Jimmy Page


04 Sep 09 - 10:12 PM (#2716539)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: TinDor

Guest wrote:


"I don't consider Led Zeppelin metal music ...it is hard rock. Zep didn't give birth to metal - I think Ozzie and Black Sabbath did that with those "E down to D and back up to E" progressions, not to mention Ozzie's references to Satan and all, that have become part and parcel of any subsequent metal music, whether the reference is valid or not...(then Mettalica took that one step further with the "E to F" chord progression). Zeppelin's roots in the blues are enough to disqualify the music as being "metal." "



.
.
.
.
.
.
.

...what? The very first "Metal" regardless if you think it was Zeppelin or Black Sabbath, clearly is rooted in the Blues. I think people time and time again make the mistake by continuing to defing Blues by the 12 bar progression because it's more than that. BLues is also the vocab of it's playing and it's colorings.


Anyway, here something for ,from the members of Black Sabbath and just exactly what their roots were... I'll highlight the main parts


From the book
Sabbath Bloody Sabbath : The Battle for Black Sabbath

Quote:


" David Donato brought many attributes to the table. Not only could he sing with the power and style required but he unquestionably looked the part too. "Vocally my timing was good. Personally I was into that Dio and Gillan type of style so that was a big plus for them. In my club days I was a Robert Plant clone—happy to admit it. I was also big on Ronnie James Dio, even back to the old Elf days. Lots of power and melody I like to think. I had done my modelling so for that I obviously I had to look good. I was 6 foot 2 inches and kept myself in good shape. I certainly have a presence. It's like Halloween every time I get on stage. From that point on we just rehearsed at the Rockhouse. I remember the Olympics were happening at the time and Bill and I would travel into rehearsals together, driving past the Coliseum, because we lived very close to each other, Bill on Seal Beach and me on Huntington Beach. This went on for a good many months. Just solid rehearsing." For Donato this would be an opportunity to witness some of his favourite musicians at close quarters. "Tony is a stylist completely on guitar. When you hear a riff of his you know exactly who it is and there are very, very few guitarists you could claim that of. It's interesting the Heavy Metal label the band has because Billy always said they were a Blues band. They knew all of that old stuff, had a great knowledge of it."

This observation about Sabbath's Blues heritage is poignant. Often overlooked it is vital to the understanding of Black Sabbath's immensely successful formula. They didn't title their fledgling act The Polka Tulk Blues Band for nothing. Geezer Butler backed this up, taking a momentary dip back into time when asked a question on the musical values of his 1997 solo record 'Black Science'. "I like to experiment, we all do. When I think of the hours and hours we have spent just jamming along in the studio. That's how we relax, have a good old blast with your mates and forget about everything else. If we could get paid just for that I would be very happy. Sometimes you forget why you're there. Oh, we have to make an album? Rehearse for a tour?

Most of our stuff goes back to 12 bar Blues really Our younger fans find that surprising sometimes. . When we were kids we started out playing along to those old records in just the same way people like Jimmy Page did. Back in those days that's how you leant to play. We taught ourselves. All our early gigs were Blues songs and that is what we were—a Blues band. We would be happy to just jam instrumentally for ages. I suppose the transition to Heavy Metal was through Tony and I developing these very simple three chord Blues riffs into something of our own. It was like, OK, where can we go with this? Alvin Lee of Ten Years After had a big effect on us too. Alvin was doing the same thing, taking the Blues but turning it around into something different. It's the same for Led Zeppelin, Jethro Tull and Deep Purple too, all those bands of that period, just expressed the Blues differently. Its all a tradition of the Blues so give us half the chance and we'll spend all day playing Willie Dixon. People seem surprised by that but I tell them, Heavy Metal would not exist without the Blues. Black Sabbath would not exist without the Blues.

Tony Iommi., talking to the author backstage at the Leicester De Montfort Hall in 1986, would acknowledge the Blues as central to the very essence of Black Sabbath. "When we started both Geezer and I were playing guitar and we learned everything we knew from the Blues.. Anyone who was serious about an instrument was either learning Blues or Jazz. The Blues is a great place to start, to build on and find your own style." Did Tony find a grounding in the Blues the reason for a dearth in quality of latter day Rock acts? He was diplomatic. . "I would recommend it to anyone. Don't pick up a guitar and try to play my riffs. Get hold of some old Howlin' Wolf or Willie Dixon records first. That's the way to start. Ask Jimmy Page, Brian May, Rory Gallagher or Gary Moore or any of those guys.The thing is there are so many bands around today I can't keep up. There were not that many bands around and it was very creative because everyone was trying to find something different. Everything was based on the Blues though—everything.

"


05 Sep 09 - 03:16 PM (#2716903)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: mayomick

The acoustic Blackmoutainside , wasn't that taken from Bert Jansch's version of Blackwaterside ?


05 Sep 09 - 03:20 PM (#2716907)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: Crow Sister (off with the fairies)

I never bothered to read the thread.
Jimmy Paige was a wonderful artist, end of.


05 Sep 09 - 08:19 PM (#2717112)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: Bobert

Well, okay... Yeah, there was a lot of folks going back and takin' lyrics and a few licks from the old blues players and then addin' their own take on it and then saying that what they were playin' was the blues??? Huh??? Not really...

Dylan was more a blues player than Zephin or the Stones and Sabbath, IMHO, wasn't even close to playin' the blues...

I mean, when one really listens to the blues and studies it then it is a real leap to think of any of these bands a blues bands 'cuase they weren't... Mightta riped off some lyrics and few licks but didn't even do that all that well...lol...

Bobert (blues player)


06 Sep 09 - 04:32 AM (#2717337)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: TinDor

Robert wrote:


"Well, okay... Yeah, there was a lot of folks going back and takin' lyrics and a few licks from the old blues players and then addin' their own take on it and then saying that what they were playin' was the blues??? Huh??? Not really..."

There is a reason all of these groups were descrives as "Blues Based" and it wasn't just because of taking a "few lyrics and licks". They used the vocab/coloring of the Blues

.
.


"Dylan was more a blues player than Zephin or the Stones and Sabbath, IMHO, wasn't even close to playin' the blues..."

I disagree. IMO, there was nothing bluesy about Dylan's guitar work in the Delta based style sense..Dylan had more in common with the East Coast Blues guys like Blind Willie Mctell. Zeppelin, Stones and Sabaath were based on the Delta and Eletric Chicago/Texas style.

.
.
.


"I mean, when one really listens to the blues and studies it then it is a real leap to think of any of these bands a blues bands 'cuase they weren't... Mightta riped off some lyrics and few licks but didn't even do that all that well...lol..."

Again, these bands /players (Clapton, Hendrix, Zeppelin, Sabbath etc...) were all playing blues based guitar stuff but with tons of amplification and distortion along with Jazz influenced improv.

It's pretty clear as day to hear the blues vocab/colorings/stylings when these guys play the guitar.Some examples..



Sabbath

BLACK SABBATH NIB 1970


Black Sabbath Live 1970 Paranoid)

Zeppelin,


Led Zeppelin Black Dog 1973

Led Zeppelin-I Can't Quit You Babe)

.
.
.

...now, where the first "Metal" (usually attributed to Sabbath) comes in is when Sabbtah started making songs based around the "Diabolus in Musica (Devils Interveral)/TriTone/Flatted 5th combined with scary and Satanic themes, is when the first "Metal" was born. As seen below..

Sabbath @ around 2:06

Black Sabbath - Black Sabbath (live paris 1970)




.
.
.
.


06 Sep 09 - 04:01 PM (#2717576)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: Bonzo3legs

Interesting, but virtually every working rock/blues guitarist who started playing after 1965 borrowed the style perfected by Eric Clapton in 1965. He of course borrowed his style from a number of USAian blues players and made it sound convincing only those of us who stood within 10 feet of his amp during his stints with John Mayall's Bluesbreakers can appreciate that!

Anyone see Jimmy Page in Neil Christian's Crusaders? I did!


06 Sep 09 - 04:30 PM (#2717590)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: olddude

Well in this life I am not sure of much of anything. But I am sure of one thing and that is our Bobert knows the blues. He is the best there is at it.   So I gotta go with Bob's opinion - for me anyway


07 Sep 09 - 03:08 AM (#2717855)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Page- Plagiarist of the Blues?
From: GUEST,Tunesmith

I know that when Alan Lomax interviewed Muddy Waters on the planation in 1941, Muddy sang a song that he said that he'd made up but when questioned by Lomax he said that he'd learned it form Robert Johnson( or maybe Son House). Muddy wasn't trying to steal the song but clearly he thought he had made it into his song by personalizing it by rearranging/adding verses and adding his interpretation.