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The members of Led Zeppelin are major deities in the pantheon of rock gods. The first and heaviest of the heavy metal monsters, they violently shook the foundations of rock music and took no prisoners on the road. Their tours were legendary, their lives were exalted—and in an era well known for sex and drugs, the mighty Zeppelin set an unattainable standard of excess and mythos for any band that tried to follow them. They were power, they were fantasy, they were black magic. No band ever flew as high as Led Zeppelin or suffered so disastrous a fall. And only some of them lived to tell the tale.
Hammer of the Gods is the New York Times bestselling epic saga of the hard reign of Page, Plant, Jones, and Bonham—a spellbinding, electrifying, no-holds-barred classic of rock 'n' roll history that has now been updated to include the continuing adventures of the band.
- Sales Rank: #53020 in Books
- Brand: HarperEntertainment
- Published on: 2008-04-08
- Released on: 2008-04-08
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 8.00" h x .97" w x 5.31" l, .82 pounds
- Binding: Paperback
- 432 pages
- HarperEntertainment
Review
“Incredible.” (Village Voice)
“One of the most notorious rock biographies ever written.” (Chicago Tribune)
From the Inside Flap
Led Zeppelin was the hottest, hardest, horniest, most hedonistic group in rock history. Their parties defined 60s and 70s excess, their concerts were long, loud and thrilling. Based on interviews and behind-the-scenes stories, here is the truth behind the genius of Jimmy Page, Robert Plant, John Paul Jones, and the late John Bonham.
About the Author
Stephen Davis is also the author of the New York Times bestsellers Walk This Way and Fleetwood. Other books include Jim Morrison, Bob Marley, and Old Gods Almost Dead: The 40-Year Odyssey of the Rolling Stones. He lives near Boston, Massachusetts.
Most helpful customer reviews
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful.
The historical context is missing
By lily t.
I really enjoyed Davis' 2004 biography of Jim Morrison. Despite negative criticism from cerebral Doors fans, I thought it recreated the era and the possible demons that drove and destroyed Mr. Morrison beautifully. Additionally, Davis had great insight into Morrison's creative process, his blocks, his frustration during his non-productive years and the difficulties he had during the first creative transition between his earlier output and the last album.
Hammer of the Gods is missing all that. I realize Davis was writing about four people and so could not cover them all as profoundly as he did Morrison, but despite the actual writing, which is quite good for this genre, I think in 1985 he was lacking both the historical perspective and the maturity to be able to give Zeppelin its full due.
Despite the selling one's soul to the devil bit, which is merely a catchy framing device, he starts out well, chronicling Jimmy Page's early musical growth and subsequent session work, understanding that it was a laboratory for his development and his output with the Yardbirds. This portion was fascinating and gave real insight into Page's vision --as well as documenting the intelligent business decisions and transactions he and his manager made, which transformed Rock and the way performers were remunerated.
However, the other three members of the band and their early development are merely glossed over. Jones is given credit as a solid supporting player; Bonham and Plant are depicted as yokels who had the extreme good fortune to be picked up by Page.
1985 was perhaps too soon to understand the social impact of the 1970's - and so Davis makes the band seem particularly narcissistic as the story moves away from their creative process and musicianship and devolves into a series of debaucheries. Though he is careful to document the antics of the roadies and managers and separate those incidents from the bands actual transgressions, he fails to put those events into context. In fact, the seventies were a time of great excess all around: the sexual revolution was gaining momentum ( yes, shockingly, even mom and pop were swinging in middle America), women's liberation was in its early days, the the social movements of the '60's had gone underground and morphed into all sorts of self exploration including those featuring the occult and transcendence.
Again, though Davis details the recording sessions from a technical perspective, there is no insight into the band's creative process, aside from that of Stairway to Heaven -and this is where the lack of first person interview really comes into play. Some pages are spent on the marketing of the band to a mass audience, but there is little analysis why the band was despised by rock journalists who adored the Stones, and older fans who worshiped Hendrix and Cream, for example. Poor lyrics are suggested as the reason, but listening to Zeppelin's powerful sound forty years later, I think a deeper analysis of the social and historical zeitgeist is merited. Though Zeppelin didn't reach a mass audience until 1973-4, they did arrive in L.A in 1969--so it is inconceivable that the more mature audience had already moved on. As an afterthought, although Plant, Page and Jones were exceptionally good looking, they never exploited that fact in their marketing like the Beatles, Stones, Morrison and others did- which might account for their lack of social prestige and lack of interest from the art crowd --and that their appeal remained predominately limited to a younger male audience, which was concentrated on the sound and the intensity of the performances.
Personally I was impressed with the professionalism and integrity of the band in relation to performing for its fans. There is no gross self indulgence on stage [ aside from long solos] - members made it a point of showing up under the most adverse conditions and giving it their all. I don't know about you, but I have to take a nap after working out or doing a bunch of errands--so I can't imagine the kind of stamina it would take to not only tour but to perform night after night raising the kind of energy necessary to whip up the audience to a certain level.
Maybe I am overthinking this and should just uncork the champagne and turn up the volume, but I would like to see a do over by the author and a serious analysis of Zeppelin with less concentration on bedroom antics and more on the music.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
Mudsharks and the Blues
By Drew Hunkins
This is exactly what you want to read when buying a book of this type. The good ol' days of 1970s excess in the form of almost every vice imaginable described in vivid Hollywood Babylon tone with no tiny detail spared is what `Hammer of the Gods' was meant to be.
Whether every word is 100% accurate is almost of minor importance since most of the main points seem to have a ring of truth to them; the book generally appears credible. Sure, a few sentences were probably embellished to elicit a certain shock factor, but hey, the legendary stories contained in Hammer of the Gods are exactly why it reached the top of the misty mountain as the classic legendary rock biography.
No music fan or fan of biographical works can neglect to at least skim through it as just like LZ themselves, the book was a major catalyst for a subsequent wave of similar copy-cat musical artist tell-alls that definitely have as first priority titillation, with secondary billing going to conveying some of the more specific aspects of the music biz.
Hammer of the Gods really comes through in that while never disappointing in the jaw-dropping department it also weaves a fascinating picture behind many of LZ's hit recordings and the American Blues history underlying several of them. How Plant, Page, Bonham and Jones ultimately first fell into place in post WWII U.K. is an interesting story in its own right. Cole and Grant's managerial maneuverings, camaraderie, intimidations, violent beatings and in some cases business acumen make for just as enthralling reading as the band and roadies' wild exploits on tour. Grant leaves an impression.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
you better believe it
By David Terralavoro
apologies if this seems to be repeated - i swore i did everything right and entered this review yesterday......... This is a good book(Zep members would call it fiction) I read this when it first came out in 1986 (that may have been the "added chapter including Live Aid") twice in between then more recently, my original copy had yellowed, worn down or was just 1/3 highlighted. I find it strange that people put down this book - while its listed in bibliographies of the GOOD Led Zep books. Although i cant comment on the fact the main source was from someone LZ had fired -no names -Richard Cole - the book at times seems to focus on the antics drugs, boozing, groupies, violence. However, the History of the band is accurate! At the time there were less than 5 books on Zep- but two were available in England (those by Ritchie Yorke - authorized by the band, and Chris Welch MM writer and friend of Pages first then the band.) Not everyone in the US could access them - face it kids we didn't have Internet. (what we did have was specialty record stores, fanzines and fans long distant calling each other or just cassette trading.) I myself enjoyed reading "hammer" , Mr Davis traces the roots of Zep, analyzes the music does his research and is a good writer. If this book is such trash as some fans call it -why did it make the Best Seller list? OK maybe in the book Mr Davis crosses the line about the so called events of the band, but it is a good telling of LZ history (This is the only book to my knowledge where he mentions Page and Roy Harper wrote songs together during Zep days and Plant read about it in a farming magazine - what gives?) I like this book and therefore give it 5 stars, send your hate mail to .(LOL) David Terralavoro
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