For all the praise deservedly heaped on Jimmy Page for his technique as an innovative rock-blues shredder—with his violin-bowed walls of noise and motor speedway licks—one can lose sight of just how great he was as a driving rhythm player. The rough mix of Led Zeppelinâs âWhole Lotta Loveâ—which chugs along without the studio versionâs signature stock car-engine sound in the refrain—brings Pageâs rhythms to the fore. The song’s production also demonstrates Pageâs skill in the studio. The guitarist masterminded the sound of âWhole Lotta Loveâ and the recording of AOR groundbreaker Led Zeppelin II, and he tells the story of the songâs creation, along with that unforgettable riff, in an interview with The Wall Street Journal:
I came up with the guitar riff for “Whole Lotta Love” in the summer of ’68, on my houseboat along the Thames in Pangbourne, England. I suppose my early love for big intros by rockabilly guitarists was an inspiration, but as soon as I developed the riff, I knew it was strong enough to drive the entire song, not just open it. When I played the riff for the band in my living room several weeks later during rehearsals for our first album, the excitement was immediate and collective. We felt the riff was addictive, like a forbidden thing.
The rough mix above traveled with the band as they toured the U.S. in May and June of 1969, overdubbing in studios in Los Angeles and New York. Page describes how he, engineer George Chkiantz, and mixer Eddie Kramer created the songâs reverb-drenched sonic envelope, designing each piece to work specifically for stereo FM radio. âFor the song to work as this panoramic audio experience,â he says, âI needed Bonzo [drummer John Bonham] to really stand out, so that every stick stroke sounded clear and you could really feel them. If the drums were recorded just right, we could lay in everything else.â He compares Robert Plantâs searing vocal to his guitar work:
Robert’s vocal was just as extreme. He kept gaining confidence during the session and gave it everything he had. His vocals, like my solos, were about performance. He was pushing to see what he could get out of his voice. We were performing for each other, almost competitively.
As for the pre-echo and massive amounts of reverb on Plantâs vocals in the songâs breakdown—all of this came about by accident. An alternate take of Plantâs voice bled through on the master tape. Page and Kramer decided to leave it in and add the effects to make it seem intentional. More improvisational studio wizardry between the two produced the crazed outro. âJimmy and I went nuts on the knobs,â recalls Kramer, âWe had eight dials controlling the levels on eight individual tracks, so we rehearsed the choreography of what we were going to do to create the far-out sounds.â
Like current claims against the band for musical theft in âStairway to Heaven,â âWhole Lotta Loveâ engendered a lawsuit from Willie Dixon, who wrote Muddy Waterâs âYou Need Love.â Page and Plant both admit the debt, but Page defends his contribution, saying âif you take Robert’s vocal out, there’s no musical reference.â In any case, they were eventually forced to give Dixon co-credit for the song. In a 1990 interview with Musician, Plant waxed philosophical about the controversy: âPage’s riff was Page’s riff. It was there before anything else. I just thought, ‘well, what am I going to sing?’ That was it, a nick. Now happily paid for. At the time, there was a lot of conversation about what to do. It was decided that it was so far away in time and influence that⦠well, you only get caught when you’re successful. That’s the game.â
Of course, the essence of the blues is musical quotation, and the affair was more a matter of money, not a case against the songâs creative power or the originality of that killer riff. Read more about the making of âWhole Lotta Loveâ from Page, Chkiantz, and Kramer at The Wall Street Journal.
Related Content:
Whole Lotta Led Zeppelin: Live at the Royal Albert Hall and The Song Remains the Sameâthe Full Shows
Jimmy Page Tells the Story of âKashmirâ
Hear Led Zeppelinâs Mind-Blowing First Recorded Concert Ever (1968)
Deconstructing Led Zeppelinâs Classic Song âRamble Onâ Track by Track: Guitars, Bass, Drums & Vocals
Josh Jones is a writer and musician based in Durham, NC. Follow him at @jdmagness.
Jimmy Page Describes the Creation of Led Zeppelin’s “Whole Lotta Love” is a post from: Open Culture. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Google Plus, or get our Daily Email. And don’t miss our big collections of Free Online Courses, Free Online Movies, Free eBooks, Free Audio Books, Free Foreign Language Lessons, and MOOCs.
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Jimmy Page Describes the Creation of Led Zeppelinâs âWhole Lotta Loveâ
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