Daily Democrat (Woodland)

Jimmy Page to present Led Zeppelin doc

- By Nicole Winfield

Guitarist Jimmy Page turned down a lot of pitches over the years to make a documentar­y about Led Zeppelin.

VENICE, ITALY >> Guitarist Jimmy Page says he turned down a lot of “pretty miserable” pitches over the years to make a documentar­y about Led Zeppelin. But he finally bit when he received a deeply-researched proposal focusing almost exclusivel­y on the music and chroniclin­g the band’s birth in 1968 and its meteoric early rise.

The result is “Becoming Led Zeppelin,” one of the most eagerly anticipate­d documentar­ies at the Venice Film Festival, which made its premiere Saturday with Page on the red carpet.

Producers Bernard MacMahon and Allison McGourty — avowed Zeppelin fans — obtained never-before-seen footage of some of the band’s early U.S. and British concerts as well as an astonishin­g audio interview that drummer John Bonham gave to an Australian journalist before he died in 1980.

The interview, concert footage and other archive material are spliced into contempora­ry interviews with the three surviving band members — Page, Robert Plant and John Paul Jones — to create a montage that maps the frenetic first two years of the band’s existence and its early musical influences.

MacMahon, who along with McGourty launched the PBS “American Epic” documentar­y series, said it took a year to locate the Bonham recording, after hearing a bootleg version of the interview on a vinyl record.

From the sound, he knew that it had been converted into a quarter-inch tape. He then “went to every Australian journalist that we knew from that era saying do you recognize this voice? Because the journalist doesn’t identify himself.”

“Eventually I tracked down someone who said, ‘We know who it was but he died.’”

MacMahon then drew on previous contacts he had with a sound archive in Canberra, Australia, which went through “30,000 unmarked reels” to find the one with the interview.

He went to similar lengths to get full concert recordings of the songs as performed, sometimes finding reels of uncut songs that had never before been seen. He said he went to such lengths because he wanted the film to essentiall­y be a musical interspers­ed with interviews.

Page said he particular­ly appreciate­d the focus on the music — the songs are played at full-length, not just snippets. And it lets the band members tell their own story in their own words. There are no other on-camera interviews.

Page said he agreed to the producers’ pitch after he received a leatherbou­nd storyboard mapping out the movie as they had researched it and envisaged it.

Page said he particular­ly appreciate­d the focus on the music — the songs are played at fulllength, not just snippets.

“When we first met we were probably a little nervous of each other. But the conduit was the storyboard,” Page said. “And I thought they’ve really got it, they really understand what it was about.”

He said he had received plenty of proposals over the years to tell Led Zeppelin’s story, but “they were pretty miserable. Miserable and also to the point where they would want to be concentrat­ing on anything but the music.”

“This one, it’s everything about the music, and what made the music tick,” he said. “It’s not just a sample of it with a talking head. This is something in a totally different genre.”

 ?? DOMENICO STINELLIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Director Bernard MacMahon, right, screenwrit­er Allison McGourty, and musician Jimmy Page, left, at the photo call of the movie ‘Becoming Led Zeppelin’ at the 78th edition of the Venice Film Festival at the Venice Lido, Italy, Saturday. The festival is on until Sept. 11.
DOMENICO STINELLIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Director Bernard MacMahon, right, screenwrit­er Allison McGourty, and musician Jimmy Page, left, at the photo call of the movie ‘Becoming Led Zeppelin’ at the 78th edition of the Venice Film Festival at the Venice Lido, Italy, Saturday. The festival is on until Sept. 11.

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