The Commercial Appeal

Led Zeppelin biography covers the good times and bad times

- Chris Vognar

There are a few different approaches one can take in chroniclin­g Led Zeppelin, the larger-than-life hard rock band that blazed through the 1970s like an out-of-control comet. You can stick to the music, the approach taken by the worshipful upcoming documentar­y “Becoming Led Zeppelin.” You can go salacious, as in Stephen Davis’ unauthoriz­ed 1985 book “Hammer of the Gods.” Or you can bite off the whole story, the glory and the mayhem, the train wreck and the true bliss.

That’s how Bob Spitz approaches “Led Zeppelin: The Biography” (Penguin Press, 688 pp., eeeg, out now). Spitz, whose previous subjects include The Beatles, Bob Dylan and Ronald Reagan, knows he needn’t exaggerate the band’s abhorrent behavior, from drummer John Bonham’s sexual assaults to guitarist Jimmy Page’s petulant entitlemen­t. He also knows said behavior doesn’t eliminate Led Zeppelin’s mighty musical triumphs as the most popular rock band of its generation (they routinely outsold The Rolling Stones). The good, the bad and the ugly coexist in the Led Zeppelin story, and Spitz knows well enough to report and tell it all.

It all starts with the blues, an obsession for English white boys of the ’60s looking to break free from safe pop strains. “For a generation of British teenagers looking to leave their mark,” Spitz writes, “the blues had become a state of mind.” Willie Dixon, John Lee Hooker, T-bone Walker and others made these young musicians’ hearts go pitter-patter, including a skinny, talented guitarist named Jimmy Page.

Before long Page was jamming with The Yardbirds alongside his friend Jeff Beck. To his credit, Spitz doesn’t portray this pairing as some kind of collaborat­ive paradise. One stage wasn’t big enough for those two egos. Besides, Page had something bigger on his mind: a super group, boasting the kind of talent and profile no one else could match.

From the London studio scene he plucked bassist John Paul Jones. In the blue-collar Midlands pub scene he found wailing singer Robert Plant and ferocious drummer John Bonham. There’s a relative innocence to these early times. Zeppelin had yet to become a collection of divas. The mountains of cocaine, rivers of booze and piles of cash hadn’t yet curdled the quartet. Their demands and expectatio­ns hadn’t yet become ridiculous. The band’s manager, Peter Grant, hadn’t yet become a cokedup bully. Zeppelin just wanted to be louder, and better, than anyone else. And oftentimes they were.

Zeppelin obviously wasn’t the only band of its time and milieu to partake in ’70s rock ’n’ roll excess. But they did seem to push hedonism to unusually destructiv­e lengths. The book details two instances of attempted rape by Bonham, who drank himself to an early grave at the age of 32. Page was a connoisseu­r of underage groupies: “Robert’s girlfriend­s weren’t as young as Jimmy’s; many hovered around the age of consent,” Spitz writes. Regarding the groupie scene, it was Plant who said, “One minute she’s twelve and the next minute she’s thirteen and over the top.”

“It’s telling of attitudes of the time that cultural commentato­rs didn’t call out such sentiments as offensive,” Spitz writes. “Rock ‘n roll bands – especially Led Zeppelin, perhaps the most egregious in the behavior department – were given a pass.”

Spitz, on the other hand, gives nobody a pass. Hovering above all the parties and the detailed accounts of creating each album is an abundance of abominable behavior that only grew worse as Zeppelin’s fame exploded. Blame the drugs and the alcohol and the enabling if you wish, but this is one group portrait that doesn’t flatter.

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