Jimmy Page Tells the Story of “Stairway to Heaven”: How the Most Played Rock Song Came To Be
Walk into any guitar store, anywhere in the world, and you’re likely
to hear the strains of one, or both, of two songs: Guns n’ Roses’ “Sweet
Child O’ Mine” and Led Zeppelin’s “Stairway to Heaven.” (Some guitar
shops supposedly banned
the latter several years ago.) Why are these so popular with budding
players? Perhaps it’s because they have two of the most memorable guitar
intros in rock history. But only one of those intros might be lifted
almost wholesale from another song, at least if you ask the estate of Randy California.
Heirs of the late guitarist and co-founder of the band Spirit have
claimed for years that the delicate acoustic melody that opens
Zeppelin’s song came directly from California’s tune “Taurus.” The lawsuit is ongoing, and maybe not without some merit.
But all that aside (and what song, after all, doesn’t at least
reference another?), “Stairway” is a phenomenal piece of songwriting,
with its Celtic folk undertones and orchestral crescendos. So how, apart
from some borrowing, did Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page come to write
it? You can hear the story from the man himself above. Page talks about
the use of recorders in the song’s “exposed acoustic” intro to give it a
“slightly medieval feel.” Given the number of Lord of the Rings references
in Robert Plant’s lyrics, this seems only fitting.
Multi-instrumentalist bass player John Paul Jones came up with the idea
for the recorders, Page tells us, and played them himself. (Page would
have gone with “the texture of electric piano”).
Page offers many other fascinating tidbits on the moody, layered
“Stairway.” To hear what it sounded like at first, before the storied
album version’s cavernous production, listen to the early acoustic demo
above. Page and Plant composed the rudiments while vacationing
in Wales at a cottage called Bron Yr Aur (now a famous pilgrimage site
for fans). Recording sessions took place in 1970 and 71 at Basing Street
Studios in London and Headley Grange in Hampshire, where the band lived
at the time. Zeppelin debuted “Stairway” live at Belfast’s Ulster Hall
on March 5, 1971, with Page playing his many parts on a Gibson double-necked guitar. You can hear that first performance, and the somewhat tepid audience response, in the muffled recording below.
According to John Paul Jones,
the crowd was “all bored to tears waiting to hear something they knew.”
Nonetheless, “Stairway to Heaven” became the band’s “most requested
song ever played on American radio” and was “included at every
subsequent Zeppelin show.” Though it may be the most overplayed song of
all time, “Stairway” has certainly earned it status as a rock ‘n’ roll
milestone. As Page says at the top, the recording captures the band in
their most inspired moment, a time when they did “nothing but eat,
sleep, and make music.”
Watch interview on YouTube:
http://www.openculture.com/2015/01/jimmy-page-tells-the-story-of-stairway-to-heaven.html
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