Advertisement

We need your help now

Support from readers like you keeps The Journal open.

You are visiting us because we have something you value. Independent, unbiased news that tells the truth. Advertising revenue goes some way to support our mission, but this year it has not been enough.

If you've seen value in our reporting, please contribute what you can, so we can continue to produce accurate and meaningful journalism. For everyone who needs it.

Jimmy Page and Robert Plant (2012) Evan Agostini/AP

Led Zeppelin denies stealing opening chords of Stairway to Heaven

Jimmy Page and Robert Plant told an LA court they didn’t lift the opening bars from Spirit’s Taurus.

LED ZEPPELIN’S JIMMY Page and Robert Plant have appeared in court to deny accusations they “lifted” the opening bars to iconic rock song Stairway to Heaven.

The musicians arrived to a throng of reporters at Los Angeles federal court, where a jury of four men and four women was played their anthemic hit.

Spirit, a psychedelic LA band that enjoyed a niche following but never attained the superstardom of Zeppelin, claims the melancholic guitar that opens Stairway was taken from its instrumental track Taurus.

Spirit’s guitarist Randy Wolfe — who went by the nickname Randy California — never took legal action and drowned in Hawaii in 1997, but a lawsuit was filed by his trustee and friend Michael Skidmore, who was in court.

“This case can be summarised in six words: Give credit where credit is due,” said Francis Malofiy, Skidmore’s attorney.

Malofiy told the jury it could look at the lawsuit “almost like a taste test”, asking: “Do these things taste the same? Do these things sound the same?”

The attorney played a recording for the jury of the introduction to Stairway, describing the arpeggio as a “lifted composition”.

At issue is whether Led Zeppelin had access to 1967′s Taurus before recording Stairway in London in December 1970 and January 1971.

No recollection 

Zeppelin opened for Spirit when the hard British rockers — Plant, Page, John Paul Jones and the since deceased John Bonham — made their US debut on 26 December 1968 in Denver.

But surviving members of Led Zeppelin have submitted testimony that they never had substantive interaction with Spirit or listened to the band’s music.

Defence attorney Peter Anderson told jurors that Page (72) and Plant (67) were not familiar with Spirit or its output, and that Page had no recollection of ever hearing Taurus.

Sergiuddd / YouTube

TheSoundtrackBeast / YouTube

Anderson played the first two minutes and 14 seconds of Stairway as Page nodded along. He said:

Stairway to Heaven was written by Jimmy Page and Robert Plant and them alone, period.

Skidmore has not specified the damages he is seeking, but various stories in the music press have posited a possible settlement at anywhere between a symbolic $1 (about 89 cent here) plus a writing credit to as much as $40 million (€35 million).

The lawsuit speaks of Led Zeppelin’s “deep-rooted history of lifting composition from blues artists and other songwriters who they have repeatedly failed to credit”.

It lists disputes over 16 other Led Zeppelin songs, many of which were settled by giving the complainant a songwriting credit and royalties, including classics Whole Lotta Love and Babe I’m Gonna Leave You.

‘Prodigy’ 

The court heard from California’s younger sister, horse trainer and musician Janet Wolfe, who described her brother as a “prodigy”.

Wolfe, of Ventura, California, recalled how the family had travelled to New York in 1966, where Randy, then just 15, met and befriended Jimi Hendrix.

Led Zeppelin-Copyright Suit Plane and Page perform in 1985. Rusty Kennedy / AP Rusty Kennedy / AP / AP

The rock legend hired the youngster to play back-up guitar, and gave him the name Randy California to distinguish him from another Randy in the band, the court heard.

Wolfe (62) recalled how California had complained later in life about Led Zeppelin plagiarising Taurus, which he had written for a girlfriend.

“It was something that upset him for many, many years,” she said.

Multi-instrumentalist Jay Ferguson (69) who played with Spirit and later wrote music for film and television, described Taurus as a “really special number”.

It was a palate cleanser… it was beautiful. It was a different style of music than anything else we played in the shows.

Ferguson, who has written music for Arnold Schwarzenegger action movie The Terminator (1984) and comedy series The Office, said Spirit played the song at the majority of their concerts.

He described having a “meet and greet” with Plant at a Spirit gig in Britain in the 1970s, recalling he was “flattered” that the singer had turned up to see the band.

The trial is expected to last about five days.

© AFP 2016

Read: Judge rules that Led Zeppelin’s Stairway to Heaven may be partly stolen

Read: Hillary and Bernie meet to discuss the “dangerous threat” posed by Trump

Author
View 24 comments
Close
24 Comments
    Submit a report
    Please help us understand how this comment violates our community guidelines.
    Thank you for the feedback
    Your feedback has been sent to our team for review.
    JournalTv
    News in 60 seconds