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Jeff Beck's Album Finally Hits The Top 40, Half A Century After Its Release
Jeff Beck's Album Finally Hits The Top 40, Half A Century After Its Release

Forbes

time02-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Forbes

Jeff Beck's Album Finally Hits The Top 40, Half A Century After Its Release

Jeff Beck's Truth debuts on the Official Vinyl Albums chart at No. 37 as a vinyl bestseller decades ... More after its 1968 release, following a colorful reissue. LONDON, ENGLAND - NOVEMBER 09: Jeff Beck performs during the NFL week 10 match between the Jackson Jaguars and the Dallas Cowboys at Wembley Stadium on November 9, 2014 in London, England. (Photo by) Jeff Beck accomplished so much during his decades-long musical career. After first finding fame and success as a member of the Yardbirds, he broke out on his own and began pushing the boundaries of what guitarists could do, both as part of various groups and as a solo superstar. More than two years after the celebrated musician's passing, one of Beck's earliest albums under his own name has finally become a top 40 bestseller and returned to multiple rankings in his home country. Jeff Beck's Truth Becomes a Vinyl Bestseller Beck's debut solo project Truth launches on the Official Vinyl Albums chart this week, becoming a bestseller on the format for the first time since the Official Charts Company began publishing the specific tally. Truth opens at No. 37 this frame. Jeff Beck's Solo Albums Have All Reached the Top 40 Beck has only ever placed a trio of projects on the Official Vinyl Albums chart, and as Truth arrives, he ensures that all of them have reached the top 40. He first cracked the region with Loud Hailer, which rose to No. 36. Just three years ago, he was joined by his friend Johnny Depp on 18, which brought him to a new career high of No. 32. Vinyl Reissues Make Truth a Collectible Parlophone recently reissued both of Beck's first two solo albums on colorful vinyl, turning them into collectibles. Truth, which originally arrived in 1968, and Beck-Ola, which followed in 1969, were offered for sale on orange and white vinyl, respectively. Only the former becomes a charting win at the moment. Truth Returns to Other Official Rankings As Truth debuts on the Official Vinyl Albums ranking, it also returns to both the Official Physical Albums and Official Albums Sales charts at Nos. 83 and 91, respectively. The set hasn't been seen on either of those lists since January 2023, when there was a surge in consumption of Beck's music following his death.

Whole lotta legal argument: Led Zeppelin guitarist Page sued
Whole lotta legal argument: Led Zeppelin guitarist Page sued

Kuwait Times

time10-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Kuwait Times

Whole lotta legal argument: Led Zeppelin guitarist Page sued

Led Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page is being sued in California by the composer of "Dazed and Confused," one of the British rock band's biggest hits. Its epic guitar riffs and complex drum work made the song an enduring show stopper for one of the most influential groups of the 1970s. Page's soulful licks and singer Robert Plant's soaring vocals in the song -- it was on their first album -- helped establish the band's trademark blues-rock sound. But while the sound of "Dazed and Confused" was all theirs, it was originally by folk rocker Jake Holmes, who recorded it in 1967, a lawsuit filed in Los Angeles on Monday said. The suit argues that Page and music publisher Warner Chappell disregarded a 2011 settlement over the song by issuing early live recordings and featuring it in Sony Pictures' new documentary "Becoming Led Zeppelin" without permission, payment or credit. "The film incorporates at least two performances of 'Dazed and Confused' -- one by the Yardbirds and one by Led Zeppelin," the suit says. According to the filing, the film says the Yardbirds version of Holmes' song was written by Page alone, while the Zeppelin version in the documentary was written by Page, but "inspired by" Holmes. Page played with the Yardbirds -- who had a version of the song -- from 1966 to 1968 before leaving to form Led Zeppelin with Plant, bassist-keyboardist John Paul Jones and drummer John Bonham. "Dazed and Confused" appears on the band's self-titled debut album, which came out in 1969. Holmes and Page settled a copyright dispute over the song after a lawsuit in Los Angeles in 2010. Details of that settlement were not made public, but Holmes' new suit claims he is now owed $150,000 per alleged infringement in connection with the song's use by the Yardbirds. "Starting in or around 1968, the Yardbirds began to publicly perform the Holmes composition," the complaint says. "Every performance of 'Dazed and Confused' by the Yardbirds is a performance of the Holmes composition." Monday's suit is not the first time the provenance of a Led Zeppelin hit has been legally questioned. The iconic smash hit "Stairway to Heaven" was the subject of a lengthy legal tussle when Los Angeles band Spirit claimed the famous opening riff was swiped from their work. The case almost made it to the US Supreme Court, but ultimately the country's chief justices refused to take it up, and let stand a California court's ruling in favor of the British rockers. — AFP

‘The Yardbirds' Review: The Reign of the Guitar Gods
‘The Yardbirds' Review: The Reign of the Guitar Gods

Wall Street Journal

time09-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Wall Street Journal

‘The Yardbirds' Review: The Reign of the Guitar Gods

'It's a shame the Yardbirds have no image,' opined Herman's Hermits' Peter Noone bluntly in 1966, 'because they would be the Number One group in England.' It's true that the Yardbirds—whose 'magnificent reverberations' are chronicled in Peter Stanfield's 'The Yardbirds: The Most Blueswailing Futuristic Way-Out Heavy Beat Sound'—remain a difficult band to peg among their peers. They were tricky to market, too, stiff and uncomfortable in publicity photos. Despite the powerful, affectless voice of their singer Keith Relf, the Yardbirds frontman offered no Mick Jagger-like threat to the female populace. One British magazine described him as 'frail like a sparrow,' more likely to engender maternal feelings in its teen readership. In any case it was its succession of genius guitarists to whom the rest of the band was in thrall. The sequence began with Eric Clapton, who left in 1965 over a mix of personality clashes and his own blues orthodoxy. He was followed by sonic adventurer Jeff Beck, who moved front and center with his arsenal of fuzz, distortion and feedback, and, finally, Jimmy Page, who arrived in 1966 as a bassist but graduated to guitar, violin bow in hand, foot rocking on the wah-wah pedal. Their classic mid-'60s lineup included Chris Dreja on rhythm guitar, bassist Paul Samwell-Smith and Jim McCarty on drums (the sole original member in the current iteration of the band). The London rhythm-and-blues scene—including the Crawdaddy Club, where the Rolling Stones were launched—gave the Yardbirds their start. Their signature was the 'blueswailing' rave-up, the instrumental interlude that could stretch any three-minute number into a sweaty epic jam, feeding off the proximity of an audience moving, in the words of one contemporary journalist, 'like a crazy caterpillar on pep pills.' Their debut album, 'Five Live Yardbirds,' recorded at the Marquee Club in 1964, would later be tagged by All Music Guide as 'the best such live record of the entire middle of the decade.' After Mr. Clapton's departure, the Yardbirds gravitated toward commercial pop ('For Your Love,' 1965), then pioneered psychedelia ('Shapes of Things,' 1966) before unexpectedly and ill-advisedly joining forces with Mickie Most, the producer of acts such as Herman's Hermits and Donovan. When Relf and Mr. McCarty left in 1968, Mr. Page, in pursuit of a 'heavy beat sound,' recruited new members into an act that briefly toured as the New Yardbirds. They re-formed as Led Zeppelin, inheriting some Yardbirds tunes including the staple 'Dazed and Confused.'

Whole lotta legal argument: Led Zeppelin guitarist Page sued
Whole lotta legal argument: Led Zeppelin guitarist Page sued

Japan Today

time06-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Japan Today

Whole lotta legal argument: Led Zeppelin guitarist Page sued

Led Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page, seen here with frontman Robert Plant, is being sued over the copyright of 'Dazed and Confused' Led Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page is being sued in California by the composer of "Dazed and Confused," one of the British rock band's biggest hits. Its epic guitar riffs and complex drum work made the song an enduring show stopper for one of the most influential groups of the 1970s. Page's soulful licks and singer Robert Plant's soaring vocals in the song -- it was on their first album -- helped establish the band's trademark blues-rock sound. But while the sound of "Dazed and Confused" was all theirs, it was originally by folk rocker Jake Holmes, who recorded it in 1967, a lawsuit filed in Los Angeles on Monday said. The suit argues that Page and music publisher Warner Chappell disregarded a 2011 settlement over the song by issuing early live recordings and featuring it in Sony Pictures' new documentary "Becoming Led Zeppelin" without permission, payment or credit. "The film incorporates at least two performances of 'Dazed and Confused' -- one by the Yardbirds and one by Led Zeppelin," the suit says. According to the filing, the film says the Yardbirds version of Holmes' song was written by Page alone, while the Zeppelin version in the documentary was written by Page, but "inspired by" Holmes. Page played with the Yardbirds -- who had a version of the song -- from 1966 to 1968 before leaving to form Led Zeppelin with Plant, bassist-keyboardist John Paul Jones and drummer John Bonham. "Dazed and Confused" appears on the band's self-titled debut album, which came out in 1969. Holmes and Page settled a copyright dispute over the song after a lawsuit in Los Angeles in 2010. Details of that settlement were not made public, but Holmes' new suit claims he is now owed $150,000 per alleged infringement in connection with the song's use by the Yardbirds. "Starting in or around 1968, the Yardbirds began to publicly perform the Holmes composition," the complaint says. "Every performance of 'Dazed and Confused' by the Yardbirds is a performance of the Holmes composition." Monday's suit is not the first time the provenance of a Led Zeppelin hit has been legally questioned. The iconic smash hit "Stairway to Heaven" was the subject of a lengthy legal tussle when Los Angeles band Spirit claimed the famous opening riff was swiped from their work. The case almost made it to the U.S. Supreme Court, but ultimately the country's chief justices refused to take it up, and let stand a California court's ruling in favor of the British rockers. © 2025 AFP

Rock Legend Sued Over Iconic Songwriting Credits
Rock Legend Sued Over Iconic Songwriting Credits

Yahoo

time06-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Rock Legend Sued Over Iconic Songwriting Credits

Songwriter Jake Holmes is Dazed and Confused about why Jimmy Page won't give credit where credit is due when it comes to the 1969 Led Zeppelin hit and he wants the courts to sort it all out. Legendary rocker Jimmy Page is being sued by songwriter Jake Holmes over money and credit Holmes claims he is due and that Page is denying him. The song in question is the 1969 Led Zeppelin hit Dazed and Confused. Holmes filed suit against James Patrick Page, Jimmy's legal name, in federal court stating that according to a settlement reached between he and Page in 2011, he holds the copyright on the song. The first version of the song was originally released in 1968 by the Yardbirds when Jimmy Page was a member of that group. When Jimmy joined Led Zeppelin he recorded another version with them and Page was the only credited writer. Holmes later sued over that because he had gotten the copyright for the song in 1967. That suit led to their 2011 settlement. According to his new filing Holmes took issue when he saw the new Zeppelin IMAX documentary, Becoming Led Zeppelin which was released in early 2025. According to the film credits, Dazed and Confused was "inspired" by Holmes but written by Page. Holmes says that this is false. He believes that any version of the song was written by him and he wants the courts to order that he be fairly compensated and credited for his work. He wants all monies earned from the use of the song in the documentary and from any future releases it is used in.

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