Not excusing anyone in Zeppelin with this. John Paul Jones tried hard to keep himself away from their behaviour. Staying separate hotels and such. He got harassed for it and became the outsider. Some say JPJ didn't sign their deal with the Devil and has escaped a lot of the tragedy and behaviour of his bandmates.
@YankeePinstriper3 жыл бұрын
That is very true, it's said that, while his bandmates were out doing who knows what, he stayed at the hotel or diguised himself to go out without being harassed. Still, it's not excusable, as you say, it's complicated.
@TheIslandDivision3 жыл бұрын
@@YankeePinstriper I can see any opposing Peter Grant and his money maker being quite a daunting task.
@whitespyder93 жыл бұрын
JPJ will forever be my favorite member of Zeppelin, and one of my favorite musicians across the board for this reason, among others.
@rodriguezelfeliz46233 жыл бұрын
That sounds like something JPJ would do
@gabrielles69923 жыл бұрын
Sure but he knew about Lori Mattix/Jimmy Page "relationship" and he cheated on his wife with groupies, albeit not the teenage ones. I don't think I've ever read that he got harassed for staying in different hotels. I guess it depends on your definition of harassment. There is being alienated and there is making a choice to be an outsider. I think JPJ made his choice, especially when Plant's son died and JPJ decided not to come to funeral because he was on vacation.
@helterskelter96703 жыл бұрын
I specially like your take on the "separate art from the artist" debate. I mean, I agree that the most ethical thing to do is to quit supporting harmful or problematic artists, but people often talk about this like if artists were brands of shoes, like "I'll buy more Adidas for I don't want to support Nike anymore". Art impacts our lives in complex and often unpredictable ways and we can't fully control how it makes us feel, even if we know it's creator may not be the best person there is. I'm not saying good artists should'nt be hold accountable for their mistakes but I think we need to talk more about how art can still be meaningful even if we don't like the person who made it.
@manicpepsicola34312 жыл бұрын
This is why you torrent 👊
@drowsy79212 жыл бұрын
Piracy is the anwser.
@curly_wyn Жыл бұрын
@@drowsy7921Arrgh!
@ChrisLawton669 ай бұрын
I wouldn't call what was described in this video as "mistakes". One doesn't mistakenly sleep with a 14 year old.
@azeezahmad88504 ай бұрын
Art for sure is meaningful but the kind of hedonistic lifestyle these people led certainly find its way in the lyrics to most of these songs and its impossible to not get influenced from them. Howsoever good their music might have been,they couldnt sing about anything other than their materialistic pursuits.There is almost never no substance to any of their lyrics and worst of all the music never makes you feel good afterwards.I mean its good but eerie too and most of the times far from positive.Its like you'll never have them sing about anything other than their desires
@kaririyon3 жыл бұрын
This video hit especially hard for me. I'm a HUGE Zeppelin fan but I'm also an abuse survivor, so there always remained a conflict in me when I felt touched and inspired by their art while knowing they have a spotty history in regards to misogyny, abuse, etc. The nuance and compassion you gave this topic is admirable and it helped put into words some of the complicated feelings I have towards Zep. Their work changed me for the better and I have derived a lot of comfort and happiness from their music, but it also doesn't mean I excuse their reprehensible behavior. Looking at Zeppelin as flawed, complex human beings rather than as perfect icons/idols or completely deplorable demons gives me a new layer of understanding to their work, as well as reassuring the nuanced perspective of them I hope more people can achieve. I don't think I'll ever stop loving and enjoying Zeppelin, but it's been a very freeing realization to me that sometimes being critical of the things you love, acknowledging its problems, and allowing room for those deeply human flaws to be Seen shows a type of respect and appreciation for art that is often misunderstood to be hateful. Not to mention it can help ME respect MYSELF more when I allow these men to exist as more than just easy-to-define caricatures in my mind. And this applies to more than just Zeppelin, too, considering Zep are FAR from the only ones doing this kind of stuff (I recently had to rethink my old admiration for Prince, so it's definitely something that isn't exclusive to Zep, nor is it something that started or ended with them... I appreciate a lot the way you acknowledged that, too.) TL;DR, love the video. Keep up the good work!
@TommySprocket3 жыл бұрын
My best friend and I got talked into taking our sisters to a rock show featuring Motorhead, AC-DC and Aerosmith at the Long Beach Arena as we both liked the groups and it was free to us we agreed. I went to get the tickets and got lucky getting a priority ticket which allowed the purchase of 4 tickets 6th row center. It was a great show (Bon Scott era AC-DC) anyway half way through the Aerosmith set a roadie approached my sister and starts to take her to the backstage fenced off area so I followed him and as he opens the door I say "Hey Man that's my sister and she's only 15 " his response was to throw his hands in the air and quickly duck behind the door. My sister was a little upset with me at the time, but I'm still glad I did it.
@guyknack3 жыл бұрын
@@TommySprocket that's nice. I hope your sister understands what was right with you saying that
@dahawk85743 жыл бұрын
“She is only three years old and it's a real fine way to start.”
@Sunburn773 жыл бұрын
@@dahawk8574 in all fairness they have a lot of creepy lyrics but that ones about Robert plants daughter, he’d often change the lyric to reflect on her current age, that’s why on TSRTS version of the ocean he says “4 years old”
@dahawk85743 жыл бұрын
@@Sunburn77, I'll repost what I'd responded in a different thread... ========== Let's look at the context: --------- I got a date, I can't be late ... Now I'm singing all my songs to the girl who won my heart --------- Having a date, and having a female winning his heart is readily interpreted as romantic involvement. So then he switches to his daughter. The audience response is supposed to be surprise. Ha ha, because dating underage females is such a hoot. We all know Led Zeppelin's history with lifting song ideas from black artists. No way that The Ocean was a ripoff of Chuck Berry's plot twist ending in Memphis, Tennessee where the listener is led to believe he's inquiring about his lover, only to learn at the end that its his 6yr old daughter Marie. No way anyone would confuse Chuck Berry for a pedophile sex offender. The parallel is uncanny. Perhaps to the point that it was worthy of mention in this Polyphonic series covering Led Zeppelin's Dark Side. It's actually very easy to imagine the band having a laugh over this song. "Ha ha, Pagey, you're dating a child, and here I am singing about dating my child!" Hilarity. Pedophilia is such a humorous topic. At least it appears to have been to Led Zeppelin. (Let alone Chuck Berry, Jerry Lee Lewis, etc, etc, etc.) ==========
@jamalwest76583 жыл бұрын
James Brown was the hardest working man in show business, but Poly is the hardest working music channel on KZbin
@memorandom74843 жыл бұрын
Nah, that title belongs to Professor of Rock.
@ManuelHernandez-do5qt3 жыл бұрын
@@memorandom7484 I feel you but I feel the production mixed with conceptual, eloquent aspects of his videos are too tier. As well as these sort of hidden, abstract stories of things I’ve never heard of, is definitely a result of hard work
@paisleyprincess79963 жыл бұрын
James Brown was a horrific, terrible abuser of women. He makes Ike Turner look like a choir boy
@bowel_movement3 жыл бұрын
@@paisleyprincess7996 true as this may be, this neither confirms nor denies the statement you decided to reply to. You can be an abusive person *and* the hardest working person in a field. I'd even argue working as hard as that will make you *more* likely to be abusive because of the immense psychological strain. Keep in mind, that I'm not making excuses for abusive behaviour.
@paisleyprincess79963 жыл бұрын
@@bowel_movement Yes, he WAS the hardest working man, and that’s no lie. BUT, if we’re going into abusive musicians, we need to call out James Brown, who threw a teenage Tami Terrell down the stars. Great musician, hard working…Talented. But NOT a great man Lots of people work hard, and they don’t beat people up for missing notes. I think JB’s issues had to do more with temperament and his own issues than anything else
@lightaces3 жыл бұрын
When you started this series, I was thinking, "great, another Led Zeppelin series," but I've really enjoyed, and been impressed by, the complexity of the stories you've told. As you said, you are big Led Zeppelin fan, and you don't shy away from the full story. This is exactly the way I think great artists should be discussed - understand the great art and appreciate it, but understand the full complexity of the subject. Bravo, sir, bravo. This is an extremely well done series.
@darkseid6898 Жыл бұрын
Nasty beta BS. Nobody cares about all this PC crap. Grow a pair and man up.
@ArchiduquesaMA2 жыл бұрын
I'm so glad Led Zeppelin doesn't even have music videos, every video of them online is live, some interviews but the music was always in front of a crowd listening sitting down. Truly legendary
@MalMotorDedo2 жыл бұрын
Led Zeppelin tells everybody what music and stardom is and what it should never be
@curly_wyn Жыл бұрын
Well said.
@annaguedez47713 жыл бұрын
Funny how, when I was 13 and "discovered" Led Zeppelin I thought Jimmy's and Lori's relationship was something to romanticize. I was always secluded, fantasizing. But i had to understand, the hard way, that there cannot be a healthy relationship when one admires the other too much, and the other does not reciprocate. Now i have a daughter, and that thought has been more than cemented. Their music is almost sacred to me, my daughter will grow up listening to them. But she will also know, in her due time, what they did and what kind of people they were, and how "normal" it was back then. A conversation i need to have, in order to change something for the better. I guess.
@IDONTCAREWYT3 жыл бұрын
That's why it's hard for me to single out Zeppelin. Their behavior really wasn't THAT outrageous considering the times (I'm 56 and have very vivid memories of those days). Still, not something to celebrate as we have acquired life experiences and wisdom, but in our youth, most of us was attracted to the permissive lifestyle of the 70s and 80s. Compared to today, that was a very strange time to be alive. I reckon that as time goes on, the pendulum will swing back to similar behavior once things hit the limit with conservativism and moral crusades. It's cyclical. All we can do is try our best to raise our kids and hope to G-d everything works our alright.
@lyndoncmp57513 жыл бұрын
Lori lost her virginity to David Bowie yet I never hear anyone bashing media darling Bowie for it. Some suspect Elvis may have been with Priscilla before she came of age. Let's also not forget it wasn't that long ago that kids were fighting in wars. Well, they still are in some places today.
@poasful3 жыл бұрын
don't wait too much for that conversation. From what I see coming from Tiktok, kids will get even more promiscuos than ever before.
@ronmurphy003 жыл бұрын
Anna out of everyone's comments your s made the absolute most sense.. you are a wise woman..
@ronmurphy003 жыл бұрын
@@poasful You hit the nail on the head China is trying to take us down with a thousand Cuts just don't listen to their b******* hold your shoulders back and your head high they will never be as great as America never
@rgs89703 жыл бұрын
I appreciate the nuance and humility in this series. I am right there with you, not just with music but with other art forms. Sometimes, I can't separate the artist, or I have to limit my consumption because it just reminds me of the chasm between what it once meant to me and what the artist now represents (esp. if the artist is still alive and causing harm 🙃). And sometimes I can contextualize it, let myself feel uneasy, and strive for something better. It's the best I've got, for now, and I genuinely believe that this is the path to something better in the future, still unknown.
@MsMastress3 жыл бұрын
Excellent vid Poly. As a huge Zep fan myself, reckoning with their complicated legacy is very difficult, but you've made that much easier with these magnificent videos. Thank you!
@AngelHadzi3 жыл бұрын
same here
@VixxKong22 жыл бұрын
It's easy for me, I just do not concern myself with devil stuff, or else I'll be unable to like almost ANYONE in show business. Just focus on what you like. Most of the bad stuff you hear is rumors and defamation anyway. It's a bed of vipers out there. The bigger you are, the more enemies you get. And everyone knows that character-assassination is the most effective weapon against a celebrity, so it's not far-fetched to say Led Zeppelin is probably not guilty of half the things they're accused of.
@darkseid6898 Жыл бұрын
Nasty woke beta BS. Nobody cares about all this PC crap.
@MsMastress Жыл бұрын
@@darkseid6898 How is it nasty, woke, and beta to be concerned about pedophilic allegations and artistic theft? 🤔
@darkseid6898 Жыл бұрын
@@MsMastress Don't be stupid. Nobody cares about all that weak leftist crap. You need to educate yourself.
@musicalintentions3 жыл бұрын
“When art hits you it hits you.” so true
@Alberto-ny7kf3 жыл бұрын
this series has to be one of the best, most nuanced critiques of an artist's legacy ever made. thank you bro.
@ArchiduquesaMA2 жыл бұрын
8:23 morgana welch, the girl with the blonde hair in the middle, told the story about this photo. she said that this was bonzos birthday party and everyone gathered in to take a picture and the baby groupies (lori maddox and sable starr) came out of no where. and sable (the girl with blonde curly hair sitting next to robert) made robert really uncomfortable. apparently robert actually felt really bad for the underage groupies. and that’s what the song “sick again” is about.
@curly_wyn Жыл бұрын
Apologist.
@livingreflection58 ай бұрын
I was going to write this too! Plant didn't like the teen groupies and wrote about them. BUT all rock bands had teen groupies in the 70s, 80s, 90s.
@paisleyprincess79963 жыл бұрын
Lori Maddox looks like a 13 year old girl in those photos. When you see these grown ass men almost twice her age partying with Lori and the one who was a groupie at 11, it puts into perspective how little respect they had not only for the girls, but their ages. Not everyone considers themselves victims when they’re assaulted, as Maddox doesn’t see herself as such. But she contradicted herself when she said she wouldn’t want that for anyone’s daughter, which shows that she isn’t as okay with it as she seems. The sad thing here is you got people, even tho the girl was 14 and the other 11, STILL defending The LZ crew. Yes it was decades ago, but even then any ordinary grown man “having sex” with an 11 or 14 year old would be seen as disturbing asf. It’s STILL disturbing!
@paisleyprincess79962 жыл бұрын
@Critique Everything Prince couldn’t be classified as a pedophile because pedophiles go for kids 13 and younger. Predator? He did groom Mayte by taking him under his wing at 16, but he didn’t “consummate” their relationship until she was 18. Cringy and creepy? Indeed. Mayte was immature 18 year old virgin…Prince was pretty predatory for that
@javaskull88 Жыл бұрын
I was a teenager in the 1970s, and our society as a whole was distorted and destructive due to rampant drinking, drugs, and “free love.” I look back and am disgusted by what was considered normal, funny or even admirable. There were a lot of walking wounded, but no one seemed to take note. Led Zeppelin both reflected this lack of values and led the charge.
@paisleyprincess7996 Жыл бұрын
@@javaskull88 true!
@MissScorpia20044 ай бұрын
Prince wasn't also a saint btw....
@paisleyprincess79964 ай бұрын
@@MissScorpia2004 I know that, and I’ll be the first to admit that
@GiulianaBruna3 жыл бұрын
I think listening or not listening is too personal. And there are so many geniuses that have been (or are) abusers, bigots, etc that all of us has some piece of art that we can't let go of. Being honest about it, having this conversations, listening to victims, caring and not allowing new artists to get away with it, it helps a lot.
@aporue58932 жыл бұрын
if you always look for the negative,chances are you are deeply negative inside.
@GiulianaBruna2 жыл бұрын
@@aporue5893 what does that have to do with anything?
@connorcraig5182 жыл бұрын
you’re so good at editing videos it’s insane
@liambaillargeon31363 жыл бұрын
This series was incredible, and as a Zep fan uncomfortable in exactly the right way.
@darkseid6898 Жыл бұрын
Nasty beta BS. Nobody cares about all this PC crap. Grow a pair and man up.
@gabrielles69923 жыл бұрын
This video is a bit frustrating because it's obvious you know a lot about the band, but the knowledge about band's members personal lives (that is subject of this video) is a bit superficial. At one point in time, I probably read every book/interview/forum post there was about the band, and I got much different impression about the excesses. For example, the picture you showed on screen with Sable and Lori in it was taken at Rodney's Bingenheimer English Disco during John Bonham's 24th birthday. There is an interview out there that I remember reading in which Plant got asked about that specific picture. The band obviously didn't want it taken, they were surprised by it, so the band members were not posing but Sable was. Apparently, Sable sat next to Plant just before the picture got taken. He was annoyed (you can see him giving her a side eye). He said he knew that this picture would end up in some magazine that his wife would see. I read many tell-all books including those written by women who were there: Lori, Pamela, Bebe etc. and none of them even hinted Plant was with Sable Starr. I think you jumped into conclusions based on just that picture. There is no reason for me to defend these men. There were many times their behavior (mostly Page's and Bonham's) was atrocious but after reading about many other bands it just doesn't stand out (which is sad). There are lots of myths about Zeppelin that they never cared to dispel and now it bites them in their asses. When you read direct interviews with people who were there it becomes obvious many of those outrageous stories were just not true or exaggerated. The fantasy is often more appealing, so it sticks. The infamous "Mudshark incident" at most included one member of LZ if it even happened. Plant didn't wear blouses of groupies he slept with, he bought them himself in vintage shops in cities they toured in etc.
@habojspade3 жыл бұрын
The argument of, "Well other people did even worse" isn't the iron-clad defense you seem to think it is.
@gabrielles69923 жыл бұрын
@@habojspade well, I didn't say "other people did even worse". Why are you misrepresenting my comment?
@vincentjeffrey77583 жыл бұрын
He admits many of the stories could be apocryphal at several moments in the video. This includes the Mudshark incident. History is often unclear with conflicting accounts and mythology. I think he sorted it out pretty well.
@Michael693 жыл бұрын
I'm glad you made this comment because I think it's important to note this. That assumption he made about Sable and Plant was fucking ridiculous and nowadays you can get in a decent amount of trouble for that kind of defamation - seeing as he made this video, he must know this well. It kinda seems like although he's a big Zep fan, he's bought into some of the myths which researchers of the band know are highly exaggerated or outright false. I do believe he has good intentions with making this video. He wants to make it clear that this kind of behaviour is not acceptable. At all. But when he puts too much of his own opinion and emotion into a subject which he can only know about via 2nd and 3rd hand stories, he's unfortunately losing credibility. He said Sick Again is about Lori. I had to sigh as soon as he said that - It's about Plant feeling sorry for the young try-hard groupies, which is quite the contrary to what Polyphonic was trying to make out. I feel like he (like many others) forget that these were different times with different standards: Beating your wife as seen as normal and was socially acceptable; cops were far more violent than they are nowadays and used to get away with a whole lot of corruption that would make any sane person sick to their stomach; racism was fairly common because it was almost a social norm due to the very recent past of injustices which were still happening (and still happen, unfortunately). This is putting things into perspective. It is not a defence or an excuse. If you take the incidents out of context (in this scenario, almost 5 decades out of context), of course they look like fucking horrific tales of paedophilia, rape and more when in reality it was just a mixture of fans, wannabes and outcasts who were desperate for some kind of connection and sought it from rockstars who should have been far more moral than they chose to be.
@paisleyprincess79963 жыл бұрын
@@poetryflynn3712 But let’s make something clear: Lots of victims don’t think they’re victims. Given their ages, they probably didn’t think that they were victims, as they were “living the dream.” Lori Maddox said herself she wouldn’t wish that on anyone’s daughter, which shows that a 14-year old “having sex” with a Jimmy Page is pretty bad. And like the video says, these women couldn’t consent, so it’s still awful…whether they think it was or not.
@1972LittleC3 жыл бұрын
I never heard of the mudshark incident, so I googled it. According to Carmine Appice's biography he was there and the people involved with the incident were the tourmanagers of Zep and Vanilla Fudge, none of the band members of those bands. So, it begs the question; can you hold that against the band(s)? If yes, in which way. and if not, why have you brought it up here?
@1pcfred3 жыл бұрын
Because it's titillating. Some people just talk crap to pass wind. Led Zeppelin were the OG rock Gods. With all that entails. Yeah they did drugs and banged groupies. Get over it! It's what they were supposed to be doing. The Universe demanded it of them.
@1972LittleC3 жыл бұрын
@@1pcfred you didn't read the question, did you?
@1pcfred3 жыл бұрын
@@1972LittleC of course I read the question. I also answered the question.
@1972LittleC3 жыл бұрын
@@1pcfred no, you didn't, because it had nothing to do with the band, as I explained. So, why would you, in a piece about a band and groupies, mention something that has nothing to do with the band? It sounds more like a drive by shooting then a targeted segment this way.
@GizzyDillespee3 жыл бұрын
"Piling on", is the technical term for it.
@Danisername2 жыл бұрын
The Art Assigment here on youtube has a video about "love the art, hate the artist" and i really liked her take on the matter. And asterisk is always needed when we celebrate the art of a person that commited things that we would condemn without a second thought. In this case, its like poly said: this side of zeppelin must be talked about. It doesnt mean that people have to stop listening to them, applying that rule to every artist would very quickly cause a huge problem, but we cant keep hiding this things. You can love wagner but you gotta know that he was basically a pre-nazi, you can like picasso but you have to accept that his treatment of women was terrifying and you can love zeppelin but you have to say how they abused their status to get their way as many times as they wanted.
@Sforeczka2 жыл бұрын
I want to thank you for this. I was a young teen at the time of Led Zeppelin's greatest popularity. I remember how many male fans would both drool over and slut shame groupies, and openly talk about their rape fantasies. When I was a young soldier, I was raped by a young men I served with, and the content and tone of the stories the guys told prevented me from telling anyone for 35 years. The respectful and critical attention that you give to sexual abuse of girls by "Gods" (blech) moves us away from harm and shame to respect and value. Thank you.
@lonrot22243 жыл бұрын
This has been my favorite polyphonic series ngl
@BeamTheChao3 жыл бұрын
Amazing series of videos, especially this one. I've always compared the struggle of liking music with artists that have complex and unsavory stories to liking a villain's character in a book- you wouldn't condone it and you understand and acknowledge what they've done and how it affects people, but you can enjoy what the character brings to the story as a whole, and they might even teach you something about yourself. Ultimately, all art is made by humans, who are imperfect and make countless mistakes, but knowing those mistakes and learning from them and seeing how that reflects in their art, makes the art itself human. Thanks for bringing up these topics, really enjoyed this month of videos!
@TurnerClassicNinja3 жыл бұрын
I don't know if we _can_ have a satisfactory answer to the question of what to do with abusive artists. It's clear that we didn't kill the gods. We just pulled them down to our level. All we can do, I think, is try to make the world a better place, and try to hold power accountable. Even that is going to be a Herculean task.
@YankeePinstriper3 жыл бұрын
Guys, what do we say about John Paul Jones? He tried to get away from his bandmates's behavior, but he was still a part of Zeppelin, therefore doesn't really get a pass on these things. What do you think of this?
@ecurewitz3 жыл бұрын
It's complicated
@floppavevo59203 жыл бұрын
he did more than the others but he should of still done more to call out his bandmates i don't blame him though it must of been awful to see your bandmates, your friends becoming monsters that are celebrated as gods
@elpolitemexa22723 жыл бұрын
I'll give him a pass because he probably couldnt do much about it
@paisleyprincess79963 жыл бұрын
He was complicit, whether there was anything he could do about it or not.
@ravenelias43822 жыл бұрын
You got it totally right on the money. You've just echoed of what I've been feeling. This comes from a musician that actually had a very strange mystical and scary experience when I met Jimmy Page in 1986 when I shook his hand at the back of the stage in Houston, as the Firm was rehearsing 12 noon.
@christar95272 жыл бұрын
Do tell.
@user-gu3ie Жыл бұрын
@@christar9527he won't.. because it never happened 😂
@vik85962 жыл бұрын
Honestly I think Page’s predatory actions just reflect his personality. There was most likely something wrong with him. He had bizarre obsessions and seemingly no regard for morality, and the heroin addiction didn’t help. I look up to the art Page made, but I don’t look up to who he is
@amt59112 жыл бұрын
If you look to Alister Crowley as a role model, it's not that big of a shock.
@redstar7292 Жыл бұрын
I dont think even AC went that far his youngest Scarlet Woman was 19, she ended up stabbing him..!
@ex_orpheus11663 жыл бұрын
Would it be fair to say that John Paul Jones was the least problematic of all Led Zeppelin members, since he wasn't infamous for engaging in the debauchery with other band members and was more 'introverted' and 'discreet'? Or should we say he was complicit in the problematic behaviour of his band mates?
@paisleyprincess79963 жыл бұрын
Probably complicit.
@fuckingblackgod3 жыл бұрын
I don't think he was involved in that stuff. Like, he stayed far away and just focused on the music. Minded his own business. In that way though, he can be seen as guilty of enabling that lifestyle. He didn't partake, but he didn't stop. He just moved aside and let the river flow. Is that bad? Is that good? Depends on which side of the world you're on.
@paisleyprincess79963 жыл бұрын
@@fuckingblackgod I think that’s worse than doing the act itself. Even if he couldn’t stop them he could have said something
@guitarocks953 жыл бұрын
He was an arranger and sessionplayer in london before zepplin, so was page, but jpj seems the quiet english professional type and has been married since 67
@TAJMofficial2 жыл бұрын
@@paisleyprincess7996 You legitimately think that staying away from the public eye is worse than child abuse?
@onbearfeet3 жыл бұрын
I can't claim to offer a Zeppelin-specific solution here, but one best practice I've developed in cases of great art from flawed people who did awful things is to remember Artemisia Gentileschi. She was a brilliant 17th-century painter in the style of Caravaggio, but for centuries she was remembered primarily for being assaulted as a teenager by a minor painter who was supposed to be mentoring her. (There was a public trial and the transcripts are WILD.) Recently, art historians have re-examined her art and she's now considered one of the finest artists of her generation. For Artemisia, things mostly worked out. But we know that's not how it goes for a lot of young victims, especially those who lack the power of the Gentileschi family. Less powerful victims may end up silenced or dead. So when I look at great art produced by someone who did awful things, I remind myself that the price of this art may be an Artemisia, or many of them, and all the art they might have made. It adds perspective, even when it's hard to feel sympathy for a potentially nameless teenage girl. I've seen paintings by the man who assaulted Artemisia Gentileschi. Her paintings are better than his. And we could have had a world without them. What was lost when those "baby groupies" were harmed? Something to remember.
@matthewsteigauf4703 жыл бұрын
16:00 I appreciate this video and bring a focused and nuanced light to the problematic flaws of people generally treated as above the rest. However, the way I see it is this, your "what makes Bonham such a good drummer" is about the music styling. The skill, the notes, etc. It's educational and fascinating and bloating it with disclaimers about him as a person would seriously distract from the lessons and the thesis at hand. That being said, as a creator you can balance for it by having videos like this too. Putting it all in the same Playlist so people binging will see both. I always get concerned when historiogrophers or storytellers get caught up in trying to present a perfect view of a person. You can't. A story is a 2d look at a 3d world, it will always miss something. Multiple stories, multiple angles, thats how you present this stuff imo
@Michael693 жыл бұрын
"A story is a 2d look at a 3d world" I like that. Thank you.
@The_Chewmiester3 жыл бұрын
Amazing series Polyphonic. This is a great deep dive into a variety of tough topics. Nice work sir.
@Guy_Fawkes_News3 жыл бұрын
None of this is new, but it’s impact never lessens when told again. In fact, it’s retelling helps those who are victims of abuse or are currently in a situation that requires intervention. So thanks for this. 🙏🏼 Artists who choose a lifestyle of bohemian decadence bear a personal responsibility to society if that behavior victimizes the impressionable. It’s abusing the power that comes with public adoration. Morality doesn’t change across generations or certain periods of time. Whether it’s “flower power free love” or “gangsta” or “hipster”, whatever age identifiers we chose in fandom, it doesn’t allow free reign over immoral behavior simply because our music heroes are “cool”. Whatever artistic license our music heroes may choose, it doesn’t give them license to be immoral douchebags - simply because their popularity gave them the power to do so. Subscribed
@wyattgranger58703 жыл бұрын
Morality doesn't change across generations or periods of time? Citation needed. I get what I think you're trying to say, but morality always changes, very much across generations.
@Guy_Fawkes_News3 жыл бұрын
@@wyattgranger5870 Morality doesn’t change because it’s connected to human nature, as Aristotle proves. What changes is people’s attitude towards morality. By nature people are selfish and make excuses to adapt morality to what they think benefits them. It’s ethics that changes - as we evolve and we develop knowledge. What most people call their morality, is their ethic. Think of your ethic as your "best current guess" of what is not immoral. Often, ethic is simply society's best current justification for its own immorality. Ethics based on what is culturally acceptable, but not on our own innate sense of morality. What I probably failed to explain clearly was that morality in its true sense should be something unflinching and non-compromisable dictate of life.
@sleepshouter50172 жыл бұрын
Honestly I had no idea about this because I don’t really research into the bands I listen to, or even listen to the lyrics that much. I mostly just like the melody and that’s all music really is to me. The sounds are satisfying to listen to, and I don’t really care who exactly is creating them. But everyone is different…
@coyleigh11 ай бұрын
It sounds like you don't appreciate music very much. When I like a song I have to know the lyrics. I'm interested in the band and the music. You could say I appreciate everything about music.
@sleepshouter501711 ай бұрын
@@coyleigh I mean I’ve been playing guitar almost every day for over a year now (16 months), which is an instrument I tried several times before to play but finally stuck with it enough to get past the first few hurdles. I’ve been saving up to get an electric and also a basic drum set for both me and my nephew. I can play a handful of Led Zeppelin songs fully and about a dozen partially, “Bron-Y-Aur-Stomp” is what got me into guitar and I can play that song fully, but not 100% flawlessly yet. I’ve been working on a small project to play a certain set of relatively obscure songs from a game I like on acoustic and I even found out how to play one of them by ear and am working on the tabs for that one since they currently don’t exist as far as I know. I listen to music daily, and not just have it on in the background, I thoroughly listen to the melody on its own. Obviously I catch lyrics, and vocals are part of the melody itself, but I just don’t really care what the lyrics say nearly as much as I care about how good the melody is. You can have a song with great lyrics, and if its melody is shit I’m not gonna listen to it. Who plays the song or comes up with the melody is also irrelevant, as a good melody is a good melody. I definitely appreciate music itself, I just don’t care about lyrics or the band. I think that’s a fair opinion to have and just because I don’t have an interest in EVERY aspect of music doesn’t mean I don’t appreciate it. If you’re a musician or an artist in general you should know that everyone is inspired by different things within a given subject and there isn’t a “wrong” way to appreciate something lol.
@monikat23277 ай бұрын
Sleepshouter. I paint pictures while listening to music. I'm not interested in the morality of composers. Art would be very poor if we removed everyone who behaved badly. Did you know that Caravaggio killed a man?
@GiulianaBruna3 жыл бұрын
You touch this kind of topics with so much nuance. So compassionate.
@LTGuitarist3 жыл бұрын
I started watching this vid thinking it would be about the band's mythology and how they cultivated it.... I'm glad it wasn't all about that! I'm glad we're talking about the problematic aspects of Zeppelin openly, and other bands of the time. I spent years avoiding Zeppelin because of their abust and struggling with the art vs the artist idea. I think, as you suggested, the solution is to be conscious of the language we use when we talk about bands like Zeppelin, and hold ourselves and the rest of our musical scenes to a higher standard
@timmotel5804 Жыл бұрын
2023: I've been a drummer since 1964, when I was 12. Great Great Music from those days. I still play drums and guitar. I loved and love their music along with that of many other bands from those times. It has been a wonderful trip. Thanks and Best Regards. I just found you and subscribed today.
@k0129573 жыл бұрын
This is similar to the discussion about the founding fathers of the USA. The new type of government they envisioned, and the lofty ideas they wrote into the founding documents need to be separated from the men themselves. They (for the most part) were flawed individuals. Yet, the country they formed and the ideals they espoused are truly remarkable.
@moe4meswtdg2 жыл бұрын
Agreed! Just getting back from a trip to D.C. and visiting Mount Vernon, I was appalled that George Washington had 200 slaves. None of the history books that I read ever mentioned that he had that many. In actuality, he was a plantation owner. And Martha was a rich widow who funded the revolution. Didn't know that either!
@bkrbyex43393 жыл бұрын
He didn't mention that page was also involved with "miss Pamela".another legendary groupie...long before she met and married Michael Des Barres...(whose first band "detective" was on Led Zeppelin's SwanSong label at the time)
@kat43472 жыл бұрын
I love that literally no one has to say something other than positive things for John Paul Jones.
@jamescarlisle40233 жыл бұрын
When it comes to an issue like this, there are two paths that people often take. The first path is to cancel out the artist and their art completely. The other path is to ignore the artist's transgressions altogether and throw accountability out the window. I would argue that neither of them are correct. Because there's social context to their actions that cannot be ignored. While it's easy to simply *hate* Led Zeppelin, the fact is they were part of an entire culture and a society that *literally* treated famous male artists like gods. A culture that *literally encouraged* men to abuse their power. I'm not saying "times were different" as an excuse; I'm just saying it matters. It's an important piece of context. Because it wasn't just Led Zeppelin; it extended to Chuck Berry, Elvis Presley, Rolling Stones, Marvin Gaye, David Bowie, Iggy Pop, Steven Tyler, Red Hot Chili Peppers; the list goes on and on and on. Famous male artists were quite literally treated like gods. Sex with minors was all but in the same category as drug abuse. Anything went. There was *no accountability.* Obviously, this lack of accountability is *no excuse* for the artists' actions, but does that mean their art has no value anymore? Not at all. These artists weren't inherently terrible people. It doesn't take a complete sociopath to do some terrible, exploitative things if there's no accountability for them. Led Zeppelin were the same flawed, wretched, impure human beings as the rest of us. If anything, the art that they made should remind us that humanity is more complicated than Good vs Bad, or Saint vs Monster. People can make great art that touches the lives of millions while also exploiting and abusing their power. Both of those things can be true. It's complicated, but one doesn't necessarily cancel out the other. Most importantly, though we *cannot* treat artists as something greater than human. We *cannot* refuse to hold them accountable.
@bryandraughn98302 жыл бұрын
A balanced assessment is a rare thing nowadays. Is society so desperate that the individual will abandon rational thought for superiority? I'm pretty concerned about divisive thinking being the new norm. It's shocking how many people embrace such a polarized attitude. Maybe it's not as common as it looks. It makes me nervous though. Peace.
@anthonybianchini23733 ай бұрын
Well said and I am a Christian pastor and rock fan
@ralphfranco83192 жыл бұрын
To single out Led Zeppelin for behavior that was broadly encouraged in that scene at the time which we would all consider horrible today is not really fair
@ggmarsh15312 жыл бұрын
🎯
@omegatafkal242 жыл бұрын
Feminists hated Zeppelin
@StaceyWatson-e2q4 ай бұрын
It's because of their popularity and the fact that they were leary of the media.
@boomerdell3 жыл бұрын
As always, superb work by Polyphonic here. The background prep, writing, thoroughness, and production...just incredible. And it's great to see the thoughtful and sometimes painful comments in the wake of this excellent and challenging video. I don't have anything all that original to add to the discussion, and the internal struggle that comes from admiring the art or other work of a person or group and learning about things they did as people...it's awful at times. Led Zeppelin's music is amongst the best I've ever heard, and I've listened to them consistently now for over four decades. What do I do with my sincere love of their work in light of the things they've done? I have the same inner struggle with certain filmmakers, visual artists, literary artists, and so on. I still seek an answer regarding how to reconcile this conflict. Do I stop any activity that might enrich them somehow? Do I separate the artist from the work? What about when the artist is no longer living, can I go back to their work? I don't know. It's vital that we work through these contradictions and face whatever truth we might have to face about this topic. I'm very grateful to Noah for this essential work.
@drummerchappell2 жыл бұрын
Still one of my favourite bands, and Bonham will always be one of my favourite drummers.
@StaceyWatson-e2q4 ай бұрын
I noticed that everyone mentions John's explosive temper. But no mention of the man on the other side of the coin. There was a lot more happening with the band that is coming to light. Yes, he had an alcohol addiction. There's no denying that. From all that I have read, he had a heart of gold and would do anything for anyone. He was a family man and wanted nothing more than to be home on his farm with his wife and children, but was touring 9 months out of the year. No one saw how bad his drinking had really become. There were no interventions back then. I find it incredibly sad.
@brooke4627 Жыл бұрын
This is a very important and honest appraisal. I am not a "direct" Zepplin fan like most of you here, but I came to appreciate their work at a later stage in my life - largely through their influence on my own cultural icon, Tori Amos. What I feel might give some answers to the questions raised in this video is that Zepplin were part of a cultural zeitgeist which was ostensibly Liberal and henceforth inclusive of the excesses and abuses that are documented in this video. When I was a young student the influence of this zeitgeist was still present, but another was being born, that heralded by Madonna, Tori Amos, and later by Alanis Morissette. Now this zeitgeist had a very different energy and impact to the one of Led Zepplin. As a young man I encountered the influence of Zepplin zeitgeist, rejected it, and embraced the dynamic of the latter one. Needless to say this brought about influences in my life just as the Zepplin zeitgeist has impacted the consciousness of many people here. I am not saying that one zeitgeist is superior to the other, but rather that they have different impacts. What I feel we can see in this, is that the questions raised in this video can be answered in the light of the cultural context of the Zepplin zeitgeist and its affect on society as a whole, as well as in the light of the important moral subjects raised in this video.
@Nate_Higgins3 жыл бұрын
I think videos like this is about the best you can do to address these issues. I'm in the same boat as you. It's tough. We have to realize that these dark chapters are just a reflection of a sickness in our culture. It's good that these chapters are brought out of the darkness. Regardless Zep will always be a major part of my musical life. They were really the 1st to show me a world beyond what was on the radio when I was a kid. Jimmy Paige was the main reason I wanted to play music in the first place. I turned out to be more of a drummer, but I do play some guitar and I don't know if I would have done any of it without seeing The Song Remains the Same on VHS. Thanks for this important video.
@fernandoorozco37512 жыл бұрын
Back in 1975 when I was 9 years old, there was a guy that I went to school with, a kid named Rocky. He was kind of a bully so I stayed away from him, but I do remember one day when Rocky came to school with a black eye. The scuttlebutt on the playground was his dad had punched him in the face. His dad was a big burly ex-marine who I believe had gone to Vietnam and probably was suffering from some pretty severe PTSD.The kids called his dad a "slap happy pappy." I remember people saying that his father beat all the members of his family pretty regularly. I also remember my parents having conversations about the neighbors. My mom would say "I think he beats the wife and kids". It would always inevitably end with "it's their family business" and end it at that. I also remember casual racism was pervasive and gay people didn't exist. Then you look at a lot of these pop/rock songs from that era with themes of misogyny and pedophilia and it makes sense for the American culture at that time. All this is out on display on Songs like "Hot Child in the City" by Nick Gilder. Or "Brown eyed girl." Or "You're, 16 you're beautiful, and your mine" sung on prime time television by Ringo Starr to a then underage Carrie Fisher. Cringy. So many other rock songs from this era were all basically about getting and using up a virgin girl. Thinking about all this in context, it seems like another planet. I remember a few years back when the Me Too movement happened. I remember sitting there thinking "oh wait they're just talking about the casting couch." That's been an open secret for decades. I mean I always just thought and accepted that any attractive woman in Hollywood had had to f*** somebody to get where she was at. I realize now how horrible that is but for a long time it was just an accepted fact. Anyways basically we are in a new era. That was a different world and we don't live there anymore. And that's a good thing.
@dickcnormis14442 жыл бұрын
If you think we don’t live there any more you are dreaming. Do you see the way rappers and NBA/NFL players treat women. Do you see these cheesy losers on Instagram and Twitter exploiting themselves for views, how about the Kardaschians. They launched their careers on their knees and the mother is a pimp.
@JU5TINPDX3 жыл бұрын
The human experience is, and has never been, free of pain, exploitation, idolatry, or abuse of power… and if true honest art is a reflection, or a product of this experience, then the “darkness” will always be present in art, and therefore the artist. We can try to intellectually separate the craftsman from the craft, or accept that their art resonates with us… and we don’t have to understand why.
@SahilMakhijani3 жыл бұрын
This whole "Led Zeppelin Month" might just be your magnum opus
@sylviadailey91262 жыл бұрын
Maybe. There are other good shows on the channel. I am a huge fan of Pink Floyd and their Dark Side of the Moon album. It really blows my mind in how deep and profound the lyrics are. Polyphonic has a great video series about this album. I highly recommend it to anyone that is interested in the album. That would be another candidate for a magnum opus of Polyphonic.
@davemish41633 жыл бұрын
I respect and agree with your criticism of the band, yet I wonder how many of us could resist the temptations that they were presented with all of the time.
@diggdugg21693 жыл бұрын
I think we're scrutinizing 1969 -1976 through a 2021 lens here. Plant and Bonham started touring with Page and JPJ when they were about 18 - 19 yrs old. There was a huge sexual revolution going on during those times. People are very sexual creatures and sometimes like doing things that others would consider perverse. A lot of crazy things happen when people go off to college, too, and that's without the open permission to do drugs. Many people tend to go through a time of excess when they're young. But during that era most rockstars were kind of like that. There are some crazy messed up stories of Don Henley while he was in the Eagles with drugs and groupies and ladies of the night. I would argue that is probably still the lifestyle of many of our current musicians on the charts today. Back then it still wasn't too uncommon for someone to marry younger than 16 and also have a large age gap in a relationship. I'm guessing it was something from the Depression era that we had to grow away from. People have learned a lot since then. That was a half a century ago. I am not trying to justify Led Zeppelin's actions or any other rockstars of that era. I just wanted to add a little more context to it all from my perspective. Led Zeppelin were so huge that I guess I worry that people will think that their behavior was exclusive to only them. This isn't even a critique. I thought this video was perfect. I've loved watching your Zeppelin series vids and this one is no exception. Beautiful work. There's no better tribute than the truth. Even if its hard to swallow sometimes. That's how we learn. Peace.
@jimmyrrpage3 жыл бұрын
"I think we're scrutinizing 1969 -1976 through a 2021 lens here." I would disagree with this. As said in this video, Jimmy Page was terrified of being arrested for statutory rape *during* his relationship with Lori, so even then they *knew* it was wrong. I pretty much reject the sort of "it was a different time" entirely because that just isn't true. They absolutely knew then that it was wrong, just like we know it was wrong, as well. The biggest difference, of course, is that it was encouraged, but encouraging it didn't make it right. Again... they knew. That's why Jimmy kept Lori locked up in hotel rooms... because they *knew*.
@dormantformant3 жыл бұрын
Thats a long way of saying "I excuse sexual abuse of minors / paedophilia".
@diggdugg21693 жыл бұрын
@@dormantformant You're projecting. Maybe people should have the courage to hold their own abusers accountable rather than take up a cause of accusing everyone else of abuse. Not everybody is out to hurt you. I know it feels like it sometimes but there are decent people out there.
@RafaSarriaBustamante2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for speaking truth. I can tell how much you love the music, so I know this must have been a difficult video to make. It's infuriating and depressing that this type of behavior continues to this day with performers like R. Kelly & Drake
@jerrenpentance4 ай бұрын
I personally think Peter Grant was the best manager ever. He made a lot of changes in the way concert promoters dealt with musical talent.
@theabhidixityt3 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for making this video! Led Zeppelin is my favorite band of all time, yet I did not know how to tackle this conversation about artists and their abuse of power. The same question has troubled me in the case of Michael Jackson, who's music helped me open up (I was very socially awkward and shy as a kid lol) and start dancing freely. Your video really helped me understand how to tackle this issue that is seen repeating with so many artists.
@priyadarshidash43532 жыл бұрын
michael jackson was proven inncoent tho
@sammcn2 жыл бұрын
My opinion is.... that there isn't much of a way to unpack this. Zeppelin belonged to an entire culture, and a time, in which "abuse" was the normal. That does NOT make it "right". But it's "what was", and Zeppelin were not alone in their behaviour. As you've mentioned. One could argue that their "extremes" in behaviour actually shone a light on "what so many other people were doing, had done and have done since". We think about, and try to get perspective on, human conduct - types of which, most of us will never be a part of. Sam McNally, Australia.
@emilymuckler3 жыл бұрын
I appreciate the HELL out of this video. I'm willing to bet the boomers are gonna flood this comment section with "this was a different time". I don't understand what's so hard about enjoying Zeppelin's music AND holding them accountable. No one is asking for a cancellation, a boycott, whatever. Literally no one. We just need to address those issues and stop brushing them under the rug.
@noodlehoppa72123 жыл бұрын
It’s because most Led Zeppelin fanboys match the toxic energy of the band
@adam8723 жыл бұрын
Totally agree on holding them accountable and enjoying the music, it's possible to do both. That said, this kind of behaviour was definitely a lot more normalised (not excusing it) back then and during the sexual revolution people got up to some pretty freaky shit, some of it completely morally bankrupt (as well as illegal). My parents were coming age smack bang in the middle of it and they tell some pretty hair raising stories about their youth. I've come to regard quite a few of the rock stars of this era and into the 80's with a level of disdain, but enjoy their music.
@curly_wyn3 жыл бұрын
I’m not saying you can’t enjoy the art of a band of human garbage, I’m just saying: you shouldn’t.
@sylviadailey91262 жыл бұрын
Say what! I can understand the cultural appropriation was a product of the times. People were a lot more racist back then, and they struggled with segregation. However I didn't know the raunchy sexy stuff was going on. Yikes! This still makes Led Zeppelin look bad.
@caramanico13 жыл бұрын
I'm very grateful that I had a pair of - but in no ways perfect, of course - grounded parents. I became a huge music freak at 14 - Elton was my first "musical love" - and subsequently a monster Zep fan. I heard and read about things like the mud shark episode, but I just chuckled, did a deep dive into the music (the production, the instruments/amps, the studios, engineers, etc...) and the other artistic aspects (album packaging, posters, etc...). Grant used the tried and true standard marketing technique of limited availability in order to whet the appetite of their consumers. Myths are not created by people who did the deeds. They are created by the people who document/report on those deeds.
@scottnance22003 жыл бұрын
I've only been a Zep fan since 1971; I remember the first time I ever heard Stairway to Heaven on the radio (it didn't actually make that much of an impression). I was also aware of the band's exploits. Even at the time, I thought "that's not right," but their music was so transcendent, I just pushed those qualms aside. The fact is, as Michael Herr said, Led Zeppelin wasn't a rock band, they were a mystery cult, and to be admitted, all you had to do was to buy an album. But, like Zeus raping Ledo, sometimes we just don't want to think about how our gods behave. In the end, I agreed with every single observation you made. Thank you.
@smith98082 жыл бұрын
2:00 love the intro mix you did. Immigrant Song scream with Achilles riff with Echo. Hits so hard. Would love a full remix of this.
@moonxliqht Жыл бұрын
this channel is genuinely one of my favourite channels, ever. i've noticed that the doors are very similar in the way of this "mythological storytelling", there are so many different accounts of one band that it's nearly impossible to tell what was true or not aside from videos and pictures. i just got into led zeppelin and i love their music, but you're entirely right, i should be holding them accountable. i like to think it's okay, but it's really not. what they did was disgusting, especially to minors. as a girl, i should be remembering these stories, and uplifting those harmed instead of those who harmed fellow women/girls.
@clarkrrr2 жыл бұрын
there should always be a separation between art and artist. If there isn’t, then that rules out all classical music an a lot of the music of the 20th century.
@JefferyHagen7 ай бұрын
I’m not excusing anyone but this is a modern judgement about the past. My grandmother would’ve told those girls you made your bed you lie in it. Once you willingly stepped out of the social norms you were on your own.
@janesweeney96442 жыл бұрын
I grew up as a teenager in the 70s and was a huge LZ fan. It was the mythological themes and the occult feeling that intrigued me. I think they were totally original and used the music of other artists as influence only. Still love them to this day!!!
@Stublinsky2 жыл бұрын
"I think they were totally original and used the music of other artists as influence only." What a steaming pile of horseshit !!!! Led Zeppelin literally took other people's music and slapped their names on it as if they were the song's writers. Just look at the song writing credits on Zeppelin's original albums, and look at the song-writing credits on the Zeppelin re-issues. Jimmy Page and his fellow plagiarists gave credit where credit is due only when major litigation came their way. Led Zeppelin were plagiarists, and that's a proven fact. No amount of sycophantic bullshit from Dead Zeppelin fan boys will change the facts !
@valley_robot2 жыл бұрын
There are hundreds of videos showing how led zeppelin stole from other artis , entire songs not just influences
@JonasMoore-b6v Жыл бұрын
They're anything but original
@kevinnashsquad336010 ай бұрын
@@valley_robotcry
@c.nelson37473 жыл бұрын
There's a lot of people here blaming the girls for "throwing themselves at Led Zeppelin" which is kinda strange. In a scenario where a young, inexperienced and immature child is trying to hit on fully grown, mentally mature adult men, I feel like the responsibility should fall on the adult men to not sleep with fourteen year old's, because they should know better than to do that. If a child was trying to sleep with you, and you were the adult in the situation, would you blame her for you giving in? And that's literally the whole point of this video, to hold the band to the standards of the everyday person. I don't really get why that's a concept that people refuse to grasp, if not just because it makes Led Zeppelin look really, really bad.
@1pcfred3 жыл бұрын
What do you mean know better? Perhaps they do know better? Or are you speaking from some personal experience yourself?
@christar95272 жыл бұрын
Of course it should be the adults responsibility. It’s called pe Do ph ELia. It’s criminal behavior and the adult should pay the consequences for his actions. Hard to believe people are blaming and shaming the underage girls but that’s how men operate. It’s a horrible place for females.
@DrSpaceman427 ай бұрын
Mentally mature is a stretch
@rustykernz18 ай бұрын
I got the honor of seeing them in 75’ and then again in 77’ when they were like 2 hours late. It was Bonzo’s bday and his riser came out to the front of the stage where the sold out crowd sang happy birthday to him!❤
@4dultw1thj0b3 жыл бұрын
Wow he actually had a Dennis Reynolds "Golden God" moment?
@micahrutland991 Жыл бұрын
That's what inspired the "Golden gid" Dennis moment.
@NokiGaming3 жыл бұрын
To be completely honest, this was probably your most necessary work yet. We praise these artists for their music, but you’re the first big KZbinr who can praise and criticize them too, at least that I’ve seen. I really hope some day uou touch on the legacy of the Beatles, my favourite band, most notably John Lennon’s horrible history with women. That’s a subject I hate to bring up, but John was not a good person through the majority of the Beatles and solo career.
@lucasskotiniotis13602 жыл бұрын
I've been thinking of getting a Led Zeppelin tattoo for a long time, as my mom who passed away a few years ago was a massive fan and we listened to a lot of music together when I was a kid. I wanted the zoso symbol but no longer did upon finding out that Page had a 14 year old girlfriend, so I decided that I could get Plant's feather, as he was my mom's favorite member anyway. This video is really making me think twice... I'm really torn
@Pencake21122 жыл бұрын
Get it anyway dude, its about the music not the story. Led Zeppelin sucked as people but the music they make makes me love them
@stickylizardbabyangel2 жыл бұрын
Lucas, it is a homage to your mother, not to these specific traits these people had. I am, myself, massively fan of Zep’s music, knowing them to have been taken hostages by their zeitgeist and the showbiz. They were flawed, as most were. This does not diminish my admiration, but on the contrary: allows me to comprehend them as talented, flawed humans. My take? Get the tattoo.
@JonasMoore-b6v Жыл бұрын
@@Pencake2112 They're not gods , they are demons
@Pencake2112 Жыл бұрын
@@JonasMoore-b6v yes, as people they are demons. I think that's why i like bands that don't have many controversies like rush.
@JonasMoore-b6v Жыл бұрын
@@stickylizardbabyangel It should diminish your admiration, you shouldn't admire child molesters no matter how talented they may be , if you support men who harm children then you are part of the problem
@JAMESGANG-f5u Жыл бұрын
8:23 JPJ flippin the bird at someone
@mletrout79422 жыл бұрын
I always wondered how the Wilson sisters could write a song like “Barracuda” and at the same time celebrate Led Zeppelin. The Kennedy Center Honors were too much for me.
@RandomRabbit0072 жыл бұрын
It's not that hard to understand. IT WAS A DIFFERENT TIME THEN. The same way that 15-20 years from now the youth will look at what your generation does and entirely vilify it and make claims onto your character. It's pretty lame tbh
@DaedalusYoung3 жыл бұрын
The best we can do is learn from the past. We can learn what circumstances led to what events. If we can analyse that, we know how we can do our best to avoid it in the future. It is sad that these things happened, but it's even sadder that these sort of things still happen today. We should've learned by now.
@RockandRollWoman2 жыл бұрын
I was in high school when Zep spent hours on my turntable. Those lyrics reflected the times. I'm old enough now to be able to reject the lyrical content and still love the music. In the early seventies, when I was in high school, we just swallowed the lyrics without thinking about it. If someone's parents objected, we gave no thought to why. They were wrong. We were rebelling. Would it have mattered if the critique had focused on misogynistic lyrics rather than on how loud the music was, the long hair, the tight jeans, and the optics of rock and roll? I'm sure there were critics who did just that, but I was too busy working at the grocery store, cranking it up to 11, getting high, and suffering the angst of hormone driven first loves to think about intellectual criticism. Zep posed a bigger problem than the Beatles for many parents, yet the Beatles' Run for Your Life lyrics are horrible. "I'd rather see you dead, little girl, than to be with another man..." In a race to the bottom, I prefer hearing that a big legged woman ain't got no soul. At least she's not dead. We will always have a complicated relationship to history. I don't excuse black face. I don't excuse gay bashing. The misogyny of rap is worse. We have acknowledged the existence of domestic violence. We've had decades to bring a little more enlightenment to our lives - yet collectively we have supported the inexcusable with our dollars despite what our higher selves know. I can listen to Zep without feeling guilty. I can be very grateful that we have a better understanding of addiction. Yes, there is still a stigma, but help is much more readily available. (That Keith Richards and Jimmy Page are still alive is absolute proof that life is not fair.) I have a hard time when I hear Ringo singing you're 16, you're beautiful, and you're mine - when he's in his seventies. Ewwww...
@kurosakiichigo50673 жыл бұрын
Man, do I miss the old/regular intro of your videos. I'm really used to this song and like it a lot actually.
@chrisgenovese81883 жыл бұрын
Fantastic video. I think as we are now holding these people accountable that we used to collectively worship, we will all have to grapple with the unsavory past of many of the musicians and famous people we love. It almost seems unavoidable at this point.
@moe4meswtdg2 жыл бұрын
I read somewhere that in the end times, everything you do or have done, everyone will know. Never understood that, but i get it now. The internet makes everything visible.
@rogerio1234rogerio3 жыл бұрын
Our values and beliefs are representative of our generation, and our generation only. We cannot judge the past based on our current view of right or wrong. If you go this way, EVERYTHING done in the past will fall in the same category. (And I'm not defending any Zeppelin members behaviour.)
@clf4003 жыл бұрын
Uh yes we fucking can
@lighthorizons75953 жыл бұрын
@@clf400 Yet you don't provide any actual arguments to why. Cringe.
@clf4003 жыл бұрын
@@lighthorizons7595 rape was bad then too. Being a nonce was bad then too. This isn’t judging a time when doing the things they did was acceptable
@gardenboydon3 жыл бұрын
What an incredible series!! Thank you
@mcknottee3 жыл бұрын
Important video and conversation. Being a famous influential person does not grant you the right to ignore social and legal standards about how to treat other people.
@PennyLane433 жыл бұрын
I love the aspect ratio! (and the content)
@holyfreak863 жыл бұрын
the acoustic song that pays on the backgorund, where can I find it?
@jeremywanner45262 жыл бұрын
The parents of those poor underage groupies are just as guilty.
@metalmacabre99919 ай бұрын
Im in no way defending them with their sleeping with teenage girls, but it wasn't just them all the rock bands were doing it, its just Zeppelin were the biggest band back then, and when you're the biggest, people see everything you do, a lot of those girls were in places they shouldn't have even been in, mixing with adults, they also lied about their ages. Im not saying it's right because it wasn't, but it wasn't just them, it was also a different time.
@SpinDlsc2 жыл бұрын
I don't listen to Led Zeppelin much these days, but I do listen to David Bowie and Michael Jackson periodically. When I think about the kind of people they ended up being, it still feels odd -- almost dirty -- to listen to their music. But the music itself was always so good, and some of it tells amazing stories! It really is difficult to reconcile your feelings about the creators when they have produced many wonderful works -- especially ones that you grew up with -- but you know that they were deeply troubled, flawed, or even disgusting human beings.
@johannsebastianbach1082 жыл бұрын
but the accuses towards mj was fake though
@luxekook2 жыл бұрын
But Michael didn’t do it, lol.
@AuroraBoarder12 жыл бұрын
Michael Jackson was a victim, not an oppressor. His father Joe destroyed him.
@JonasMoore-b6v Жыл бұрын
@@luxekook But how can you know for sure, were you friends with him
@JonasMoore-b6v Жыл бұрын
@@johannsebastianbach108 you don't know that unless you knew him as a friend or a relative
@Urbangardener12 жыл бұрын
If you listen to Robert plant's podcast, he actually addresses this using The lemon song as an example. He's not proud of it. And he didn't try to defend it. He just talked about how different he is now at the age of 78. As we all will be. I don't think there's anything new here. All of us, even back then understood what was happening with these rock stars. Van Halen was famous for their exploits. And it's true that probably the one of the reasons I started to play the guitar when I was 16 was because I wanted to get some girls. And it worked. Eventually I ended up meeting a girl and having five kids with her. But the relationship did not work out long-term just like so many other people I know. If you looked at my life when I was 23 years old, you could probably tell exploits equally as reprehensible.
@aunch32 жыл бұрын
This is so true regarding celebrities, specifically Michael Jackson. Even if he wasn’t having relations with underage kids (which is hard to believe), it’s still highly inappropriate to having slumber parties with them, but he gets a pass because of his fame etc
@angelicaquirarte Жыл бұрын
Agree if the guy was the breadman parents wouldn't allowed his sons to sleep in his house, is still wrong
@tonyr6692 жыл бұрын
I had a ticket to see Led Zeppelin at Madison Square Garden in Manhattan but my parents moved me to Florida before the show. I then bought a ticket for the concert in Miami at the Orange bowl but the city of Miami canceled the concert because they didn’t want hippies destroying the football field. I then bought a ticket to see them in New Orleans and my mom found weed in my underwear drawer and took my car keys away for me and I couldn’t go to the concert. I then bought a ticket to Orlando and Robert plants son passed away sadly. I then had a ticket for Tampa where I bought the ticket in Miami got tear gassed and my head bashed in by the Miami riot squad. On the way to Tampa my beat up 1971 fury three overheated several times we had to get Canal water just to get to the stadium. By the time we got to the stadium the heavens opened up into a deluge of rain like you could not believe. When the rain stopped we got out of the car and turned the corner of the stadium and got trampled by another riot where I got tear gasses again. Another show was canceled when Jimmy Page broke his arm. I never got to see Zep live. I finally saw Robert Plant on my 55th birthday, but never saw Jimmy Page. Unreal, right?
@Deusofficial1233 жыл бұрын
Its simply a terrible culture from the past. There have always been things in the past that were ordinary that are deemed as insensitive or offensive now. The rock style life of sex, drugs, and rock n roll is the extreme version of past cultures that are unacceptable today. It's foolish to cancel them now, but its important that we never forget this abusive time in musical history so it may never be a norm today again.
@1pcfred3 жыл бұрын
No U. Yours is the terrible culture. Zeppelin lived like Gods. That's cool. You're not.
@theeoddments9603 жыл бұрын
@@1pcfred this looks like a joke account
@lauraarcher17302 жыл бұрын
@@1pcfred pathetic.
@lauraarcher17302 жыл бұрын
But it’s still going on!
@danielleshovlin53693 жыл бұрын
You were the first KZbin channel I ever subscribed to! You have such a talent for editing and music analysis!
@thejimmydanly3 жыл бұрын
Great video. To me, my perspective comes down to my personal humanist philosophy: Worship humanity, never worship a human.
@antiksankarmajumder24983 жыл бұрын
I have been a massive Led Zeppelin fan but sometimes it is very tough to separate the artist from his art. This is the reason why I never listen to Guns n' Roses. I understand every one is flawed and everyone makes mistake. I fucking took up the guitar to be like Page and Brian May. It's hard to accept your heroes' flaws but I see no other way. Their music is one of the best ever recorded and ever heard my the human ear. If I don't separate them now, I have to stop consuming their music, which I can't do at any cost. I'm with you @Polyphonic. I remember discovering this channel in 2019 and since then it has been one of my favourite haunts on the internet. What matters is that the person who were the abusers understood the consequences of their actions. Everyone makes mistakes, does that make them a bad person? Maybe. I hope that they have understood their actions. Also, the hero-worshipping is another problem. The line, "Who wouldn't want to lose their virginity to David Bowie" makes my blood boil. But you can't blame her coz she was only a child. I will watch through this whole video, even if it makes me hate the people; becoz being ignorant can never be an option and I won't be one. @Polyphonic not matter what, no matter how controversial, don't stop posting videos like this; if one is a true fan, to really appreciate one's heroes, one needs to be informed about both their good and bad deeds
@lucasaparks888 Жыл бұрын
can’t separate the art from the artist
@ralphtarr59312 жыл бұрын
Listen, being a musician who gre up in the late 70s and early 80s things were looked at different, in retrospect it's appalling but at the time as with other societal behavior things have changed and for the better , I'm not proud of the the things I did but I did them . I don't know how to answer to someone who didn't live through the times but I can say it's in the past and it's a better world now, you can't judge if you haven't lived it .
@fredraputznik23133 жыл бұрын
So brave of you to confront Zeppelin’s most troublesome aspects. I’m sure many in the comments will pillory you for it, but know that I-and most others-support you. Thank you.
@DrVonNostrand2 жыл бұрын
"so brave of you" Jesus, definition of bravery has sure changed since I survived the war
@Tavares07092 жыл бұрын
@@DrVonNostrand ohh shut up
@aaronsaunders6974Ай бұрын
wasn’t that blonde guy (next 2 page) in gg allin? looks mighty familiar
@carolincas3 жыл бұрын
this meant the WORLD to me. i live and breath zeppelin every day. its my sanity. and yet-im pissed about all that shit too. i hate them for what they did, but i wont live without their music. we really needed someone to talk about it, so thank you. no one has ever framed it like this. you cannot talk about this enough. this was incredible. Heres my vote- we do exactly what those women do- love them and hate them and listen to them complain about them challenge them accept them teach them and most of all-- most of all- make art that talks back to them. i think those women would want that, and there would be no greater way to honor them anyway.
@nattmazzoni3 жыл бұрын
It's so good to listen to a person who is a fan of Led Zeppelin talking about these issues, because often I see fans just pretending it never happened or it doesn't matter, or people who talk about it through complete hate. But I am a woman who loves Led Zeppelin and I never knew how to reconcilie these things. So it's a relief to have someone else talking about it, even of there are no real answers in the end.
@lalremtluangakhawlhring8639 Жыл бұрын
Can you please tell me the name of the songs and the artist of the background music you are using. It's so good.
@nameymcnameface66573 жыл бұрын
It's almost like putting people up on a mile high pedestal, loading them up with an inhuman amount of drugs, and shipping them around the world to crowds of people to build that pedestal higher is a really bad idea. I'm surprised more didnt go wrong.
@galleguilloscastro3 жыл бұрын
Polyphonic => music commentary with a social lenes. I love it!
@ZOB43 жыл бұрын
You have thrown many stones this month - most (if not all) of the artists you have featured on this channel are equally susceptible to this treatment. If you're going to ask us to not view artists as gods but as people, we should do the same for artists like Bob Dylan, Jimi Hendrix, Pink Floyd, Bob Marley, and many others which have been lionized here. I also find it remarkable of you to point out Led Zeppelin's abuse of women one week when the week before you were accusing them of cultural appropriation of Blues music - Blues music is rife (one could even argue built on) lyrics which espouse violence against women. If we're going to question Led Zeppelin on it, we need to question Muddy Waters and Robert Johnson and many others. You've pointed out similar issues with Pop Punk, maybe we should explore the misogyny in Hip Hop? If we're going to shine lights on problematic lifestyles, we should consider making it a lantern instead of a spotlight and open it up beyond just one band, or even one genre.
@floppavevo59203 жыл бұрын
Pink Floyd was a lot better than this though they still have a complicated history (mostly Roger Waters)
@bleepmusic3 жыл бұрын
This is Led Zeppelin month. He's talking about Led Zeppelin.
@ZOB43 жыл бұрын
@@bleepmusic Yes, but will we get a David Bowie month? Will we get a Muddy Waters month? My point is that Led Zeppelin are hardly unique in their problems - why single them out as a target, when their issues are hardly unique?
@bleepmusic3 жыл бұрын
@@ZOB4 This isn't a series of videos about the issues with Led Zeppelin. It's a series about Led Zeppelin who happen to be surrounded by a bunch of issues. As you've specifically cited, he's referenced similar issues in discussions of previous artists. When he gets to other artists in the future, it's likely he'll point out problematic aspects if they're relevant as well. His video on music theft featuring them is largely a defense of their artistic vision. It's not explicitly a video series meant to defame Led Zeppelin.
@scottisnotaprofessional96653 жыл бұрын
Come on now. You know Poly the sanctimonious leftist won't go anywhere near the personal misdeeds and "problematic" histories of various black artists. Much safer (and more ideologically satisfying) for him to stick to deconstructing mainly white artists and white culture.
@adrianacuna54792 жыл бұрын
As a new rock fan I didn’t know any of this. I also saw a bunch if striking similarities with the movie almost famous. The guitarist having a relationship with a curly haired teenager , and another groupie in the movie called bay bay
@adrianarnold45523 жыл бұрын
Hey, proud of you for choosing to walk down this hard road! It’s not easy to be both inspired and repulsed by something, but choosing to seek out the good and lovely things of the world while still decrying the wicked will surely help make it a better place. Keep it up.