John Paul Jones: Led Zeppelin’s Secret Weapon
By Steven P. Wheeler
For 12 years, from 1968-1980, Led Zeppelin dominated the rock world with an unparalleled blend of brutal thundering power and shimmering acoustic beauty, an intoxicating balance of darkness and light. From their explosive self-titled debut to their final and most diverse studio album In Through the Out Door (released 40 years ago today), Led Zeppelin would rapidly expand the boundaries of rock music into new realms.
âStairway to Heaven,â âWhole Lotta Loveâ and âKashmirâ alone represent the closest thing to Biblical Tablets music fans may ever find on the Mount of Rock; each unique unto themselves, each a fascinating mind-expanding journey that no band had dared embark upon before.
Selling an estimated 300 million albums around the world, Led Zeppelinâguitarist Jimmy Page, vocalist Robert Plant, bassist/keyboardist/multi-instrumentalist John Paul Jones and drummer John Bonhamâand their flamboyantly intimidating manager Peter Grant broke all the existing rules of the music industry and all concert records along the way. And Zeppelin did it all without the support of mainstream music critics who largely despised them and their phenomenal success.
Led Zeppelin was truly the definition of a peopleâs band until it all came to a screeching halt on September 25, 1980 with the tragic death of drummer John Bonhamâ12 years to the day they began recording their first album.
In early 2000, I sat down with John Paul Jones: Led Zeppelinâs Secret Weapon; the Quiet One who enabled the quartet to be totally self-contained as he was not only rockâs finest and most innovative bassists, but also a master keyboardist and someone who could literally play any instrument he laid his hands on. During his time with Zep, the former London-based session musician, composer, producer and arranger not only (officially) co-wrote half of the bandâs tunes but also, just as importantly, he added the textures and layers that truly made Zeppelin unique.
While Plant sang and blew a little harp on occasion and Page bounced from acoustic to electric guitars and Bonham propelled the band behind his drum kit, JPJ laid the rhythmic foundation with his bass playing mastery while adding piano, organ, clavinet, mellotron, synthesizers, mandolin, banjo or any little ingredient that would complete a particular Zeppelin stew. His amazing and versatile musicianship also allowed Zeppelin to bring their texture-ridden studio work to the stage.
Led Zeppelin never once had supporting musicians join them in concert, keeping the magical diamond of musicianship within the four. This was due to Jones, whether playing keyboard and bass pedals concurrently or pulling out his triple-neck during the bandâs now-famous acoustic sets in the middle of their legendary three-hour performances.
Whether composing âNo Quarterâ or writing the riff of âBlack Dogâ or arranging the horns and strings on âKashmir,â the importance of John Paul Jones to Led Zeppelin cannot be overstated. Without the classical, jazz, blues, pop and rock pedigree that this only child and musical prodigy from Kent brought to Zep, the band would never have achieved its status as one of rockâs most influential and successful acts in history.
Quietly Busier Than Ever
Jones’ vast array of abilities remain just as in demand today as they did all those years ago. Since his Zep days, Jones has played, produced and/or arranged for such mainstream superstars as R.E.M., Heart, Peter Gabriel, Lenny Kravitz and Paul McCartney while also showing off his love of musical diversity by working with lesser known acts like goth-rockers The Mission U.K., punk act the Butthole Surfers, and the avant-garde powerhouse Diamanda GalĂĄs. Not to mention his two solo albums in 1999 and 2001, Zooma and The Thunderthief, as well as some film scoring on the side.
In fact, over the past ten years, Jones, who turned 73 this past January, has been busier than most musicians half his age, including his hugely successful stint with the trio Them Crooked Vultures, which he co-founded with Nirvana/Foo Fighters’ Dave Grohl and Queens of the Stone Age/Kyuss frontman Josh Homme.
Them Crooked Vulturesâ 2009 self-titled album rocketed up the charts, hitting #12 on Billboard, and their raucous live appearances around the world left fans wanting more. Grohl, Homme and Jones all continue to say they will record another album together once each of their busy schedules allow.
More recently this master of his trade has recorded and played live with the American bluesman Seasick Steve, including on SSâs 2011 Top Ten U.K. album You Canât Teach an Old Dog New Tricks, not to mention playing live as part of the jazz trio Tres Coyotes with celloist Anssi Karttunen and pianist Magnus Lindberg. And just last month, Jones announced his latest act Sons of Chipotle, in which Jones will move to piano along with Karttunen and experimental musician/producer Jim OâRourke who worked previously as a member of Sonic Youth. They will be playing live next month in Japan.
Meet Mr. Baldwin
Born John Richard Baldwin to a musical mother and a piano-playing father who was also a big band arranger in the ’40s and ’50s, like his future Zeppelin band mate Jimmy Page, the teenage Baldwin would become one of the most in-demand session musicians in London during the 1960s. The musical whiz kid was merely 16 when he went on the road in 1962 as the bassist for Jet Harris and Tony Meehan of the Shadows, who had formed a duo and recorded the chart-topping U.K. hit, âDiamonds,â which, ironically, featured Page on guitar.
With Meehanâs help, Mr. Baldwin began an amazing career as a session musician and arranger. At one point, in 1964, he even released his own solo recording, an instrumental called âBaja,â under his newly christened stage name: John Paul Jones, which came at the suggestion of Rolling Stonesâ manager and producer Andrew Loog Oldham.
Over the next several years, Jones would work with such major pop and rock acts as the Rolling Stones, Donovan, Jeff Beck, Cat Stevens, Tom Jones, Hermanâs Hermits, Lulu, Dusty Springfield, and countless others. During a December, 1965 Donovan session, Jones would work with Page on âSunshine Superman,â which hit #1 in America.
The following year Jones would also do the arrangement for Donovanâs other classic hit âMellow Yellow,â and in 1968 Jones and Page would work together again on his #2 hit, âHurdy Gurdy Man.â Jones played the bass, handled the string arrangement and booked the session players, including Page.
The “Lead Balloon” Session
In May of 1966, Jones took part in a fateful recording session for Jeff BeckâPageâs former band mate in the Yardbirds. The musicians on this now-famous recording of âBeckâs Bolero,â were Beck, Jones and Page, along with Who drummer Keith Moon and legendary session pianist Nicky Hopkins.
Although the track wouldnât be released as a single until the following year, it was what happened during a break in that 1966 session that planted the seed for what would take over the lives of Jones and Page two years later. When someone mentioned that these five musicians should all form a group, Moon is said to have replied famously: âOh no, that would go over like a âlead balloonâ.â Apparently, Page remembered the joke and would dub his eventual new band: Led Zeppelin.
In late 1967, producer Reg Tracey brought together session players to back his vocalist discovery Keith De Groot. This track featured the nucleus of the musicians on the âBeckâs Boleroâ session a year earlier: John Paul Jones on bass, Jimmy Page on guitar, and the late great Nicky Hopkins on keyboards who also wrote this particular track, âBurn Up.â These recordings were never released until the mid-â70s to ride the Zeppelin wave of popularity.
Arranger Extraordinaire
Early in his studio career, Jones branched out rapidly from his bass and keyboard work and quickly became a highly sought after string arranger as well. One of Jonesâ most famous arrangements was one he did for the Rolling Stones in 1967.
âSheâs a Rainbowâ was not a huge hit at the time, but it is incredibly popular today with it being used in TWO seemingly incessant TV ad campaignsâone for Acura and one for Dior. With those two commercials, the song from the Stonesâ Their Satanic Majestyâs Request sessions has been brought back into the spotlight. The Stones even brought the song out of the closet and have played it during their 2019 tour.
All these work-for-hire gigs at the time had their drawbacks as Jones recalled with a laugh: âBack in the â60s, I did an arrangement for Hermanâs Hermits and there was one particular arrangement I did for a song called âThereâs a Kind of Hushâ [for their 1967 album of the same name].
âIt was a big hit for them, but it was an even bigger hit for The Carpenters [in 1976], who, more or less, used the same arrangement I did back in the â60s for which I was paid about 80 dollars,â he said with a hearty laugh. âSo things have changed for me a bit because of that; my fees are a lot higher now,â he noted with a smile. âIn those days they got a lot of value for their 80 bucks.â
“When I did the arrangements for R.E.M.âs Automatic for the People, Michael Stipe wrote me this really nice handwritten letter saying, âWe really like what you doâ and he wrote down little things like âcan the strings come in halfway through âEverybody Hurtsâ”
(Interview By Steven P. Wheeler)
When it comes to his work as an arranger, Jones pointed to charting the strings for the R.E.M. classic, âEverybody Hurts,â 25 years after his work with the Stones, as a guide. âI like doing arrangements because theyâre quick and theyâre usually a lot of fun,â he said during our conversation. âPeople will seek me out because they like the arrangements Iâve done before, so theyâll send me the tracks and leave me to do what I do. The most direction Iâll get is maybe something like, âWeâd like the strings to come in halfway through the song,ââ he laughs, âthatâs the most instruction I tend to get.
âItâs like when I did the arrangements for R.E.M.âs Automatic for the People [in 1992], Michael Stipe wrote me this really nice handwritten letter saying, âWe really like what you doâ and he wrote down little things like âcan the strings come in halfway through âEverybody Hurtsâ or on other songs maybe something like âplease watch out for the guitar line that we would like to keep,â so just little things like that. And that was it.
âI wrote out all the charts and arrangements, turned up and booked the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra,” explained Jones. “We had a great time for two or three days; had dinner, hung out and it was over.â
A few years later, in 1995, Jones served as the producer and arranger for The Road Home, a live âunpluggedâ styled album by hardcore Zeppelin devotees Heart. Jones not only helmed the project but also did the orchestra arrangements and played piano, bass and mandolin at the concert.
Heartâs guitarist Nancy Wilson recalled when the sisters met JPJ for the first time: âWe had our first meeting at the Sit ân Spin, this laundromat/diner/bar across the street from Bad Animals Studio in Seattle. We had a pint together and we were just so beside ourselves at the excitement just to meet him. We were trying to act all nonchalant and natural around him and he just mentions in passing, âYou know, I might just, perhaps, pick up a guitar now and then.â It was, âAre you kidding, of course!â Weâd been afraid to ask. Heâs so gifted.â
Heart vocalist Ann Wilson recalled: âHe really knows how to give himself to a situation. Heâs had all these experiences in his life and these incredible levels but he can still come to Seattle and totally immerse himself in it and be cheerful and sincere and write these great string charts and play the mandolin and sit around afterwards and have a drink and tell stories.
âHe spent a big weekend in his hotel room where he locked the door and just wrote all the string charts,â the singer said, âand I envisioned papers just flying through the air and pots of tea and stuff. It was so great. It was a great experience, top to bottom. And people around here are still talking about it.â
Back to the Beginning
By 1968, Jones was working an insane schedule of two or three sessions per day, six or seven days a week, and doing some 50 string and/or horn arrangements a month. While toiling away non-stop, it left little time for anything else in his life, musically or otherwise.
At only 22 years of age, he was feeling trapped by his own success. âI didnât have a manager in those days,â Jones told me. âI did the work and my wife ran the diary. That was pretty much it. We did it together. In the pre-Zeppelin days I used to go at it tooth-and-nail, and accepted so much work.â
In search of and desperate for change, Jones said he needed out of the studio for his own sanity, and at the suggestion of his wife, Maureen, who he had just married the year before in 1967 (and, yes, they are still married 52 years later), he approached his old session mate Jimmy Page in the spring of 1968. Maureen had heard through the grapevine that Page was said to be forming a new band out of the ashes of the Yardbirds, who he had joined in 1966.
Page recalled that the chance meeting happened during a Donovan session in April of 1968: âI was working at the sessions for Donovan’s Hurdy Gurdy Man, and John Paul Jones was looking after the musical arrangements. During a break, he asked me if I could use a bass player in the new group I was forming. He had proper music training, and he had quite brilliant ideas. I jumped at the chance of getting him.”
With two of Londonâs most talented session players together, the âveteransâ Page (all of 24) and Jones (only 22) were eventually joined by two completely unknowns only 19 and 20 years old, respectivelyâa raw blues wailing vocalist named Robert Plant and his mate and drumming powerhouse John Bonham.
As legend has it, the four gathered together in a small basement room on Gerrard Street in London in mid-August of â68âjust days before Plantâs 20th birthdayâto see if there was any kismet between them. By the time they had finished a rough run-through of âTrain Kept A-Rollinâ,â it wasnât so much magic as a musical epiphany!
Jones described that first jam to me in one word: it was nothing short of an âexplosion.â None of the four members had ever heard so much power and intensity coming from three instruments and a vocalist. They knew it then and there. This was new. This was magic. This was Led Zeppelin.
First “Zeppelin” Recording
The rest of the world would have to wait a few more months to hear this new sound as the quartet first had to fulfill some concert dates in Scandinavia under the name of the New Yardbirds in September of â68. What many Zep fans may not know is that just before hitting the road, Jones had been booked as the arranger at Olympic Studios for a session backing P.J. Proby for his album Three Week Hero.
As a way to get his new band familiar with the studio, Jones simply hired Page, Bonham and Plant as the band for the session. The result was that this would be the very first time the future Led Zeppelin quartet would be recorded in a studio together.
Zeppelin Arrives
After the Proby sessions, they were off to Scandinavia for a series of gigs that brought the four together even more intensely, both in sound and focus. Upon their return to London, on September 25, 1968, the newly christened band once again entered Olympic Studios. This time it was to record their own album. Tight, rehearsed, and brimming with new confidence from their tour, the self-titled debut was recorded and mixed in less than 40 HOURS.
The intro of the first cut on that now classic album perfectly illustrated the dynamic arrival of two new words on the music scene: Led Zeppelin.
The Sound That “Shook” the World
When it comes to Led Zeppelin, itâs hard to explain in this day and age just how much they changed the sound of recorded music. One of the biggest innovations that Zeppelin brought to the world of music was a micâing technique that captured an in-your-face gargantuan sound, which dwarfed the often-muddled sounds that came before, especially in the area of drums.
Much of this could be attributed to the years of studio experience that both Page and Jones had put together. As Jones noted, unlike most session players who would take a tea break or read books during the inevitable down time, he and Page were studio nerds who would spend that time in the studio watching and learning about sounds and techniques from the engineers and producers, and with Zeppelin this knowledge and their own experimentation all came to fruition.
Take this example of Willie Dixonâs blues classic âYou Shook Meâ by the Jeff Beck Group with Rod Stewart on vocals (and a certain John Paul Jones on organ) from Beckâs iconic Truth album versus the recording of the same song by Zeppelin on their first album.
Note that both of these recordings took place at Olympic Studios only four months apart. And while both are classic renditions in their own right, the studio sound captured by Zeppelin was truly groundbreaking in 1968 and brought an all-new dimension to rock recordings.
Itâs also interesting to hear the vastly different organ solos from John Paul Jones. There is the controlled, concise and safe approach under the direction of producer Mickie Most on the Beck version and the no-holds-barred, break all the rules approach that was Led Zeppelin.
The Business of Zeppelin
Without a record deal when they went about recording their first album, Page and the bandâs legendary manager Peter Grant paid all the studio costs for their debut in just the first of many examples of how Led Zeppelin would change the business of the music industry forever. By paying for the album themselves, they would be literally selling the band and their album to a record company, which they ultimately did with legendary Atlantic Recordsâ co-founder Ahmet Ertegun.
â[Peter Grant] would always say, âYou take care of the music and Iâll take care of the business.â It was a simple division. He certainly revolutionized the touring business. It was a 60/40 split before Zeppelin came along. Peter straight out told promoters that if they wanted Zeppelin it was 90/10. He knew that the artist was getting ripped off by just about everybody and he wanted to change it.â
(Interview By Steven P. Wheeler)
From that point forward, Zeppelin would retain control of their own destiny; free of record company interference in their artistic process as Grant would handle everything outside the music. And in so doing, he would single-handedly change many of the archaic systems of an industry that benefited everyone but the artist. In Grantâs mind, he worked for the band, not the other way around, which had often been the conventional thinking.
Jones had nothing but the highest praise for their late manager, noting that the physically intimidating ex-wrestler was perfect for the band. âIn terms of Zeppelin, what Peter Grant did for us was he kept everyone away. He would always say, âYou take care of the music and Iâll take care of the business.â It was a simple division.
âHe didnât say anything about the music, other than âthatâs great,ââ Jones said, jokingly, âbut he would keep everyone away from us so we could get on with creating and making the music. We didnât even have a management contract with Peter Grant for many years. It was all on trust, and you canât buy that kind of thing.â
Although Jones snickered as he recalled that eventually the band did have to draw up an agreement with their manager at the behest of their record label who eventually discovered that fact. âOf course when Atlantic Records found out that we didnât have a contract with Peter a few years after we signed with them, they made us put one together.â
When I mention that no matter how great Zeppelin was, it seems that they would have never achieved their landmark success without the involvement of Grant. Jones enthusiastically agreed: âOh yes, absolutely. I absolutely agree with that. He was a brilliant manager.
âHe certainly revolutionized the touring business. It was a 60/40 split before Zeppelin came along.â With a smile at the memory, Jones continued, âPeter straight out told promoters that if they wanted Zeppelin it was 90/10, and thatâs kind of how itâs been ever since.â Promoters soon realized that with the amount of business that Zeppelin pulled in, 10 percent was better than nothing at all and they all fell into line.
âPeter really did single-handedly change all of that,â Jones explained. âHe really and truly believed that the artist should get their due. He knew that the artist was getting ripped off by just about everybody and he wanted to change it.â
As for his reputation as a brawler and intimidating businessman, Jones noted: âPeter Grant was a very fair man and if you played ball and were fair with him, heâd be fair with you. There must have been a lot of concert promoters who hated his guts, but there were a lot of promoters that we worked with who really respected him and knew that his word was very honorable.
“Ahmet [Ertegun, the co-founder and president of Atlantic Records] said to Peter: âYou have got to have a single. If you put out a single, youâll easily sell 800,000 singles.â And Peter just stood his ground and said, âNo, there are to be no singles.â And sure enough we would sell 800,000 albums instead [laughs].”
(Interview By Steven P. Wheeler)
âAside from what he did in terms of the concert business, Peter also got Zeppelin really good royalty rates. We obviously did very well touring, but we also deal very well on the record side. We really sold a lot of records, we really did!
âIn the days of Zeppelin, even our record label was saying that âYou have to put out a single in order to sell albums,â Jones said with an eyeroll. âThatâs a great Peter Grant story, where Ahmet [Ertegun, the co-founder and president of Atlantic Records] said to Peter: âYou have got to have a single. If you put out a single, youâll easily sell 800,000 singles.â And Peter just stood his ground and said, âNo, there are to be no singles.â And sure enough we would sell 800,000 albums instead [laughs].
âThe only thing we didnât really do in those days was merchandising. Those were the days before people really understood merchandising. There just werenât the setups like there are today. But between touring and record sales, we did really well because Peter made really good deals.â
Swan Song
With their fame reaching the stratosphere in 1974, Grant and Zeppelin created their own record company Swan Song. Within a year of forming the company, Swan Song had four albums in the Billboard Charts at the same timeâBad Companyâs classic self-titled debut, Zeppelinâs double-album juggernaut Physical Graffiti, Pretty Thingsâ Silk Torpedo and Maggie Bellâs Suicide Sal.
âPeter Grant was sort of driving Swan Song,â Jones said. âThere was Bad Company and Maggie Bell and the Pretty Things and Detective for a while. The four of us were somewhat involved but it got kind of loose in those days, to be honest. In retrospect, I donât think that we should have been trying to run a record company as well as our own career in Zeppelin.â
The company closed its door in 1983. âIt was one of those things that seemed like a good idea at the time,â he admitted. âIt worked well for a while, but then everybody had other stuff to attend to after a while. So it probably wasnât the most successful venture overall.â
Behind the Songs
As for the internal band business of songwriting, Jones says now that he wished that he had done things differently with Zeppelin in retrospect. âMy advice for musicians in bands is to make sure that the way you determine writings credits is worked out fairly early on and perhaps even put it down on paper.
âLed Zeppelin was a partnership between four people and sometimes when you see these âPage/Plantâ songwriting credits on everything, it looks like it was a Lennon/McCartney type situation where they wrote everything and we just kind of learned it from them. I was stunned that people really thought that because itâs so far from the truth.â
(Interview By Steven P. Wheeler)
âI probably should have paid more attention to the writing credits in the earlier days, but in those days I would say, âWell, I wrote that, but, hell, I guess itâs just part of the arrangement or whatever,â not realizing that it had more to do with the writing than just arranging it.â
While Jones was credited on writing 31 of the 73 songs that were released during Zeppelinâs existence, I asked if all four members should have been credited on everything like other bands have done. âThatâs probably true, but it wasnât that way. I also thought that John Bonhamâs contribution was much more than the dozen or so he ever got credit for. I know it was much more than a handful of songs.â
Asked to explain how Zeppelin created their music, Jones said matter-of-factly: âHereâs the thing, Led Zeppelin was a partnership between four people and sometimes when you see these âPage/Plantâ songwriting credits on everything, it looks like it was a Lennon/McCartney type situation where they wrote everything and we just kind of learned it from them.
âIn fact, a journalist once asked me that question, he said, âSo did [Page and Plant] just write the songs and then teach them to you and Bonham?â And my mouth just flopped open. I was stunned that people really thought that and I couldnât even think of an answer because itâs so far from the truth [laughs].
âTo start with Robert used to usually write the lyrics last after we had completed the track, but he was credited on every song because there are lyrics on every one, but sometimes we would send him back to rewrite them,â he said with a laugh. âBut whatever, Iâve done fine out of the whole thing. Itâs bought me endless studios and the freedom to do what I want musically, so I shouldnât complain.â
It was on the bandâs final album, In Through the Out Door, that Jones was credited on all the tracks, with the exception of the pseudo country-rocker âHot Dog.â The reason for this is simple: Jimmy Page just wasnât around much, reportedly fighting his heroin demons. âI was always involved in the songwriting, but I just got more credits on that album because Page was less involved. At the rehearsals, Robert and I more or less wrote the whole album together.â
At the time, Jones had purchased the incredibly huge Yamaha GX-1, a 600-pound behemoth of a complex polyphonic synthesizer organ that he dubbed âthe Dream Machine,â which he would also play at the bandâs two Knebworth gigs around the time of the albumâs release.
Probably one of the chart-topping albumâs most memorable songs is âAll My Love,â written by Jones and Plant. Jonesâ inspired melody and playing gave a heavenly lift to Plantâs touching lyrical ode to his son, Karac, who had tragically died of a stomach virus at the age of five, one year before their final recording sessions.
The Zeppelin Rift
With the death of John Bonham in September of 1980, Led Zeppelin would fly no more in a recording studio. In the wake of the Zeppelin break-up, Plant embarked on his still ongoing solo career, Page joined up with Bad Company vocalist Paul Rodgers in The Firm for two albums, and Jones took the early â80s off to spend time with his wife and three daughters. The three surviving members did get together for a couple of one-off performances, but nothing seemed to carry on beyond that.
âWe did try various things,â Jones admitted to me during our meeting in 2000, âbut we always knew that there was no Zeppelin. No John Bonham, no Zeppelin; simple as that. But there was the feeling that the three of us had worked together for 12 years, so there seemed no reason not to have another go at some point.
âWhat would happen over the years is that we would end up together for a reunion of sorts; like Live-Aid [in 1985] or the Atlantic 40th Anniversary Concert [in 1988]. And we would immediately say, âThis feels good, letâs try something.â At one point, we did try something with [drummer] Tony Thompson, who played with us at Live-Aid, but for one reason or another the enthusiasm would wane and it never came off. Robert was always much more concerned and focused with his solo stuff and never really wanted to get involved with us.â
Things came to a head between the three Zeps when Page and Plant decided to get together again but without Jones. Many fans, including myself, thought this was very cavalier treatment towards their former partner in crime, but, behind the scenes, it was even worse.
âI think [Robert] got involved with Page, without me, perhaps thinking that it wouldnât be Zeppelin, but then they started doing all Zeppelin songs [laughs]. I remember the press contacting me and asking me what I thought of No Quarter, presumably meaning their album, and I said, âI always reckoned it was one of my best tunes.ââ
(Interview By Steven P. Wheeler)
Neither Page nor Plant had even bothered to call Jones to let him know that it was happening, leaving him to field incessant calls from the media about why he was not involved with the project. In fact, Jones found out by accident when rumors of a Zeppelin reunion were heating up again in 1993.
âEvery year since Zeppelin broke up there would be talk of a reunion and all of that,â Jones said. âSo at some point in early â94, I was talking with one of the bandâs business associates and I said, âI see the rumors are getting bad again,â like a joke. And he said, âOh, havenât they told you?â
âI went, âWhaddya mean? Told me what?â And he said, âWell, theyâre working together, but, of course, theyâre not doing Zeppelin material.â So I was like, âOkay, whatever.â It wasnât so much that I thought they should include me with what they were doing. I just thought I should have been informed.â
At the time, Jones had just finished producing an album called The Sporting Life with the avant-garde American soprano/composer Diamanda GalĂĄs, and they ended up taking the show on the road.
It was during that European tour that Jones saw what his former partners were doing. Their claim of not doing Zeppelin material was not so true after all. âWhile I was on the road touring with Diamanda in Germany I saw [their No Quarter concert] on TV and it was 95 percent Zeppelin songs they were playing [laughs]. I was thinking, âHmm, this organ part sounds familiar and then my bass parts came in and then my string parts came in.â So I just thought, âOkay, so thatâs how itâs gonna be then.ââ
âI think [Robert] got involved with Page, without me, perhaps thinking that it wouldnât be Zeppelin, but then they started doing all Zeppelin songs [laughs]. I remember the press contacting me and asking me what I thought of No Quarter, presumably meaning their album, and I said, âI always reckoned it was one of my best tunes.â So I would get out of those things gracefully with a little wit.
âIt was very, very strange for them to call their album No Quarter. I donât know, I just never understood it. I remember that Robert said at one point: âIt would have been different if [Jones] was involved,â which is damn right and probably why they didnât want me along,â he added with a laugh.
This behind-the-scenes drama became public at Led Zeppelinâs 1995 induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame when Jones made a brief yet pointed statement from the stage, which left his former colleagues uncomfortable and the audience in hysterics.
âI just could never understand why they couldnât just pick up the phone, which is why I said what I said at the Hall of Fame thing,â Jones explained. âThat was just a bad day because there was just this strange vibe going on. Nobody would talk to each other. It was just a horrible day when it really should have been a good day. That whole situation really ruined it.â
âI just felt like I had to say something and I felt a whole lot better when I did, and the noise of the laughter coming from the press table was a joy to hear I have to say,â Jones told me.
Page and Plantâs next album, the bland and disappointing Walking into Clarksdale in 1998 put an end to that collaboration, and as Jones noted: âIn the final analysis, they did me a favor because I got to focus on doing my first solo album and Iâm excited about it and doing this tour.â
By 2000, during our conversation, it seemed that things may have settled down a little bit but the wedge still seemed to be present. âWe see each other for business purposes; meetings and stuff like that. Itâs a formal relationship these days, letâs say,â Jones explained. âWe get together when projects like the remastering of the albums comes up or releasing something like the BBC Sessions, and all of us have to agree unanimously or it doesnât happen. Thatâs how it was always set up.â
Initial Post-Zep Career
While Jonesâ post-Zeppelin career has really been on roll over the past 25 years, after taking a career sabbatical for the first half of the â80s, he admitted to finding things a tough-go once he started to look at working again. His legendary Zeppelin career actually made people forget what he did before that lead balloon first took flight.
âFor a while I did try and get some film work but I was running into people thinking: âHeâs a rock bass player, what does he know about scoring or arranging?â People had forgotten or never knew that I had done all this stuff before. They would only know me from Zeppelin.”
(Interview By Steven P. Wheeler)
Jones first ran into issues when he looked into doing some film scoring. âI had been working for 18 solid straight years by the time Zeppelin finished, so it was a good time to take a break and be with the family because the kids were growing up and I got to spend some time there. I never really worried that I wouldnât get work when I decided to go back, but it was kind of hard right after Zeppelin.
âFor a while I did try and get some film work but I was running into people thinking: âHeâs a rock bass player, what does he know about scoring or arranging?â People had forgotten or never knew that I had done all this stuff before. They would only know me from Zeppelin, so no one would give me any work.
âI did dabble in it, but the first film [1984âs Scream for Help] wasnât very good,â he admitted. âIn fact, it went straight to video [laughs]. Itâs one of those things where if I want to make a career of it then I would need to move to Hollywood and pretty much accept every project that comes along, which is what I had to do back in the session days. But there are a couple songs from the Scream For Help soundtrack I did which are quite good and appropriate to play on this tour Iâm doing.â
âIt wasnât just me though,â he pointed out, before recalling a conversation he had with the Beatlesâ producer and composer Sir George Martin. âThatâs how the business can be. I remember George Martin telling me once that he scored a film called Honky Tonk Freeway [a 1981 British comedy flop] with an elephant water skiing in it. And they actually told him that they didnât think he would be able to score a scene with an American marching band in it because he wasnât American and wouldnât know how. I mean, this is George Martin, right? [laughs].
âA lot of these film people are really worse than music industry people, and thatâs saying something, with all due respect. You know the kind of people Iâm talking about, donât you, Steve?,â he asked rhetorically.
âEverything is decided by committee as well, so it can be quite interesting at times. Of course there are the people who say, âI know what I want and I know you can do it, letâs get it on.â But there are very few of those people in the movie business.
âYou accept every gig that comes along and then you can start to pick and choose, and I didnât want to do that with film scoring, starting an all-new career like that. I didnât do that with production either by the way. I turned down so much stuff by some really well-known people, for no other reason than I just didnât think it was me or because I didnât feel like I could really bring anything else to the project except my name.
âFilm scores are pretty much like that for me. I really didnât want to work that hard to get into the system and then have to take on projects whether you liked them or not and then be driven crazy with deadlines, and having to send copies of the scores in taxis in the middle of the night and trying to get orchestras together. Iâve done all of that. It would have been like the old days.â
JPJ Producer
Eventually Jones turned his attention to producing and worked himself back into studio life. âIt was kind of tough going there in the early â80s, but then I got work producing The Mission [the goth-rock act known as The Mission UK in the States] on their second album in â87, but even then I ran into these weird things. I remember wanting to do this John Hiatt album and the label guy said, âWell, we really canât see your relevance to John Hiatt.â Relevance? Itâs music! What are these people talking about? [laughs]. I understand his music perfectly, whatâs up?â
âProduction is much more time consuming,â Jones noted, âespecially the way I produce. I tend to make sure that the band really knows what theyâre going to be recording, so I spend a lot of time in pre-production before we ever go in the studio because itâs the bandâs money youâre spending.
âPeople think the record company is paying for it, but the band is and I tell them that: âLook, youâre paying for this. You really want to use your studio time wisely.â So Iâll work three months or more when I do a production and I work very hard for them, as any band Iâve worked with will tell you. Production is just much more time consuming so Iâm less interested in doing that these days.
Jones continued on as a producer through the â90s, taking on a very diverse roster of acts, including the unlikely choice of the controversial American hardcore outfit the Butthole Surfers; helming their sixth album 1993âs Independent Worm Saloon which became the bandâs first effort to make the Billboard Charts.
First Solo Album
By 1999, Jones had finally decided to take the plunge and record his very first solo album Zooma, an instrumental rock album that he released on Discipline Global Mobile, the artist-centric indie label founded by King Crimsonâs Robert Fripp.
âI share management with Fripp and I asked my manager: âWhat does Robert do with his label?â Because I was interested in finding someone who is kind of a maverick where the industry is concerned. So the first thing he told me was: âThere are no contracts, itâs all on trust. If you donât like them you can leave whenever you want.â
âThat really reminded me of the early days of Led Zeppelin, so not having a contract with Robertâs record label wasnât so strange to me. And they also have this ethical policy whereby the artist keeps all their copyrights and masters, and they pay a very good royalty rate and they have very good distribution with Rykodisc in America and Pinnacle in the U.K. They also have a good internet presence and a great mail-order service and a really good setup.
âThey had built up all these alternative forms of promotion and distribution, because a lot of their stuff isnât wildly commercial. Plus they loved the album, so I met with Fripp and he struck me as a fairly decent chap, heâs a great guitarist, and now heâs my new label boss [laughs].â
As for as commercial expectations of Zooma, Jones had no illusions that an instrumental rock album will find a mainstream audience in todayâs marketplace, but that was never the intention. âThis album isnât going to be a huge chart album, so I want to do a lot of press and promotion and touring so that everybody at least gets to know about it and has a crack at hearing it because they might like it. I just want to give this album its best possible chance.
âPeople will say that instrumental rock in this day and age wonât sell, but I always point to Tracy Chapman and say, âCould anybody have said that a black female folk singer was going to take the charts by storm?â People would have said you were off your head.â
âIn the old days when I first started in the early â60s, there was a ton of instrumental rock with Duane Eddy and the Ventures and the Shadows. There were all sorts of people doing instrumental rock and then the Beatles came along and killed it stone-dead.”
(Interview By Steven P. Wheeler)
Jones went on to say that he was focused on creating an actual instrumental album because he knew what would happen otherwise. âI knew that if I brought in a singer that I would stop being an instrumentalist and a composer and I would quickly become a producer and an arranger. I knew thatâs what I would do by instinct. I would begin to immediately work on songs with lyrics and spend all my time trying to make the singer sound good and make sure he sang them all perfectly, and my compositions would have just fallen by the wayside.
âI just didnât want to do that, and, to be honest, Iâm just not that interested in song-based rock at the moment. And no one else is doing instrumental rock right now so I kind of have the field to myself,â he said, with a laugh. âThatâs one way to cut down on the competition, right? Do something that nobody else is doing.
âBut creating instrumental music is a challenge because there are no lyrics and no singing to hang anything on,â Jones continued. âItâs like a classical composition or jazz, which are by definition instrumental music. Itâs just that these days rock music isnât.â
The irony is that when he was a teenager, instrumental music was en vogue, unlike today. âIn the old days when I first started in the early â60s, there was a ton of instrumental rock with Duane Eddy and the Ventures and the Shadows. There were all sorts of people doing instrumental rock and then the Beatles came along and killed it stone-dead [laughs].
âWhen I was with Jet Harris and Tony Meehan we had three Top Ten hits in about four or five months. They were all instrumentals and then suddenly the Beatles came along and I donât think there was another instrumental rock record after that.â
First Solo Tour
Going out on tour behind the album was also central to Jonesâ approach to the album after getting back onstage with Diamanda GalĂĄs in â94: âI really got the playing bug again with Diamanda,â he said. âAfter the Zeppelin days, I did a lot of producing, arranging and composing, but playing live wasnât one of them. And I realized just how much I really missed it when we went on the road, and I got the bug again.
âWith my album, Iâm going on the road and will be playing for people that I can actually see which will be nice,â Jones said about the smaller club date tour. âWhen you can see faces you can get a really different kind of feedback from your audience and Iâm really looking forward to that. Thatâs how Zeppelin started, playing in small clubs and taking your music to the people. This album serves two functions in a way: I get to do my solo album but I also get to have a body of work that allows me to go out and play live onstage.â
âThere are surprisingly very little overdubs on the album. A lot of it was done with pedals and live electronics, so when it sounds like a ton of guitars, they arenât really. Itâs me hitting a pedal with some processing. This album was designed to be played live, and with the live show, it will be drummer Terl Bryant from Aztec Camera, Bauhaus, and loads of sessions, and Nick Beggs playing a Chapman Stick.
âIâll play the multi-string basses and the lap steel guitar, so when Iâm playing the lap steel, the Chapman Stick will handle the bass, and when Iâm playing the bass, Nick will play the guitar side of the Chapman. There will be a lot of swapping around during this tour. Iâll also play some keyboards onstage that will also handle the string parts.â
Jones also noted at the time that he was already mentally piecing together his second solo effort. âBrain-wise Iâm already halfway through the next album. Iâve got all sorts of ideas I want to do.â Sure enough, Jonesâ second solo album, The Thunderthief, would ultimately be released in 2001 and this time featured three tracks with JPJ doing vocals, including his humorous post-punk rocker âAngry Angry.â
Zeppelin Flies Again
By 2007, the rift between Jones and Page/Plant had healed enough for one final Led Zeppelin reunion. This time it was to celebrate the memory of the late music business legend Ahmet Ertegun; the man who signed Zeppelin all those years ago and who had passed away in December of 2006 .
And all three surviving members were determined to do it right by bringing in Jason Bonham to fill his fatherâs drum stool for a full-length concert. It was to be a true Zeppelin family affair. Unlike the ramshackle Live-Aid and less-than-memorable Atlantic Records 40th Anniversary mini-sets, this was to be a full-blown Zeppelin extravaganza; the first in 27 long years and the band spent six weeks of rehearsal in preparation.
The ticket demand for the charity event at the 02 Arena in London literally brought down the internet as more than 20 million fans from around the world registered at the same time in hopes of securing one of the 20,000 available tickets. Those lucky 20,000 were treated to an awe-inspiring 18-song set that showed the magic of the Mighty Zeppelin one more time as they effectively put a final exclamation point on the bandâs enduring legacy.
The memorable concert was finally released on Blu-ray and DVD in 2012. At the time of that delayed release, Jones summed it up by joking: âFive years is like five minutes in Zeppelin time. Iâm actually surprised we got it out so quickly.â
One Final Honor
Five years after the now legendary 02 reunion, Led Zeppelin received massive public acclaim once more in 2012 when they were honored by the prestigious Kennedy Center for their artistic contribution to American culture; which would have been unheard of during their wild-eyed heyday. But times change and 50 years after they first blasted out of stereo speakers and radios, Led Zeppelin will forever be mentioned as one of the, if not THE greatest rock band in the history of music.
And last but not least, Iâm gonna wrap things up with this sublime and beautiful Jones-focused Led Zeppelin outtake from 1976âs Presence, which was the only Zep album not to feature any of JPJâs keyboards. This gorgeous instrumental demonstrates that Jones did indeed play some piano and compose during those sessions after all. Enjoy the majestic ivory tickling talents of Mr. John Paul Jones.