Sure, Led Zeppelin IV and Physical Grafitti are generally accepted as #LedZeppelinâs twin peaks, though you could find someone to make a case for each of their albums (even In Through The Out Door).
But if you want a true connoisseurâs choice, then this hugely influential live bootleg is the one. Bootlegs and Zeppelin have been synonymous for decades. Despite manager Peter Grantâs heavy-handedness when dealing with anyone he caught taping their shows, Zep became the most bootlegged act of all time.
The impact the band made on their initial American tours made them a prime target for the then emerging bootleg recording business. From their inception, it was more than evident that Zepâs studio output was just the starting point. On stage was where the real action occurred, as they constantly improvised and expanded their material. Peter Grant summed it up when he stated: âLed Zeppelin was primarily an in-person band⊠thatâs what it was really about.â
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#BenjiWebbe is one of British metalâs national treasures. For almost 30 years, heâs been the rabble-rousing, ultra-charismatic frontman of #Skindred, the ragga-metal four-piece who came rolling out of Newport, South Wales in the late 90s. But Benji was already a veteran of the music industry by the time Skindred were on the scene.
Born in Newport in 1967, he lost both his parents at an early age and was raised by his older brother. Before long, he became obsessed with music, with reggae, dub, punk and rockânâroll dominating his listening. His first big break came with Dub War in the early 90s, sparking a decades-long career in rock â albeit one that has had its share of challenges along the way.
âIâm very grateful,â he beams, as he looks back over his journey. âWhether we play a club in Aberystwyth with six people or we play Brixton Academy with 5,000, Iâm having a good time, all the time.â
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One of rock music's most eyebrow-raising stories of the 2020s so far has been the rise of #TwinTemple, the doo-wop wife-and-husband duo who have been embraced by the metal underground despite not playing a note of heavy metal themselves. Their seductive, #Satanic message has struck a chord nonetheless, and in early 2021, Metal Hammer met with Alexandra and Zachary James to chat about their music, their unique journey and the challenges they've faced.
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âSatan is good!â
Twin Temple singer Alexandra James is praising the Great Horned One because, after three failed attempts, weâve finally managed to sort the connection for this eveningâs interview. We canât imagine that The Devil himself ever envisioned his name being praised courtesy of a Google Hangout, but then again, we canât imagine he ever envisioned something like Twin Temple, either.
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When #Slayer began their first real tour of the UK in April 1987, thrash was barely out of its infancy. For the average rock fan at least, the jury remained out on a style of music that naysayers considered a flash in the pan or just plain unmusical.
Compared to their peers and rivals #Metallica, #Megadeth and #Anthrax, there seemed something different about Slayer. They felt just a little more edgy, and a bit less cartoonish. Were they really Devil-worshippers? No one knew for sure, and few dared to ask.
Although the Californiansâ third full-length, the Rick Rubin-produced Reign In Blood, was their most complete statement so far, distributors of Def Jam Records declined to release it as its opening track, Angel Of Death, was inspired by the Auschwitz concentration camp butcher Josef Mengele.
Slayerâs attitude was simple: Reign In Blood is art, and if you donât want to put it out, itâs your loss. They found another distributor. The controversy only heightened an increasing sense of notoriety, though zero fucks were given when people began branding them as Nazis. âIf youâre afraid of words then youâre a fucking idiot,â reasoned guitarist Kerry King.
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By 1990, the hounds of Britainâs tabloid press were hot on #FreddieMercuryâs trail. Day and night, the #Queen frontmanâs Garden Lodge home in West London crawled with reporters, his increasingly rare outings dogged by shutter-clicks and thrusted microphones. His pursuers had a common goal: to confirm the rumour that Mercury was HIV positive, had AIDS â and was dying.
But for now, the press would be forced to seize on crumbs of evidence for their splashes. Mercuryâs gaunt appearance at that Februaryâs Brit Awards had fuelled the fire, though while Brian May parried it all with the party line: âHe definitely hasnât got AIDS, but I think his wild rock ânâ roll lifestyle has caught up with him.â
In an age before social media, the silence from the Queen camp was absolute. Yet the bandâs public denials of Mercuryâs worsening condition were at odds with their musical output of the era, with the following yearâs Innuendo album all but admitting the singerâs diagnosis, while diving deeper into his headspace than any tell-all interview.
âWe were dealing with things that were hard to talk about at the time,â May told Guitar World, âbut in the world of music, you could do it.â
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Biff Byford recalled it as the moment when âthe dam began to burstâ. In May 1979, #Saxon, the Yorkshire-based heavy metal band fronted by the foghorn-voiced Byford, released their debut album.
In the same month, in a Sounds review of a London show with three other young bands on the bill â Angel Witch, Samson and Iron Maiden â the phrase âNew Wave Of British Heavy Metalâ was printed for the first time.
Change was in the air, a vibrant grass-roots rock scene was developing. As Byford said: âWe were in the right place at the right time.â
The NWOBHM would make working-class heroes of former factory workers, labourers and dole-queue dreamers, and Byford and co. were as proletarian as they come. The band formed in 1976 as Son Of A Bitch, and it was in local Working Menâs Clubs that they honed their act. âWeâd play three sets a night, maybe with bingo in the middle,â Byford said. âAnd in some really rough places. It was like the Wild West some nights.â
The primary influences for Son Of A Bitch were the big heavy rock groups of the early 70s: Led Zeppelin, Black Sabbath, Uriah Heep. But as guitarist Graham Oliver said: âIn 1977 we did a few gigs with punk bands. We supported the Sex Pistols and The Clash. Their audiences didnât know what to make of us, but we had so much energy weâd really stick it to âem!â
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On the night of January 26, 1980, #DaveGrohl sneaked out of his family home in Springfield, Virginia to hang out with his big sister, who was babysitting for a neighbouring family. Having packed the kids off to bed, Lisa Grohl was watching Saturday Night Live when her 11-year-old brother showed up, just in time to see host Terri Garr introduce the nightâs musical guests. The four minutes that followed, would blow the future Foo Fighters leader's mind.
"I remember that moment like some people remember the Kennedy assassination," he told me in 2009. "When The B-52's played Rock Lobster, honestly, that moment changed my life. The importance and impact of that on my life was huge. That people that were so strange could play this music that sounded so foreign to me and for it to be so moving ... growing up in suburban Virginia, I had never even imagined something so bizarre was possible. It made me want to be weird."
For mainstream America, and the US music business, however, The B-52's remained a cult concern, "just too weird for the powers that be", as frontman Fred Schneider acknowledged in a 2025 interview with Vulture. To this day, the Athens, Georgia band have never even been nominated for the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame, for instance. Nevertheless, the quartet have become national treasures, and global icons, thanks largely to 1989 single that, ironically, some of the group members originally wanted to abandon.
"I thought Love Shack had the most commercial potential we had done up to that point," Schneider told Vulture writer Devon Ivie, admitting that "some of the band" didn't even want to finish recording the song. "They said, 'We canât nail the end, letâs just forget it," he recalled. "I had to be like, No, calm down, this can be done!"
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Itâs 1982, and #Motorhead tickets only cost a fiver. You elbow your way to the front and yell impatiently at the curtains drawn across the stage, which you imagine hides a black-clad road crew beavering away with torches and gaffer tape on the drum riser and towering black backline.
But when the house lights go out and the curtains part, there's no sign of the band. Instead, a short film plays on the scrim behind Phil 'Philthy Animal' Taylor's drum kit. In the footage â soundtracked by Gustav Holstâs epic Mars, Bringer Of War â Motörhead emerge from mist dressed in medieval clobber with studded leather armour, brandishing fearsome gauntlets and arcane weaponry.
"I think most of the costumes were originally made for a film called Merlin, which John Boorman made way back when, director Nick Mead told Negative Insight. "It was lit by aircraft landing lights hidden behind a hill and we dropped a few smoke bombs to create eerie smoke, which the band walked through. Nothing that technical, and thankfully it wasnât a windy night, the smoke basically did what it was told!"
Lemmy, Philthy Animal and âFastâ Eddie Clarke start playing, but they're still nowhere to be seen. There's only a giant mechanical fist, a 3-D realisation of the one on the albumâs cover, flexing its spotlight-tipped fingers.
This was surprising, likewise the sound of the then-unreleased Iron Fistâs title track, but above us, there was more. As the searchlights built into said enormous iron fistâs fingers raked our bemused eyeballs, the penny dropped⊠the band were above us, being lowered from the roof over the stage!
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#DepecheMode frontman Dave Gahan can vividly remember the first time he tried heroin, as a 17-year-old, on a night out in London.
"I snorted it thinking, This doesn't look like speed," he recalled to MOJO magazine in 2013. "I threw up all over myself and passed out in the corner, woke up, and the gig was over. Well, that was rubbish, I'm never doing that again."
But when Depeche Mode began focussing heavily on breaking America in the late '80s and early '90s, the drug entered Gahan's world once more.
"Everyone was doing it in LA, bands like Alice In Chains, Jane's Addiction," he told writer Martin Aston. "I never thought it was scary... the shoe just fit."
It was only when the band decamped to Madrid, Spain to make their eighth studio album, Songs of Faith and Devotion, that Gahan began to truly realise the extent of his reliance on heroin.
"Everyone scrabbled around to find what they thought I needed - booze, coke, hash pills," he recalled in his career-spanning MOJO Interview. "But heroin wasn't provided. I went looking in some subterranean club. I approached some guys who looked like they might be in that vein, but I got a severe beating outside instead. I remember rolling under this car, snow on the ground, and Martin [Gore] trying to intervene, and promptly getting punched. The next morning I told everyone.
"It was awful. It took years to earn back Martin's trust... It's such a selfish addiction. Even if you'd said my mother had died, I wouldn't have cared less... Addiction is a sad, boring existence. Years go by, You're still sitting on the couch, seeing the same dealer, talking the same bullshit."
In the mid '90s, Gahan asked builders working on his Los Angeles home to create a special chamber for his personal use, accessible via the bedroom he shared with his second wife, the band's publicist Teresa Conway. The Blue Room, as it was known, was exclusively reserved for the vocalist's drug taking. Gahan once spent three whole weeks alone in this room, with a friend checking in on him now and then, to see if he was still alive.
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In 2016 #JeffLynne looked back on the second half of the 1970s, a period in which #ElectricLightOrchestra became arguably the biggest thing in rock music â which he hadnât noticed at the time.
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ELOâs 1974 album Eldorado may have had a loose concept about a daydreamer journeying to fantastical places to escape his boring reality, but it was also their first bona fide pop album. It even contained a US Top 10 hit, Canât Get It Out Of My Head. âI was always surprised when anything did well,â Jeff Lynne admits. âAnd they all started to do well at that point.â
The bandâs upward trajectory continued apace with 1975âs Face The Music and its top-10 single Evil Woman, which Lynne professes to have written in minutes. âWe were in the studio and I thought, âI ainât got a single yet for this album.â So I sent the other guys out to play football and said, âIâm going to make this up now in five minutes.â
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Former R.E.M. frontman #MichaelStipe is applying the final touches to his debut solo album, and it promises to be an interesting listen.
Stipe has been working on the record for several years, and in a recent interview with The Times, he admitted that completing the collection has "taken longer than I wanted".
"Covid didnât help," he acknowledged, "but Iâm finishing it. When the band split, I just needed a break. I took five years but I got pulled back into music. Itâs been a struggle. Thatâs the main thing. I want it to be great, but Iâve got the pressure of having been in REM and itâs a high bar, because I want this to be as good as that, and thatâs near impossible. So itâs fucking exciting but also terrifying, and Iâm doing the music for the first time too, and I think Iâm good at it but not great."
Now, in an appearance on US TV talk show The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, the 66-year-old singer says that he is "writing the final lyrics" for the record, and has shared one of its themes.
âOne of the songs is the sound of a tree hearing itself for the first time,â he reveals. "Itâs this confusing situation. My friend recorded a tree in my backyard in Georgia and played it back to itself, and so it sounds like Daft Punk."
Stipe also suggested that the song will incorporate a sea shanty.
Asked how the tree reacted to its own sound, Stipe replied, "The tree has not responded yet. Weâre gonna let his people get back to my people and see what happens."
In his interview with The Times, Stipe suggested that his album might be titled, Meet THE Michael Stipe., and expressed the hope that it would emerge this year.
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