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Led Zeppelin Sued Over ‘Stairway To Heaven’ Guitar Line

Jimmy Page, Robert Plant, and John Bonham of Led Zeppelin, in 1970. A new lawsuit says the group borrowed from another band's work without crediting it, for the huge hit "Stairway to Heaven." Roger Jackson/Getty Images
Jimmy Page, Robert Plant, and John Bonham of Led Zeppelin, in 1970. A new lawsuit says the group borrowed from another band’s work without crediting it, for the huge hit “Stairway to Heaven.” Roger Jackson/Getty Images

Did a band from Los Angeles get ripped off by Led Zeppelin? That’s the claim in a new lawsuit by representatives of the band Spirit, which played some dates with the British rock legends in their early days in America.

The story is a familiar one: A band plays a bit of music that sounds a lot like another song; a debate ensues. But in this case, the band is Led Zeppelin, and the song is “Stairway to Heaven,” a megahit so popular it’s been ubiquitous in bars and on the radio for decades.

The similarity of the meditative guitar-picking in both 1971’s “Stairway to Heaven” and 1968’s “Taurus,” an instrumental track on Spirit’s self-titled album, has been discussed by music fans for years. Now a lawsuit over the songs’ similarities has sent the debate toward a court date.

You can listen to the Spirit song and see for yourself what you think.

As Bloomberg Businessweek reports, the lawsuit was filed on behalf of the trust of Spirit guitarist Randy California, who died in 1997. The band’s original bassist is also involved in the case.

“The idea behind this is to make sure that Randy California is given a writing credit on ‘Stairway to Heaven,’ ” says attorney Francis Alexander Malofiy. “It’s been a long time coming.”

The attorney also acknowledges there’s a great deal of money at stake. From Bloomberg Businessweek:

“Stairway‘s stature—financially, culturally, and musically—is towering. By 2008, when Conde Nast Portfolio magazine published an estimate that included royalties and record sales, the song had earned at least $562 million.”

That number is out of date — and it’s poised to rise higher, as Led Zeppelin is set to release new versions of its albums this summer.

News of the lawsuit has prompted a lively comment session over at Rolling Stone, where readers are debating the ability to copyright chord progressions and chords.

Randy California didn’t often speak about the similarity between the two songs. By many accounts, he was an easygoing sort who didn’t let it bother him. But he did comment on it in an interview with Listener magazine that was recently quoted by the site Turn Me On, Dead Man:

“Well, if you listen to the two songs, you can make your own judgment. It’s an exact… I’d say it was a rip-off. And the guys made millions of bucks on it and never said, ‘Thank you,’ never said, ‘Can we pay you some money for it?’ It’s kind of a sore point with me. Maybe some day their conscience will make them do something about it. I don’t know.”

As that story noted, Led Zeppelin had likely heard the song on its first American tour, when it opened up for Spirit.

Writing about the 40th anniversary of “Stairway To Heaven” in 2011, NPR’s Ann Powers noted that elements of it “may or may not” have been borrowed from the Spirit song. But she also noted, “nobody but Zep could have molded those chord progressions into such a masterpiece of excess.”

Stories about artistic influence are often circuitous — and to prove it, we bring you a paragraph from music critic Will Shade, written in 2001 for Perfect Sound Forever. He laid out several instances in which Led Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page has been alleged to have lifted the work of others, before touching on the “Taurus” question:

“But it is that holiest of Holy Grails, ‘Stairway To Heaven,’ that will shock the faithful. On one of Led Zeppelin’s early tours, they had opened for the California art-rock group, Spirit. In the liner notes to the reissue of Spirit’s 1968 eponymous debut, the band’s guitarist Randy California mentions the fact that Jimmy Page took special interest in an original entitled ‘Taurus.’ There is no doubt that Page appropriated the opening guitar lines note for note on ‘Stairway To Heaven.’ Further, the chord progression in ‘Stairway To Heaven’ is incredibly similar to a song by the Chocolate Watch Band, ‘And She’s Lonely.’ The Yardbirds played with the Chocolate Watch Band during Page’s tenure. It would be quite ironic if he did indeed lift the chords from the Chocolate Watch Band. The Chocolate Watch Band, to those in the know, were the ultimate Yardbirds clone. Wouldn’t it be fitting that a former Yardbirds guitarist ripped off something from a band that based an entire career around sounding like that famed quintet?”

Copyright 2014 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.image
Read original article – Published May 20, 2014 2:33 PM ET
Led Zeppelin Sued Over ‘Stairway To Heaven’ Guitar Line

Astronomar drops Mutant Club EP

A man DJs on a computer
Marlon Lumba performs as DJ Astronomar at the KXLL New Year’s Eve Block Party on Dec. 31, 2013. Photo by Annie Bartholomew/KXLL

DJ Astronomar‘s new Mutant Club EP  just dropped and is free for download until June 6. The four track release features cover art from Brazilian heavy metal drummer Iggor Cavalera and is full of the quality electronic dance music tracks you’ve come to expect from Mar and his label Main Course. But you should really listen yourself.

 

 

 

 

Shred Tunes 16

PicsArt_1389410159876

Everybody has a soundtrack for life. Mine is the background for exploring and getting outside in this mountain paradise we live in. I spend most of my winter days at Eaglecrest, with other locals dedicated to searching for turns, having fun in the mountains and shredding. This series focuses on those locals and the tunes they listen to while shredding.

 

Shredder: Ben Huff

What are you shredding? Telemark skis

Age: 41

Years shredding: 3

What 3 tunes have you guys been shredding to lately? 

My favorite tracks this weekend are…

 

 

 

 





Shredder: Jenny Jones

What are you shredding? A snowboard

Age: 24

Years shredding: 3

What 3 tunes have you been shredding to lately?

 

 

 

 

 





Shredder: Andrew Ainsworth

What are you shredding? A snowboard

Age: 24

Years shredding: 10

What 3 tunes have you been shredding to lately?

 

 

 

 

 




 

For more Shred Tunes click here: 12345678910,  11121314 and 15

Find Jessie on Instagram @messyjessiehh 

Shred Tunes 15

PicsArt_1389410159876

Everybody has a soundtrack for life. Mine is the background for exploring and getting outside in this mountain paradise we live in. I spend most of my winter days at Eaglecrest, with other locals dedicated to searching for turns, having fun in the mountains and shredding. This series focuses on those locals and the tunes they listen to while shredding.

 

Shredder: Jeremy Lavender (on the left)

What are you shredding? A snowboard

Age: 29

Years Shredding: I’ve been riding for 19 years and this is my 4th season shredding at Eaglecrest.

 

Shredder: Spenser Johnson (on the right)

What are you shredding? A snowboard

Age: 25

Years Shredding: This is my 16th season at Eaglecrest.

 

What 3 tunes have you guys been shredding to lately?

 

 

 

Jeremy’s Tunes





Spenser’s Tunes




For more Shred Tunes click here: 12345678910,  11121314 and 16

Find Jessie on Instagram @messyjessiehh 

George Kuhar releases One Heart Army

George Kuhar rehearses with his band Playboy Spaceman at Peabody's rehearsal space in downtown Juneau on Feb. 17, 2014. Photo by Annie Bartholomew/KTOO
George Kuhar rehearses with his band Playboy Spaceman at Peabody’s rehearsal space in downtown Juneau on Feb. 17, 2014. (Photo by Annie Bartholomew/KTOO)

Last month, Juneau musician George Kuhar performed his new album with his band Playboy Spaceman the Rockwell ballroom.

One Heart Army was mixed, mastered, and created in Juneau. The band recorded the album with Betsy Sims at Juneau’s Studio A with musicians Nick Wagner, Jason Messing, Simon Taylor and Kuhar’s wife Bridget.

Kuhar’s title track, “One Heart Army” begins slowly with an acoustic intro, steadily marching forward, reaching a stadium rock epic chorus.

“I just finished mastering it about a month ago. I spent several months mixing it.  I spent several years writing the songs and you know it’s been a real labor of love.”

Kuhar’s favorite song on the album is called “Pattern of Your Mind,” a space age medley cut with Wagners playful electronics, Bridget’s synthesizers, and a gritty guitar solo at the heart of the song.

“That song was kind of an experiment. It was very experimental in every way – the way it was recorded, the lyrics were written and it was a real pleasant surprise the way it turned out. The guitar solo was a first take, and that’s always a great feeling to play a take for the first time and go, ‘Well, I don’t think I could play it any better than that so let’s just leave it behind,’ and it just continued to grow on me.”

Though the album is full of upbeat rock and roll sing-alongs like “Teach Me To Love,” it  is also filled with moments of beauty of vulnerability.

George and Bridget harmonize over handclaps and ukulele on the track “Sonneman” written after visiting the home of his friend Joseph Sonneman who died of Lou Gehrig’s disease. Sonneman had a miner’s cottage near Bullwinkles on Willoughby Avenue where Kuhar rented week-to-week when he first moved to Juneau. Years after his death, the house was converted into the Twilight Café where George went to get coffee one day.

“I went in their just to check it out because I’d been in there before and it was so different inside. And there must have been a trace of him left because when I walked out of there I wrote that song and then I went home and played it for Bridget on the Ukulele and she cried. So I guess I knew that was a song I needed to keep playing at that point.

It felt thick and dense, so you know, when you have those feelings they often turn into good songs. I mean as an artist you hope you’re creating work that’s dense with meaning and life and you just kind of have to get lucky I think.”

Kuhar says he doesn’t know if he got lucky yet.  He thinks he’ll never know.

 “I just hope that I put it out and people like it, or that they find some value in it.”

The band Playboy Spaceman performs the album One Heart Army at the Rockwell Ballroom on Friday, Feb. 28, 2014. Photo by Jessie Herman-Haywood/KTOO
The band Playboy Spaceman performs the album One Heart Army at the Rockwell Ballroom on Friday, Feb. 28, 2014. (Photo by Jessie Herman-Haywood/KTOO)

The album is now available for download on iTunes or you can find the CD at Alaska Robotics.

Shred Tunes 14

PicsArt_1389410159876

Everybody has a soundtrack for life. Mine is the background for exploring and getting outside in this mountain paradise we live in. I spend most of my days at Eaglecrest, with other locals dedicated to searching for turns, having fun in the mountains and shredding. This series focuses on those locals and the tunes they listen to while shredding.

Shredder: Beth Geiger

What are you shredding? A snowboard!

Age: 26

Years Shredding: 16

What 3 tunes have you guys been shredding to lately?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 





Shredder: Rick Shattuck

What are you shredding? Skis

Age: 45

Years Shredding: 35

What 3 tunes have you been shredding to lately?

 

 

 

 




 

For more Shred Tunes click here: 12345678910,  111213 and 14

Find Jessie on Instagram @messyjessiehh 

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