Led Zeppelin - "Celebration Day"
Is it a film or is it a concert? Do I write a film review or a concert review?
Who knows - hey, let's think laterally and do both!
This was a film, and I attended the Vue Cinema at the Reebok Stadium in Bolton
to watch it with my friend. On the other hand, it was a concert, pure and
simple, nothing added and nothing taken away, filmed when Led Zeppelin performed
at a one off reunion concert at the O2 Arena in December 2007 in memory of
Atlantic Records boss Ahmet Ertegun. I had applied for tickets at the time, but
it was always a rather forlorn hope, what with the rest of the world also
applying. That was the last I expected to hear of it, but nearly five years down
the line, the concert film is being shown in selected cinemas and in a few weeks
time a CD and DVD set is to be issued - and which I have naturally pre-ordered.
I was a bit reluctant to go and see this film, as a similar film release - "The
Song Remains The Same" - had proved a big disappointment when I had seen it a
cinema on Deansgate in the mid 1980s. I had fears of similarly disappointing
poor, very low volume sound quality, but the prospect of a Sunday afternoon out
with my mate was too good to resist, so off I went.
There is very little doubt that I will ever get to see Led Zeppelin live in the
flesh, so I have to be satisfied with this film version. If by a miracle they
should reform properly and do a tour, it is not likely that I would get a
ticket, so intense would be the demand. It would probably be true to say that
Led Zep were the standard bearers for hard rock throughout the seventies, and
that in some ways they carried on from where the Beatles left off. Unlike the
Beatles they didn't release any singles and so I don't think their influence can
be rated anywhere near as highly: they certainly changed (and dominated) the
world of hard rock, but they didn't change the world outside of that - and after
the punk rock revolution they were seen as dinosaurs, relics from another age. I
can't deny their seminal importance and I do like their records, but I have a
higher regard for the likes of Black Sabbath, Deep Purple and the various
progressive rock pioneers.
As to the film itself, all my preconceptions based on the unsatisfactory
experience of The Song Remains The Same were cast aside. The sound quality was
superb, crystal clear and very loud indeed, probably better than being at the
concert itself. The fact that it was played at "selected cinemas" is of some
importance because I doubt that the tiddly little screens at the Trafford Centre
would have coped and its unlikely that the sound system would have been up to it
either. The film was a straight run through of the concert itself, no silly
fantasy sequences and was all the better for it. My major reservation is that I
do doubt if Robert Plant's voice was as good as it sounded - surely it must have
been touched up more than somewhat in the intervening five years? He also looked
somewhat silly with his hairstyle as per 1970 but in his mid sixties! Jimmy
Page's guitar playing was as good as ever, like he hadn't been away, and John
Paul Jones was coolness personified. Jason Bonham was the ideal stand in for his
dad on drums, but good as he was, it just wasn't the same as he just wasn't
"brutal" enough.
The song selection was excellent, mainly concentrating on the bluesy type tracks
from the early albums, but with some moody keyboard pieces from Houses of the
Holy etc. Somewhat ironically, the track “Celebration Day” itself wasn’t played,
but that is undoubtedly in the best Led Zep tradition. There were no acoustic
tracks, which was a little disappointing as it didn't give a full overview of
their repertoire, but on the other hand, boring solos were kept to a minimum and
there was a mighty, bone crushing rendition of Kashmir, which will keep me dosed
up on heavy duty riffing for years to come.
In conclusion: it matters not a jot whether it was a film or a concert. What
does matter is that it was a superb recording of one of rock music's major
players at a crucial time in their career. It's probably the last that any of us
will see of them, so it's a nostalgic and historic record, as well as being a
hugely noisy and well filmed one, full of some of the best rock music ever
written.