Led Zeppelin Book:

Hammer of the Gods: The Led Zeppelin Saga




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Led Zeppelin book:

'Hammer of the Gods: The Led Zeppelin Saga
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Led Zeppelin Book:
Hammer of the Gods: The Led Zeppelin Saga



Book
Hammer of the Gods: The Led Zeppelin Saga
Hammer of the Gods: The Led Zeppelin Saga
List Price: $14.95Publisher: Harper Paperbacks

Salesrank: 62302

Released: April 8, 2008
Our Price: $8.82
Used Price: $8.76
Media: Paperback

Editorial Review:

The members of Led Zeppelin are major deities in the pantheon of rock gods. The first and heaviest of the heavy metal monsters, they violently shook the foundations of rock music and took no prisoners on the road. Their tours were legendary, their lives were exalted—and in an era well known for sex and drugs, the mighty Zeppelin set an unattainable standard of excess and mythos for any band that tried to follow them. They were power, they were fantasy, they were black magic. No band ever flew as high as Led Zeppelin or suffered so disastrous a fall. And only some of them lived to tell the tale.

Hammer of the Gods is the New York Times bestselling epic saga of the hard reign of Page, Plant, Jones, and Bonham—a spellbinding, electrifying, no-holds-barred classic of rock 'n' roll history that has now been updated to include the continuing adventures of the band.

Hammer of the Gods: The Led Zeppelin Saga Reviews:
hammer of the gods less than divine 3 Star Review
2008-09-30 - Finally read the Zeppelin bio after years of hearing about the book's legendary status. What a letdown.

Little interesting info about the musicians, instead just groupie rumors and trashing hotels, written in the most lame prose I've endured since reading my school newspaper back in junior high. Some really wince-inducing passages.

I saw on the back cover that author Stephen Davis has written quite a few rock band bios, and this feels slapped together just under deadline.

The Heavy Led Zeppelin Trip 3 Star Review
2008-01-16 - There are few bands that have achieved the musical heights of the four Englishmen known as Led Zeppelin. Songs like Whole Lotta Love, Stairway To Heaven, Kashmir and Black Dog are staples of young and old, charts and radio; catchiness and memorability. Similarly, very few bands have had as much popularity, mystique, innuendo or power attributed to them as the folk and blues hard rock legends.

While the roots, music, business dealings and concerts of the band are present and discussed Led Zeppelin's hedonistic travails and fantastic romps through America and Europe are what Hammer Of The Gods (a phrase brought to contemporary consciousness by Friedrich Nietzsche and heard in the 1970 song Immigrant Song) is largely focused on.

If reports are true much of the book's information and insider tips stem from the band's roadie and tour manager Richard Cole, in addition to the information collected, and chronologically presented, from press and public sources. Given Richard Cole's role and vocation Hammer Of The Gods is riddled with stories of sex, drugs, rock 'n' roll as well as concert grosses and tour itineraries and exploits. Much of the information might be both exaggerated and shrouded in the daze of yesteryears memory, but Hammer Of The Gods is a fast and interesting read on the band and its habits. Singer Robert Plant, who is presented as a debauched sex symbol, says as much in a post-publication quotation attributed to him in later editions. Guitarist Jimmy Page, who was the band's main composer, is seen as a semi-junkie with a lust for young girls and magick, drummer John Bonzo as an affable drunk drummer who beat the drums harder than anybody while bassist and keyboardist John Paul Jones is both absent and, perhaps by implication, more serene.

There are other books out there on Led Zeppelin - including one by Richard Cole called Stairway to Heaven: Led Zeppelin Uncensored - but it is hard to imagine a more interesting read on the legendary Brits than this - warts, booze, groupies and all.

Armadillos in their Trousers 5 Star Review
2007-12-29 - I used to listen to Led Zep in high school, and until the release of Mothership and the publicity surrounding the reunion concert I never knew anything about the band. This book was a totally enjoyable read and a good overview of the band's history. I came away with an image of the band members as four vibrant and dynamic individuals. Their story is a fascinating one, and I'll enjoy their music even more now.

As Overblown as the Band Itself 4 Star Review
2007-12-28 - Davis' profile of Led Zepplin is probably a reliable protrait of the band. If you are like me and you don't care too much for Led Zep music, you will still find the book an interesting read as a slice of pop culture history and biography of at least one fairly interesting guy (Jimmy Page).

Davis' use of language is sometimes preposterously overblown. His diction is sometimes questionable, too, as when he describes Bonham flying into a rage. Bonham "apotheosized into the Beast." (Here you have an example of both hyperbole and poor diction.)

The book is filled with this type of writing, which makes it exciting to read while casting a shadow of doubt as to its veracity.

Davis doesn't call Page out on his affected interest in black magic and sorcery. Davis seems to take it all seriously. The other side of that story is Page was a young man, in his 20s, with excess cash and a deficit in maturity, dabbling in a silly hobby.

Overall, this was a good read for the uninitiated. A bit of a guilty pleasure really.

Fast, interesting read about a great band 4 Star Review
2007-11-23 - I read 'Hammer of the Gods' in one day. It's an easy read, and a fun one. I'm not a Led Zeppelin expert by any means, so any inaccuracies would have gone right over my head. However, I did read the other reviews on Amazon and realize that perhaps the book is a bit skewed by the dependence on the memory of Richard Cole, who seems to like to drop the F-bomb as many times in each quote as possible and to go for maximum shock value.

That being said, it's a fun read, with plenty of info on how the group formed, its members, the creation of the Zep sound, how they created an image that was hard to live down, etc. The author also traces the origins of the music back to the Blues and does a nice job showing how the 'Devil's Music' made its way from the Southern US into the repertoire of white boys from England.

Perhaps not definitive, but still lots of fun to read, this book gives you a good overview of personalities, music, and the history of the group.


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