Jimmy Page on his surprise Rolling Stones collaboration, and the gear that made rock history. tt

“I had a couple of passes at the solo, and that was it. Keith’s playing great – and it’s unusual to hear me playing at full acceleration outside of Led Zeppelin”: Jimmy Page on his surprise Rolling Stones collaboration, and the gear that made rock history

In this all-encompassing 2020 interview, the Led Zeppelin legend reflects on the evolution of his guitar rig, writing rock’s greatest albums – and how the Beatles shaped the sound of Whole Lotta Love

Jimmy Page

(Image credit: Gijsbert Hanekroot/Redferns)

This interview was first published in Total Guitar magazine in November 2020.

It is an extraordinary story, and as Jimmy Page puts it, quietly but firmly, only he is qualified to tell it. He has a new book published this month, titled simply Jimmy Page: The Anthology. It is what he calls “an autobiography with photographs”, and a “companion volume” to 2010’s Jimmy Page By Jimmy Page.

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Anthology gave me the opportunity to do the detail behind the detail of everything pertaining to my career

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Jimmy Page

Jimmy Page circa 1970 (Image credit: Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images)

John Bonham, with his approach to the drums and the dazzling technique that he had, the overall sound of his drums was unlike anybody that I’d heard before

Jimmy Page

(Image credit: Mirrorpix via Getty Images)

I wanted to really make the guitar my own. People had started painting guitars at that point and I thought, well, I’d like to paint mine and really consecrate it

I’ve often wondered if my Number One Les Paul had been re-finished when I had it, by Joe Walsh, who sold it to me

I thought, what’s the guitar, how to do this on stage? And it was just obvious that the doubleneck is the only way I’m going to do it

Led Zeppelin

(Image credit: Jay Dickman/CORBIS/Corbis via Getty Images)

Led Zeppelin

Billed as the New Yardbirds, Led Zeppelin perform for the first time Gladsaxe Teen Club in Gladsaxe, Denmark, on September 7th, 1968.  (Image credit: Jorgen Angel/Redferns)

The second album was clearly going to be all about the Les Paul

People were saying, ‘Oh, Led Zeppelin’s gone acoustic’. Well, what happened to your ears on the first album and the second album?

When it went to the point of the more acoustic style of the third album, you can imagine our record company getting that in and going, ‘Where’s the Whole Lotta Love?‘

Dazed And Confused was basically a vehicle for improvisation… From Robert, as well

I knew with Whole Lotta Love that there weren’t going to be any edits. I insisted that they kept the middle section in it, which of course they didn’t like, but they had to do it

Jimmy Page

(Image credit: Robert Knight Archive/Redferns)

I prefer to be able to fool around with things, you know? Shape the things on stage. So that’s the same with the Theremin and the Echoplex, I could just really have a real good time with those things

The Supro fits great with the Telecaster, but with the Gibson Les Paul it was a really overdriven sound, right? And when I started doing studio work, I realised that that was a bit too radical for them

I was using the Super Beatle amps with the [Rickenbacker] Transonic cabinets. So that’s exactly what’s on Whole Lotta Love

I started to write things on the Danelectro like Kashmir because I was used to playing it in the DADGAD tuning, so Kashmir came out on that guitar, and In My Time Of Dying

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