His image is familiar to millions, iconic to a generation of rock fans and a 52-year mystery finally solved: The old, bearded, hunched-over man toting a big bundle of sticks as seen on the cover of ...
As reported by The Guardian, new research has identified the bearded man with a walking stick and a bundle of twigs on his back as a Victorian-era Wiltshire thatcher named Lot Long (also known as Lot ...
The identity of the man on the cover of Led Zeppelin IV has finally been identified by a historian, 52 years after the album’s release. The well-known image of an elderly, bearded figure, who’s ...
Led Zeppelin’s founding guitarist Jimmy Page pieced together Coda two years after the band broke up since they owed Atlantic Records one more album. His skill in the recording booth helped him get ...
Led Zeppelin IV is the most popular album from Led Zeppelin, one of the biggest bands ever. The 1971 recording, which includes classic rock radio favorites “Stairway to Heaven,” “Black Dog,” and “Rock ...
Here’s a little quiz for your Wednesday afternoon: do you know the name Spencer Elden? What about Keithroy Yearwood, John Button, or Brian Cannon and Sean Rowley? If you guessed that all of these ...
After more than half a century, the identity of the elderly, stick-carrying man featured on the “Led Zeppelin IV” album cover has finally been revealed. The “Stick Man” who featured on the cover of ...
Robert Plant joked that his experience of off-grid living at Bron-Yr-Aur Cottage had transformed him into the man seen on the cover of Led Zeppelin IV. The singer, who’d spent childhood holidays at ...
The members of Led Zeppelin were very clear fans of Blind Willie Johnson. Johnson was a major figure in gospel blues throughout the late 1920s. They covered several of his songs, one of which being ...
Many have tried, but few have successfully pulled off a Led Zeppelin cover. Seriously, how many vocalists have the range of Robert Plant? How many guitarists possess the chops to do Jimmy Page justice ...
After two hard-hitting and heavy blues-influenced albums, Led Zeppelin III confused fans and critics with several folk-inspired songs. The cover telegraphed the musical direction even before listeners ...