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Led Zeppelin: Good Times, Bad Times: A Visual Biography of the Ultimate Band | 
| Authors: Jerry Prochnicky, Ralph Hulett Creator: Anthony DeCurtis Publisher: Abrams Category: Book
List Price: $35.00 Buy New: $18.99 as of 9/10/2010 14:23 EDT details You Save: $16.01 (46%)
New (21) Used (11) from $14.40
Seller: abookarama Rating: 5 reviews Sales Rank: 467078
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1 Pages: 216 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.8 Dimensions (in): 10.1 x 8.7 x 1.1
ISBN: 081095009X Dewey Decimal Number: 782.421660922 EAN: 9780810950092 ASIN: 081095009X
Publication Date: October 1, 2009 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description
Good Times, Bad Times: Led Zeppelin captures the public and private lives of rock gods Led Zeppelin through rare and iconic photographs. More than any other band, they embodied the rock-star lifestyle of sex, drugs, and rock and roll and came to define the music and culture of the 1970s. Forty years after the release of their first album in 1969, Led ZeppelinâJimmy Page, Robert Plant, John Paul Jones, and John Bonhamâ continues to fascinate and inspire legions of fans, young and old alike.
A general overview of the bandâs history will introduce the core of the book: a gallery of more than 200 photographs, laid out in chronological order, more than half of which have never been published. Whether onstage, backstage, recording in the studio, on tour, or at homeâthe band is shown as never before. From their very first performance in Denmark on September 7, 1968 (as the new Yardbirds) to their last performance in London in 2007, this collection of images will remind die-hard fans why the group became, and remains, one of the greatest and most notorious bands in the history of rock and roll.
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| Customer Reviews: It Should Be A Required Addition October 3, 2009 Jeffrey Strawman (Houston, TX) 11 out of 11 found this review helpful
It is said that a picture is worth a thousand words. If that is true, then this book is worth at least 200 thousand words. Led Zeppelin: Good Times, Bad Times - A Visual Biography of the Ultimate Band by Jerry Prochnicky and Ralph Hulett is an amazing and eye-opening look at Led Zeppelin from their first performance in Denmark on September 7, 1968 through their reunion concert at the O2 Arena in London, England on December 10, 2007.
Over 60 photographers have contributed their photos and stories to give a full look and perspective into an amazing history. From photos at the Rose Palace in Pasadena, California and the Boston Tea Party in Boston, Massachusetts in May 1969 and February 1972 photos of Jimmy Page bending the D string during "Heartbreaker" at the Sydney Showground to Robert Plant in the San Diego Sports Arena on June 19, 1977 with clenched fist and the band performing their last song at the last concert before John Bonham died, you truly get everything in-between.
In addition to photos of live performances, you also get candid and private photos of the band members at home with their families, like John Paul Jones playing mandolin outside on the steps of his country estate in Hertfordshire, England for his wife Maureen and two of his daughters, Tamara and Jacinda, in August 1970 and Robert Plant, curled up in a wicker chair with his daughter Carmen.
Also captued are early shots of the band in the studio, working on tracks for upcoming albums as well as backstage shots before and after live concerts.
This hardcovered, 216-page book is a perfect visual companion to Prochincky and Hulett's 2005 book "Whole Lotta Led: Our Flight With Led Zeppelin". Whether this book ends up on your coffee table or in your bookcase library of Led Zeppelin-related books, it should be a required addition.
Jeff Strawman
[...]
October 2, 2009
From www.LedZeppelinNews.com December 17, 2009 Stephen P. Sauer 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
In a series of three black-and-white shots taken by James Fortune in 1973 straight-on in front of center stage, we see Robert Plant in full performance mode onstage at the Los Angeles Forum. With his legs positioned in pyramid formation, his face bobs from side to side, his hair bouncing a beat behind. The microphone in his left hand points outward, not to himself or to anything in particular. His opposite hand bears a tight grip of the microphone cord, allowing him to give the cord a good stretch. Behind him, a barely visible Jones plays his bass while standing next to the symbol-adorned drum set of a shadowy Bonham keeping time. The body that shifts the most in this series of shots is that of Jimmy Page, who starts off by bending impossibly backward from the knees up, his guitar extended courtesy of an outstretched strap from his shoulders. Page's face changes in each photo to demonstrate three separate looks of anguish as he cuts his chops high on the fretboard.
Any one of these three images could suffice as the quintessential image of Led Zeppelin at its peak. In fact, precisely this thought has crossed a lot of minds, inspiring quite a few imitators. "Many heavy metal groups, such as Heart, Van Halen, Guns n' Roses, and Metallica, to name but a few, borrowed from Zeppelin. But, as seen in these images taken at the Los Angeles Forum, no one could rock harder than the original," acknowledges a photo caption accompanying these photos as printed in "Good Times Bad Times: A Visual Biography of the Ultimate Band," a new book by Jerry Prochnicky and Ralph Hulett published by Abrams Press.
These are only three of the 200 photographs on 216 pages in this hardcover coffee table book, and "Good Times Bad Times" presents so much more than the usual photos of Led Zeppelin onstage. In fact, some of the book's highlights take place far from the road. Rare glimpses of Jimmy Page inside his fancifully decorated yet modestly lit Pangbourne boathouse depict the guitarist lounging at home, always looking away from the camera, even in close-ups. Elsewhere, John Paul Jones, in bell bottom trousers and sandals, embodies the posture of a serenading Dave Matthews as he plays a mandolin outside his Hertfordshire estate with two of his daughters and his wife dancing and clapping along. In others, Robert Plant enjoys the company of a horse and a goat at his farm in Kidderminster, England. In some backstage shots scattered throughout the book, the text notes that Bonham looks particularly bored to be away from his home and family, whether it's conveyed by his body language or the words on his shirt -- one such shirt has an image of the dog Snoopy on the front and, on the opposite side, the words "I wish I could bite somebody ... I need a release from my inner tensions!"
The California-based writing team of Prochnicky and Hulett, who previously turned out the paperback "Whole Lotta Led: Our Flight with Led Zeppelin," provide a general overview of the band's history in the first few pages of the book. This text definitely takes on the theme of the "Good Times Bad Times" title, as any written history of the band's 12 years should, but the authors dedicate an inordinate amount of column inches to the ups and downs of the 1977 tour, whereas the 1973 tour that the authors posit was the "peak" warrants a single paragraph. The real point of the book is to showcase the band pictorially, and that is achieved. The group is often serious, often silly, and the text provided alongside the photos reflects that always in an appropriate manner. Their appropriateness is no better exemplified than on page 179, which shows all four band members squeezed into a choreographed shot via a rather goofy pose during a Manticore Studios rehearsal in January 1977, above a separate image of a nervous Page at the Swan Song office in London, biting his thumbnail and retaining a near-worthless cigarette butt in his two fingers as he dares explain to members of the press on Oct. 28, 1977, that Led Zeppelin was not going to split up and not responsible for "bad karma."
From the band's tragic end in 1980, the story completes itself with a tidy four-photo recap of events that have followed. Jason and Zoe Bonham join Led Zeppelin's surviving members in a photo taken at Led Zeppelin's induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1995. A slimmer and distinguished version of manager Peter Grant stares at Martyn Goodacre's camera in a rare shot taken in the early '90s, prior to his death in 1995. The book closes with two shots of Led Zeppelin in action again, with Jason Bonham on drums, at the O2 arena on Dec. 10, 2007. Of the future, the authors say, "There may be a few more reunions or perhaps a limited tour, but the remaining members wisely decided that it was best to leave the legacy intact by not launching any huge world tours." And with that, one supposes, the story seems fittingly ended.
There are so many striking images in this book, some of which were never published before or have rarely been seen. Instead of concentrating on the usual suspects of Led Zeppelin photography, the book draws from a number of sources who either had access to the group in its formative days or just happened to catch up along the way. Some of the photographers earned their own rightful mention inside the book, such as the bespectacled and mustachioed Chuck Boyd, who catches John Paul Jones rehearsing on an electric bass while seated on a folding chair in a daylighted lounge on Sept. 4, 1970, hours ahead of the now-legendary "Blueberry Hill" concert. Back in December 1968, this photographer is said to have "lobbied intensely" for the L.A.-based company Sunn Amplifiers to start an endorsement deal with a band based solely on the strength of a test pressing of that group's first album. The company's promotions person said Boyd was "certain they would sell more amps than any [other] artist on [Sunn's] roster" but declined.
With each flip of the page, a new surprise lies ahead. In all probability, the reader looks just like a kid on Christmas -- or the bright-eyed Robert Plant smiling on page 111. In a black-and-white photo credited to Koh Hasebe / Shinko Music Archives, we see Plant's left hand cradling the first few frets of the six-string portion of Jimmy Page's double-neck guitar. Out of sorts with the equipment, he sits on a crate and supports the guitar's heavy body on his right leg. Behind Plant's back, only a few onlookers all facing the stage wander this empty indoor arena in Japan, where Led Zeppelin is sure to pack in thousands of screaming fans a few hours later, while the band is on its first tour of the country, in September 1971. What speaks volumes in this photo is that Led Zeppelin had even the power to bring that joy even to themselves.
LED ZEPPELIN FAN December 7, 2009 J. Williams (Visalia, Ca. USA) If you are a Led Zeppelin fan this is a must book.
The pictures and information about this band is awesome!
Led Zeppelin: Good Times, Bad Times (Abrams) April 30, 2010 BlogOnBooks (Los Angeles CA) 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
The Rolling Stones aside, it's hard to think of a rock band, and certainly not a hard-rock band, that exemplified the power, majesty and rock'n'roll excess that encompassed all that is Led Zeppelin. From their early days as `the new Yardbirds' to their now current final show at London's O2 arena, no band has ever combined both the sonic impact and global fame as the mighty Zeppelin juggernaut.
Author Jerry Prochnicky and photographer Ralph Hulett have great familiarity with the subject between years of research as well as their previous collaboration on `Whole Lotta Led: Our Flight with Led Zeppelin,' and this photo-based volume captures the basic chronology of the band from beginning to end.
Having said that, the book is far from a completist work, nor does it represent a truly authoritative volume. To be a complete visual history of the band, one would expect at least screen shots from the early TV appearances of the band (as are ever-so-popular these days on YouTube) as well as a more professional selection of photos from various tours of America, Japan, and Europe and even the final U.S. performance at Philadelphia's Live Aid concert. There are factual mistakes in this book as well - the famed Hyatt House is in Hollywood, not Pasadena, the Oakland Day-On-The-Green show was not the band's final U.S. appearance, as just previously mentioned.
Overall the book makes a nice fan history of the band, and has a number of rare and never-before seen shots, but given the obvious stature of Led Zeppelin, it is ultimately disappointing that many major pictures were not included here (where is famed Zep photog Neal Preston's work, for example?) Good for completists, but if you are expecting something resembling the entire Zeppelin photo history, this is just not it.
I didn't receive, so can't rate it. February 1, 2010 Marcos De O. Pedroso (São Paulo, Brazil) 0 out of 3 found this review helpful
I bought in December 30, 2009 and I didn't receive it so far.
That's too bad for me because LED is a band which I like a lot.
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