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Remember When: Jimmy Page Not-So-Subtly Blamed a Led Zeppelin Lawsuit on Robert Plant

The best bands operate as a single unit, a true ensembleโ€ฆexcept, it would seem, in the case of a Led Zeppelin lawsuit with blues songwriter Willie Dixon. On this occasion, the British rock four-piece took a more individualistic approach. In fact, guitarist Jimmy Page not-so-subtly blamed the suit on bandmate and frontman Robert Plant. Although, to Plantโ€™s credit, later comments suggested the decision was a band-wide approach.

At the very least, the entire band felt the penalties from the lawsuit they lost. As Plant would later describe it, the entire debacle was โ€œhappily paid for.โ€

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The Led Zeppelin Lawsuit Jimmy Page Blamed On Robert Plant

Led Zeppelin achieved their first hit in the United States with โ€œWhole Lotta Love,โ€ which the British rock band released on their sophomore release, Led Zeppelin II. From its driving drums to signature guitar riffs to Robert Plantโ€™s moaning, whining vocals, itโ€™s a classic Led Zeppelin track through and through, with one notable exception: the lyrics. Those could be attributed to blues singer-songwriter Willie Dixonโ€™s song, โ€œYou Need Love.โ€

After hearing โ€œWhole Lotta Loveโ€ on the radio, Dixonโ€™s daughter informed her father of the noticeable similarities between the Led Zeppelin track and โ€œYou Need Love,โ€ which Muddy Waters released as a single in 1962. Dixon agreed and filed a lawsuit against Led Zeppelin in 1985, 16 years after the band first released their song. But if Dixon was expecting a lengthy legal battle, he wouldโ€™ve been mistaken. Led Zeppelin quickly agreed to his accusations and settled with the bluesman outside of court.

โ€œ[Jimmy] Pageโ€™s riff was Pageโ€™s riff,โ€ Plant later recalled in an interview with Musician. โ€œI just thought, โ€˜Well, what am I going to sing?โ€™ That was it, a nick, now happily paid for. At the time, there was a lot of conversation about what to do. It was decided that it was so far away in time and influenceโ€ฆwell, you only get caught when youโ€™re successful. Thatโ€™s the game.โ€

Page had a clearer idea of who was to blame. โ€œRobert was supposed to change the lyrics,โ€ he claimed (via Classic Rock). โ€œHe didnโ€™t always do that, which is what brought on most of the grief.โ€

Other Times, One Could Reasonably Place More Blame On Page

Led Zeppelinโ€™s lawsuit with Willie Dixon in 1985 would not be the only legal trouble the British rock band would find themselves in over musical plagiarism. Jimmy Page was willing to throw frontman Robert Plant under the bus for not changing the lyrics to โ€œWhole Lotta Love.โ€ But he had less ammunition for a subsequent lawsuit that began in 2014.ย 

The suit between Led Zeppelin and the estate of Spirit guitarist Randy Wolfe was over the former bandโ€™s iconic ballad, โ€œStairway to Heaven.โ€ Michael Skidmore, an estate trustee of Wolfe, accused Led Zeppelin of ripping off Spiritโ€™s 1968 instrumental track, โ€œTaurus,โ€ for their melodic guitar intro. Unlike the case of the Led Zeppelin II opening track, โ€œWhole Lotta Love,โ€ where Plant was quick to admit he had nicked the lyrical gist of Dixonโ€™s song, Page rejected the notion that he purposefully ripped off Spirit for his signature guitar part. Led Zeppelin won the legal battle in 2020, much to the Spirit estateโ€™s chagrin.

โ€œWhat you have here is a big win for the multi-billion dollar industry against the creatives,โ€ Skidmoreโ€™s lawyer, Francis Malofiy, told Rolling Stone. โ€œI love Led Zeppelin as a man. I can separate my appreciation for them as four band members playing amazing music. But theyโ€™re the greatest art thieves of all time, and they got away with it again today. They won on a technicality. But they absolutely stole that piece of work.โ€

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