Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

John Bonham

 
Artist: John Bonham
John Bonham

Similar Artists:

Influenced By:

Followers:

Shorty, Rick Allen, Tommy Lee, Glenn Graham, Alex Van Halen, Matt Sorum, Chad Smith, Stephen Perkins, Neil Peart, Vinnie Paul, Dave Krusen, Joey Kramer, Will Calhoun, Mike Bordin, Tim "Herb" Alexander, Roger Taylor, Peter Criss, Stewart Copeland, The Pack A.D., Eric Kalb, Rick Iantosca, Eric Singer

Worked With:

Relationship With:

  • Born: May 31, 1948, Birmingham, England
  • Died: September 25, 1980, Windsor, England
  • Active: '60s, '70s, '80s
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: Drums

Biography

Drummer John Bonham, often referred to by his nickname "Bonzo," was one of the most important and influential drummers of the 1960s and 1970s -- as a member Led Zeppelin, he was also a bona fide superstar for the last decade of his life and, along with Ringo Starr of the Beatles, Charlie Watts of the Rolling Stones, Keith Moon of the Who, and Ginger Baker, one of the most well-known drummers in rock. John Henry Bonham was born in Redditch, England, in 1948. He was a natural drummer, sensitive to rhythm from an early age -- he beat pots and pans in his parents' kitchen, and built his first drum kit out of leftover containers and coffee cans when he was five years old. By the age of ten he had moved up to a real drum, and then later a complete used drum kit that his father bought for him. Like a lot of aspiring drummers of his generation, Bonham's musical awareness transcended rock & roll -- his idols included such percussion icons as Gene Krupa and Buddy Rich, whose careers dated from the 1930s.

He spent most of his youth in Birmingham, England, and left school in his mid-teens, circa 1964, and for a time worked for his brother's construction company. He played in his first band, Terry Web and the Spiders, in 1964 -- subsequently, he worked with a multitude of bands, mostly based in Birmingham, including the Blue Stars and the Senators, of whom the latter saw some success with a single entitled "She's a Mod." Bonham was already an extremely powerful player, and had a growing reputation in the midlands as one of the loudest drummers in music. By the mid-'60s, he'd formed his own group, A Way of Life, in tandem with bassist Dave Pegg, later a key member of Fairport Convention and Jethro Tull. After a few months, however, Bonham left -- the group continued without him for a time, while Bonham joined a blued-based band called the Crawling King Snakes, which featured a lead singer named Robert Plant. The two became friends, and Plant was very much an admirer of Bonham's playing.

Bonham found himself one of the most in-demand unsigned drummers in England, and after brief return to A Way of Life, he went back to working with Plant, this time in a new group called Band of Joy, whose history included a series of demos that didn't get them a contract, and a string of gigs opening for American folk/blues singer Tim Rose. The group split up, but when Rose returned to England for another tour a few months later, he invited Bonham to play in his band. At approximately the same time, guitarist Jimmy Page, a longtime sessionman who had been playing with the Yardbirds for almost two years, was in the process of assembling a new band out of the ashes of the latter group, which had split up in the spring of 1968. Page and bassist Chris Dreja had the Yardbirds name and a series of gigs in Scandanavia which they were contracted to play -- Page intended to meet those obligations, but he had much more in mind for the new band he'd already decided to put together. He recognized that the Yardbirds and the sound they'd generated had gone as far as they could commercially, and he was determined to carry this new musical venture to the next level and beyond. He asked Chris Dreja into the new outfit, and wanted Terry Reid as lead singer, but Reid declined the offer, instead recommending Robert Plant, who accepted Page's offer. At around this time, Dreja -- who'd been with the band since 1963 -- decided he didn't want to continue as a working musician, preferring instead to pursue a career in photography; in his place, Page recruited veteran fellow session musician John Paul Jones. That left the drummer's spot to be filled -- Page had thought of several well-known musicians as possible drummers for the band, including B.J. Wilson of Procol Harum, veteran sessionman Clem Cattini, and Aynsley Dunbar, but Plant urged him to look at Bonham. The guitarist, along with band manager Peter Grant, attended a Tim Rose performance at Hampstead, liked what they heard, and offered Bonham the spot. Bonham actually hesitated to accept at first -- Page and Grant weren't offering as much money to start with as a lot of other outfits interested in his services, but he did finally come around and joined.

The quartet was in place by September of 1968, and following their tour under the "New Yardbirds" name, they took up their chosen new name -- Led Zeppelin -- and work began on a new album, with a new repertory, under a contract signed with Atlantic Records. The self-titled Led Zeppelin album, released in January of 1969, showed how everything about the group was notched up -- the intensity of Plant's singing, the range and volume of Page's playing, and the depth and power of Jones' and Bonham's rhythm section. Actually, a good deal of what they did was not new -- Jeff Beck, Page's predecessor in the Yardbirds, had pioneered a similar sound earlier on a series of singles in 1967 and the Truth album in the summer of 1968, but Page and company focused it with laser-like precision. Moreover, whereas Beck's band, as represented on Truth, had been something of a work in progress, with the work of four different drummers (including Cattini and Dunbar, two of Page's early candidates for the spot) represented, Led Zeppelin arrived fully formed, and that went double in the drumming department. Not that there wasn't room for growth and advancement -- Bonham's playing was as loud and forceful as ever when they started, but he took another step up following Led Zeppelin's first tour of the United States, on which they opened for Vanilla Fudge; their drummer, Carmine Appice (later to be a Jeff Beck alumnus), turned Bonham on to Ludwig drums, which became his instruments of choice for the rest of his life.

The first Led Zeppelin album, released in early 1969, topped the charts, and Led Zeppelin II, released eight months later, was even bigger, riding the number one spot for almost two months -- both albums, along with Led Zeppelin III (which, being somewhat more experimental, did not sell as well) were recorded and released amid 30 months of near-constant touring, across which the group ascended from support act to headliners, and from auditoriums to arenas. When the smoke cleared, they were established among record buyers and concertgoers from junior high to college age as one of the top musical attractions in the world, ranked alongside the Rolling Stones and the Who. Moreover, because of the group's strategy of almost entirely avoiding the release of singles, it was impossible not to be immersed in their total sound, including Bonham's playing, if one owned any of their music -- they sold their music by the album, and one bought in for the whole package, even if the interest stemmed from a single song, perhaps even one of the folkier numbers that turned up increasingly in their repertory after the first two albums. Across the ensuing decade, the band ruled the heavy metal landscape, and Bonham's drumming was a key part of their appeal. His most basic playing, exhibited on early classics such as "Whole Lotta Love," had an explosive power that was larger-than-life (even next to Plant's singing and Page's soloing), especially in tandem with Jones' bass work, and in later years, when he added orchestral tympani and other, more exotic and advanced percussion devices to his array, it only added richness to the power and articulation that he already exuded. He was as well known as Page or Plant, and his featured spot, the sometimes 45-minute-long piece best known as "Moby Dick," was a recognized musical reference point far beyond the ranks of their fans (enough that it could be satirized in This Is Spinal Tap). He could also play with admirable restraint and great effect as well, as on "Bron-Y-Saur Stomp," and his more circumspect presence on some of the band's middle-period folk-based material, such as "The Rain Song" from Houses of the Holy, is welcome. But Bonham's great musical virtue was his raw power -- Ginger Baker could generate polyrhythms that teased and dazzled the listener (even next to Eric Clapton's solos and Jack Bruce's thunderous bass); Bill Bruford, whether in Yes or King Crimson or any of the bands that followed, could make his drums seem to sing (and very sweetly, at that); Carl Palmer exuded almost unnatural speed behind his kit; and Keith Moon played his drums like an orchestra accompanying the Who. But whether it was the bass, the snare, the cymbals -- even the symphonic gong, which he added to his sound a couple of years into the band's history -- that he was hitting, Bonham played with the power of a pair of pile-drivers. Not coincidentally, he used some of the heaviest sticks around, and he never gave up that attribute of forcefulness, even when he added synthesized drums to his array of sounds in the late '70s.

Amid all of his success, and the musical and personal fulfillment that came from playing in front of arena-sized audiences and selling tens of millions of records, Bonham was -- as much as anyone in rock & roll -- burning the candle at both ends. In addition to such indulgences as collecting vintage sports cars and motorcycles in his spare time, he tended to push himself hard in other areas of life. In the fall of 1980, Bonham had been a dozen years a member of Led Zeppelin and was still only 33 years young. He was also known as a man who loved his alcohol. On September 24, he downed somewhere over three dozen straight shots of vodka in just a few hours. He died in his sleep later that night, apparently choking on his own vomit from a sandwich he'd eaten amid the drinking. Left to grieve his loss and ask why were his wife, two children, many friends, and tons of fans. Led Zeppelin -- perhaps looking at the travails of the Who, who had lost their drummer, Keith Moon, a couple of years earlier and, with him, their sound and their group identity and cohesion -- didn't recover, and called it quits within three months. Officially, the band never worked again after 1980, the surviving members going off to their solo projects and various reconfigurations (often reviving elements of Zeppelin repertory), and Page overseeing the eventual remastering of their library across the 1990s. There were archival releases, including several box sets, a set of BBC performances, and a live collection in the early 21st century, but Bonham's death was effectively the end of the band. The surviving members did appear together, however, in a performance honoring the 50th anniversary of Atlantic Records; and in 2007, a one-off Led Zeppelin performance was announced, for a concert honoring the memory of Atlantic Records president and co-founder Ahmet Ertegun -- with Jason Bonham, John's son, in the drummer's spot -- to take place in London in November of 2007. ~ Bruce Eder & Charlotte Dillon, All Music Guide
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: John Bonham
Top
John Bonham

John Bonham in 1970
Background information
Birth name John Henry Bonham
Also known as Bonzo, The Beast
Born 31 May 1948(1948-05-31)
Redditch, Worcestershire, England
Died 25 September 1980 (aged 32)
Clewer, Windsor, England
Genres Hard rock, heavy metal, blues-rock, folk rock
Occupations Musician, songwriter
Instruments Drums, percussion
Years active 1962–1980
Labels Atlantic, Swan Song
Associated acts Led Zeppelin, Band of Joy, Paul McCartney
Website www.ledzeppelin.com

John Henry "Bonzo" Bonham (31 May 1948 – 25 September 1980) was an English drummer and songwriter, best known as the drummer of the band Led Zeppelin.

He was renowned for his power, fast right foot, distinctive sound and "feel" for the groove. He is widely considered to be one of the greatest drummers in the history of hard rock music by other musicians and commentators in the industry, and one of the most important and influential musicians of his era.

Bonham lived to the age of 32; he died on 25 September 1980 due to pulmonary edema.

Contents

Biography

Early years

Bonham was born on 31 May 1948, in Redditch, Worcestershire, England, to Joan and Jack Bonham.

He first learned how to play drums at the age of five, making a drum kit out of containers and coffee tins, imitating his idols Gene Krupa and Buddy Rich. His mother gave him a snare drum at the age of ten. He received his first proper drum kit from his father at the age of fifteen, a Premier Percussion kit. Bonham never took any formal drum lessons, though as a teen he would get advice from other Redditch drummers. While still at school, Bonham would occasionally perform as a stand-in drummer for bands such as the Blue Star Trio between 1962-63,[1] and Gerry Levene & the Avengers in 1963.[2]

Bonham attended Lodge Farm Secondary Modern School, where his headmaster once wrote in his school report card that "He will either end up a dustman or a millionaire".[3][4] After leaving school in 1964, he worked for his father as an apprentice carpenter[5] in between drumming for different local bands. In 1964, Bonham joined his first semi-professional band, Terry Webb and the Spiders, and met his future wife Pat Phillips around the same time. He also played in other Birmingham bands such as The Nicky James Movement, and The Senators, who released a moderately successful single "She's a Mod," in 1964. Bonham took up drumming full-time. Two years later, he joined A Way of Life, but the band soon became inactive. In desperation for a regular income, he joined a blues group called Crawling King Snakes whose lead singer was a young Robert Plant.

In 1967, A Way of Life asked Bonham to return to the group, and he agreed — though throughout this period, Plant kept in constant contact with Bonham. When Plant decided to form Band of Joy, Bonham was first choice as drummer. The band recorded a number of demos but no album. In 1968 American singer Tim Rose toured Britain and invited Band of Joy to open his concerts. When Rose returned for another tour months later, Bonham was formally invited by the singer to drum for his band, which gave him a regular income.

Led Zeppelin

Led Zeppelin in 1969. From left to right: John Bonham, Robert Plant, Jimmy Page, John Paul Jones

After the break-up of The Yardbirds, guitarist Jimmy Page met Robert Plant, who in turn suggested Bonham. Bonham already knew Plant, and knew Page from session work, as well as John Paul Jones. Page's choices for drummer included Procol Harum's B.J. Wilson, and session drummers Clem Cattini and Aynsley Dunbar. Ginger Baker was also rumoured to be on Page's list. However, upon seeing Bonham drum for Tim Rose in Hampstead, north London, in July 1968, Page and manager Peter Grant were instantly convinced that he was the perfect fit for the new project.

Despite an intensive campaign to snare the drummer, Bonham was initially reluctant to join the band.[6] Plant sent eight telegrams to Bonham's pub, the "Three Men in a Boat", in Walsall, which were followed by forty telegrams from Grant. However, at the same time he was also receiving lucrative offers from established artists Joe Cocker and Chris Farlowe. In the end, though, Bonham accepted Grant's offer. He later recalled, "I decided I liked their music better than Cocker's or Farlowe's."[7]

During Led Zeppelin's first tour of the United States in December 1968, Bonham became friends with Vanilla Fudge's drummer Carmine Appice. Appice introduced him to Ludwig Drums, which he then used for the rest of his career. Bonham used the longest and heaviest sticks available (size 2B), which he referred to as "trees." His hard hitting style was displayed to great effect on many Led Zeppelin songs, including "Immigrant Song" (Led Zeppelin III), "When the Levee Breaks" (Led Zeppelin IV / Zoso.svg), "Kashmir" (Physical Graffiti), "The Ocean" (Houses of the Holy), and "Achilles Last Stand" (Presence). The studio recording of "Misty Mountain Hop" perfectly captures his keen sense of dynamics, and this is similarly exhibited by his precise drumming on "No Quarter." On several cuts from later albums, Bonham rather adeptly handled funk and Latin-influenced drumming. Songs like "Royal Orleans" and "Fool in the Rain" are good examples, the latter displaying great skill with a New Orleans shuffle and a samba rhythm.

His famous drum solo, first entitled "Pat's Delight," later renamed "Moby Dick," would often last for half an hour and regularly featured his use of bare hands to achieve different sound effects. In Led Zeppelin concert tours after 1969, Bonham would expand his basic kit to include congas, orchestral timpani, and a symphonic gong. Bonham is also credited (by the Dallas Times Herald) with the first in-concert use of electronic timpani drum synthesizers (most likely made by Syndrum) during a performance of the song "Kashmir" in Dallas, Texas in 1977. Many modern rappers would later heavily sample his drumming and incorporate it into their compositions, such as Beastie Boys, who sampled "Moby Dick," "The Ocean," and "When the Levee Breaks."[8]

Performing in Madison Square Garden with Led Zeppelin in 1975

In 1974, Bonham appeared in the film Son of Dracula, playing drums in Count Downe's (Harry Nilsson) backing band. This was an Apple film directed by Freddie Francis. Bonham appeared in an overcrowded drum line-up including Keith Moon and Starr on the soundtrack album. Bonham's action sequence for the film The Song Remains the Same featured him in a drag race at Santa Pod Raceway to the sound of his signature drum solo, "Moby Dick".

During his time with Led Zeppelin, Bonham was also an avid collector of antique sports cars and motorcycles, which he kept on his family's farm called The Old Hyde. He even bought The Plough pub in the nearby village of Shenstone, which shows signs of conversion work to allow him to drive his bikes or cars right behind the bar. This was not, however, the pub featured in the film The Song Remains the Same. It was in fact the New Inn which is currently boarded up, the only clue to its famous past being a picture hanging close to the bar.[citation needed]

As well as recording with Led Zeppelin, Bonham also found time to play on sessions for other artists. In 1969 Bonham appeared on The Family Dogg's A Way of Life, with Page and Jones. Bonham also sessioned for Screaming Lord Sutch on his album Lord Sutch and Heavy Friends in 1970. He also played drums on Lulu's 1971 song "Everybody Clap," originally written by Maurice Gibb and Billy Lawrie. Later in his career, Bonham drummed for his Birmingham friend, Roy Wood, on his 1979 album, On the Road Again, and for Wings on Paul McCartney's Back to the Egg Rockestra project.

Death

On 25 September 1980, Bonham was picked up by Led Zeppelin assistant Rex King to attend rehearsals at Bray Studios for an upcoming tour of the U.S.; the band's first since 1977. During the journey Bonham had asked to stop for breakfast, where he downed four quadruple vodkas (roughly sixteen shots, amounting to about half of an imperial quart or 473 ml). He then continued to drink heavily when he arrived at the rehearsals. A halt was called to the rehearsals late in the evening and the band retired to Page's house, The Old Mill House in Clewer, Windsor. After midnight, Bonham had fallen asleep and was taken to bed and placed on his side. Benji LeFevre (who had replaced Richard Cole as Led Zeppelin's tour manager) and John Paul Jones found him dead the next afternoon.[9] Bonham was 32 years old.

Weeks later at the coroner's inquest, it emerged that in the 24 hours before he died, John Bonham had consumed forty shots of vodka which resulted in pulmonary edema: waterlogging of the lungs caused by inhalation of vomit. A verdict of accidental death was returned at an inquest held on 27 October.[9] An autopsy had found no other drugs in Bonham's body.[10] John Bonham was cremated and on 12 October 1980 interred at Rushock Parish Church, Worcestershire. His headstone reads:

Cherished memories of a loving husband and father, John Henry Bonham Who died Sept. 25th 1980. aged 32 years. He will always be remembered in our hearts, Goodnight my Love, God Bless.

John Bonham's gravestone

Despite media rumors that drummers including Cozy Powell, Carmine Appice, Barriemore Barlow, Simon Kirke or Bev Bevan, among others, would join the group as his replacement, the remaining members decided to disband Led Zeppelin after Bonham's death. They issued a press statement on 4 December 1980, confirming that the band would not continue without its drummer. "We wish it to be known that the loss of our dear friend and the deep respect we have for his family, together with the sense of undivided harmony felt by ourselves and our manager, have led us to decide that we could not continue as we were." It was simply signed "Led Zeppelin".[11]

Family

John Bonham had two siblings; his younger brother, Mick Bonham (1951–2000), was a disc jockey, author and photographer and his younger sister, Deborah Bonham (born in 1962), who is a singer-songwriter.

Bonham was married to Pat Phillips, and the couple had two children; his daughter Zoë Bonham (born 1975), who is a singer-songwriter and also appears regularly at Led Zeppelin conventions and awards and his son Jason Bonham (born 1966), a rock drummer who has gained success with various bands including Foreigner and Bonham. In December 2007, he played with Led Zeppelin on the Ahmet Ertegun Tribute Concert, as well as their previous reunion at the Atlantic Records 40th Anniversary show in 1988. A 1970 film clip of a four-year-old Jason playing drums appears in the Led Zeppelin film The Song Remains the Same. Zoë and Jason appeared at the induction ceremony for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1995 along with the surviving members of Led Zeppelin. His mother, Joan Bonham, is one of the lead vocalists for the Zimmers, [12] a 40-member band set up as a result of a BBC documentary on the treatment of the elderly.[13]

Bonham's cousin Billy Bonham (born 1950), also played keyboards for Terry Reid and Ace Kefford.[14]

Equipment

Drums

Bonham initially used Premier drums, but in the late 1960s was introduced to Ludwig drums by Carmine Appice of Vanilla Fudge. Throughout the remainder of his career, Bonham was a major endorser of Ludwig Drums. In concert, he used a wide range of different drum kits, but mostly of the same sizes. From 1970 onwards, he used a 14"x26" bass drum, which was the most identifiable part of his setup. He used 16"x16", 16"x18" and 20"x18" floor toms, while occasionally changing his tom sizes, which included sizes 12"x14", 10"x14", and 12"x15".

Studio and Touring Kit (1969–1970)

  • 14x12" Tom (mounted on snare stand, and later a Rogers mount was added)
  • 16x16" Floor Tom
  • 18x16" Floor Tom
  • 26x14" Bass Drum x2 (Used only briefly as can be seen in the Communication breakdown Promo)

Also included a 20" and a 22" floor tom which were rarely used due to their size)

Studio and Touring Kit (1970–1973)

  • Drums — Ludwig Green Sparkle
    • 14x10" Tom (mounted on a rail consolette mount)
    • 16x16" Floor Tom
    • 18x16" Floor Tom
    • 26x14" Bass Drum
    • 14x6.5" Ludwig Chrome Supraphonic 402 Snare
    • 29" Machine Timpani (1972+)
    • 29" 32" Universal Timpani (1972+)
    • Ludwig Speed King Bass pedal
  • John was known for telling the band that the Green Sparkle kit was his favourite and Best sounding kit, and it was used on all recordings from IV onwards, excluding Presence where he used the Silver Sparkle kit.
  • Used on Led Zeppelin IV and Houses of the Holy.

"The Song Remains The Same" Kit (1973–1975) [15]

  • Drums — Ludwig Amber Vistalite
    • 14"x10" Tom
    • 16x16" Floor Tom
    • 18x16" Floor Tom
    • 20x16" Floor Tom
    • 26x14" Bass Drum
    • 14x6.5" Ludwig Chrome Supraphonic 402 Snare
    • 29" Machine Timpani
    • 29" 32" Universal Timpani
    • Ludwig speed king bass pedal
  • A spare bass drum was kept, as these drums were renowned for cracking

Cymbals

Bonham used Paiste Cymbals exclusively. His cymbal setup, included Paiste Giant Beat cymbals until 1970. The Paiste Endorsement Agreement shows he experimented with cymbals including the 602 series before changing to a complete set of what is now the 2002 series in '71, which he used for the rest of his career. His setup:

  • 15" 2002 Sound Edge Hi-Hat
  • 24" 2002 Ride
  • 20" 2002 Medium Crash
  • 18" 2002 Crash (Switched to 18" 2002 Medium Crash in 1973)
  • 16" 2002 Medium Crash
  • 36-38" Symphonic Gong

Drum Heads

Bonham played Remo drum heads throughout his career. For his wood drums, he always used Remo Coated Emperors (or Ludwig equivalent) on his batter sides, while using coated ambassadors on the resonant side of his toms, and a diplomat or clear ambassador on the resonant side of his snare drum. The bass drums front head was always a medium weight head, for instance a Remo Coated Ambassador. The batter head was always tuned medium-tight, (almost jazz-like) and the resonate head was always tuned way up, for a full, round sound. He never put anything inside his bass drum (although his band members have said that he would sometimes fill it with crumpled tin foil, so that it would project). He only used a felt strip on the batter side occasionally. The bass drum heads were also tuned a lot higher than one would think. Some have claimed he used to make "Ritchie Rings" cut out of old drum heads for his front bass drum head, but this anomaly is simply the surrounding light producing a shadow from the hoop on the white drum head producing the ring effect (you can produce the same effect with a front bass drum head, as long as the head is coated).[citation needed]

On the vistalites he used Remo CS black dots on the batter side of the toms and the bass drum and clear ambassadors on the resonate side. The snare always had a coated emperor on the batter side and an ambassador or a diplomat on the snare side. He sometimes used a Gretsch 42-strand snare wires to fatten the snare sound.

Bass Drum Pedal

Bonham used Ludwig Speed King Pedal (AKA "Squeak king") (with tight spring tension) throughout his career. His trademark bass drum "triplets," — played interchangeably with doubles and singles — which are most notable in "Good Times Bad Times", were played on a single bass pedal, and not a double bass pedal. Unlike some contemporary drummers, Bonham did not use a double-bass drum kit. He did once own one (it was featured in the demo "Communication Breakdown"), but it was removed from his kit by the rest of the band. John Bonham did play double bass drums while the band was touring with the band Vanilla Fudge {as quoted by Carmine Appice.}

It is possible to hear the squeak of the pedal in several recordings, including "Since I've Been Loving You", "The Ocean", "The Rain Song", "Houses of the Holy", "Ten Years Gone", "Bonzo's Montreux" and the live version of "I Can't Quit You Baby" on Coda and "All My Love" on In Through The Out Door. Jimmy Page later commented:

The only real problem I can remember encountering was when we were putting the first boxed set together. There was an awfully squeaky bass drum pedal on "Since I've Been Loving You". It sounds louder and louder every time I hear it! [laughs]. That was something that was obviously sadly overlooked at the time.[16]

Tribute Kits

In 2005, Ludwig began issuing Bonham reissue kits in green sparkle maple and amber Vistalite. Ludwig currently offers various "Zep Kits" in their Vistalite, Classic, and Accent lines, with 26" bass drums, a 13" or 14" tom mounted on a snare stand, and 16" and 18" floor toms. In 2007 they issued a limited edition stainless steel kit similar to the ones Bonham used on the last Led Zeppelin tours in the 1970s. The stainless steel shells were manufactured by Ronn Dunnett of Dunnett Classic Drums.

References

  1. ^ Welch, Chris (2001). John Bonham: A Thunder of Drums. San Francisco, Calif.: Backbeat. p. 19. ISBN 0-87930-658-0. 
  2. ^ Bonham, Mick (2005). John Bonham: The Powerhouse Behind Led Zeppelin. London: Southbank Publ.. p. 31. ISBN 1-90491-511-6. 
  3. ^ Ian Fortnam, "Dazed & confused", Classic Rock Magazine: Classic Rock Presents Led Zeppelin, 2008, p. 38.
  4. ^ Chris Welch and Geoff Nicholls (2001), John Bonham: A Thunder of Drums, page 15.Google books (limited extracts) Retrieved 2008-09-07
  5. ^ ibid, page 18.
  6. ^ Erlewine, Stephen Thomas. "Led Zeppelin Biography". Allmusic. http://allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=11:wifexqe5ldde~T1. Retrieved 2008-11-11. 
  7. ^ Davis, Stephen (4 July 1985). "Power, Mystery And The Hammer Of The Gods: The Rise and Fall of Led Zeppelin". Rolling Stone (451). http://www.rollingstone.com/artists/ledzeppelin/articles/story/17537975/power_mystery_and_the_hammer_of_the_gods. Retrieved 2008-01-15. 
  8. ^ Duffell, Daniel. Making Music with Samples (2005): 181
  9. ^ a b Chris Welch (1994) Led Zeppelin, London: Orion Books. ISBN 0-85797-930-3, pp. 92–94.
  10. ^ John Bonham Biography
  11. ^ Mick Wall (2005). No Way Out. pp. 86. 
  12. ^ Joan Bonham
  13. ^ Probably the oldest rock band in the world
  14. ^ "Happening! February 1970". Marmalade Skies: The Home of British Psychedelia. marmalade-skies.co.uk. 28 November 1999. http://www.marmalade-skies.co.uk/feb1970.htm. Retrieved 2009-03-27. 
  15. ^ The drums were switched out depending upon the night and what Bonham felt like using — according to A Thunder of Drums
  16. ^ Interview with Jimmy Page, Guitar World magazine, 1993

Sources

  • Bonham, Mick (2005). John Bonham: The Powerhouse Behind Led Zeppelin. Southbank Publishing. ISBN 1-904915-11-6
  • Bonham, Mick (2003). Bonham by Bonham: My Brother John. Solihull: Icarus Publications. ISBN 0-9545717-0-3
  • Welch, Chris & Nicholls, Geoff (2001). John Bonham: A Thunder of Drums. San Francisco: Backbeat Books. ISBN 0-87930-658-0

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "John Bonham" Read more