Publishers Weekly
11/11/2013
The mystique surrounding 65-year-old Robert Plant—a man who reimagined the role of rock star while in Led Zeppelin—makes it nearly impossible to write the singer's first comprehensive biography, and an unauthorized one at that. British veteran music journalist Rees attempts to find a balance between the man, the myth, the music, and the darkness, but he ultimately delivers a piece of general reportage with intermittent moments of drama and clarity. The one-time editor of Kerrang! and Q magazines gleaned details from other books and articles, as well as his own previous conversations with Plant and many of Plant's former classmates, band mates, and tour mates—some who weren't afraid to speak candidly and critically. Even as a mischievous English grammar-school student, Plant had the talent and looks that eventually propelled him to self-described "golden god" status. He sang in regional bands before guitarist Jimmy Page recruited him for a new group that became Led Zeppelin. Groupies, drugs, and tragedy followed as Zeppelin's legend grew. The band dissolved after drummer John Bonham's death in 1980, and Plant reemerged as an ever-evolving solo artist who kept his distance from Zeppelin, rarely reuniting with his former band mates. This book is billed as the singer's definitive story, but that will remain untold until Plant writes it himself. Agent: Matthew Hamilton, Aitkin Alexander Associates. (Oct.)
From the Publisher
Rees informs and entertains . . . leav[ing] few stones in Plant’s life unturned. — MOJO
Anyone seeking insight into Robert Plant as a man and musician will find it here. — Q Magazine
Particularly enlightening on Plant’s formative pre-Zep years in the Midlands, A Life puts the singer’s eclectic career into clear context. — Dave Lewis, Tight But Loose magazine
Dave Lewis
Particularly enlightening on Plant’s formative pre-Zep years in the Midlands, A Life puts the singer’s eclectic career into clear context.
MOJO
Rees informs and entertains . . . leav[ing] few stones in Plant’s life unturned.
Q Magazine
Anyone seeking insight into Robert Plant as a man and musician will find it here.
Kirkus Reviews
2013-11-13
By-the-numbers biography of the shaggy rocker. Unfortunately, former Q and Kerrang! editor Rees hits nearly every rock-bio cliché. As his yarn opens, we find an aging Plant, frontman of Led Zeppelin, world-weary, "the weight of history pressing down upon him; the burden of all the demons he had come here to put to rest at last." Then the perfunctory career review begins: Midlands boy grows up in a bombed-out, gritty industrial landscape, the child of music-loving (but classical music, mind you) parents, hears Elvis--and, more to the point, Bill Haley and His Comets--and is turned into a faux American. As Rees rightly notes, Plant, initially known in Britain as the hippie's hippie, is a shrewd and bookish fellow who refuses to be pinned down. He made his fortune as a singer of heavy rock, but, as folk-rock idol Roy Harper says, "Robust Planet" was smart not to do the same old rock thing in the 30-odd years post-Zep, instead searching endlessly on the musical horizon for the next thing to do. (The current next thing is a blend of Middle Eastern and Americana, a pleasingly contradictory sound.) Plant, who at 65 "is now eligible for a bus pass and a state pension" in Britain, is a serious enough musician to warrant a serious biography, though perhaps it's payback for thudding anthems like "Kashmir" and "Immigrant Song" to have a life story clotted with thudding prose along the lines of "His path was set," "In many respects 1965 was to be a pivotal year," and "He heard the screams, smelt the sex and sensed the power that could be bestowed upon the man with the microphone." For die-hard fans only. Zeppelin fanatics will want to turn to Stephen Davis' hoary Hammer of the Gods (1985), which, though covering only the band and not Plant's solo decades, isn't as painful to read.