THE BEATLES And THE ROLLING STONES Didn’t Like LED ZEPPELIN’s First Album, A Perfect Conflict Of Generations

Led Zeppelin

Yeah, my child of the night. Rock has its conflicts of generations as well. The older generation disdain the new just because they are the news. Have you heard? The Beatles guitarist George Harrison and The Rolling Stones vocalist Mick Jagger had the pleasure to listen to Led Zep’s debut album at first hand, but you know what? They disliked it. Go see…

Glyn Johns, the man who handled the engineering duties on Led Zeppelin‘s 1969 eponymous debut album, talked to SiriusXM:

“I was working with The Stones around the same time this record [‘Led Zeppelin‘] was made. We were putting together [1968’s] ‘The Rolling Stones Rock and Roll Circus,’ which was a TV show which had a lot of different artists on it.

“Just after I’d finished this record [‘Led Zeppelin‘], I was going to a production meeting for that [‘The Rolling Stones Rock and Roll Circus’].

“We were all kicking around ideas of who should be on it and I took this record and played it at the production meeting to Mick [Jagger]. ‘Jimmy [Page] put this band together with John Paul Jones. It’s gonna be absolutely huge!’

“But Mick didn’t get one side of it. Probably still doesn’t.

“I also was working with The Beatles and on my way home from a Beatles session – George Harrison and I lived in the same direction and went past Olympic Studios [in London, UK], which is where I made the [Zeppelin] record.

“I said to him as we left Apple, ‘You should come, follow me to Olympic so I can play you something.’ I got the master out and I went into the studio – in which no-one was in – and I played a bit of the record to him.

“And he didn’t get one side of it either. He thought it was awful.”