John Bonham is still regularly voted in polls as the greatest and most
influential rock drummer of all time, an opinion which has also been
expressed by the likes of
Roger Taylor of
Queen,
Dave Grohl of
Nirvana and
Chad Smith of the
Red Hot Chili Peppers.
He started playing drums at the age of five using a makeshift kit and
later progressed to real drums. His influences included great American
jazz drummers such as
Gene Krupa and
Buddy Rich. He played in a series of bands
and formed an association with
Robert Plant
through Band of Joy, who combined blues, psychedelics and extended
musical workouts. According to Plant: "Bonzo was totally and absolutely
devoted to getting it right. Everything that he listened to he could go
beyond, not only could he recreate it but he could take it somewhere
new. He knew that he was a powerhouse among drummers... we seemed to
have a great affinity for each other."
Although Bonham and Plant went their separate ways after Band of Joy,
they reunited in The Yardbirds, which already featured
Jimmy Page.
John Paul Jones joined and this
led to the formation of
Led Zeppelin, who
released their first album in 1969. They went on to become the biggest
rock band of the 1970s, achieving extraordinary success in the United
States in particular.
Bonham died aged 32 in 1980. He had a reputation as a heavy drinker and
had consumed too much vodka in the 24 hours before his death, which
caused vomiting and asphyxiation. The coroner returned a verdict of
accidental death. Led Zeppelin announced they were finished as a band.
According to Page, the band could not have continued without him, he
was so integral to their sound. They didn't play again as Led Zeppelin
until
Live Aid (1985), which
included Plant's solo drummer
Phil Collins and The Power
Station's
Tony Thompson
replacing him in a performance which has been disowned by the band.
Bonham's son,
Jason Bonham, has
become a successful drummer himself and a member of Led Zeppelin for
subsequent reunion performances.