Friday, May 1, 2026

Hot Chocolate co‑founder and You Sexy Thing co‑writer dead at 78

Tony Wilson, the bassist, songwriter and co‑founder of Hot Chocolate, has died at the age of 78. His...

Latest Posts

Is Beyoncé’s rock album going to feature a cameo from Stevie Nicks?

Beyoncé has sent the BeyHive into full detective mode after uploading a new video to her website — and fans are now...

Lizzo unleashes B**** and a wild circus video

Lizzo has unveiled the title track from her upcoming album B****, giving fans the latest preview of her newly announced third studio...

Zara Larsson rallies a global girl gang for Midnight Sun: Girls Trip remix takeover

Zara Larsson is keeping her Midnight Sun momentum blazing with a brand‑new project — and this time, she’s brought an entire international...

Madonna and Sabrina Carpenter turn up the heat with Bring Your Love

Madonna has released her hotly anticipated Sabrina Carpenter duet, Bring Your Love, from her upcoming Confessions II album. The...

‘I don’t think I was difficult to work with’: Jimmy Page is a perfectionist

Jimmy Page is always “striving to be better”.

The Led Zeppelin guitarist is a perfectionist and despite being in the music business for more than six decades, the 79-year-old rocker doesn’t get it right all the time.

Asked if he’s as much of a perfectionist about the music business side as he is with the music itself, he replied: “God, no! But that perfectionism applied to everything, to be honest.”

Quizzed on whether he’s difficult to work with, he responded: “No. I don’t think I was at all.”

When asked if his bandmates – including Robert Plant, John Paul Jones, and the late John Bonham – ever found him difficult to work with, he admitted he never got that impression from them.

He told Guitar Player magazine: “I don’t know if anyone thought I was.”

Jimmy added: “You’re always trying to strive to be better and better and better. That’s all there is to it. And sometimes, whatever you’ve done isn’t good enough. Do better, do better. But, you know, that’s my own thing. And I haven’t changed. That’s how I am.”

Meanwhile, Jimmy previously admitted he doesn’t think Led Zeppelin would exist today because of the immediacy of the online world.

The musician found working in the 1970s a “fun time as a creative musician” because the ‘Stairway to Heaven’ hitmakers were able to experiment with their sound and introduce new material at gigs without worrying it would leak any further than the venue.

He explained: “We used to throw songs into the live set that we hadn’t recorded yet, just for fun.

“We did that with ‘Immigrant Song’ at Bath Festival in 1970, and nobody had heard anything like it. You don’t have that freedom now because it would be posted online immediately. It was a fun time as a creative musician, a fun time to be in a band.”

The band ended in 1980 when drummer John passed away but they have reunited for special one-off performances, most recently in 2007.

Latest Posts

Is Beyoncé’s rock album going to feature a cameo from Stevie Nicks?

Beyoncé has sent the BeyHive into full detective mode after uploading a new video to her website — and fans are now...

Lizzo unleashes B**** and a wild circus video

Lizzo has unveiled the title track from her upcoming album B****, giving fans the latest preview of her newly announced third studio...

Zara Larsson rallies a global girl gang for Midnight Sun: Girls Trip remix takeover

Zara Larsson is keeping her Midnight Sun momentum blazing with a brand‑new project — and this time, she’s brought an entire international...

Madonna and Sabrina Carpenter turn up the heat with Bring Your Love

Madonna has released her hotly anticipated Sabrina Carpenter duet, Bring Your Love, from her upcoming Confessions II album. The...

Don't Miss

Iron Maiden won’t retire

Iron Maiden won't retire. Although the English heavy metal band plan to take a break in 2027 after their...

Cara Delevingne signs deal with Warner Music

Cara Delevingne has signed a deal with Warner Music. The 33-year-old model and actress is set to branch out...

Kneecap say undercover police, banned songs and Belfast politics shaped their rise

Kneecap have lifted the lid on the chaos, politics and undercover‑police chases that shaped their early years, revealing how their breakout tracks...

Ringo Starr says Beatles bandmates ‘laughed hysterically’ at his early songwriting

Ringo Starr has admitted his earliest stabs at songwriting didn’t exactly impress the rest of The Beatles — and the band would...

Shed Seven confirm new album as Rick Witter says fresh songs are ready to record

Shed Seven are wasting no time after their huge chart comeback — frontman Rick Witter has revealed the band already have “a...

Stay in touch

To be updated with all the latest news, offers and special announcements.