Ulteriori informazioni
Informationen zum Autor Stephen Davis, BS, MS, is a veteran of the US Army, where he served as a medic, and spent 22 years in fire and emergency services, rising to the rank of Division Chief. With over 25 years of experience in leadership, Stephen is a decorated public servant, now meeting the needs of families around the world as the co-founder of The Raising Alphas Project, a parenting movement dedicated to raising the next generation of mighty leaders. Based in the Central Florida area, Stephen's greatest joy is his family, with his beautiful wife, Veronika, and their two alpha sons, Caiden and Kai. Klappentext A revealing insider's account of Led Zeppelin's 1975 North American tour from the bestselling author of Hammer of the Gods . As a young music journalist in 1975, Stephen Davis got the opportunity of a lifetime: an invitation to cover the sold-out 1975 North American tour of Led Zeppelin for a national magazine. He received a backstage pass, was granted interviews with band members, and even got a prized seat on the band's luxurious tour jet, The Starship. While on duty, he chronicled the Zeppelin tour in three notebooks, but after writing his article in 1975 he misplaced them. Three decades later, he finally found the notebooks and unearthed a vivid account of the band members' extravagant, and often troubled, lives on tour. Tied together by Davis's entertaining narrative, and including more than forty never-before-published photographs, LZ-'75 is an unprecedented and comprehensive personal portrait of the greatest (and most notoriously press-shy) rock band in history at its apex. A revealing insider's account of Led Zeppelin's 1975 North American tour from the bestselling author of Hammer of the Gods . As a young music journalist in 1975, Stephen Davis got the opportunity of a lifetime: an invitation to cover the sold-out 1975 North American tour of Led Zeppelin for a national magazine. He received a backstage pass, was granted interviews with band members, and even got a prized seat on the band's luxurious tour jet, The Starship. While on duty, he chronicled the Zeppelin tour in three notebooks, but after writing his article in 1975 he misplaced them. Three decades later, he finally found the notebooks and unearthed a vivid account of the band members' extravagant, and often troubled, lives on tour. Tied together by Davis's entertaining narrative, and including more than forty never-before-published photographs, LZ-'75 is an unprecedented and comprehensive personal portrait of the greatest (and most notoriously press-shy) rock band in history at its apex. ...