No Introduction Necessary [Deluxe Edition]

Rate It! Avg: 3.5 (46 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 20   Total Length: 61:22

eMusic Review

Avatar Image
George Smith

eMusic Contributor

10.28.05
Antic party fun set to hard rock, featuring most of Led Zeppelin.
2005 | Label: Cleopatra Records / The Orchard

The last six tunes on No Introduction Necessary come from 1970's Lord Sutch & Heavy Friends, an album dubbed "the worst of all time" in a BBC poll about a year before Sutch committed suicide. That's harsh. Anyway, also reissued in 2002 on Wounded Bird, the Sutch record featured most of Led Zeppelin, who are unmistakable on "Thumping Beat" and even in the jaunty "Union Jack Car." David Sutch is (or was) antic party fun set to hard rock with everyone cheerfully going along for the ride.

Write a Review4 Member Reviews

Please log in before you review a release. Log in

user avatar

the 70's weren't all that great

ernie-c

this just proves that the great albums in the 70's were great, but there was just as much crap then as there is now.

user avatar

check the songs

wbcxmidniteradio

This is Page BEFORE the Led Zep years when he played guitar on nearly everyone's records. this is not NEW Jimmy Page stuff. Morons.

user avatar

Sad

jdcraig5

This is the Jimmy Page of Led Zepplin? Let him rest in peace. Lesson learned. Don't play after your prime if this is all you have.

user avatar

A few interesting tunes

BFrank

The last 6 songs on this album are taken from the "classic" 1970 release, "Lord Sutch & Heavy Friends". These are all the tunes from that album that Page played on. The rest of "No Introduction" seem to be made up of early pop/rock-a-billy tunes that Page contributed to pre-Yardbirds. The original "Heavy Friends" album was a motley collection of rock stars of the day (including John Bonham, Jeff Beck, Nicky Hopkins and Noel Redding) doing their best to support the embarassing vocals of Lord Sutch. It's one of those "so bad, it's good" albums (otherwise known as "guilty pleasures"). Check it out.

Recommended Albums

eMusic Features

Icon: Led Zeppelin

By Lenny Kaye

They were the grandest example of rock become classic, both in the outreach of their many musical wanderings and the exemplary lifestyle they led while zepping the road, dominating the '70s. The amazing thing, listened to 30 years on, is how truly strange their recorded work is, how it set the bar for skewed virtuosic guitar, vocal pyrotechniques, stolidity of beat and bass orchestrating like a keyboard, a band in the truest sense of the… more »

They Say All Media Guide

Before the name Jimmy Page became synonymous with hard rock guitar, the guitarist was a much sought-after session player in London — appearing on a variety of artists’ recordings. Some were well known (the Kinks, the Who, etc.), but quite a few were obscurities — which serves as the basis for the 20-track No Introduction Necessary [Deluxe Edition]. Although Led Zeppelin touched upon a variety of musical styles throughout their career, the first 14 tracks could all be neatly placed in the 1960s rock & roll/pop genre — the amps are certainly not cranked to ten here. But you do get a glimpse into Page’s playing as a ‘hired gun’ — “Lovin’ Up a Storm” and “Boll Weevil Song” are enjoyable (yet not exactly ‘must-hear’) selections. Closer to the hard rock sound you expect from Page are several tracks that close out the collection, which are taken from the obscure 1970 Screaming Lord Sutch recording, Lord Sutch and Heavy Friends. Page produces and plays on the record (even co-penning a few tracks), and while the music does reflect early Led Zeppelin at times (John Bonham also plays), the vocals of Screaming Lord Sutch don’t come close to matching up to those of Robert Plant. Overall, not a bad compilation of Page’s early playing. – Greg Prato

more »