Becoming Led Zeppelin

The Documentation

Some music documentaries tell you why a band matters. Becoming Led Zeppelin just lets it happen.

This isn’t a behind-the-music exposé – no scandalous detours, no dirt-digging. Instead, it’s a clean, carefully assembled history. A film that understands Led Zeppelin’s story doesn’t need embellishment to be interesting. The band’s formation, their relentless early touring, their creative philosophy, their refusal to play by industry rules. All unfolds in a way that’s patient, immersive and strangely elegant.

What makes Becoming Led Zeppelin special is its restraint. It doesn’t oversell the myth. It just connects stray dots across vast distances. Showing how Jimmy Page’s disciplined career as a session musician intersected with Robert Plant’s wandering, near-destitute bluesman existence. How John Bonham’s monstrous drumming, fine-tuned from endless small club gigs, gave Zeppelin their engine. Their first album wasn’t a fluke but a precise and calculated creation. It was built by four people who had already invested their 10,000 hours.

Best Left Unsaid

The film is packed with footage – early performances, studio work, tour clips. But it also knows when to let moments breathe. A perfect example: we see Jimmy Page using a violin bow on his guitar multiple times. We hear what it does, we see the technique – but nobody in the film ever explains it. Same goes for Plant’s vocals. Nobody outright says, “These early lyrics were improvised,” but the evidence is there. The film trusts you to pick up on it.

Zeppelin didn’t just play music – they played against history. While humanity was landing on the Moon, LZ was burning down concert houses on Earth. Their timeline and mythology seem almost deliberately intertwined. Additionally, the way they conquered America wasn’t by appeasing radio stations or chasing hit singles. They tore through it by playing live. They succeeded by being an album band in a singles era and a performance band in a radio era.

There’s a looseness to the storytelling that works. No cheap nostalgia grabs, no faux-deep analysis – just a methodical unraveling of how this band came to be. The camaraderie is the most striking part. Page’s instrumental mastery combining with Plant’s unique improvisational vocals.

When performing at music festivals, Bonham would often mirror the techniques of fellow drummers – and visa versa. Similarly, Plant’s air guitar solos mimicked Page’s riffs with sheer enthusiasm.

These moments, though different in form, were both flavors of the same phenomenon. This was an intuitive connection that bridged musical styles, personalities, and performance styles. It added layers to Zeppelin’s raw energy. These guys weren’t just in a band – they were obsessed with music. They refined, expanded and lived inside of it.

The Truth

Does it drag in the final stretch? Sure. Most documentaries do. But that’s a minor flaw for a film that’s more about absorption than revelation.

If you enjoy a well-crafted documentary, Becoming Led Zeppelin is worth seeing. Even if Zeppelin isn’t your favorite band. The musical craftsmanship is impressive. The obsession and sheer commitment to doing things their way make it all fascinating to watch unfold.

Like all great things, Becoming Led Zeppelin knows exactly where to end.

★★★★ ★★★★

TLDR? Short editorials located at IMDb and Letterboxd. Or read up on another doc at An Inconvenient Truth.


Discover more from Stephen Tier

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Have thoughts? Comment, please.