Ralph Hulett’s fascination with Led Zeppelin ignited when his friend and musician, Clyde Johnson, introduced him to the band’s self-titled debut album in 1969.
“It was just this mind-paralyzing sound — a musical hypnosis that dragged you in,” Hulett said. “It was a blender full of different music elements and was very different from what everyone else was doing at the time.
“Zeppelin was more interested in being visionaries and blowing listeners’ minds with their musical art than pleasing critics.”
Hulett had been a fan of Jimmy Page since his days as the Yardbirds’ guitarist, but found the new sound Page created with vocalist Robert Plant, bassist John Paul Jones and drummer John Bonham to be greater than anything he’d ever heard.