Beck, Page, Hopkins, Jones, and Moon were pleased with the outcome of the recording session and there was talk of forming a working group and additional recordings. This led to the famous quip, "Yeah, it'll go down like a lead zeppelin", which Page later used, with a slight spelling change, for his new group. Page ascribed it to Moon, while Beck's and
Led Zeppelin's later manager
Peter Grant claimed Moon used the phrase "go down like a lead balloon", to which Entwistle added "more like a lead zeppelin". Group biographer Keith Shadwick notes that forming an actual group at the time "was never a realistic option", due to existing contractual obligations. backstage in West Germany, 1967 For all their attempts at secrecy, Townshend learned of Moon's move. Beck recalled, "I remember [Pete] Townshend looking daggers at me when he heard it ... because it was a bit near the mark. He didn't want anybody meddling with that territory [his band, the Who] at all". Townshend also took to referring to Beck and Page as "flashy little guitarists of very little brain" for their perceived subterfuge (Page responded with "Townshend got into feedback because he couldn't play single notes"). In a later interview, Townshend explained Differences with Moon were resolved and he returned to the Who shortly after the recording. One month later, Page joined the Yardbirds and together with Beck became one of the first dual-lead guitar teams in popular rock. In 1968, Hopkins became a member of
the Jeff Beck Group and for performances of "Beck's Bolero" during their first US tour in June, singer
Rod Stewart played the rhythm guitar part. Also in 1968, Page started Led Zeppelin with Jones. Page incorporated some of the melody line and bolero rhythm into the medley portion of "
How Many More Times" for the
Led Zeppelin debut album. "Beck's Bolero" appears on various "best of" lists and in
Guitar Masters: Intimate Portraits, Alan di Perna describes it as "one of the great rock instrumentals, epic in scope, harmonically and rhythmically ambitious yet infused with primal energy". The May 1966 recording pre-dated other mid-1960s hard rock/
psychedelic rock milestones, such as the formation of
Cream,
Jimi Hendrix's arrival in England,
the Beatles'
Revolver album, and the rise of the
San Francisco Sound. Guitarist
Mike Bloomfield recalled that "Beck's Bolero" had a "significant impact on Jimi Hendrix, who named it among his favorite tracks". Beck recalled performing a live version with Hendrix on lead guitar, but a recording has not been forthcoming. According to
Paul Hornsby, who played with
Duane Allman in
Hour Glass in 1967–1968 before
the Allman Brothers Band, "Beck's Bolero" inspired Allman to take up slide guitar. After hearing Beck's record, Allman "loved that slide part and told me he was going to learn to play it", Hornsby recalled. In 1970,
Joe Walsh adapted the slide-guitar section of "Beck's Bolero" for a
James Gang song. Titled "The Bomber", the multi-part suite also includes a rendition of Ravel's
Boléro and appears on the
James Gang Rides Again album. == Personnel ==