The Black Crowes and Jimmy Page revisit a unique 25-year-old live set
[April 16, 2025]
By MARK KENNEDY
NEW YORK (AP) — One of the more puzzling live albums of all time came
out in 2000. It featured songs from a two-night stand with The Black
Crowes and Led Zeppelin icon Jimmy Page. But fans hoping to hear “Hard
to Handle” or “She Talks to Angels” were out of luck. Bizarrely, not a
single Black Crowes song was on it.
Twenty-five years later, that misstep has been fixed. The 36-track
“Jimmy Page & The Black Crowes: Live at the Greek,” restores 16
previously unreleased songs and offers a better window into a unique
trans-Atlantic rock combination.
“The whole project was special, very electric for us, very something
very alive,” says singer-songwriter Chris Robinson. “I think we were all
— for lack of a better word — just abuzz with what we were doing as a
band, as an outfit together.”
The live tracks were recorded at The Greek Theatre in Los Angeles over
two nights in October 1999. It captured musicians who were cooking after
previous stops at New York City's Roseland Ballroom; the Centrum in
Worcester, Massachusetts; and The Palace of Auburn Hills in Michigan.
“I think we really felt like it wasn’t the Black Crowes with Jimmy Page.
It was one thing, it was one group,” says Chris Robinson. “We really
felt connected and tied. I just think we just had a really high energy
level, and we knew we were onto something that was powerful.”
An album missing something
The album that came out had Zeppelin tunes like “Celebration Day,” “In
My Time of Dying” and “Whole Lotta Love,” as well as old blues and R&B
standards like “Woke Up This Morning,” “Sloppy Drunk,” “Mellow Down
Easy” and “Shake Your Money Maker,” plus the Yardbirds′ “Shape of Things
to Come” and Fleetwood Mac’s “Oh Well.”

But no Black Crowes songs were included due to contractual reasons: The
band had just left their label and weren't allowed to use anything from
their catalog.
“We were happy with what came out. We were bummed that we weren’t able
legally to put our songs on the record,” says songwriter and guitarist
Rich Robinson. Adds his brother Chris: “I wasn’t surprised by how inept
that decision was.”
“I felt really bad about that because they extended this hand of
friendship that I could come and join the band,” says Page. “I felt
really sad because I knew the versions that we did were really good of
their songs.”
The anniversary edition of “Live at the Greek” includes the once-dropped
Black Crowes' tunes “No Speak No Slave,” ”Hard to Handle," “Wiser Time,"
“Remedy” and a version of “She Talks to Angels,” which Rich Robinson
says Page took "to a totally different direction and a new level.”
Zeppelin tunes like “Misty Mountain Hop” and “Bring It on Home” are also
included.
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Chris Robinson, left, and Rich Robinson, center, of The Black
Crowes, appear with Jimmy Page of Led Zeppelin in London on April 2,
2025. (Ross Halfin via AP)
 In addition to Page and the
brothers, the band on stage included Sven Pipien on bass, Eddie
Harsch on keyboards, Audley Freed on guitar and Steve Gorman on
drums. Page says he felt loose and connected with the guys.
“In the past, whenever I knew it was going to be recorded, say in
the Zeppelin days, I’d always get really nervous,” he says. “But
with this, I didn’t have any of that anxiety or anything. We were on
a wave.”
Hits and some soundchecks
Fans will delight in the restored songs but also in some outtakes,
including five songs at soundcheck and the never-before-released
song Rich Robinson and Page wrote while jamming, called simply
“Jams.”
“I think the surprises are the things that really excite us as
well,” says Chris Robinson. “We didn’t even know that we had this
extra material or the other things that we hadn’t really thought
about until this project came around.”
The concerts at The Greek capture a partnership that would endure.
Page and the Crowes would go on a full-length American tour in the
summer of 2000 and are friends today.
“We were all then joined in the hip when we were playing, and it was
just such a joyful event to for me to be playing with these guys,
and I guess them to be playing with me, too,” says Page.
The album re-release comes as The Black Crowes are enjoying a
creative patch, earning their second career Grammy nod last year for
“Happiness Bastards,” nominated for best rock album alongside the
Rolling Stones.
Chris Robinson is philosophical about the timing of the anniversary
release. Despite the songs sitting in a vault for a quarter of a
century, he's just happy they can now be heard.
“I do have a firm belief that things happen when they’re supposed to
happen because they’re supposed to happen," he says. "And if you
play around with that too much, it might not have the same
resonance, you know?”
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