Posted on 11/13/2023 1:03:29 PM PST by Red Badger
Exactly 52 years after the release of Led Zeppelin’s fourth studio album—widely referred to as Led Zeppelin IV—the identity of the man gracing its cover has been revealed, The Guardian and The New York Times report. The cover artwork famously features an elderly man hinged at the waist, weighed down by a bale of long twigs strapped to his back. Now, a research fellow in South West England named Brian Edwards has discovered that the original source of the scene: a late Victorian era photograph of a Wiltshire thatcher named Lot Long.
A visiting research fellow with the regional history center at the University of the West of England, Edwards came across the photograph while he was perusing a Victorian photo album at an auction house, per The New York Times. He instantly recognized Long as the mysterious man on the cover of Led Zeppelin IV, an album to which he’s been listening since it was released in 1971. The photograph was captured by Ernest Farmer, who is now the subject of an exhibition at the Wiltshire Museum, which includes the image of Long.
Edwards’ discovery is notable not only because it reveals the identity of the bearded thatcher, but also because, for many years, the image was widely believed to be a painting. Led Zeppelin’s record sleeve depicts a re-colored version of the image hanging in a frame on a wall, which Robert Plant and Jimmy Page found in an antique shop in the village of Pangbourne, as legend has it. The source photograph is black and white, and the colorized version has never been recovered.
Additional research into Lot Long suggests that he was born in Mere in 1823 and died in 1893, as the Wiltshire Museum point out on their website. At the time the photograph was taken, he was a widower living in a cottage in Shaftesbury Road, Mere.
The Wiltshire Museum’s upcoming exhibition of Ernest Farmer photographs will focus on other images that Edwards came across during his research, including portraits of rural workers from the period.
Led Zeppelin IV album cover
Cool photo. Thanks.
What a way to make a living.
You forgot his cousin - So
Couldn’t they have just asked the designer of the album cover where he got his material from?
Who is John Galt?
Well, at least we’ve know who the waitress is on Supertramp Breakfast in America. No lost sleep over that.
Who did they steal it from?
Red Bull gives you wings.
I did a little research. The painting is called “Evening: The Fall of Day” and was painted in 1869 by William Rimmer.
When I was a kid, I imagined it to be Icarus, with his wings melting off.
It was referred to as the Runes album, back in the day.
I wonder if he got a big fat royalty check?
I prefer my 12 cups of black coffee every morning. LOL.
Remember Lot’s wife.
One if the first albums I bought. And one if the few I bought in vinyl, cassette, 8 track, CD, and now its on my phone in digital.
Probably one of those albums you would take to the proverbial “desert island.”
I didn’t know about British copyright laws…but it would have been “in the public domain” in the US.
Well the old man deserves reparations or back pay.
There are slow news days, and there are sssslllllloooooooowwwwwwwwww news days.
I’ll bet that old tired guy was just peachy keen happy to be slaving away under a heavy burden when some fool tourist took his picture, though. 😆
LOL
I have that album.
Oh, the humanity.
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