The Day Joe Walsh Handed Jimmy Page His Most Legendary Guitar

For any true musician, an instrument is never just a tool. It becomes a voice, a way to speak without words. Jimmy Page, like many great players, owned countless guitars throughout his career, but a few of them carried stories that shaped his sound — and rock history itself.

Even before Led Zeppelin, Page understood the importance of tone. As a young but seasoned session player, he knew no one could last in the studio without mastering the craft of sound. By the time he joined The Yardbirds, Page was developing his own guitar language, one that leaned on his trusty Fender Telecaster. With it, he blended blues-rock and psychedelia on songs like “Heart Full of Soul,” a hint of the fire that would later define Zeppelin.

Once Led Zeppelin took off, the Telecaster stayed with him, powering early classics such as “Good Times Bad Times.” But as Zeppelin’s sound grew heavier and more ambitious, Page realized he needed an instrument that could take him further.

That’s where Joe Walsh entered the story. Long before joining the Eagles, Walsh had made his mark with the James Gang and had even shared the stage with Jimi Hendrix. During this time, he became friends with Page. Sensing that Page needed a different kind of guitar, Walsh offered him a Gibson Les Paul Standard.

Page hesitated at first, but the moment he plugged it in, everything changed. Reflecting on it later, he said:

“With the Les Paul, you’d get feedback through the amp and speakers, but you could control it more easily and work with it. You could change the literal note and frequency that was coming back on the feedback. I just really enjoyed playing Joe’s guitar. So I agreed with him that maybe I should buy his Les Paul Standard after all. I played [it] on ‘Whole Lotta Love’ and ‘What Is and What Should Never Be’ and that decided it for me.”

That decision altered the course of Zeppelin’s sound. While the Telecaster was still part of his arsenal, the Les Paul became Page’s weapon of choice, driving the heavier, more experimental tones on Led Zeppelin II. Songs like “Whole Lotta Love” didn’t just push Zeppelin forward — they helped define the very sound of 1970s hard rock.

Walsh, for his part, seemed to have a gift for putting iconic guitars in the right hands. Around the same time, he also passed a Gibson Les Paul to Pete Townshend, who used it on Who’s Next. In another life, Walsh might have made a fine guitar dealer, but in reality, he ensured that two of rock’s most important players had the perfect instruments to change music forever.

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