LED ZEPPELIN rocker JIMMY PAGE has appeared in court as a witness to
give evidence against an man accused of infringing copyright laws by selling
bootlegged CDs and DVDs.
The guitarist, 63, testified against Robert Langley, who was caught selling
the illegal copies - including some unreleased performances of Led Zeppelin -
at a British record fair.
He was arrested and charged on 12 counts of breaching copyright and trademark
law.
On Thursday (26Jul07), Page told the court that his large "personal
collection" of previously-unseen footage of his band performing and "fun"
studio sessions had been stolen from his home in Berkshire, England, in the
1980s.
Addressing the sale of a £220 ($440) DVD box set of Led Zeppelin concerts,
Page told prosecutor Judith Hutchinson he would "never sanction" those
performances because he is "a perfectionist" and very specific about the live
footage the band release.
He said: "There was a time when I had an injured finger while I was playing,
so I would not want that sold. It is just the same when (lead singer) Robert
Plant had a croaky voice - we would not want that sold."
He added: "Fans trade music but once you start packaging it up you are
breaking the rules."
The trial at Glasgow Sheriff Court in Scotland continues.
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