When Led Zeppelin Met Gilligan’s Island (Sort Of) - Best Classic Bands (2025)

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by Jeff Tamarkin

It starts off with an instantly familiar guitar passage. The flute enters at 18 seconds in. You wait for the words: “There’s a lady who’s sure all that glitters is gold…”

But they don’t come.

Instead you hear: “Just sit right back and you’ll hear a tale/A tale of a fateful trip, that started from this tropic port, aboard this tiny ship.”

What the hell, you ask yourself, is this?!

Its official title is “Gilligan’s Island (Stairway)” but it’s usually just called “Stairway to Gilligan’s Island”—by the relatively few people who’ve heard it. Those people include Weird Al Yankovic, who has credited the 45 r.p.m. single as providing the inspiration to begin his career spoofing pop hits.

It was released in 1978 on a small independent label called Splash Records, and credited to Little Roger & the Goosebumps.

It was, in a word, hilarious. But Led Zeppelin’s attorneys didn’t think so. We’ll get to that in a minute. First, the backstory (based on information provided to Best Classic Bands by Roger Clark, the Little Roger of the band name).

Check out the bottom Trivial Pursuit question. Now you know the answer!

In 1977, Little Roger and the Goosebumps, a San Francisco-based pop band, was rehearsing new throwaway TV themes and other unlikely material to pad a nonsense medley for the last set of their grueling five-nights-a-week/four sets-of-largely-original-songs-a-night routine. Their wildly varying original material had confused the record industry but had won Little Roger and his partner Dick Bright a large loyal following up and down the West Coast and Mountain states.

While learning the theme to the Gilligan’s Island TV show, it became instantly clear to the musicians that the chord progression was very similar to that of “Stairway to Heaven.” So was born what Clark calls “the infamous Frankenstein novelty song” that perfectly married the Zep classic and the theme from the popular ’60s sitcom starring Bob Denver. “It was the original rock mash-up,” Clark says. “Everyone in the band at the time lays claim to first having the idea, of course, but the swift decision to act on it was purely an executive one.”

Produced by Matthew Kaufman (of the Bay Area’s Beserkley Records) and Kenny Laguna (songwriter/producer of several ’60s bubblegum hits and later Joan Jett’s manager/producer), the track was recorded in March 1978, with the local band Earthquake providing the music.

The 1978 single usually known as “Stairway to Gilligan’s Island”

Even today, it’s a hoot. We don’t want to spoil the initial listening experience (scroll down to hear it) but suffice to say that Clark and the musicians managed to both honor and cleverly lampoon “Stairway to Heaven.”

Things happened quickly once the single was released. During its first week in the wild, the song debuted on KSAN, the popular FM rock station in San Francisco. By its second week, all major Northern California radio stations, as well as stations in Seattle and the rest of the Pacific Northwest, had jumped on the record. By week three, Midwest and East Coast FM and Top 40 stations had jumped on board. The following week, Little Roger and the Goosebumps became a hot commodity, with major labels wanting to sign them.

Then, week five: It all goes south. A private detective from Louis Nizer’s law firm (representing the publisher, Zeppelin’s label Atlantic Records and Sherwood Schwartz, the television producer who’d created Gilligan’s Island) delivered cease and desist papers to Clark’s parents’ house from a federal court in New York.

Roger Clark, namesake of Little Roger and the Goosebumps

Says Clark, “The legal issue involved whether ‘fair use’ included this kind of manipulation, complicated by the fact that two songs were defiled. The lawyers were thorough enough to have eliminated an end run by roping Sherwood Schwartz into the complaint. We were not in a position to fight and were ordered to turn over or destroy all copies, tapes and pressing parts. We ignored that one. Their lawyers paid to have people call radio stations demanding that they stop playing the record. It didn’t work.”

Needless to say, though, a small-time indie band from San Francisco was no match for such high-powered lawyers. Little Roger and the Goosebumps—although they had credited both Robert Plant and Jimmy Page and the Gilligan theme’s writers on the label of the single—gave up, and so ended the brief but fun saga of “Gilligan’s Island (Stairway).”

Or did it?

Fortunately, enough copies had already been circulated so that this brilliantly conceived and executed novelty record would never truly disappear. (In fact, in 2000, Laguna bravely reissued it on a CD called Laguna Tunes, this time officially renamed “Stairway to Gilligan’s Island.”)

Its popularity is greater posthumously than during its one-month life. The recording even provided a question and answer on the popular game Trivial Pursuit!

When Led Zeppelin Met Gilligan’s Island (Sort Of) - Best Classic Bands (5)

As of Jan. 2025, Tina Louise, who played castaway Ginger, is the sole surviving member. She was born on February 11, 1934. Dawn Wells, who played Mary Ann, turned 82 on October 18, 2020, but died two months later of Covid-19.

“Yes, it won’t die!” says Clark. “The record killed my band and haunts me to this day! I have become the worst cliché in show business—someone who gets known for comedy who wants to be taken seriously: the dreaded Jim Nabors syndrome! At the time I was pretty pissed to have been bagged as a spoof artist and forced to grudgingly release some other weak novelties, but after not too long I came to appreciate that I attained some notoriety in a sea of unknowns. Judging from how regularly I get calls or messages from people, I guess somebody finds a thin excuse to mention or play it regularly.”

When Led Zeppelin Met Gilligan’s Island (Sort Of) - Best Classic Bands (6)

Little Roger and the Goosebumps’ “Gilligan’s Island (Stairway),” signed by…Robert Plant

Some have theorized that Clark was intending to make some kind of grand statement with the record. He laughs. “The deep pop culture commentary that has been attributed to this record was unintentional,” he says. “It was, to us, a stupid joke to pull out at the end of the night.”

Did Led Zeppelin’s members ever comment themselves? Well, look at the photo to the right. It’s autographed: “My favorite, Robert Plant.”

Says Clark: “I met Robert Plant at a local benefit in the late ’80s, armed with a copy of the single, intent on giving him a ration of righteous shit. Of course, he charmingly processed me in about 30 seconds. ‘Oh, you are Little Roger? I love this record!’ He signed it, turned me toward the cameras for the obligatory picture, and was gone. In 2005 he told Terry Gross on an NPR interview that it was his all-time favorite Led Zeppelin cover.”

Hear “Gilligan’s Island (Stairway),” aka “Stairway to Gilligan’s Island”

In case you missed it in the above caption, there is just one member of theGilligan’s Island cast that is still with us. Tina Louise, who played Ginger, turns 89 on February 11, 2023. Dawn Wells, who played Mary Ann, died in December 2020 of Covid-19.

Related: Gilligan’s Island – An appreciation

And then there’s this! Jimmy Page and Bob “Gilligan” Denver share a birthday. Both were born on Jan. 9… nine years apart.

Bonus… the series’ opening and closing credits

The complete Gilligan’s Island series is available for purchase here.

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Jeff Tamarkin

Best Classic Bands Editor Jeff Tamarkin has been a prolific music journalist for more than four decades. He is formerly the editor of Goldmine, CMJ and Relix magazines, has written for dozens of other publications and has authored liner notes for more than 80 CDs. Jeff has also served on the Nominating Committee of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and as a consultant to the Grammys. His first book was 'Got a Revolution! The Turbulent Flight of Jefferson Airplane.' He is also the co-author of 'Shell Shocked: My Life with the Turtles, Flo and Eddie, and Frank Zappa, etc.,' with Howard Kaylan.

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When Led Zeppelin Met Gilligan’s Island (Sort Of) - Best Classic Bands (2025)

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