Jake Holmes reached a settlement in his new ‘Dazed and Confused’ lawsuit

Jake Holmes debut album
A cropped copy of the cover of Jake Holmes' 1967 debut album "The Above Ground Sound" of Jake Holmes (Discogs)

Jake Holmes has reached a settlement in his latest lawsuit over “Dazed and Confused” that “resolves the entire case”, according to a legal filing made on August 1.

A document filed by Holmes’ lawyer claims that “a settlement has been reached that resolves the entire case.”

“The parties are in the process of finalizing a written settlement agreement and anticipate filing a stipulated dismissal of the action with prejudice within thirty (30) days,” the filing continued.

Holmes filed the lawsuit in California on May 5, accusing Jimmy Page, Warner Chappell Music, Sony Pictures and the filmmakers behind “Becoming Led Zeppelin” of failing to properly credit him for “Dazed and Confused”, copyright infringement and for allegedly using the song in “Becoming Led Zeppelin” without his permission.

The complaint accused Page and others of failing to comply with a 2011 settlement reached following an earlier lawsuit Holmes filed in 2010.

Now, it seems Holmes has again reached a settlement with Page over the authorship of “Dazed And Confused”.

Holmes’ lawyer Daniel A. Johnson declined to comment. A spokesperson for Page did not respond to a request for comment.

The August 1 filing is embedded below:

Jake Holmes 2025 lawsuit – Notice of Settlement of Entire Action by James Cook on Scribd

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