The early days
(1968–1970)
The beginnings of Led Zeppelin can be
traced back to the British blues-influenced rock band
The Yardbirds. Jimmy Page joined The
Yardbirds in 1966 to play bass guitar after the original
bassist, Paul Samwell-Smith, left the group.
Shortly after, Page switched from bass to second lead
guitar, creating a dual-lead guitar line up with Jeff
Beck.
Following the departure of Beck in
October 1966, The Yardbirds, tired from constant touring
and recording, were beginning to wind down. Page wanted
to form a supergroup with himself and Beck on guitars,
and The Who's rhythm section - drummer Keith
Moon and bassist John Entwistle. Vocalists
Donovan, Steve Winwood and Steve Marriott
were also considered for the project. The group never
formed, although Page, Beck and Moon did record a song
together in 1966, "Beck's Bolero", which is featured on
Beck's 1968 album, Truth. The recording session
also included bassist-keyboardist John Paul Jones,
who told Page that he would be interested in
collaborating with him on future projects.
The Yardbirds played their final gig in
July 1968. However, they were still committed to
performing several concerts in Scandinavia, so drummer
Jim McCarty and vocalist Keith Relf
authorised Page and bassist Chris Dreja to use
the Yardbirds name to fulfil the band's obligations.
Page and Dreja began putting a new line-up together.
Page's first choice for lead singer, Terry Reid,
declined the offer, but suggested Robert Plant, a
Birmingham singer he knew. Plant eventually accepted the
position, recommending a drummer, John Bonham
from nearby Redditch. When Dreja opted out of the
project to become a photographer—he would later take the
photograph that appeared on the back of Led Zeppelin's
debut album—Jones, at the suggestion of his wife,
contacted Page about the vacant position. Being familiar
with Jones' credentials, Page agreed to bring in Jones
as the final piece.
The group played together on record the
first time on the final day of sessions for the P. J.
Proby album, Three Week Hero. Proby recalled,
"Come the last day we found we had some studio time, so
I just asked the band to play while I just came up with
the words. ... They weren't Led Zeppelin at the time,
they were The New Yardbirds and they were going
to be my band."
The band completed the Scandinavian tour
as The New Yardbirds. One account of the band's naming,
which has become almost legendary, has it that Keith
Moon and John Entwistle suggested that a possible
supergroup containing themselves, Jimmy Page, and Jeff
Beck would go down like a lead balloon, a term
Entwistle used to describe a bad gig. The group
deliberately dropped the 'a' in Lead at the
suggestion of their manager, Peter Grant, to
prevent "thick Americans" from pronouncing it as "leed".
Grant also secured an advance deal of
$200,000 from Atlantic Records in November 1968, then
the biggest deal of its kind for a new band. Atlantic
was a label known for its catalogue of blues, soul and
jazz artists, but in the late-60s it began to take an
interest in progressive British rock acts, and signed
Led Zeppelin without having ever seen them, largely on
the recommendation of singer Dusty Springfield.
With their first album not yet released, Led Zeppelin
made their live debut at the University of Surrey,
Guildford on October 15, 1968. This was followed by a US
concert debut on December 26, 1968 (when promoter
Barry Fey added them onto a bill in Denver,
Colorado) before moving on to the west coast for dates
in Los Angeles, San Francisco and other cities.
In July 1969 Led Zeppelin was the
headliner of the Schaefer Music Festival in New York
City's Central Park, along with The Byrds,
Chuck Berry, Fleetwood Mac, Miles Davis,
B.B. King, The Beach Boys, Frank Zappa
and Patti LaBelle.
Shortly after their first tour, the
group's eponymous first album was released on January 12
1969. Its blend of blues, folk, and eastern influences
with distorted amplification made it one of the pivotal
records in the creation of heavy metal music. However,
Plant has commented that it is unfair for people to
typecast the band as heavy metal, since about a third of
their music was acoustic.
In an interview for the Led Zeppelin
Profiled radio promo CD (1990) Page said that the
album took about 36 hours of studio time to create
(including mixing), and stated that he knows this
because of the amount charged on the studio bill. Peter
Grant claimed the album cost £1,750 to produce
(including artwork). By 1975, the album had grossed
$7,000,000.
Led Zeppelin's
album cover met an interesting protest when, at a 28
February 1970 gig in Copenhagen, the band was billed as
"The Nobs" as the result of a threat of legal action
from aristocrat Eva von Zeppelin (a relative of the
namesake creator of the Zeppelin aircraft), who, upon
seeing the logo of the Hindenburg crashing in
flames, threatened to have the show pulled off the air.
In their first year of existence, Led
Zeppelin managed to complete four US and four UK concert
tours, as well as find time to release their second
album, entitled Led Zeppelin II. Recorded almost
entirely on the road at various North American recording
studios, the second album was an even greater success
than the first and reached the number one chart position
in the US and the UK. Here the band further developed
ideas established on their debut album, creating a work
which became even more widely acclaimed and arguably
more influential. It has been suggested that Led
Zeppelin II largely wrote the blueprint for 70s hard
rock.
Following the album's release Led
Zeppelin made several more tours of the United States.
They played often, initially in clubs and ballrooms,
then in larger auditoriums as their popularity grew. Led
Zeppelin concerts could last more than three hours, with
expanded, improvised live versions of their song
repertoire. Many of these shows have been preserved as
Led Zeppelin bootleg recordings.
For the composition of their third album,
Led Zeppelin III, Jimmy Page and Robert Plant
retired to Bron-Yr-Aur, a remote cottage in Wales, in
1970. This would result in a more acoustic sound than
previously exhibited by the group (and a song, "Bron-Yr-Aur
Stomp", misspelled as "Bron-Y-Aur Stomp" on the album
cover, which was a complete remake of Bert Jansch's
song "The Waggoners Lad"). Strongly influenced by folk
and Celtic music, the album revealed a different side of
the band's versatility.
The album's rich acoustic sound initially
received mixed reactions, with many critics and fans
surprised at the turn taken by the band away from the
primarily electric compositions of the first two albums.
Over time, however, its reputation has recovered and
Led Zeppelin III is now generally praised. It has a
unique album cover featuring a wheel which, when
rotated, displayed various images through cut outs in
the main jacket sleeve.
The album's opening track, "Immigrant
Song", was released in November 1970 by Atlantic Records
as a single against the band's wishes (Atlantic had
earlier released an edited version of "Whole Lotta Love"
which cut the 5:34 song to 3:10, removing the abstract
middle section). It included their only non-album
b-side, "Hey Hey What Can I Do". Even though the band
saw their albums as indivisible, whole listening
experiences—and their manager, Peter Grant, maintained
an aggressive pro-album stance—some singles were
released without their consent. The group also
increasingly resisted television appearances, enforcing
their preference that their fans hear and see them in
person.
The album finishes with "Hats Off To
(Roy) Harper", a track dedicated to their influential
contemporary, Roy Harper, that both honours
Harper’s work and acknowledges the bands’ roots in
acoustic music.
"The biggest band in
the world" (1971–1975)
The success of Led Zeppelin's early years
would be dwarfed by this five-year period in which the
band would release their best selling albums and ascend
to musical success in the 70s. The band's image also
changed as members began to wear elaborate, colourful
clothing and jewellery similar to other popular
performers of the era. If the band's popularity on stage
was impressive, so too was its reputation for off-stage
wildness and excess. Led Zeppelin began travelling in a
private jet airliner (nicknamed The Starship),
rented out entire sections of hotels (most notably the
Continental Hyatt House in Los Angeles, known
colloquially as the "Riot House"), and became the
subject of many of rock's most famous stories of
debauchery. One escapade involved John Bonham throwing
televisions out of the windows of the Riot House during
a drunken rampage and then blaming the damage on Led
Zeppelin groupies. Another example of Led Zeppelin
excess was the infamous shark episode, or red snapper
incident, which took place at the Edgewater Inn in
Seattle, Washington, on July 28, 1969.
Led Zeppelin's fourth album was released
on 8 November 1971. There was no indication of a title
nor band name on the original cover, but on the LP label
four symbols were printed—. The band were motivated to
undertake this initiative by their disdain for the
media, which labelled them as hyped and overrated. In
response, they released the album with no indication of
who they were in order to prove that the music could
sell itself. The album is variously referred to as
Four Symbols and The Fourth Album (both
titles were used in the Atlantic Records catalogue), and
also IV, Untitled, Zoso, Runes,
Sticks, Man With Sticks, and Four.
It is still officially untitled and most commonly
referred to as Led Zeppelin IV. In an interview
with Rolling Stone magazine in 2005, Plant said
that it is simply called The Fourth Album.
The album further refined the band's
unique formula of combining earthy, acoustic elements
with heavy metal and blues emphases. The album included
examples of hard rock, such as "Black Dog" and an
acoustic track, "Going to California" (a tribute to
Joni Mitchell).
"Rock and Roll" is a tribute to the early
rock music of the 50s. Recently (as of 2006) and until
mid-2007, the song has been used prominently in Cadillac
automobile commercials—one of the few instances of Led
Zeppelin's surviving members licensing songs.
The album also featured "Stairway to
Heaven", which became a massive album-oriented rock FM
radio hit despite never being released as a single. The
song has been controversial due to unsubstantiated but
repeated claims of "satanic" back masked messages. In
2005, the magazine Guitar World held a poll of
readers in which "Stairway to Heaven" was voted as
having the greatest guitar solo of all time.
As of July 31, 2006, has sold 23 million
copies in the US, making it one of the top four best
selling albums in the history of the US music industry.
Worldwide, it ranks at number eleven in album sales.
Led Zeppelin's next album, Houses of
the Holy, was released in 1973. It featured further
experimentation, with longer tracks and expanded use of
synthesisers and mellotron orchestration. The song
"Houses of the Holy" does not appear on its namesake
album, even though it was recorded at the same time as
other songs on the album; it eventually made its way
onto the 1975 album Physical Graffiti.
The striking orange album cover of
Houses of the Holy features images of nude children
climbing up the Giant's Causeway (in County Antrim,
Northern Ireland) to an unseen idol. Although the
children are not depicted from the front, this was
highly controversial at the time of the album's release,
and in some areas, such as the "Bible Belt" and Spain,
the record was banned.
The album topped the charts, and Led
Zeppelin's subsequent Houses of the Holy concert
tour of the United States in 1973 broke records for
attendance, as they consistently filled large
auditoriums and stadiums. At Tampa Stadium, Florida,
they played to 56,800 fans (breaking the record set by
The
Beatles at Shea Stadium in 1965), and grossed
$309,000. Three sold-out shows at Madison Square Garden
in New York were filmed for a motion picture, but the
theatrical release of this project (The Song Remains
the Same) would be delayed until 1976.
In 1974, Led Zeppelin took a break from
touring and launched their own record label, Swan Song,
named after one of only five Led Zeppelin songs which
the band never released commercially (Page later
re-worked the song with his band, The Firm, and
it appears as "Midnight Moonlight" on their first
album). The record label's logo, based on a drawing
called Evening: Fall of Day (1869) by William
Rimmer, features a picture of Apollo (although it is
often misinterpreted as a picture of Icarus, Daedelus,
Satan, or Lucifer). The logo can be found on much Led
Zeppelin memorabilia, especially t-shirts. In addition
to using Swan Song as a vehicle to promote their own
albums, the band expanded the label's roster, signing
artists such as Bad Company, Pretty Things,
Maggie Bell, Detective, Dave Edmunds,
Midnight Flyer, Sad Café and Wildlife.
The label would be successful while Led Zeppelin
existed, but folded less than three years after they
disbanded.
February 24, 1975 saw the release of Led
Zeppelin's first double album, Physical Graffiti,
which was the first release on the Swan Song Records
label. It consisted of fifteen songs, eight of which
were recorded at Headley Grange in 1974, and the
remainder being tracks recorded years previously but not
released on earlier albums.
A review in Rolling Stone magazine
referred to Physical Graffiti as Led Zeppelin's
"bid for artistic respectability," adding that the only
competition the band had for the title of 'World's Best
Rock Band' were the
Rolling Stones and The Who. The album was
a massive fiscal and critical success. Shortly after the
release of Physical Graffiti, all previous Led
Zeppelin albums simultaneously re-entered the top-200
album chart, and the band embarked on another US tour,
again playing to record-breaking crowds. In May 1975,
Led Zeppelin played five highly successful, sold-out
nights at the Earls Court Exhibition Centre in London,
footage of which was released in 2003, on the Led
Zeppelin DVD. This series of concerts could be
considered as some of the best of the band's career.
The latter days
(1976–1980)
By 1976, Led Zeppelin were becoming
increasingly popular worldwide, having outsold most
bands of the time, including the
Rolling Stones. Their live shows would increase even
further in theatricality, featuring larger stage areas
and complex light shows. However, while there were still
massive musical and commercial successes for the band
during this period, problems such as the 1977 death of
Robert Plant's son, Jimmy Page's heroin use, changing
musical tastes, and ultimately John Bonham's 1980 death
would finally bring an end to Led Zeppelin.
Following their triumphant Earls Court
appearances, Led Zeppelin took an unplanned break from
touring. In August 1975, Robert Plant and his wife
Maureen were involved in a serious car crash while
on holiday in Rhodes, Greece. Robert suffered a broken
ankle and Maureen was very badly injured; a blood
transfusion saved her life. Unable to tour, Plant headed
to the channel island of Jersey to spend August and
September recuperating, with Bonham and Page in tow. The
band then reconvened in Malibu, California. It was
during this forced hiatus that much of the material for
their next album, Presence, was written.
Released in March 1976, the album marked
a change in the Led Zeppelin sound towards more
straightforward, guitar-based jams, departing from the
acoustic ballads and intricate arrangements featured on
their previous albums. Though it was a platinum seller,
Presence received mixed responses from critics
and fans. While many appreciated the looser style,
others dismissed it as "sloppy", and some critics
speculated that the band members' legendary excesses
might have finally caught up with them, resulting in a
sub-standard album release. The recording of Presence
coincided with the beginning of Page's heroin use, which
may have interfered with Led Zeppelin's later live shows
and studio recordings, although Page has denied this.
Despite the original criticisms, Jimmy
Page has called Presence his favourite album, and
its opening track "Achilles Last Stand" his favourite
Led Zeppelin song. Robert Plant has also stated that he
thinks Presence is the album that probably sounds
the most "Led Zeppelin" of all their LPs.
Robert Plant's injuries prevented Led
Zeppelin from touring in 1976. Instead, the band finally
completed the concert film The Song Remains The Same,
and the soundtrack album of the film. It would be the
only official live document of the group available until
the release of the BBC Sessions in 1997. The
recording had taken place during three nights of
concerts at Madison Square Garden in July 1973, during
the Houses of the Holy concert tour. The film
premiered in New York on October 20, 1976, but was not
well received by critics or fans. The film was
particularly unsuccessful in the UK, where, after eight
years of recording and touring, and in the wake of the
punk rock revolution, Led Zeppelin were now considered
to be obsolete in some quarters.
In 1977, Led Zeppelin embarked on another
massive US concert tour. Though profitable financially,
the tour was beset with off-stage problems. On June 3,
after a concert at Tampa Stadium was cut short because
of a severe thunderstorm, a riot broke out amongst the
audience, resulting in several arrests and injuries.
Police ultimately resorted to tear gas to break up the
crowd.
After a July 23 show at the "Days on the
Green" festival at Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum in
Oakland, California, John Bonham and members of the
band's support staff (including manager Peter Grant and
security co-ordinator John Bindon) were arrested
after a member of promoter Bill Graham's staff
was badly beaten during the performance. A member of the
staff had allegedly slapped Grant's son when he was
taking down a dressing room sign; when Grant heard about
this, he went into the trailer, along with Bindon and
John Bonham, and savagely assaulted the man.
The following day's second Oakland
concert would prove be the band's final live appearance
in the United States. After the performance, news came
that Plant's five year old son, Karac, had died
from a stomach virus. The rest of the tour was
immediately cancelled.
December 1978 saw the group recording
again, this time at Polar Studios in Stockholm, Sweden.
The resultant album was In Through the Out Door,
which exhibited a degree of sonic experimentation that
again drew mixed reactions from critics. Nevertheless,
the band still commanded legions of loyal fans, and the
album easily reached #1 in the UK and the US (in just
its second week on the Billboard album chart).
In August 1979, after two warm-up shows
in Copenhagen, Led Zeppelin headlined two concerts at
the Knebworth music festival, where crowds of close to
120,000 witnessed the return of the band. However,
Robert Plant was not eager to tour full-time again, and
even considered leaving Led Zeppelin. He was persuaded
to stay by Peter Grant. A brief, low-key European tour
was undertaken in June and July 1980, featuring a
stripped-down set without the usual lengthy jams and
solos. At one show on June 27, in Nuremberg, Germany,
the concert came to an abrupt end in the middle of the
third song when John Bonham collapsed on stage and was
rushed to a hospital. Press speculation arose that
Bonham's problem was caused by an excess of alcohol and
drugs, but the band claimed that he had simply
overeaten, and they completed the European tour on July
7, at Berlin.
"A tragic end"
On September 24, 1980, John Bonham was
picked up by Led Zeppelin assistant Rex King to
attend rehearsals at Bray Studios for the upcoming tour
of the United States, the band's first since 1977.
During the journey Bonham had asked to stop for
breakfast, where he downed four quadruple vodkas
(roughly sixteen shots-or 400ml-of vodka), with a ham
roll. After taking a bite of the ham roll he said to his
assistant, "Breakfast." He continued to drink heavily
when he arrived at the studio. A halt was called to the
rehearsals late in the evening and the band retired to
Page's house — The Old Mill House in Clewer, Windsor.
After midnight, Bonham had fallen asleep and was taken
to bed and placed on his side. Benji LeFevre (who
had replaced Richard Cole as Led Zeppelin's tour
manager) and John Paul Jones found him dead the next
morning. Bonham was 32 years old.
The cause of death was asphyxiation from
vomit. A subsequent
autopsy
found no other drugs in Bonham's body. The alcoholism
that had plagued the drummer since his earliest days
with the band ultimately led to his death. John Bonham
was cremated on October 10, 1980, at Rushock,
Worcestershire parish church.
Despite rumours that Cozy Powell,
Carmine Appice, Barriemore Barlow,
Simon Kirke, or Bev Bevan would join the
group as his replacement, the remaining members decided
to disband Led Zeppelin after Bonham's death. They
issued a press statement on December 4, 1980 confirming
that the band would not continue without Bonham. "We
wish it to be known that the loss of our dear friend,
and the deep sense of undivided harmony felt by
ourselves and our manager, have led us to decide that we
could not continue as we were."
Post Led Zeppelin
(1980–present)
In 1982, the surviving members of the
group released a collection of out-takes from various
sessions during Led Zeppelin's career, entitled Coda.
It included two tracks taken from the band's performance
at the Royal Albert Hall in 1970, one each from the
Led Zeppelin III and Houses of the Holy
sessions, and three from the In Through the Out Door
sessions. It also featured a 1976 John Bonham drum
instrumental with electronic effects added by Jimmy
Page, called "Bonzo's Montreux".
On July 13, 1985 Page, Plant and John
Paul Jones reunited at the Live Aid concert at JFK
Stadium, Philadelphia, for a short set featuring
drummers Tony Thompson and Phil Collins.
Collins had played on Plant's first two solo albums.
When Live Aid footage was released on a four-DVD set in
late 2004, the group unanimously agreed not to allow
footage from their performance to be used, agreeing that
it was not up to their usual standards. However, to show
their ongoing support Page and Plant pledged proceeds
from their forthcoming Page and Plant DVD release to the
campaign and John Paul Jones pledged the proceeds of his
then-current US tour with Mutual Admiration Society to
the project.
The three members reunited again in May
of 1988, for Atlantic Records' 40th Anniversary concert,
with Bonham's son, Jason Bonham, on drums.
Page and Plant reunited in 1994 for an
MTV Unplugged performance (dubbed Unledded)
which eventually led to a world tour with a Middle
Eastern orchestra, and a live album entitled No
Quarter. The bass player was Charlie Jones,
who had been the bassist with Plant's own band for
several years. Many see this as the beginning of discord
with John Paul Jones, who was upset with Page and Plant
for touring without asking him first. Tensions were
further increased when Plant was asked at a press
conference where Jones was, and he jokingly replied that
Jones was parking the car.
On January 12, 1995, Led Zeppelin was
inducted into the United States Rock and Roll Hall of
Fame. They were inducted by Aerosmith's vocalist,
Steven Tyler and guitarist Joe Perry.
Jason and Zoe Bonham also attended, representing
their late father. At the induction ceremony, the band's
inner rift became apparent when Jones joked upon
accepting his award, "Thank you, my friends, for finally
remembering my phone number," causing consternation and
awkward looks from Page and Plant. Afterwards, they
played a brief set with Tyler and Perry, along with
Neil Young and Michael Bell.
On August 29, 1997, Atlantic released a
single edit of "Whole Lotta Love" in the US and the UK,
making it the only Led Zeppelin CD single. Additional
tracks on this CD-single are "Baby Come on Home" and "Travelling
Riverside Blues". It is the only single the band ever
released in the UK. It peaked at #21.
November 11, 1997 saw the release of
Led Zeppelin BBC Sessions, the first Led Zeppelin
album in fifteen years. The two-disc set included almost
all of the band's recordings for the BBC.
Page and Plant continued their renewed
collaboration through 1998, releasing a critically
acclaimed CD of all original Page-Plant compositions
called Walking Into Clarksdale, which won a
Grammy for best rock song ("Most High"), and was
supported by another world tour, which the duo called
"Walking Into Everywhere". Eschewing the Middle Eastern
orchestra of the 1995 world tour, the '98 shows were an
all-out rock and roll show, highlighting classic
Zeppelin material, along with Page and Plant originals
from the No Quarter and Walking Into
Clarksdale CDs.
In October 2002, the British press
reported that Robert Plant and John Paul Jones had
reconciled after a 20-year feud which had kept Led
Zeppelin apart, and rumours surfaced of a reunion tour
in 2003. This was later denied by Plant and Page's
management company.
2003 saw the release of a triple live
album, How the West Was Won, and a video
collection, Led Zeppelin DVD, both featuring
material from the band's heyday. At the year's end, the
DVD had sold more than 520,000 copies. Around Christmas
2004, "Stairway To Heaven" was voted the best rock song
of all time by Planet Rock listeners in a poll conducted
on the station's website. Two other Led Zeppelin songs
were also featured in the top ten - "Whole Lotta Love"
at number six and "Rock and Roll" at number eight.
In 2005, Led Zeppelin received a Grammy
Lifetime Achievement Award, and readers of Guitar
World magazine voted the guitar solo from "Stairway
to Heaven" to be the best rock guitar solo of all time.
Led Zeppelin ranked #14 on Rolling Stone's 2004
list of the 100 Greatest Artists of All Time. In
November 2005, it was announced that Led Zeppelin and
Russian conductor Valery Gergiev were the winners
of the 2006 Polar Music Prize. The King of Sweden
presented the prize to Plant, Page and Jones, along with
John Bonham's daughter, in Stockholm in May, 2006.
In November 2006, Led Zeppelin were
inducted into the UK Music Hall of Fame. The television
broadcasting of the event consisted of an introduction
to the band by various famous admirers, a presentation
of an award to Jimmy Page and then a short speech by the
guitarist. After this, rock group Wolfmother
played a tribute to Led Zeppelin, playing the song
"Communication Breakdown".
Led Zeppelin have always been very
protective of its catalogue of songs, and have seldom
allowed them to be licensed for films or commercials. In
recent years, this position has softened, and their
songs can be heard in movies such as One Day in
September, School of Rock, Shrek the Third
("Immigrant Song" in all three), Dogtown and Z-Boys
("Achilles Last Stand" and "Hots on for Nowhere") and
Almost Famous ("That's the Way", "The Rain Song",
"Misty Mountain Hop", and "Tangerine") and Small
Soldiers ("Communication Breakdown"). One Tree
Hill was the first, and so far only network
television show to license a Led Zeppelin song, using
"Babe I'm Gonna Leave You". Also noteworthy is the
resurgent Cadillac's use of "Rock and Roll" for their US
TV advertising campaign (no doubt for the wry opening
line, "It's been a long time..."). Also, Led Zeppelin
have allowed iTunes to sell the music from the upcoming
greatest hits collection Mothership, in the
iTunes store.
In April 2007, Hard Rock Park announced
it had secured an agreement with the band to create "Led
Zeppelin-The Ride" - A roller coaster built by B&M
synchronized to the music of Led Zeppelin's "Whole Lotta
Love". The coaster will stand 155 feet tall, feature six
inversions, and spiral over a lagoon. It will be found
in the "Rock and Roll Heaven" section of Hard Rock Park.
As of September 13, 2007, the ride track is complete.
The park is aiming to conduct test runs in December. The
park opens in May 2008 in Myrtle Beach, SC.
On June 25, 2007, World Entertainment
News reported that Led Zeppelin had allegedly agreed to
re-form for a special memorial concert in honour of
Ahmet Ertegun, the founder of Atlantic Records who
died in December 2006. It was also reported that if the
concert went well, the band would go on tour in 2008.
The same report suggested that the three surviving
members would be joined on drums by John Bonham's son,
Jason. However on June 28, Robert Plant made it appear
at a press conference that the reunion discussions were
false.
On July 27, 2007, Atlantic/Rhino, &
Warner Home Video announced three new Led Zeppelin
titles to be released in November, 2007. Released first
will be Mothership on November 13, a 24-track
best-of spanning the band's career, followed by a
reissue of the soundtrack to The Song Remains the
Same on November 20 which includes previously
unreleased material, and a new DVD.
On October 15, 2007,
www.news.com
published an article that Led Zeppelin is expected to
announce today a new series of agreements that make its
songs available as legal digital downloads. First as
ringtones through Verizon Wireless then as digital
downloads of the band's eight studio albums and other
recordings on November 13. The offerings will be
available through both Verizon Wireless and iTunes.
2007 Reunion
On September 12, 2007, it was confirmed
during a press conference by promoter Harvey
Goldsmith that the surviving members of Led Zeppelin
will reunite in aid of the Ahmet Ertegun education fund
for a show at The O2 in London on 26 November 2007, with
Jason Bonham filling in on drums. Tickets were made
available via a lottery system through
Ahmettribute.com,
costing £125 /
$250.
The
website exceeded its bandwidth allowance and crashed
almost immediately following the announcement, with the
promoter predicting that the gig will cause the "largest
demand for one show in history", due to the ticket
request site receiving one billion page impressions,
with one million people registering for fewer than
20,000 available tickets.
The tribute concert will also feature
Pete Townshend, Bill Wyman's Rhythm Kings,
Paolo Nutini, and Foreigner as supporting
acts.
Richard Dion
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