Tag Archives: Robert Plant

Led Zeppelin to tour with Robert Plant replacement

while led zeppelin was never one of my favorites back in the day, i did always respect what they did, even though it wasn’t my “thing” at the time. there is no doubt that few ever played pure rock and roll better, these boys could rock with the best ever to play the game.

i can’t imagine anything anything billed as “led zeppelin” without both plant and page involved. maybe the boys just got jealous of robert’s tecent success with allison krauss.

from NME:
Led Zeppelin to tour with Robert Plant replacement
Oct 28, 2008

Led Zeppelin will tour with a replacement for founding singer Robert Plant, bassist John Paul Jones has confirmed.

Earlier this month it was reported that the rock legends were rehearsing with singer Myles Kennedy after Plant refused to consider touring with the band.

Jones has now told BBC Radio Devon that the band are trying out “a couple” of alternative singers for a proposed tour.

“We want to do it,” he explained. “It’s sounding great and we want to get on and get out there.”

The bassist added that he and his bandmates were not after a Plant soundalike.

“It’s got to be right,” Jones said. “There’s no point in just finding another Robert. You could get that out of a tribute band, but we don’t want to be our own tribute band. There would be a record and a tour, but everyone has to be on board.”

There has been speculation about the possibility of a full Led Zeppelin tour since they played a reunion show on December 10 last year at the London O2 Arena.

Robert Plant ruled himself out of a tour by releasing a statement last month saying he would not be part of any such plans.

and from rolling stone:
Led Zeppelin To Tour, Record Without Plant?October 28, 2008 , 11:00 AM ET

Jonathan Cohen, N.Y.
The non-singing members of Led Zeppelin apparently aren’t waiting around for Robert Plant to sign off on a reunion tour and/or album. In an interview with BBC Radio, bassist John Paul Jones said he and guitarist Jimmy Page and drummer Jason Bonham “are trying out a couple of singers.”

“We want to do it,” he said. “It’s sounding great and we want to get on and get out there.” But he cautioned Plant sound-a-likes were not the goal, and that “it’s got to be right. There’s no point in just finding another Robert. You could get that out of a tribute band, but we don’t want to be our own tribute band.”

With Plant, Zeppelin reunited for a well-received one-off concert last December in London. But Plant, who has been touring with Alison Krauss for most of 2008, recently said he has no plans to work with the band again.

In recent months, Page, Jones and Bonham have logged rehearsal time together in the hopes Plant would agree to tour. Rumors have also circulated that Alter Bridge vocalist Myles Kennedy is in the running to step in for Plant.

On Nov. 4, Rhino will release a 10-disc boxed set featuring Led Zeppelin’s nine studio albums plus the rarities album “Coda” in mini-LP replica sleeves with artwork from the original U.K. vinyl releases.

Robert Plant & Alison Krauss – Mann Center/Philadelphia (07.12.2008)

submitted by: Keith from NY

Robert Plant & Alison Krauss
July 12, 2008
Mann Center for the Performing Arts
Philadelphia, PA

Robert Plant – vocals, maracas
Alison Krauss – vocals, fiddle
Stuart Duncan – banjo, fiddle, mandolin, guitar, vocals
Buddy Miller- lead guitar, pedal steel, autoharp, vocals
T-Bone Burnett – rhythm guitar, vocals
Dennis Crouch – upright bass
Jay Bellerose – drums, percussion

Set List:
01 Rich Woman
02 Leave My Woman Alone
03 Black Dog
04 Sister Rosetta Goes Before Us
05 Through the Morning, Through the Night
06 It’s Goodbye and So Long to You
07 Fortune Teller
08 In the Mood > Matty Groves > In the Mood
09 Black Country Woman
10 Laissez les Bon Temps Rouler
11 Trampled Rose
12 Green Pastures
13 Down In the River to Pray
14 Nothin’
15 Battle of Evermore
16 Please Read the Letter
17 Gone Gone Gone (You Done Me Wrong)
[encore]
18 You Don’t Knock
19 One Woman Man
20 Your Long Journey

I had already seen the “Raising Sand Revue” (as Plant calls the tour) about a month ago at the WaMu Theater beneath Madison Square Garden. The only seats I could get on presale for NYC were in the back right corner of that cavernous venue in the next to last row (WTF??), and a friend came up from NJ to see the show with me. We shared my binoculars, and unfortunately the sound totally sucked back there. But it was nonetheless a fabulous concert, and after doing a little research I decided to scalp some good seats (16th row near center) for their show at the Mann Center this past Saturday so I could enjoy them properly. I brought my oldest son Steve (a passionate Led Zep fan) and his girlfriend Amy (who’s more into Patsy Cline) along, and after 3+ grueling hours of battling the weekend traffic we finally arrived in Philadelphia, bought some overpriced beers and took our seats. We were, as it turned out, sitting right behind the family of opener Sharon Little, who was born & raised in the Philadelphia area. We had a nice chat with Sharon’s brother, sister, 8-year-old niece and grandmother before the show got under way. Sharon did a great set and dedicated a song to her little niece Kaitlyn, who was sitting directly in front of me. You’ve never seen a bigger smile! 🙂 A little later she got to watch the headliners from backstage.

Raising Sand is a very cool album, but it doesn’t really prepare you for the magic these two and the stellar band they assembled for this tour achieve on stage. They both turn in electrifying vocal performances on their featured songs, and the harmony on their duets is nothing short of magical. The show was just one great ride from beginning to end, and the musicianship was every bit as good as you could hope for to back these two stellar singers (Stuart Duncan in particular was amazing on every instrument he picked up, which were many). The highlights for me were the slow & sultry arrangement of Black Dog, the outrageously fun Fortune Teller, an absolutely spine-tingling a capella Down In the River to Pray (with Plant, Miller and Duncan harmonizing perfectly behind Alison’s pristine soprano), and a show-stopping Battle of Evermore. With the encore, the show went almost 2 hours. The only weak point was T-Bone’s ersatz rendition of Laissez les Bon Temps Rouler. The guy is an amazing producer and it was his brilliant inspiration to bring this unlikely pair together in the first place (thank you, T-Bone!), but he just ain’t much of a singer.

I’ll have an opportunity to see them once more in September at the ACL Festival in Austin, where they’re headlining this year. Can’t wait!