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Report: Led Zep, Metallica For Bonnaroo
Led Zeppelin

December 03, 2007, 12:25 PM ET

Jonathan Cohen, N.Y.
Led Zeppelin will play its first U.S. show since July 24, 1977, this June at the Bonnaroo festival in Manchester, Tenn., according to an email published in industry commentator Bob Lefsetz's newsletter. The report also says Metallica will headline the event.

Speculation about additional shows for Zeppelin, which will play a stated one-off Dec. 10 in London in tribute to late Atlantic founder Ahmet Ertegun, has been buzzing for weeks.

A Bonnaroo spokesperson had no comment on the email. A Led Zeppelin spokesperson could not be reached at deadline.

Summer Zeppelin shows would reportedly conflict with a tour by frontman Robert Plant and Alison Krauss, which is presently being booked. However, Zeppelin bassist John Paul Jones has played at Bonnaroo on several occasions, most recently this summer when he jammed on his old band's songs with Ben Harper and the Roots' ?uestlove.


As for Metallica, Bonnaroo would likely provide a launching pad for the group's next album, expected sometime in 2008 via Elektra.


http://www.billboard.com/bbcom/news/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003680301


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Led Zeppelin Bonnaroo rumours quashed
By WENN world entertainment news - Wednesday, December 5 06:50 amThe organisers of Tennessee's Bonnaroo Festival have quashed internet rumours that reformed rock legends Led Zeppelin and Metallica will headline the 2008 summer event.

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Reports circulated on Monday, prompting Led Zeppelin fans to bid for early tickets and more information.

The frenzy has led to promoters to dismiss the reports.

In a statement, promoters Superfly Presents and AC Entertainment insist there are no plans for the two rock supergroups to perform, adding, "We're very excited about the line-up that we're putting together for this year's festival. We'll be announcing the confirmed line-up toward the end of January/beginning of February."

Led Zeppelin will play their only official show in London next week although The Cult frontman Ian Astbury recently teased fans about plans to tour America with the Stairway To Heaven legends next year.


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Led Zeppelin hints at follow-up after reunion gig Tue Dec 4, 4:38 PM ET



LONDON (AFP) - Led Zeppelin could get together again for more projects after next week's long-awaited reunion gig, members of the iconic British rock band hinted in newly-published comments.

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Guitarist Jimmy Page recounted his excitement when they first played together in preparation for their reunion next Monday, and warned that the group should not wait too long or they will "need Zimmer frames."

"I would like to keep this moving," he told Q music magazine's January edition, when asked if he would like to record some new material after the "one-off" concert at London's O2 Arena.

"I must say that after our initial get-together it was so exhilarating and fun that I did feel I would like to do more," he added.

Bassist John Paul Jones added: "I guess the door has been left slightly ajar. We'll have to see how we feel about it afterwards. Everybody's got to really want to do it."

Singer Robert Plant, the other surviving member of the original foursome, made no comment to the magazine.

He has hinted in other interviews that he has other projects on and would not be interested in a full-on reunion.

Page dismissed suggestions of tension between the former wildmen.

"People always go on about the bad blood between us, but we wouldn't be in the room together if there was that much bad blood," he said.

Now is the right time for the reunion, he said. "It's better for us to do it now than to wait for another 10 years when we really would need Zimmer frames to get onstage," he said.

More than one million people applied for the 20,000 tickets for the reunion gig by the hard-rocking band, which split in 1980 following the death of drummer John Bonham.

Plant, Page and Jones will be joined by Bonham's son Jason for next week's gig, which is a tribute to Ahmet Ertegun, the late founder of the Atlantic Records label, who signed the group in 1968.

The band has sold more than 300 million albums worldwide and the group was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1995.


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If these guys go on tour in the states I will freak out and might just have to pay whatever they are asking for the tickets. Zeppelin, that is.

Metallica sucks anymore. What a sad regression from kings of metal to kings of top 40. At least I'll always have their old albums to cheer me up.

And I thought that Bonarroo story seemed fishy. That's like a hippy/jam band festival isn't it? Or is it already selling out like the original Lollapalooza did?

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Metallica sucks anymore. What a sad regression from kings of metal to kings of top 40. At least I'll always have their old albums to cheer me up.





I agree. I've been disappointed with all of their efforts after Master of Puppets. Basically, everything after Cliff's death has been a disappointment to me.


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And I thought that Bonarroo story seemed fishy. That's like a hippy/jam band festival isn't it?




Pretty much a bingo there.. Bonnaroo is more of a Allman Brothers, Government Mule, North Mississippi All Stars kind of festival.. I knew something was off kilter when Metallica is listed for Bonnaroo.. definitely the wrong band there..

I'm witcha tho.. Zep plays the states I'll freak out and spend my waking moments scheming to get tickets.


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Well I thought Bonnaroo jumped the shark last year with the Police headlining. But if it wasn't last year it's this year for sure!
I went to the first and haven't returned. Widespread Panic should be headlining this fest like in the past.

Stick a fork in it... it's done.


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Quote:

Quote:


Metallica sucks anymore. What a sad regression from kings of metal to kings of top 40. At least I'll always have their old albums to cheer me up.







I agree. I've been disappointed with all of their efforts after Master of Puppets. Basically, everything after Cliff's death has been a disappointment to me.



And Justice For All was a good album,,I love how the drums sound in that. But, I do agree. I was disappointed in the Black Album at first but it grew on me. The stuff after that, forget about it I refuse to buy it and turn the channel when it comes on.
Ride The Lightning and Kill Em All are my 2 fav! "Am I Evil?" is my all time fav song along w/Creeping Death!


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Well I thought Bonnaroo jumped the shark last year with the Police headlining. But if it wasn't last year it's this year for sure!
I went to the first and haven't returned. Widespread Panic should be headlining this fest like in the past.

Stick a fork in it... it's done.




remember when it was blues, jazz, and other great stuff? now its just a commercial machine!


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I hear what youre saying about Metallica. But I never got into Metallica until S&M was out. I know I know, it was way too late. But, i listened to hip hop alot in HS...oops. It least it wasnt that new crap though.

Anyway. Looking back at Metallica. I think the Load and Re-load albums were good. Granted its not typical Metallica style, but when they released the Black Album, they wanted to reinvent themselves, because they felt if they were gonna stick with the slash metal, someone would come out and be faster, harder, and better. So they wanted to get deeper.

I like the Load and Re-load albums because they kinda took the Grunge music style, and said, well this is how Metallica would do it. I really enjoyed that. It seemed like they adapted to the music, but still put a Metallica stamp on it.

HOWEVER. St. Anger was awful. Since James cleaned up, his music writing ability plummeted. Adding Trujillo (who is good) took them the wrong direction. The album was kind of an attempt at the new age metal that was strong at the time. System of a Down and that type of metal. Dope and Down and those bands. They lost the Metallica stamp.


But also, I do agree, while those later albums (not St Anger) were good, I think their best stuff was with Cliff. I really liked ...And Justice, it was so dark and hard, that it really just puts you in a certain mood when you listen to it, and it was so hard. Its a bad ass album.

But im not even excited for their new album. I heard a couple new songs, from Youtube of live shows they did where they stuck a new song in there, and ew. EW.


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not great quality, and sorry if I'm hijacking this thread but.



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What better time than now?"
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excuse me while i go vomit


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Well I thought Bonnaroo jumped the shark last year with the Police headlining. But if it wasn't last year it's this year for sure!
I went to the first and haven't returned. Widespread Panic should be headlining this fest like in the past.

Stick a fork in it... it's done.






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Quote:

Quote:

Well I thought Bonnaroo jumped the shark last year with the Police headlining. But if it wasn't last year it's this year for sure!
I went to the first and haven't returned. Widespread Panic should be headlining this fest like in the past.

Stick a fork in it... it's done.




remember when it was blues, jazz, and other great stuff? now its just a commercial machine!




It's similar to what happened to Lalapalooza. The first 2 years were the who's who in the "alternative" music scene. Then "alternative" music became mainstream and the whole thing lost it's edge.
Bonnaroo started out being a Widepread Panic headlined, jam, bluegrass, acid jazz, and touring band scene. They did a good job booking the first two years then just said to hell with it and stepped way outside the box. What made no sense is that they sold 70-80,000 tickets the first two years and if you ask me could have repeated acts each year and drawn the same size crowd. The Heads have been looking for a home. Bonnaroo could have been a yearly pilgrimage for those of us around the country to reconvene the spirt that was lost when Jerry died. Instead they try to push Steve Winwood without Traffic, the aged Police, and Tom Petty, as headliners. In the process they Mtv'd it up. It's been overrun by wookies (amatures, for those not hip to the lingo), and sorority blondes with dancing bear tattoos. Stick a fork in it.


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Simply put, Led Zeppelin's 2nd album is as powerful as any rock album ever. It doesn't get any heavier than that one.
I wouldn't mind seeing them reunite.


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The Hammer of the Gods..

Led Zeppelin lets the 'Good Times' roll

By CHRIS LEHOURITES, Associated Press Writer
2 hours, 20 minutes ago



LONDON - After that performance, Led Zeppelin really must go on tour.

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The reunited rock 'n' roll legends were superb Monday in their first full concert in nearly three decades, mixing in classics like "Stairway to Heaven" and "Black Dog" with the thumping "Kashmir" and the hard-rocking "Dazed and Confused."

The band's three surviving members — singer Robert Plant, guitarist Jimmy Page and bassist-keyboardist John Paul Jones — were joined by the late John Bonham's son Jason on drums.

And it was the newest member of the band that was given the honor of kicking off the sold-out benefit show, pounding out the beat before the others joined in on a near-perfect "Good Times Bad Times."

After the lights went down at the O2 Arena, newsreel footage of the band arriving in Tampa, Fla., for a 1973 performance was projected onstage. Then Bonham jumped in, soon to be joined by the rest.

They followed that with "Ramble On," and with it destroyed all rumors that the 59-year-old Plant could no longer reproduce his trademark wail.

With his button-down shirt mercifully buttoned up, Plant roamed the stage belting out hit after hit, rarely giving his critics anything to work with.

But Page showed he still has the touch as well. Besides ripping out his patented riffs all night, he put the spotlight on himself when the band played the bluesy "In My Time of Dying."

With his left hand moving freely up and down the neck of his guitar and the metal slide wrapped around one of his fingers, Page effortlessly played a song that's not easy to master.

Page and Plant later combined to open "Nobody's Fault But Mine," a song that starts with another classic Page riff and then gets help from Plant mimicking the same sounds.

Still, it was Bonham who may have been the star of the show. At 41, he is older than his father was — 32 — when he choked to death on his own vomit in 1980.

Bonham's flawless performance and driving beat even made the other members of the band watch in awe at the end of "Black Dog."

After "The Song Remains the Same," Plant screamed: "Jason Bonham, drums! Come on!"

The 16-song set list produced few surprises. They did many of the songs expected, such as "No Quarter" and "Trampled Under Foot," and the entire show lasted a bit more than two hours, mainly because of encores "Whole Lotta Love" and "Rock and Roll."

The band also played "For Your Life" live for the first time.

"It's quite peculiar to imagine ... to think about creating a dynamic evening choosing from 10 different albums. There are certain songs that have to be there, and this is one of them," Plant said in introducing "Dazed and Confused."

When Page's solo started midway through the song, many in the audience were wondering whether the guitar virtuoso would resort to his old tricks.

But after only a few seconds, the 63-year-old Page turned his back to the crowd and walked nonchalantly toward his amp. Once there, he pulled a cello bow off the top, and the fans again went wild.

They followed that with "Stairway to Heaven," the band's staple song, which many hardcore fans were hoping would be dropped from the set.

But the crowd still loved it, with many standing to dance as Page played on his double-necked guitar.

A few lighters even popped up, but they were mostly replaced by digital cameras.

Plant may have struggled a bit on the early verses — his voice a tad raspy — but it was hardly reason to believe the band wasn't ready for anything.

Fans are hoping to get to hear them do it again, and soon.

Though this show is supposed to be one-time event, there have been rumors that if all went well, it would kick off a world tour.

Plant seemed to play down those rumors, saying he plans to tour with bluegrass star Alison Krauss, but Monday's performance will only add to the fervor of the fans to see them play more gigs.

"The whole idea of being on a cavalcade of merciless repetition is not what it's all about," Page told The Sunday Times leading up to the performance.

The show was Led Zeppelin's first full set since 1980. Robbed of "Bonzo's" pulsing drums, the band decided it couldn't go on and split up on Dec. 4, 1980.

Tickets for the show, a benefit for the late Atlantic Records founder Ahmet Ertegun, were won in an Internet lottery. Proceeds are to go to the Ahmet Ertegun Education Fund, which provides scholarships to universities in the United States, Britain and Turkey.

"Hey Ahmet, we did it!" Plant screamed after "Stairway."

Monday's concert wasn't the first Led Zeppelin reunion. The band played together in 1985 at Live Aid, and joined forces again three years later — with Jason Bonham on drums — to play at the 40th anniversary concert for Atlantic Records.

At their Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony in 1995, they teamed up with other musicians for another short set.

The show was originally scheduled for Nov. 26, but was postponed until Monday because Page injured the little finger on his left hand.

There were several opening acts rotating across the stage, mainly hosted by former Rolling Stones bassist Bill Wyman.

Paul Rodgers, Keith Emerson and Foreigner got the biggest cheers.

Plant said he was told that people from 50 countries made their way to London for the show.

"I can't believe people would come from 50 countries for that," Page said after pointing out a banner in the crowd that read "Hammer of the Gods."

They came, and they saw a show that hopefully won't be the last.

More reviews

Rave reviews for Led Zeppelin concert

By CHRIS LEHOURITES, Associated Press Writer
10 minutes ago


LONDON - On the morning after Led Zeppelin's long-awaited reunion concert, the music reviewers were already calling for more.

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Playing a full set for the first time in nearly three decades, the authors of "Stairway to Heaven" and "Whole Lotta Love" rocked the O2 Arena on Monday for more than two hours, leaving fans from around the world gasping in delight.

"With a synergy like this going on, it would be an act of cosmic perversity to stop now," Pete Paphides of The Times of London wrote.

The band's three surviving members — singer Robert Plant, guitarist Jimmy Page and bassist-keyboardist John Paul Jones — were joined at the sold-out benefit show by the late John Bonham's son Jason on drums.

The 16-song set mixed the classics with the thumping "Kashmir" and the hard-rocking "Dazed and Confused," which Plant introduced by saying, "There are certain songs that have to be there, and this is one of them."

Plant's high-pitched screeches and moans also filled the arena, while Page used a cello bow during the solo in "Dazed and Confused" and picked on his double-necked guitar to ring out the famous notes to "Stairway."

Although a full tour remains a mystery — Plant is reportedly due to tour with bluegrass star Alison Krauss — the band surely proved that it still had what it takes to keep an audience interested.

"Page dispensed power chords like an aged Thor lobbing down thunderbolts for kicks," Paphides wrote about "Black Dog," the band's third song of the night.

Other media also hailed the show as a success.

"They sound awesomely tight," Alexis Petridis wrote in Tuesday's The Guardian. David Cheal of The Daily Telegraph said the band's "familiar old sinew and swagger were still there."

The Independent was a little less effusive in its praise, but Andy Gill did write that the call-and-response routine between Plant and Page during "Black Dog" was "one of the night's more engaging moments."

Gill also singled out Bonham, who was sitting in for his father. John Bonham died in 1980 after choking on his own vomit, leading to the band's breakup a few months later.

"Jason Bonham makes a more than merely able replacement for his father on drums: indeed, there's a stronger funk element to his playing which kicks the songs along with more elan," Gill wrote.

In the Evening Standard, John Aizlewood gave the concert five stars.

"Two hours and 10 minutes after they began `Good Times Bad Times,' ... they had assuaged the doubts and delivered a show of breathtaking power and spine-tingling excitement," Aizlewood wrote.

The New York Times reviewer Ben Ratliff said Plant "was authoritative; he was dignified."

"As for Mr. Page, his guitar solos weren't as frenetic and articulated as they used to be, but that only drove home the point that they were always secondary to the riffs, which on Monday were enormous, nasty, glorious," Ratliff wrote.

Kim Murphy of the Los Angeles Times said the band "played the first sets with easygoing confidence. Their good humor built into triumphant intensity as the night wore on."

Daily Star writer James Cabooter may have written what all Zep fans have been thinking since the concert was announced months ago.

"Led Zep were pure class," he wrote. "Now bring on the full reunion tour."

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I really hope they do tour, because I will be there. One of my favorite all time bands, and one I'm too young to have had a chance to see. I've seen The Who, Stones, and Pink Floyd (who also should reunite one more time ). Zeppelin would round out that set nicely for me.


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Thanks for the reviews, Saint. Now I gotta clean up a whole lotta drool.

Please please please PLEASE go on tour in the states, Zeppelin!!!!!

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Fitting they opened with Good Times Bad Times... 1st song on Zeppelin I.

Glad to read they can still rock and roll.


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http://www.cnn.com/2007/SHOWBIZ/Music/12/11/led.zeppelin.ap/index.html#cnnSTCVideo

Just in case nobody noticed there is a video attached to that CNN article.

WOW. Just, Wow.

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That sucks they make you have to sit through Metallica in order to see Led Zep....I'm more excited for Radiohead headlining Lollapalooza for the simple fact I won't have to sit through 2 hours of 40 year old guys acting like they are hardcore metal.

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Led Zeppelin isn't metal, they are rock.

Metallica is metal, and even in their current form are harder than Radiohead, which I would classify as alternative rock.


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Led Zeppelin isn't metal, they are rock.

Metallica is metal, and even in their current form are harder than Radiohead, which I would classify as alternative rock.




I think Metallica tried too hard to be hip with their last album. Iknow Radiohead isn't metal.

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