Originally posted by: compuwiz1
This is not Zeppelin. Last time I checked Bonham was still dead and frankly I can't see how these geriatrics can pull it off. There will be frequent breaks to change the Depends.![]()
Well, a Bonham is still playing the drums, and he'll sound just like his dad.Originally posted by: compuwiz1
This is not Zeppelin. Last time I checked Bonham was still dead and frankly I can't see how these geriatrics can pull it off. There will be frequent breaks to change the Depends.![]()
Originally posted by: compuwiz1
This is not Zeppelin. Last time I checked Bonham was still dead and frankly I can't see how these geriatrics can pull it off. There will be frequent breaks to change the Depends.![]()
Originally posted by: timswim78
They'll record it, but they won't release for 20 years. When they originally release it, it will only have 7 of the 15 songs on it. Then they'll release a version with the whole concert about 5 years after that. 2 years later, they'll release it again, but the songs will be reordered, and it will include two bonus tracks.
Yeah but unlike you they still have all their hair.:laugh:Originally posted by: compuwiz1
This is not Zeppelin. Last time I checked Bonham was still dead and frankly I can't see how these geriatrics can pull it off. There will be frequent breaks to change the Depends.![]()
Yep, and Van Halen was never the same after Michael Anthony replaced Mark Stone on bass, either.Originally posted by: oldsmoboat
Originally posted by: compuwiz1
This is not Zeppelin. Last time I checked Bonham was still dead and frankly I can't see how these geriatrics can pull it off. There will be frequent breaks to change the Depends.![]()
You're right.
The Beatles were never the same after Pete Best left.
![]()
True, but the main thing Robert Plant needs is his voice, and that left him over 20 years ago.Originally posted by: Red Dawn
Yeah but unlike you they still have all their hair.:laugh:Originally posted by: compuwiz1
This is not Zeppelin. Last time I checked Bonham was still dead and frankly I can't see how these geriatrics can pull it off. There will be frequent breaks to change the Depends.![]()
Originally posted by: jjsole
Is it on pay per view?
Originally posted by: Ns1
Originally posted by: jjsole
Is it on pay per view?
Yes
$16,000 for 1 view
..........
Originally posted by: oldsmoboat
Originally posted by: Ns1
Originally posted by: jjsole
Is it on pay per view?
Yes
$16,000 for 1 view
..........
I am recording it. I'll have the torrent up in a bit. PM me if you are a pirate.
Originally posted by: jjsole
Originally posted by: oldsmoboat
Originally posted by: Ns1
Originally posted by: jjsole
Is it on pay per view?
Yes
$16,000 for 1 view
..........
I am recording it. I'll have the torrent up in a bit. PM me if you are a pirate.
YHPM!
(not!)
Originally posted by: oldsmoboat
Originally posted by: compuwiz1
This is not Zeppelin. Last time I checked Bonham was still dead and frankly I can't see how these geriatrics can pull it off. There will be frequent breaks to change the Depends.![]()
You're right.
The Beatles were never the same after Pete Best left.
![]()
Originally posted by: Pacfanweb
True, but the main thing Robert Plant needs is his voice, and that left him over 20 years ago.Originally posted by: Red Dawn
Yeah but unlike you they still have all their hair.:laugh:Originally posted by: compuwiz1
This is not Zeppelin. Last time I checked Bonham was still dead and frankly I can't see how these geriatrics can pull it off. There will be frequent breaks to change the Depends.![]()
I'd still like to see them, though.
Led Zeppelin return to the stage
Led Zeppelin's Robert Plant (left) and Jimmy Page at Live Aid in 1985
Tribute band on their love of Led Zeppelin
Led Zeppelin have opened their first concert for 19 years at London's 02 arena with Good Times Bad Times, the first track of their debut album.
More than one million people took part in a ballot for just 9,000 pairs of tickets for the show.
The thousands of fans spent the day receiving their passes for the one-off tribute gig amid tight security.
One fan Geoff Jones said: "I have not been able to sleep for days." Another paid £83,000 for a pair of tickets.
Mr Jones added: "For me it's kind of like that Christmas feeling where you know Santa Claus is coming and you're like a child waiting for the biggest present you've ever waited for in your whole life."
There was huge demand to get into the one-off gig, which sees Jimmy Page, Robert Plant and John Paul Jones performing together for the first time since the late 1980s.
The show opened with news footage comparing the impact of Led Zeppelin and The Beatles, before a dazzling light show started the set.
Led Zeppelin tickets on eBay
Tickets have been fetching huge sums on eBay
The band, who have sold an estimated 300m albums, are performing a 90-minute set as part of the concert in memory of late Atlantic Records founder Ahmet Ertegun.
In an attempt to beat touts, fans were told they would not get a pass unless they presented not only the photo ID, but also the credit card they used to book their tickets and the confirmation code they received at the time.
But that has not stopped some eBay sellers claiming to have tickets, with some selling for up to £1,800 each.
BBC Radio 2 listener Kenneth Donnell, from Glasgow, had the most expensive tickets - after paying £83,000 for a pair of passes in an auction for Children In Need.
Promoter Harvey Goldsmith, who staged Live Aid and Live 8, said the reunion had probably generated more interest than "any show I've done".
The concert had been postponed from 26 November after guitarist Page fractured a finger.
The three surviving members of Led Zeppelin were joined by Jason Bonham, the son of their late drummer John Bonham.
Pete Townshend, Bill Wyman and the Rhythm Kings, Foreigner and Paolo Nutini - all Ertegun signings - were also performing.
I can't see how these geriatrics can pull it off.
"In days of my youth, I was told what it means to be a man," sang Plant, showing no trouble reproducing his trademark wail at 59. "Now I've reached that age, I've tried to do all those things the best I can. ... No matter how I try, I find my way to the same old jam."
