logo
Jason Bonham to Perform Physical Graffiti on 2025 Led Zeppelin Evening US Tour

Jason Bonham to Perform Physical Graffiti on 2025 Led Zeppelin Evening US Tour

Yahoo25-02-2025
The post Jason Bonham to Perform Physical Graffiti on 2025 Led Zeppelin Evening US Tour appeared first on Consequence.
Jason Bonham will be celebrating the 50th anniversary of Physical Graffiti on his upcoming Led Zeppelin Evening US tour.
The outing runs through the month of May, kicking off on May 3rd in Wallingford, Connecticut, and running through the 31st with a gig at the Greek Theatre in Los Angeles. The trek hits cities such as Nashville, Austin, Dallas, Phoenix, and San Diego along the way.
Get Jason Bonham's Led Zeppelin Evening Tickets Here
A Live Nation ticket pre-sale for select dates begins Thursday (February 27th) at 10 a.m. local time using the code DUET. General ticket sales start Friday (February 28th) at 10 a.m. local time via Ticketmaster.
Each show will see Bonham and his band (including guitarist Akio 'Mr. Jimmy' Sakurai) performing Physical Graffiti in its entirety, along with other select classics from the Zeppelin catalog.
'This is my favorite Led Zeppelin album of all-time,' said Bonham in a press release. 'Being able to celebrate it the way we are planning on this tour is something I am extremely excited about. I can't wait for people to come out and see these shows and celebrate this extraordinary record with us. My goal is to play at least 50 shows to commemorate 50 years…And don't worry there will be plenty of other songs that you also love played that night.'
Heavy Consequence caught Jason Bonham's Led Zeppelin Evening this past fall at the Capitol Theatre in Port Chester, New York. See our review and photo gallery of the November 26th show.
Below you can see the full list of dates for the tour.
Jason Bonham's Led Zeppelin Evening 2025 Tour Dates: 05/03 – Wallingford, CT @ Toyota Oakdale Theatre 05/04 – Stamford, CT @ Stamford Palace Theatre 05/06 – Syracuse, NY @ Landmark Theatre 05/07 – Wheeling, WV @ Capitol Theatre 05/09 – Kansas City, MO @ VooDoo at Harrah's Kansas City 05/10 – Tulsa, OK @ The Cove Margaritaville at River Spirit Casino 05/11 – Waukee, IA @ Vibrant Music Hall 05/13 – Milwaukee, WI @ The Riverside Theater 05/15 – Nashville, TN @ Ryman Auditorium 05/16 – Robinsonville, MS @ Bluesville at Horseshoe Tunica 05/17 – St. Louis, MO @ The Factory at the District 05/19 – Austin, TX @ The Paramount Theatre 05/20 – Houston, TX @ Bayou Music Center 05/21 – Dallas, TX @ Majestic Theatre 05/23 – Phoenix, AZ @ Celebrity Theatre 05/24 – Indio, CA @ Fantasy Springs Resort Casino 05/25 – Saratoga, CA @ The Mountain Winery 05/28 – San Diego, CA @ Humphrey's Concerts by the Bay 05/29 – Paso Robles, CA @ Vina Robles Amphitheatre 05/30 – Henderson, NV @ Green Valley Ranch Resort Spa & Casino – Backyard Amphitheater 05/31 – Los Angeles, CA @ The Greek Theatre
Jason Bonham to Perform Physical Graffiti on 2025 Led Zeppelin Evening US Tour Jon Hadusek
Popular Posts
J6 Prison Choir to Perform at Kennedy Center
Tony Hawk Wishes Kurt Cobain Could Meet Their Shared Grandson
Wu-Tang Clan Announce Final Tour with Run the Jewels as Special Guest
The 69 Sexiest Film Scenes of All Time
Grimes Turns to Twitter to Beg for Elon Musk's Attention Amid Child's "Medical Crisis"
Kanye West Acknowledges Report That He's Inhaling Nitrous Oxide
Subscribe to Consequence's email digest and get the latest breaking news in music, film, and television, tour updates, access to exclusive giveaways, and more straight to your inbox.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Why This Former Led Zeppelin Member Will Never Play 'Stairway to Heaven' Again
Why This Former Led Zeppelin Member Will Never Play 'Stairway to Heaven' Again

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Why This Former Led Zeppelin Member Will Never Play 'Stairway to Heaven' Again

Why This Former Led Zeppelin Member Will Never Play 'Stairway to Heaven' Again originally appeared on Parade. Led Zeppelin is one of the most iconic classic rock bands, and "Stairway to Heaven" is frequently cited as one of the greatest classic rock songs of all time. The epic eight-minute track is famed for its slow opening riff, its soft vocals, and Jimmy Page's bombastic guitar shredding in the song's final third. While Zeppelin broke up in 1980, the band's three surviving members—Page, singer Robert Plant, and bassist/keyboardist John Paul Jones—reunited for one night only in 2007. The event was recorded and released in 2012 as the film Celebration Day. While Plant, Jones, and Page are all still alive, they've made it clear that another reunion concert will never happen again. Why? Because they want to remember it for what it was and leave it in that moment in time. Now, as Plant gears up to release a new album with his new band, Saving Grace, he's revealed that he doesn't just feel that way about performing with his old bandmates, but about performing their hit songs as well. 🎬 SIGN UP for Parade's Daily newsletter to get the latest pop culture news & celebrity interviews delivered right to your inbox 🎬 Plant spoke to Mojoabout the pressure from fans to play the hits—and why he refuses to do it. 'What were the hits?" the Grammy winner asked. "How can they be related to now, where do they fit? They fit as a sort of memoir…' He continued to address why he'll never play Led Zeppelin's greatest hit. 'When people say that I don't like 'Stairway to Heaven,' I just don't like the idea of it," Plant explained. "These iconic things – they're just what they are." Plant has a point. Some things are better left untouched and left in a moment in time, like an iconic classic song or a whirlwind vacation romance. Saving Grace's album, also called Saving Grace, will be released on September 26. Why This Former Led Zeppelin Member Will Never Play 'Stairway to Heaven' Again first appeared on Parade on Aug 13, 2025 This story was originally reported by Parade on Aug 13, 2025, where it first appeared. Solve the daily Crossword

Terry Reid, rock singer known as ‘Superlungs,' dies at 75
Terry Reid, rock singer known as ‘Superlungs,' dies at 75

Boston Globe

time3 days ago

  • Boston Globe

Terry Reid, rock singer known as ‘Superlungs,' dies at 75

In his prime, in the late 1960s and the '70s, Mr. Reid's powerful vocal stylings were compared favorably to the likes of Rod Stewart and Bad Company's Paul Rodgers. Graham Nash, who produced Mr. Reid's 1976 album, 'Seed of a Memory,' once described his talent as 'phenomenal.' Robert Plant of Led Zeppelin called him 'probably the best singer of that period.' Advertisement After he released his debut album, 'Bang, Bang You're Terry Reid,' in 1968, when he was just 18, Franklin said, 'There are only three things happening in England: the Rolling Stones, the Beatles and Terry Reid.' Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up Mr. Reid never had a major hit song or album, although a few of his albums eventually came to be regarded as minor masterpieces — particularly 'River' (1973), with its blend of blues, jazz, folk, R&B, and Brazilian music. Although it climbed no higher than No. 172 on the Billboard 200, the British rock magazine Mojo later described 'River' as 'one of the most lazily magnificent records of that or any other year.' His song 'Without Expression,' which he wrote at 14 and included on his first album, was later covered by John Mellencamp, REO Speedwagon, and other artists. Jack White of the White Stripes recorded Mr. Reid's 1969 song 'Rich Kid Blues' in 2008 with his band the Raconteurs. Advertisement Even so, Mr. Reid's career was too often framed by what he didn't do. His shot at rock immortality came in late 1968, when guitar sorcerer Jimmy Page, late of the Yardbirds, was putting together his next venture, which was originally called the New Yardbirds and would evolve into Led Zeppelin. He was well aware of Mr. Reid's gift — a voice that could swing from a raspy croon to a flamethrower blues howl — since Mr. Reid had opened for the Yardbirds, and he and the band shared a manager, the intimidating ex-wrestler Peter Grant. 'Jim called me up and said, 'You'd really be good as the singer,'' Mr. Reid said in a 2016 interview with Mojo. But there were complications, starting with his contract to produce solo work for pop impresario Mickie Most, who had minted hits for the Animals, Donovan, and others. And then there were the Rolling Stones. Mr. Reid had made a handshake agreement with guitarist Keith Richards to accompany the Stones on their 1969 tour. 'I said, 'Yeah, I'd love to give it a shot,'' Mr. Reid recalled telling Page in a 2007 interview with The Independent of Britain. ''But I've just got to pop off for a minute to do this Stones tour and I don't want to be the one to tell Keith I'm not going.' ' 'Oh, no, we've got to do it now,' Mr. Reid recalled Page telling him. The supergroup Cream, featuring Eric Clapton, Ginger Baker, and Jack Bruce, 'had broken up and everybody in London was trying to put one of those groups together, so it's a big scramble who's first.' Advertisement Instead, Mr. Reid suggested two members of a group called Band of Joy — Plant, blessed with a similarly searing voice, and berserker drummer John Bonham. 'I contributed half the band,' Mr. Reid later said. 'That's enough on my part.' Terrance James Reid was born Nov. 13, 1949, in St. Neots, a town in Cambridgeshire, England, the only child of Walter Reid, a car salesman, and Grace (Barker) Reid. He grew up in the nearby village of Bluntisham and attended St. Ivo Academy in St. Ives. He started his first band, the Redbeats, at 13. Two years later he left school and joined Peter Jay and the Jaywalkers, which got a blast of exposure opening for the Rolling Stones on their 1966 British tour. One gig, at the Royal Albert Hall, was 'all screaming girls,' Mr. Reid told Mojo. 'It was scary. You couldn't hear anything, your ears were shut down.' The Jaywalkers broke up soon after, and Mr. Reid embarked on a solo career. His knack for sidestepping history continued. On the Stones' 1969 tour, Mr. Reid chose not to play the final gig — the chaotic, violence-marred Altamont Speedway Free Festival, which left one fan dead. 'I had a bad feeling about Altamont and said so to Keith,' he later recalled. Around that time, opportunity knocked again when guitarist Ritchie Blackmore invited him to become the lead vocalist for the heavy metal progenitors Deep Purple, replacing Rod Evans. Again Mr. Reid slammed the door, ceding the job to Ian Gillan. Advertisement 'They were going into a real hard-rock thing that I wasn't so into,' he later told Mojo. Mr. Reid spent years tangled in litigation with Most. He eventually wriggled free and relocated to the United States, where he signed with Atlantic Records. When the label's star-making president, Ahmet Ertegun, first heard 'The River,' he told Mr. Reid, 'You've given me a jazz album,' Mr. Reid recalled to Mojo. 'Which it was, in the sense that David Crosby's 'If I Could Only Remember My Name' or Van Morrison's 'Astral Weeks' were jazz.' His solo career wound down in the 1980s, although he did session work for the likes of Jackson Browne, Don Henley, and Bonnie Raitt. His comeback album, 'The Driver,' released in 1991, featured a star-studded cast, including Joe Walsh, Enya, and Stewart Copeland, best known as the drummer with the Police. He released his final studio album, 'The Other Side of the River,' in 2016. In addition to his wife, Mr. Reid is survived by two daughters from an earlier relationship, Kelly and Holly Reid; and two stepdaughters, Erin Grady Barbagelata and Chelsea King. Following Mr. Reid's death, Plant, who remained a friend, paid tribute to him on social media: 'Such charisma. His voice, his range … his songs capturing that carefree era … Superlungs indeed.' 'He catapulted me into an intense new world he chose to decline,' Plant added. For his part, Mr. Reid, who was burdened for life with questions about his near miss with Led Zeppelin, was not so sure that he would have been a Plant-scale supernova in some alternative universe. 'Who's to say what would have happened if Jim and me had got a band?' he said in an interview with The Independent. 'It might have been a bloody failure.' Advertisement This article originally appeared in

Terry Reid, Rock Singer Known as ‘Superlungs,' Dies at 75
Terry Reid, Rock Singer Known as ‘Superlungs,' Dies at 75

New York Times

time3 days ago

  • New York Times

Terry Reid, Rock Singer Known as ‘Superlungs,' Dies at 75

Terry Reid, a British vocal alchemist and songwriter whose powerful voice earned him the nickname Superlungs — and who, despite turning down the chance to become the lead singer of Led Zeppelin, came to be celebrated as a singer's singer by luminaries like Aretha Franklin, died on Aug. 4 in Rancho Mirage, Calif. He was 75. His wife, Annette Grady, said he died in a hospital from complications of cancer. He had experienced a variety of health problems and canceled scheduled performances in July. In his prime, in the late 1960s and the '70s, Mr. Reid's powerful vocal stylings were compared favorably to the likes of Rod Stewart and Bad Company's Paul Rodgers. Graham Nash, who produced Mr. Reid's 1976 album, 'Seed of a Memory,' once described his talent as 'phenomenal.' Robert Plant of Led Zeppelin called him 'probably the best singer of that period.' After he released his debut album, 'Bang, Bang You're Terry Reid,' in 1968, when he was just 18, Ms. Franklin said, 'There are only three things happening in England: the Rolling Stones, the Beatles and Terry Reid.' Mr. Reid never had a major hit song or album, although a few of his albums eventually came to be regarded as minor masterpieces — particularly 'River' (1973), with its blend of blues, jazz, folk, R&B and Brazilian music. Although it climbed no higher than No. 172 on the Billboard 200, the British rock magazine Mojo later described 'River' as 'one of the most lazily magnificent records of that or any other year.' His song 'Without Expression,' which he wrote at 14 and included on his first album, was later covered by John Mellencamp, REO Speedwagon and other artists. Jack White of the White Stripes recorded Mr. Reid's 1969 song 'Rich Kid Blues' in 2008 with his band the Raconteurs. Even so, Mr. Reid's career was too often framed by what he didn't do. His shot at rock immortality came in late 1968, when the guitar sorcerer Jimmy Page, late of the Yardbirds, was putting together his next venture, which was originally called the New Yardbirds and would evolve into Led Zeppelin. He was well aware of Mr. Reid's gift — a voice that could swing from a raspy croon to a flamethrower blues howl — since Mr. Reid had opened for the Yardbirds, and he and the band shared a manager, the intimidating ex-wrestler Peter Grant. 'Jim called me up and said, 'You'd really be good as the singer,'' Mr. Reid said in a 2016 interview with Mojo. But there were complications, starting with his contract to produce solo work for the pop impresario Mickie Most, who had minted hits for the Animals, Donovan and others. And then there were the Rolling Stones. Mr. Reid had made a handshake agreement with the guitarist Keith Richards to accompany the Stones on their 1969 tour. 'I said, 'Yeah, I'd love to give it a shot,'' Mr. Reid recalled telling Mr. Page in a 2007 interview with The Independent of Britain. ''But I've just got to pop off for a minute to do this Stones tour and I don't want to be the one to tell Keith I'm not going.'' 'Oh no, we've got to do it now,' Mr. Reid recalled Mr. Page telling him. The supergroup Cream, featuring Eric Clapton, Ginger Baker and Jack Bruce, 'had broken up and everybody in London was trying to put one of those groups together, so it's a big scramble who's first.' Instead, Mr. Reid suggested two members of a group called Band of Joy — the singer Robert Plant, blessed with a similarly searing voice, and the berserker drummer John Bonham. 'I contributed half the band,' Mr. Reid later said. 'That's enough on my part.' Terrance James Reid was born on Nov. 13, 1949, in St. Neots, a town in Cambridgeshire, England, the only child of Walter Reid, a car salesman, and Grace (Barker) Reid. He grew up in the nearby village of Bluntisham and attended St. Ivo Academy in St. Ives. He started his first band, the Redbeats, at 13. Two years later he left school and joined Peter Jay and the Jaywalkers, which got a blast of exposure opening for the Rolling Stones on their 1966 British tour. One gig, at the Royal Albert Hall, was 'all screaming girls,' Mr. Reid told Mojo. 'It was scary. You couldn't hear anything, your ears were shut down.' The Jaywalkers broke up soon after, and Mr. Reid embarked on a solo career. His knack for sidestepping history continued. On the Stones' 1969 tour, Mr. Reid chose not to play the final gig — the chaotic, violence-marred Altamont Speedway Free Festival, which left one fan dead. 'I had a bad feeling about Altamont and said so to Keith,' he later recalled. Around that time, opportunity knocked again when the guitarist Ritchie Blackmore invited him to become the lead vocalist for the heavy metal progenitors Deep Purple, replacing Rod Evans. Again Mr. Reid slammed the door, ceding the job to Ian Gillan. 'They were going into a real hard-rock thing that I wasn't so into,' he later told Mojo. Mr. Reid spent years tangled in litigation with Mr. Most. He eventually wriggled free and relocated to the United States, where he signed with Atlantic Records. When the label's star-making president, Ahmet Ertegun, first heard 'The River,' he told Mr. Reid, 'You've given me a jazz album,' Mr. Reid recalled to Mojo. 'Which it was, in the sense that David Crosby's 'If I Could Only Remember My Name' or Van Morrison's 'Astral Weeks' were jazz.' His solo career wound down in the 1980s, although he did session work for the likes of Jackson Browne, Don Henley and Bonnie Raitt. His comeback album, 'The Driver,' released in 1991, featured a star-studded cast, including Joe Walsh, Enya and Stewart Copeland, best known as the drummer with the Police. He released his final studio album, 'The Other Side of the River,' in 2016. In addition to his wife, Mr. Reid is survived by two daughters from an earlier relationship, Kelly and Holly Reid; and two stepdaughters, Erin Grady Barbagelata and Chelsea King. Following Mr. Reid's death, Mr. Plant, who remained a friend, paid tribute to him on social media: 'Such charisma. His voice, his range … his songs capturing that carefree era … Superlungs indeed.' 'He catapulted me into an intense new world he chose to decline,' Mr. Plant added. For his part, Mr. Reid, who was burdened for life with questions about his near miss with Led Zeppelin, was not so sure that he would have been a Plant-scale supernova in some alternative universe. 'Who's to say what would have happened if Jim and me had got a band?' he said in an interview with The Independent. 'It might have been a bloody failure.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store