Living the fast life of a rock and roller means you never know when someday will be your last, and one of those fateful moments happened at the 1979 Knebworth Festival when the original Led Zeppelin lineup played their last U.K. show unknowingly.
Videos by American Songwriter
The late summer festival was Led Zeppelin’s first live performance since the tragic death of Robert Plant’s son two years earlier. Unfortunately, the band’s experience with loss didn’t stop there.
The Original Led Zeppelin Lineup’s Last Show
Considering the band’s lengthy bereavement hiatus, Led Zeppelin’s manager, Peter Grant, wanted the iconic group to make a splash with their comeback. Thus, Grant booked the band as the headlining act for the 1979 Knebworth Festival, which also featured The New Barbarians, Todd Rundgren and Utopia, and Marshall Tucker, among others. Despite music lovers highly anticipating the band’s return, Led Zeppelin frontman Robert Plant was less enthusiastic.
“I was racked with nerves,” he later admitted (via Far Out Magazine). “It was our first British gig in four years, and we could have gone back to the Queen’s Head pub. We talked about doing something like that. But instead, we went back in such a flurry and a fluster to 210,000 people in a field and 180,000 more the next day. Nobody’s big enough to meet those expectations. But because there was some chemical charge in the air, it worked. It didn’t work for us.”
Critical reception of the performance reflected Plant’s feelings. Even manager Peter Grant admitted that the band was looser than usual, struggling to capture the same energy and tight arrangements of their earlier shows. Unfortunately, it would be the last time the original Led Zeppelin lineup would ever play together in their home country, ending their U.K. rock career with a less-than-impressive whimper.
Tragedy Followed The Band One Year Later
Although Led Zeppelin would continue to perform after their Knebworth appearance, embarking on their Tour Over Europe run in the summer of 1980, the original lineup would sadly never return to a U.K. stage. A little over one year after the band’s lackluster reunion at the Hertfordshire festival, drummer John Bonham died of aspiration on September 25, 1980, at 32 years old.
“Benje [LeFevre, the band’s road manager] and I found him,” bassist John Paul Jones later recalled. “It was like, ‘Let’s go up and look at Bonzo, see how he is.’ We tried to wake him up. It was terrible. Then I had to tell the other two. I had to break the news to Jimmy and Robert. It made me feel very angry at the waste of him. I can’t say he was in good shape because he wasn’t. There were some good moments during the last rehearsals, but then he started on the vodka.”
The day before his death, Bonham had been on a 12-hour drinking binge, consuming a whopping 40 shots worth of vodka. “He died because of an accident,” Jones said. “He was lying down the wrong way, which could have happened to anybody who drank a lot.” Led Zeppelin disbanded following Bonham’s death, leaving that fateful day on August 11, 1979, to be the last show they performed in the country where they started eleven years earlier.
Photo by Andre Csillag/Shutterstock
Leave a Reply
Only members can comment. Become a member. Already a member? Log in.