Robert Plant Won’t “Stairway” Into Led Zeppelin’s Greatest Hits on Tour

Robert Plant just wrapped up the European leg of his tour with his band Saving Grace, and as the North American dates approach this October, fans hoping for a full-on Led Zeppelin greatest hits setlist might want to adjust their expectations.

Yes, Plant has been sprinkling in a few Zeppelin favorites like “The Rain Song” and “Ramble On”, but don’t expect the legendary frontman to belt out some of the band’s most famous anthems. His reason? In his words, “to do it for the sake of it was never what Zeppelin was about.”

Plant explained that the so-called “hits” from Led Zeppelin are tricky to place in today’s context.

“They fit as a sort of memoir,” he said, adding that it’s not that he hates songs like “Stairway to Heaven”, but he’s not drawn to the idea of performing them just for nostalgia’s sake.

Instead, Plant has a soft spot for some of Zeppelin’s deeper cuts. He praised tracks like “For Your Life” from the album “Presence” and the epic “Achilles Last Stand”, calling it “extraordinary that three people and a singer can do that.” To him, these songs capture more of the magic and challenge that made the band legendary in the first place.

In another bit of classic Plant independence, he also declined an invite from Black Sabbath’s Tony Iommi to attend the band’s “Back to the Beginning” show. “I said, Tony, I’d love to come, but I can’t come… I don’t know anything about what’s going on in that world now,” he explained. Plant stressed that it’s not about disrespect — he simply feels his creative life has moved into “other places that are so rich.”

So, when you see Robert Plant live in 2025, expect a mix of Saving Grace’s material, a few carefully chosen Zeppelin tracks, and a setlist that reflects where he is now, not just where he’s been.

For Plant, it’s about keeping the music alive in the present, not locking it in the amber of classic rock history.

It’s a bold move in an era when nostalgia tours dominate the live music circuit, but then again, Robert Plant has never been one to follow the crowd. And judging by his energy and curiosity, it seems like he plans to keep it that way.

Aerosmith’s “Sweet Emotion” Tops List of 100 Classic Rock Songs by 100 Artists

Classic rock rankings usually feel like déjà vu, with the same handful of bands hogging the top spots. But UltimateClassicRock.com just gave the genre a fun shake-up by creating a list of the Top 100 Classic Rock Songs — with one important twist: only one song per artist.

That means no Beatles triple-play, no Led Zeppelin overload, and no Queen domination. Just one iconic track each, battling it out for rock supremacy.

And the crown goes to… Aerosmith’s “Sweet Emotion”. Released in 1975, it’s still one of the band’s most recognizable riffs and a permanent fixture on any rock radio playlist.

Right behind it at #2 is Led Zeppelin’s epic “Kashmir”, followed by The Rolling Stones’ gritty “Gimme Shelter” in third. The rest of the top five is just as stacked: AC/DC’s “Back in Black” at #4, and The Beatles’ “A Day in the Life” rounding things out at #5.

Here’s how the rest of the Top 20 shakes out:

  1. “All Along the Watchtower” – The Jimi Hendrix Experience
  2. “Bohemian Rhapsody” – Queen
  3. “Everybody Wants Some!!” – Van Halen
  4. “Comfortably Numb” – Pink Floyd
  5. “Paranoid” – Black Sabbath
  6. “Baba O’Riley” – The Who
  7. “Sweet Child O’ Mine” – Guns N’ Roses
  8. “Don’t Stop Believin’” – Journey
  9. “Sweet Home Alabama” – Lynyrd Skynyrd
  10. “Fortunate Son” – Creedence Clearwater Revival
  11. “Born to Run” – Bruce Springsteen
  12. “Crazy Train” – Ozzy Osbourne
  13. “L.A. Woman” – The Doors
  14. “La Grange” – ZZ Top
  15. “Hotel California” – Eagles

The full list spans decades of rock history, from psychedelic ’60s anthems to arena-shaking ’80s hits. And because of the one-song-per-artist rule, it’s a much more diverse playlist than the usual “Greatest Rock Songs” countdowns.

Fans online are already debating the rankings, questioning whether Bohemian Rhapsody should be higher, if Hotel California is underrated at #20, and whether it’s even possible to pick just one Pink Floyd song without starting a fight.

If nothing else, the list is a killer crash course in rock history — perfect for building a playlist that’ll keep you air-guitaring for hours without repeating the same band twice.

Led Zeppelin’s Live Aid Set Is the Musical Footage That Shall Not Be Named

If you’re planning to relive the magic of Live Aid this weekend, don’t expect to see Led Zeppelin anywhere in the mix. As the 40th anniversary of the historic 1985 concert rolls around this Sunday, there will LIKELY be one very notable no-show . . . because they want it that way.

The official Live Aid YouTube channel is celebrating the milestone with over 10 hours of classic performances, and CNN is dropping a four-part documentary titled “Live Aid: When Rock ‘n’ Roll Took on the World” at 9:00 p.m. Sunday.

But if you were hoping to see that infamous Zeppelin set, you’ll probably be out of luck.

Led Zeppelin’s three-song reunion performance at Live Aid, which brought together Robert Plant, Jimmy Page, and John Paul Jones for the first time since drummer John Bonham’s death, has long been considered a trainwreck by fans and the band alike. The group has refused to allow any official footage of the set to be included in Live Aid retrospectives, box sets, or documentaries ever since.

Why so bad? Well, for starters, they had less than two hours to rehearse. One of their fill-in drummers that day was Phil Collins (yes, that Phil Collins), who had just flown in from another Live Aid stage in London.

According to Jimmy Page, Collins struggled to sync up during the opening of “Rock and Roll”. And to be fair, even Phil admits it wasn’t his finest hour. In interviews, he’s said he felt like a “spare part” on stage, and would’ve walked off if he could’ve.

The performance lives on in grainy bootlegs floating around online, but you won’t find it in the official archives. Zeppelin’s stance has been firm: they want that chapter closed and buried.

So while you’ll still get Queen’s legendary set, U2’s breakout moment, and Bowie’s eyeliner in HD glory, the Led Zeppelin reunion will remain the awkward family photo everyone agreed not to frame.

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