
When Led Zeppelin broke up in 1980, it left fans of one of the most super of rock’s supergroups dazed and confused. For lead singer Robert Plant, it created the challenge of going solo after being so identified as the voice of what Rolling Stone magazine recently dubbed “the heaviest band of all time.”
Plant’s first concert as a solo artist took place in 1982, but the singer remembers his nervousness like it was yesterday.
“In the afternoon of that day in Peoria, Ill., I was really emotional. Hopping up and down and pacing around. I mean, in those days, Led Zeppelin was legendary. It was still alive.”
“I thought, maybe I should just quit now [because] nothing could be like that. But on the other hand the great challenge was, what’s it going to be like?”
From 1968 through the ’70s, Led Zeppelin grew from just another British blues band to ascend the throne of heavy metal. In their prime, they ruled the arenas and stadiums. No other hard-rock group was as consistently popular, as influential or as explosive.
Led Zeppelin split up in 1980, when the heartbeat of the group, drummer John Bonham suddenly died.
When Plant kicked off his solo career that night in 1982, he had to face up to his own legacy.
“I walked onto the stage and I was absolutely drowned,” he says. “I was reduced to the size of a mouse because the response from the audience was amazing.”
Nine Lives is the title of a new box set that charts a 25-year musical journey, as Plant explored different sounds and remained a leading voice in rock.
At first, he relied a bit heavily on synthesizers and drum machines. But hey, it was the ’80s. Other steps along the way included: Plant’s brief role with The Honeydrippers, a rhythm and blues revival group; his ongoing fascination with the music of North Africa; and his 1988 reunion with Led Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page –- which yielded a hit that creatively used familiar snippets of their best-known recordings.
“I know that [Page] was very dubious when I started sampling Led Zeppelin on ‘Tall Cool One’ but I said, ‘Look, you know, if the Beastie Boys can do it, I guess everybody can do it…'”
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