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Plant said that diving back into the band's music for the concert had been "a spectacular experience." "To get through it and come out the other side was something not much short of miraculous," he said. Plant said having Jason Bonham join the band for the show was "strange and it was peculiar at times"
-- but also wonderful. Page said Jason Bonham's "encyclopedic knowledge" of Led Zeppelin had been invaluable. "Jason was absolutely monumental," the 68-year-old guitarist said. "From the very first rehearsal right through to the O2." Led Zeppelin's resistance to reforming the band -- despite the vast sums on offer
-- is the mark of a group unwilling to dwell too much in its own past. Plant said that like the early Delta bluesmen who inspired him, Led Zeppelin is "from another time." Rock behemoths like Led Zeppelin were blown from the charts by punk -- "I think we were ousted by the Cockney Rejects in 1977 for being a bit long-winded," Plant said
-- before being rediscovered by new generations. "Celebration Day" is released in 1,500 theaters around the world Oct. 17 and on DVD and other formats Nov. 19. No future Led Zeppelin projects have been announced. But you never know. Jones, 66, laughed off a question about why there had been a five-year gap between the concert and the film. "Five years -- that's five minutes in Zeppelin time," he said. ___ Online: http://www.ledzeppelin.com/
[Associated
Press;
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