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Rock

Robert Plant Performs Led Zeppelin Classic on ‘Late Show’: Watch

The British singer and his band Saving Grace performed "Higher Rock," and stuck around for a bonus shot at the Zeppelin classic, "Ramble On."

Robert Plant & Band

Robert Plant & Band

Tom Oldham

Robert Plant, he’s still got it. Never any doubt.

The legendary Led Zeppelin frontman returned to The Late Show with Stephen Colbert on Wednesday evening (April 8), for something old, and something folky.


The British singer and his group Saving Grace performed Martha Scanlan’s “Higher Rock,” lifted from their self-titled debut covers album, released last September. The veteran artist and his bandmates stuck around for a bonus shot at the Zeppelin classic, “Ramble On.”

It’s the second time Plant has graced the Late Show stage in six months. Last November, he stopped by for a deep dive into The Lord of the Rings and the fantasy classic’s late author J.R.R. Tolkien. Hitting “Ramble On” was a neat tie-in. The song was originally recorded in 1969, appears on Zeppelin’s second studio album, and is said to have been inspired by LOTR.

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Earlier, in a sitdown with Colbert, Plant discussed the state of English folk music. He digs it, well, most of it. It’s become “quite healthy again. There’s a contemporary element of it,” he remarks in a “Colbert Before Air” edit. The American stuff, however, “it’s a lot more bloodthirsty and there’s a lot more treachery.” Sea shanties, nope.

Colbert’s beloved late-night show is scheduled to go off the air, for good, on May 21. The talk-show master isn’t folding with the end in sight.

Plant, one of many superstar entertainers booked for the last run, is one of the best to ever do it. Zep’s career spans nine albums and 12 years, effectively ending when drummer John Bonham died in 1980. Seven of those went to No. 1 on the Billboard 200 chart, and five are certified diamond by the RIAA, for 10 million units shifted in the United States. The blues-rockers were indicted into the Rock And Roll Hall of Fame in 1995.

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Saving Grace was recorded between April of 2019 and January of 2025 in the Cotswolds region of England and on the Welsh Borders. Plant most recent collaborations have been with longtime creative partner Alison Krauss, with whom he went on tour last summer, and the Sensational Shapeshifters, which was active from 2012 to 2018.

Plant and Saving Grace (vocalist Suzi Dian, drummer Oli Jefferson, guitarist Tony Kelsey, banjo and string player Matt Worley, and cellist Barney Morse-Brown) will embark on a tour of Europe and the United States this summer and fall.

See the dates here.

This article was first published by Billboard U.S.

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Dan Hawie
Courtesy Photo

Dan Hawie

Record Labels

Dan Hawie Promoted to Managing Director of Last Gang Records by MNRK Music Group

Formerly with Dine Alone Records and Nevado Records, the Toronto-based label exec joined Last Gang in 2017 where he served as director of marketing and A&R.

MNRK Music Group has announced the promotion of Dan Hawie to managing director of Last Gang Records. Effective immediately, Hawie will oversee Last Gang’s finances and assume expanded leadership across A&R and brand strategy. Based in Toronto, he will report to Randy Derebegian, vp of artist development, and Chris Moncada, coo of MNRK Music Group.

"I’m incredibly honoured to carry the legacy of Last Gang forward," Hawie says. "Twenty-one years in, our ‘Us Against The World’ mentality continues to fuel everything we do. Foundational artists like Death From Above 1979, Metric, and Mother Mother are still shaping culture today, while our new guard, including Bella Poarch, Ho99o9, Loving, and Mondo Cozmo, continues to push boundaries and move the culture forward. I’m grateful to help preserve that independent spirit, and especially proud to champion such incredible art with the same passion and belief as the artists creating it.”

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