Thursday, January 8, 2015
Jason Bonham in 2015
The first date has popped up on Ticketmaster, March 11 at the Uptown Theatre, Napa California. Tickets go on sale Monday. Look for more dates to be announced in the next week or two.
On May 2nd, Sammy Hagar and The Circle to play the Carolina Rebellion Festival in Concord, NC. The Circle features Jason, Michael Anthony and guitarist Vic Johnson from the band Waboritas. Also on the 2-day festival (May 2nd and 3rd) lineup is Slash, featuring rumoured almost Zeppeliner Myles Kennedy, Cheap Trick, Marilyn Manson, Slipknot, Slayer and a host of others.
There will be, I am sure, much more from Jason as 2015 develops.
Tuesday, April 30, 2013
Jason Bonham: Heartless?

Jason's Led Zeppelin Experience (JBLZE) will be touring in a supporting role for Heart beginning June 17th, and continuing August 30th in Portland. The show will consist of JBLZE opening the show, and then joining Heart onstage for a 30-minute encore set of Led Zeppelin songs as a finale.
The practical effect of what the LeBlanc snub means is that JBLZE will play rockers such as Rock and Roll, Black Dog, The Immigrant Song and Whole Lotta Love to open. Any keyboard songs, such as Kashmir, Since i've Been Loving You and Stairway to Heaven will happen in the encore when Heart's keyboard player, Debbie Shair, will be onstage with the band. Likely any acoustic songs will also happen then, when LeBlanc's mandolin can be filled by guitarist Tony Catania while Heart's Nancy Wilson and Craig Bartock take the guitar parts (speaking of the latter, thinking it through, does anyone else expect a Battle of Evermore/Stairway to Heaven finale?).
It's a sad day for Jason Bonham's Led Zeppelin Experience to see LeBlanc, in his own words, "thrown off the bus."
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Update: Elly LeBlanc weighs in:
This is NOT JBLZE without Stephen LeBlanc...it's a reprehensible decision...and after three years of contribution...Jason or whoever made this decision is a fucking idiot... Stephen didn't do anything other than his best to make what is essentially a fucking tribute band, (albeit probably the best Zep tribute band out there, with Stephen in it) better. Yes it does hurt... it always hurts when people are treated unethically and led to believe they are part of the band, particularly after three years of hard work.
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Wednesday, April 3, 2013
Jason Bonham's Led Zeppelin Experience to tour with Heart

Listed as the Heartbreaker Tour, I hear the Jason and the LZE could be doing upwards of 40 dates alongside Heart this summer. That should cover most of North America.
There will be more details to follow as dates are announced.
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Update:
DATE | CITY / STATE | VENUE | TICKETS | ||
6/17 | West Palm Beach, FL | Cruzan Amphitheater | Buy Tickets | ||
6/18 | Tampa, FL | Live Nation Amphitheater | Buy Tickets | ||
6/20 | Atlanta, GA | Chastain Park Amphitheater | Buy Tickets | ||
6/21 | Charlotte, NC | Verizon Wireless Amphitheater | Buy Tickets | ||
6/22 | Raleigh, NC | Time Warner Cable Music Pavilion | Buy Tickets | ||
6/24 | Virginia Beach, VA | Farm Bureau Live | Buy Tickets | ||
6/25 | Washington, DC | Jiffy Lube Live | Buy Tickets | ||
6/27 | Wantagh, NY | Nikon at Jones Beach Theater | Buy Tickets | ||
6/28 | Boston, MA | Comcast Center – Mansfield MA | Buy Tickets | ||
6/29 | Bethel, NY | Center for the Arts | Buy Tickets | ||
7/2 | Holmdel, NJ | PNC Bank Arts Center | Buy Tickets | ||
7/3 | Philadelphia, PA | Susquehanna Bank Center - Camden | Buy Tickets | ||
7/4 | Uncasville, CT | Mohegan Sun Arena | Buy Tickets | ||
7/19 | Detroit, MI | DTE Energy Music Theater | Buy Tickets | ||
7/21 | Pittsburgh, PA | First Niagara Pavilion - Burgettstown | Buy Tickets | ||
7/22 | Cleveland, OH | Blossom Music Center | Buy Tickets | ||
7/23 | Toronto, ON | Molson Canadian Ampitheatre | Buy Tickets | ||
7/27 | Cincinnati, OH | Riverbend Music Center | Buy Tickets | ||
7/29 | Chicago, IL | Ravinia Festival | Buy Tickets | ||
7/30 | Indianapolis, IN | Klipsch Music Center | Buy Tickets | ||
8/1 | West Allis, WI | Wisconsin State Fair | Buy Tickets | ||
8/14 | Houston, TX | Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion | Buy Tickets | ||
8/15 | Dallas, TX | Gexa Energy Pavilion | Buy Tickets | ||
8/17 | St. Louis, MO | Verizon Wireless Amphitheater | Buy Tickets | ||
8/18 | Kansas City, MO | Starlight Theater | TBA | ||
8/20 | Denver, CO | Fiddler’s Green Amphitheater | Buy Tickets | ||
8/22 | Los Angeles, CA | Greek Theater | TBA | ||
8/23 | Los Angeles, CA | Greek Theater | TBA | ||
8/24 | Indio, CA | Fantasy Springs Resort Casino | TBA | ||
8/26 | San Diego, CA | Open Air Theater | Buy Tickets | ||
8/28 | San Francisco, CA | America’s Cup Pavilion | Buy Tickets | ||
8/30 | Portland, OR | Sleep Country Amphitheater | TBA |

Sunday, February 10, 2013
Jason Bonham's Led Zeppelin Experience: A Profile in Review

The most surreal moment of spending a few days in the company of Jason Bonham’s Led Zeppelin Experience is exiting Massey Hall after the 2nd show of the band's current mini-tour. I turn and look at the door as it closes, and it’s the stage door, with a single light bulb over it and a sign on it. Along with Maple Leaf Gardens, Massey Hall is the iconic place for any kid from Southern Ontario, and I’ve just left it by the stage door.
We entered by the front door, where the sign is the old Massey Hall sign, the one that’s been there since my parents took me to see the Irish Rovers - which would be not long before Rush recorded All The Worlds a Stage, one of the great live albums - there. Our seats are right beside the sound board, the best seats in the house. Jason Bonham’s Led Zeppelin Experience is an audio/video rock and roll concert and the tone of the show is set immediately. The show starts with the night's first video clip before the band comes on and kicks off with Rock and Roll. Jason, the son, paying tribute to his father John with his dad’s most recognizable drum part. At the songs conclusion Bonham rips into the final drum fill, less like the father, now playing it like Jason himself, as we’ve come to know the song from Celebration Day. Your reminded of the moment in the film and can almost picture Jimmy Page, Robert Plant and John Paul Jones smiling over the drum kit at him as he nails it, the iconic 2007 concert’s final moment, the beginning on this evening. Celebration Day looms large at the Jason Bonham’s Led Zeppelin Experience shows this time around. It is mentioned in one of Jason’s monologues: the dream of a Led Zeppelin album in stores bearing his name, and adjustments have been made to some of the songs because of Celebration Day.
“I was sick last week, so I never got a chance to rehearse that song,” James Dylan is explaining to me. The back stage area in Massey Hall is more like an apartment, with a number of adjoining rooms, a balcony and a kitchen area. We are walking up the stairs as he continues: “That’s the first time I have sung that song with the band. Ironic, huh?” he asks. He's talking about Sick Again, the set's second song, adjoined to Rock and Roll as Led Zeppelin did it in 1975: Bonham has apparently been listening to the old bootlegs again. It's a great start to what is going to be a great show.
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Our first stop is the Massey Hall box office. Going past the large main doors, we can faintly hear music coming from inside. I put my ear to the door and can hear Dylan singing:
Lyin', cheatin', hurtin, that's all you seem to do.
Messin' around with every guy in town,
Puttin' me down for thinkin' of someone new.
Always the same, playin' your game,
Drive me insane, trouble is gonna come to you...
I pull my ear away having heard all I need to for now. At dinner I message Dylan: “sound checking Your Time is Gonna Come, eh? Sounds good” (the eh? is added to remind him he’s in Canada now). Later he tells me it’s a new addition to the setlist so they needed to play it through.
At soundcheck in Kitchener the next day I’m sitting in the front row, the only person there not traveling with the band. As they go through Houses of the Holy, stopping it a couple of times to get something right, even going so far as to play a recording when indecision rears it’s head, I assume it’s going to be added to the setlist. It isn’t and neither is Trampled Underfoot, which they also soundchecked. Pity, both sound great. But Bonham shows himself in soundcheck to be a bit of a perfectionist, and besides, what song should they remove to add those two in? That was always the dilemma the originals faced, and it’s one Bonham has too. When you have more than 80 quality songs, what do you leave out?
I've heard before that Jason Bonham is a good singer. Robert Plant, introducing Misty Mountain Hop during the O2 show in 2007 said, “Jason’s a pretty cool singer..." I hear first hand just how good a singer Jason is when he and keyboardist Stephen LeBlanc do a Ray Charles soundalike rendition of Georgia on my Mind. Later, he belts out the ending of Babe I’m Gonna Leave You, giving a good Robert with his lemon thoroughly squeezed imitation. Yes, Jason Bonham is a good singer.
Babe I’m Gonna Leave You may be the highlight of the show. At Massey Hall, guitarist Tony Catania’s acoustic guitar, set on a Steve Howe-like guitar stand, had a patch problem. It wasn’t working is the short version, and it was an obvious problem, not like say, they skipped a verse in Kashmir. Even Jason was peering over his drum kit, the look of a boss, worried that something is going awry, on his face. For Catania it was just a day at the office, however, and he stepped away and began the song on his Les Paul - just as Jimmy Page played it the few times Zeppelin played this song live. By the second time through the verse, the problem was solved and Catania finished the song moving between the two guitars as the arrangement was designed to do. The dynamics of the song, Catania’s acoustic to electric, Steve LeBlanc moving between his lap steel and acoustic guitar, singer Dylan simply nailing it with every note, electrified the crowd. This isn’t good, this is great and the Toronto crowd gives the night's first, but hardly last, standing ovation. In Kitchener the crowd is more vocal, and throughout the song are cheering and whooping. I am not the only one who gets chills when these guys play this song, and I know what Jimmy Page envisioned for Led Zeppelin back in 1968 was this: exactly this.
Playing slide and playing the harmonica have certain things in common: both are staples of the blues, both are easy to play, difficult to play well. Catania follows up his expressive playing on Babe I’m Gonna Leave You with some excellent slide work for You Shook Me. He hits those first few notes with such authority, clean tone and impeccable tuning there’s just no doubting, this guy can play slide. Standing beside him on stage, almost in the wings, his childhood friend is playing the harp.
“This is Gary Hood,” James introduces us, “the hardest working man on the show.” Hood is tall with long blond hair which he wears in a ponytail. Onstage, he adds a fedora and looks the part of a blues player perfectly. I offer a compliment on his playing, and he accepts it quietly, almost embarrassed that anybody noticed. On the first tour, bassist Michael Devin handled the harp duties as necessary. When Devin left the band, “they told me, I guess you’re doing it, you’re the singer,” Dylan says. “But I’ve never played harp before.” As Catania’s guitar tech, they overheard Hood playing the harp one day and he got the job. Hood plays the harp on You Shook Me and When the Levee Breaks. "We're going to start working on Nobody's Fault But Mine," Dylan jokes, "to give him another song." Just one more thing for the busiest guy on the tour to do.
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Gary Hood may be the busiest guy on the tour, but Stephen LeBlanc is the busiest guy on the stage. “I have my own tech this tour,” he tells me over dinner. “It helps a lot to make those quick changes.” The quick changes he is talking about are when he moves between lap steel and keyboards, or guitar and keyboards. For What is and What Should Never Be he uses his electric, a telecaster deluxe with two humbucker pickups, four volume/tone controls and the oddest pick-guard. “That guitar rocks,” he tells me when I ask him about it.
LeBlanc keeps his hair long and when he plays keyboard he hunches over them like a madman from the old horror movies (or Garth Hudson, take your pick). As he bobs his head, the hair flies around, creating a dynamic visual effect. On guitar, he does much the same. The hair, he’ll tell you, is too long. “It’s a mess,” he says specifically, but he understands that the longer hair adds to his stage presence.
But LeBlanc brings more to the band than just flying hair. “I’m not sure I would have made this band if I had to audition for it,” he says. We are talking about Brian Titchy’s Bonzo Bash, in which he is a member of the backing band, The Moby Dicks, and Sass Jordan’s name comes up. I tell him my old story about maybe, just maybe, auditioning for Sass’s band way back in 1982. “Fortunately, I’ve never had to do an audition,” he says. “With this band we just all got together and jammed. When it was over Jason said, ‘well that was good.’”
James Dylan is holding court after the Kitchener show and tells the story of how LeBlanc made his way into the band. “We had all got together, and Jason said, ‘I guess all we need now is someone who plays keyboards, guitar and lap steel. Anyone know anybody?’” The question is presented as if they are looking for a needle in a haystack, but Michael Devin knew LeBlanc and Devin’s recommendation was good enough for Bonham, no audition required.
During soundcheck, LeBlanc turns on the Clavinet sample and starts a funky line. Jason picks it up and they settle into a groove that would remind Bonham of The Who’s Eminence Front. Tony Catania joins in on the theremin with a low scratching sound. It’s a really cool groove, and you can’t help hope somebody captured it on tape. As the band are talking about an album, about some really great originals, I think to myself I’d love to hear this idea developed.
LeBlanc turns back to his keyboards for Thank You, the big organ sound suiting his Phantom of the Opera stage persona, while Dylan picks up his Ovation acoustic guitar for the first time. “This one is for my Dad,” Jason says before they begin the lovely ballad. A slide show and old home movies of John Bonham play on the screen behind Jason.
One thing everybody mentions about James Dylan is that he is spot on with every note. He’ll tell you he had a very little training when he was 18, then promptly forgot it all. A professional singing teacher back stage asks him about it, and then refuses to believe his answer. During soundcheck Jason and he have a discussion about the opening note in Houses of the Holy. It matters, to both of them that he gets the it just right. His ability to hit the notes is evident in Immigrant Song, notes Robert Plant himself stopped trying to hit before his 25th birthday. But James, at 46, can still wail like a rampaging viking. "Singing like Robert takes its toll. You could hear changes in Robert's voice over the course of only a few years." James tells the vocal teacher. "If my voice remains as it is for a while longer, I figure I'm very fortunate".
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There's changes in the Jason Bonham camp this time around. Bonham has changed managers and backstage there's a buzz around the band, they're all quietly excited about something. I ask about a possible album, and am told that it's happening - it's even suggested I get a listen of some of the new material, but that never happens. It's suggested more dates are coming in the summer, possibly bigger dates. But there's more, something bigger, and on three different occasions I am almost told what it is. Each band member is keeping their own counsel on the big news, but each was having a hard time not telling, biting their lips before saying, "I can't." Stephen LeBlanc tells me, when I mention his keyboard work on Since I've Been Loving You, "I've always wanted a real hammond organ on tour. Maybe this summer I'll get one." Whatever it is, it's big and according to the rumour mill, while the band is trying to hold it in, Jason is holding court elsewhere telling his guests what is up.
“Do we go straight into it from Immigrant Song?” the crew asks. “No, I need a minute. It’s a lot of work,” Jason answers. Later, he wonders if they can shorten Moby Dick a bit. “It comes in at two minutes,” Jason tells them. “Can we make it happen at a minute and a half?” I’m not sure exactly what is two minutes, but assume it’s the time from the start of the drum solo to the start of the video. For reasons unclear to me, this couldn’t be done, so they do a run through at two minutes.
"That's the best I've ever done it," Jason says when it's done. "Tonight I'll be all..." and he starts playing a series of apparently embarrassingly pedestrian tom fills, but I can't hear that they are any worse than what he did. If he played the pedestrian version of the solo that evening, which finally makes it's appearance in the set in Kitchener, neither I nor anybody else in the crowd complained.
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When he first called James Dylan to ask him to sing in his band, Dylan didn't believe it was Jason Bonham. He thought it was his friends playing a joke. When Bonham finally convinced him he was the real Jason Bonham, and began explaining his concept for the show, one thought worried Dylan the whole time. "Will I have to wear the wig?" he asked when Bonham finished his spiel. "The wig," Dylan, who is a graphic artist when not touring with Jason Bonham, says now "was a deal breaker."
"No wig," Bonham replied. "We want to do this with some dignity."
How then to explain the video after the intermission? It is of Jason and his parents, circa mid-1970's: Jason, a wad of gum in his mouth, drumming; Jason wearing a silly nose making faces for the camera while his dad drums to Dr. John's Right Place Wrong Time; Jason dancing to Gary Glitter's I'm The Leader Of The Gang (I Am!), a silly dance that's embarrassing for Jason and amusing to everybody else in the theatre.
"That dancing wouldn't be so bad," Jason says after the video, "if it was once. But it wasn't," he laughs. Then the count in for the second set:
We've done four already
and now were steady,
and then they went
one...two...three...four
My own band plays The Ocean and a trouble spot in it for our guitar player, i.e. me, is coming out of the solo and hitting on the verse section. Catania nails this, and I notice night to night an adjustment: in Toronto he plays the solo straight, in Kitchener he kicks in the wah-wah pedal. "The one thing Robert told Jason," Catania tells me at soundcheck, "is do your own thing with the music." So Jason gives the guys some leeway with the arrangements, to wah or not to wah is one of these times.
After The Ocean Dylan picks up his Ovation while LeBlanc is handed his Martin acoustic. Catania starts Over the Hills and Far Away off on his Les Paul, and he's soon being doubled by Dylan. Over the Hills is a complicated song to play and these guys handle it with ease. It's indicative of how good they are, how good they've become that they make Over the Hills and Far Away seem so easy.
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"Jason's a great blues drummer." Dorian Heartsong is leaning against the doorway, his long black curly hair framing his face. Backstage he is casual and easygoing, he speaks softly and has what my mother would say is 'a nice smile.' (Of course, she would also say he needs a haircut.) "A slow blues is hard for drummers to play, and Jason nails it," he continues, having been asked about playing with Jason, and the conversation has turned to Since I've Been Loving You.
"Dorian is the new guy in the band," is an oft heard joke. He has, in fact, played more Led Zeppelin Experience shows than his predecessor, Michael Devin. Having come to the band on Devin's recommendation after Devin moved on to Whitesnake, however, Heartsong will likely always be the new guy. For James Dylan, he calls him the yin to his yang: "We have long talks on the bus," Dylan says of Heartsong. "We talk about space and stuff," to which they both laugh.
Jason Bonham is the real front man for this show and Since I've Been Loving You is Dylan's first chance to speak to the audience: "It's the Jason Bonham Led Zeppelin Experience, not the James Dylan Led Zeppelin Experience," he said when I interviewed him in 2011. At both shows he mentions his cottage in Algonquin Park, a few hours north of Toronto. It is, along with his wife and family, his favourite topic of conversation. The cottage has been in his family 3 generations and he's been going there since he was a boy. Of his wife, he rarely mentions her without referring to her as beautiful, as in "my beautiful wife Averelle," or "the beautiful..." So much so that someone learning English around the band might think Beautiful is her given name.
While introducing Since I've Been Loving You, Dylan mentions it is the first song Catania and Bonham ever played together. And while it's true that yes, it's a slow blues and yes, Bonham is great in it and yes, Stephen LeBlanc shines on the keys and yes, James Dylan wails and moans and flat out sings his ass off, Since I've Been Loving You is a guitarists song, and Catania shines.
The same applies to The Song Remains the Same. In the last year I attempted to learn this song for a band tryout, and I can confirm, it's a complex song musically as well as technically. The band was flawless and carried the song with energy, exactly the way it should be played.
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For soundcheck in Kitchener, the band worked on Moby Dick and Houses of the Holy then played through Trampled Underfoot and When the Levee Breaks. As well, partial versions of Kashmir, Over the Hills and Far Away and Rock and Roll are played and they jammed Stephen LeBlanc's Clavinet jam, Georgia on My Mind and Earth Wind and Fire's After the Love is Gone.
After When the Levee Breaks, there's much discussion about Catania's sound. He is using 2 Marshall amplifier heads and 1 Orange head, each fed through it's own speaker cabinet and then miked separately. "Can you turn down the Orange and increase the Marshalls?" Jason asks the soundcrew. They want the sound softened, and Catania takes over on the mic, looking for the perfect tone.
Kashmir gets a partial run-through because there was problems the night before. It was almost a disaster I was told, and did I notice? Not at all, is the answer. In fact, it sounded powerful. This is partly because Catania has switched from his Danelectro guitar to a brown Les Paul Studio. I track him down after soundcheck and ask him about the switch. "Jason wanted me to go to the Les Paul," he tells me, "to get a big, thick sound, like how they played it on Celebration Day."
He's also got a new pedal board, and he's looking to Celebration Day to provide some inspiration there. "I was at that concert," he says, "and watched Jimmy using his pedals and thought 'Ohhh.' Now I'm starting to do the same in some spots." He a serious, thoughtful musician who approaches guitar playing like a thorough professional. If he came of age in the 60's or 70's it seems likely he would have been a big name guitarist, and in truth, the entire band have the talent and dedication to be stars, if only their era wasn't the 90's and the 00's.
"Jimmy was very interested when he heard I was using the acoustic stand on Stairway," Catania continues talking about equipment. He had seen Yes's Steve Howe use a stand in the 70's and always remembered it. When Jason Bonham's Led Zeppelin Experience was forming and Robert Plant told Jason, "do your own thing with the music," Catania knew he wanted to use the stand, and get a studio/live mix on Stairway to Heaven. When Stephen LeBlanc joins us, he mentions he could add some slide in Babe, I'm Gonna Leave You and I suggest he add the slide part in the Stairway solo. LeBlanc, however, says he's busy on keyboards and Catania protests he can play that part no problem. Watching them knock Stairway to Heaven out of the park a few hours later, I note they are both right.
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I never meet Jason Bonham. He has his own room backstage and stays in there with selected friends and family. At the soundcheck he enters and exits by the rear of the stage, the stage being the one place I don't have access to. In Toronto, Dylan takes someone's Celebration Day CD to Jason to be signed, and asks if we have anything we need signed. I bought the Celebration Day LP before the show, but stored it in the car. It occurs to me as he's asking, I should have brought it in with me.
Dylan does, however, want me to meet Sam, and goes into Bonham’s lair to get him. He is gone about five minutes and comes back without Sam. “Jason’s telling stories back there and I didn’t want to interrupt,” he tells us. Sam emerges a minute later, and we meet.
Sam is a legend in Led Zeppelin fan circles: he owned the LedZeppelin.com domain and ran a fan site on it. When the band decided to do their own website, Sam got asked to run it. He also runs Robert Plant’s website, and travels with Jason on these tours, although this is his last night with this tour as he has another tour to do. Sam is so tight with Jason that the last time I saw them in Orillia, Ontario, Sam's hometown, I met James and Stephen out by the stage. The only fans who got backstage were pals of Sam: hey, I only know the singer, you want to meet Jason, you need to know the web guy. Sam and I exchange a few pleasantries, but he’s on his way out the door and detailed discussions of our websites or how he hooked up with the band will have to wait for another day.
The backstage atmosphere is different on each of the two night's I am there. At Massey Hall the guys are lingering around, guests are comfortable in the apartment like backstage area. Stephen LeBlanc is having a beer and slipping out to the balcony for a smoke. James Dylan is talking and moving around. Dorian Heartsong chats with a guest for a while and takes time to talk to us as well. Tony Catania slips out for a couple of beers: Toronto is apparently an old stomping ground for him and Jason. Jason's 16-year old rapper son, Jager Bonham, is running in and out of the rooms, being chased by someone unknown. The band is staying in town, and the atmosphere is relaxed. No one is in a hurry, and some form of one-on-one conversation is possible.
In Kitchener, the bus is leaving about an hour and a half after the show. They are traveling through the night and have a border to cross. The bulk of the backstage guests are James', so he spends half an hour chatting to the group of us. But around us, the scene is more frantic. We are standing in a hallway just beside the stage and occasionally have to move because the tear down crew is pushing equipment past us. Stephen LeBlanc joins us, then runs off to get a drink, disappears again, later is back. At one point we can hear a piano from one of the side rooms: LeBlanc is teaching Jager how to play Motley Crue's Home Sweet Home. Dorian stops and says hello, but quickly moves on to change and pack. Later he passes us as he heads towards the bus, pulling his suitcase behind him.
Tony Catania joins the group. I've met Tony three times previously, and other than a specific conversation about his guitars earlier in the day, he's said very little. Tonight he's in a more expansive mood, and he's telling us a story about seeing Zoe Bonham in New York. He's still wearing his stage clothes and he's animated and funny.
"We're like a family," Dylan says to me backstage at Massey Hall. "We all get along great together. We all look out for each other. I love these guys." That they look out for each other I know from experience, having in the past received an email from one in defence of another. Stephen LeBlanc echoes the sentiment as we head out for dinner in Kitchener. "I get along great with all these guys," he says. "There's never any fights or drama."
The band finishes up with a rollicking, uptempo version of Whole Lotta Love, complete with a Tony Catania Theremin solo and James Dylan getting the crowd to belt out "Way down inside..." As we are escorted to the front door of Kitchener's Center in the Square, no stage door exit on this night, we leave the way we came in, the power of Whole Lotta Love seems somehow to echo through the auditorium still.
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Note: All pictures have been removed from this article due to server problems.
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Setlists
Massey Hall Toronto, Ontario - Jan 31, 2013
Rock and Roll
Sick Again
Your Time Is Gonna Come
Babe, I'm Gonna Leave You
You Shook Me
What Is and What Should Never Be
Thank You
Immigrant Song
Intermission
The Ocean
Over the Hills and Far Away
Since I've Been Loving You
The Song Remains the Same
When the Levee Breaks
Kashmir
Stairway to Heaven
Encore:
Whole Lotta Love
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Centre in the Square, Kitchener, Ontario - Feb 1, 2013
Rock and Roll
Celebration Day
Your Time Is Gonna Come
Babe, I'm Gonna Leave You
You Shook Me
What Is and What Should Never Be
Thank You
Immigrant Song
Moby Dick
Intermission
The Ocean
Over the Hills and Far Away
Since I've Been Loving You
The Song Remains the Same
When the Levee Breaks
Kashmir
Stairway to Heaven
Encore:
Whole Lotta Love
Wednesday, December 12, 2012
Jason Bonham to Experience Canadian Winter.
Back in the fall when Jason Bonham extended his Jason Bonham Led Zeppelin Experience dates to include the Northeast, he announced his hope they would also add some Canadian dates.
Better late than never, The Jason Bonham Led Zeppelin Experience announce six Canadian dates at the end of January and into early February. The tour starts in the only place any tour should start, Southern Ontario, on the last two days of January, and then picks up with four western dates beginning Feb 6th.
The announced dates are:
- January 30: London, Ontario - Centennial Hall
- January 31: Toronto, Ontario - Massey Hall
- February 6: Winnipeg, Manitoba - MTS Centre
- February 7: Regina, Saskatchewan - Casino Regina
- February 8: Edmonton, Alberta - River Cree Resort and Casino
- February 11: Calgary, Alberta - Southern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium
I have heard no rumours of additional shows, but that doesn't mean there won't be. If there are, I'll add them in bold.
Memo to the band: pack the long underwear, it gets cold around here this time of year, colder still in Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta.
Friday, October 5, 2012
Ramble On Radio Episode #22
Listen here
or
Subscribe on iTunes
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Links
Shawn Sarazin's Mystery of the Quotient
Dony Wynn's blog post on Modern Drummer
Buy Carol Miller's Autobiography on Amazon.com
Pre-order the Celebration Day LP:
Jason Bonham's son, J-Swagg's Facebook page.
Friday, September 21, 2012
The Return of Jason Bonham's Led Zeppelin Experience
However, it looks like The Experience will, once again, expand their California shows to include many more cities.

Anthony Grisolla, a poster on the mailing group For Badgeholders Only, heard an ad for a show in Pittsburgh on November 17th, at Carnegie Library Music Hall. A customer service representative told Anthony that tickets would go on-sale Friday.
From the 9th to 17th is a little more than a week, surely there must be more. In the past, JBLZE has done about three weeks of shows in the Northeast.
If you hear of a show in your area, let me know so I can fill in the tour dates.
Jason Bonham Led Zeppelin Experience known dates:
October 5th: Napa Valley, CA
October 6th: Reno, NV
October 11th: Los Angeles
October 12th: Las Vegas
October 13th: Indio, CA
October 14th: San Francisco
October 16th: Sacramento
Nov 9th: Westbury, NY
November 10: Philadelphia
November 11: York, Pennsylvania
November 12: Niagara Falls, NY
November 14: Port Chester, New York
November 15: Montclair, New Jersey
November 16: Wilmington, Delaware
November 17th, Pittsburgh, PA
November 19: Royal Oak, Michigan
November 20: Milwaukee, Wisconsin
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Update: A number of dates were added. The performances above in bold are newly added to the itinerary.
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Friday, July 20, 2012
Jason Bonham Led Zeppelin Experience Tour Dates

September 5th, 2012: Caupolican Theatre - Santiago, Chile
September 7th, 2012: La Tortuga - Concepcion, Chile
September 13th, 2012: Enmore Theatre - Sydney, Australia
September 14th, 2012: Forum Theatre - Melbourne, Australia
September 15th, 2012: Challenge Stadium - Perth, Australia
October 6th, 2012: Silver Legacy Casino - Reno, NV
October 7th, 2012: The Warfield - San Francisco, CA
October 8th, 2012: The Uptown Theatre - Napa Valley, CA
October 9th, 2012: Crest Theatre - Sacramento, CA
October 11th, 2012: The Greek Theatre - Los Angeles, CA
October 12th, 2012: Aliante Casino - Las Vegas, NV
October 13th, 2012: Fantasy Springs Resort Casino - Indio, CA
Expect more dates to be announced.
Tuesday, May 1, 2012
The Groove Remains Very Similar

Called Bonzo's Birthday Bash, Dave Lewis at Tight Bit Loose is today announcing a tribute concert to John Bonham on May 31st at the House of Blues in Hollywood. Like the Groove Remains the Same shows that preceded it, Bonzo's Birthday Bash will feature a number of drummers doing their favourite Zeppelin tunes. "When I first thought of this," Tichy told Lewis, "the idea seemed too simple and cool not to try; get a John Bonham replica drum set... up front, center stage, and have each drummer perform their favourite Zeppelin song with a house band."
Guest drummers include Steven Adler from Guns 'N Roses, Carmine Appice from Vanilla Fudge, Vinny Appice from Black Sabbath and of Course, Tichy himself among others.
The backing band features Tichy in lead guitar, Michael Devin on bass and Stephen Leblanc from Jason Bonham's Led Zeppelin Experience on keyboards.
Tickets are $25.00 advance, $30.00 at the door.
Monday, November 7, 2011
What, No Black Dog?
It can be, and was done Saturday Night at Casino Rama in Orillia, Ontario.

There were problems it seems, both technical and logistical. From a technical standpoint, Tony Catania seemed to be having some issues. Early on he slipped into a solo, hit on a pedal, and nothing. The sound died. At other times he just seemed to be having trouble. The theremin sat on the stage all night un-used, another clue of technical difficulties.
This is not to say Catania didn't play well, or spent all night with a deer in the headlights look, wondering why God was failing him so. All told, the look of "what the..." totalled thirty second or a minute of a two hour show, and if you weren't close enough, weren't watching the guitarist with the intensity only a hobbyist can apply to a professional, then you probably noticed nothing wrong.
[caption id="attachment_1573" align="alignnone" width="422" caption="James Dylan, "Goin Down Now...""]

The logistical problem was venue related. The casino's love to get 5,000 music fans into their casino who might not otherwise come. But once there, they don't really want them sitting pin the hall watching a show. If they had their choice, you would buy your ticket, then just come to the casino and gamble. So they put a rider in the bands contract, maximum 90 minute show.
After the show, both James Dylan and Stephen Leblanc mentioned that they had to cut songs from the set list. The longer songs took the hit, with Dazed and Confused, it was mentioned by both Dylan and LeBlanc, getting cut. With the tight time, Whole Lotta Love got a short, Over Europe 1980 treatment. It wasn't until the next day I realized Black Dog wasn't played either.
[caption id="attachment_1579" align="alignnone" width="410" caption=""I would like to thank..." "]

Problems aside, Jason Bonham's Led Zeppelin Experience didn't miss a note Saturday night. They kept the show rolling, not taking their usual break after Moby Dick, instead rolling along, keeping it moving. And in the end, they packed a lot of songs into a 90 minute set. They packed, it seemed to me, a lot of minutes in as well, as the show ran far closer to 2 hours than 90 minutes by my count.
Dazed and Confused and Black Dog notwithstanding, they didn't miss a trick. Immigrant Song, Rock and Roll, Kashmir, When the Levee Breaks, Stairway to Heaven: they touched all the bases.
[caption id="attachment_1581" align="alignnone" width="432" caption="James and Tony doing Stairway to Heaven"]

Musically, the band gets better and better, the music of Led Zeppelin, so complicated to perform, seeming to roll off them. They are tighter than last time I saw them, and they are playing with an ease I don't remember. Stephen LeBlanc has become essential to this band, adding lap steel here, an electric guitar part there. Keyboard, acoustic guitar, mandolin, every song is given that extra touch by LeBlanc, who has also developed his theatrical flair.
Dorian Heartsong, the new guy in the band, although he has probably played more shows with them now than Michael Devon has, lays down a perfect groove every time. He fit's in so well he was barely noticeable, which is the highest compliment I can pay to a bass player.
James Dylan was once again, note perfect. Hitting Robert Plant's notes and phrases, without ever sounding just like Robert Plant. If you didn't miss Robert Plant, if you closed your eyes, you still knew it wasn't Plant. The perfect frontman for a cover band, he sings in a way that is flattering to Plant, without being imitative.
Tony Catania, technical issues aside, hit all the notes, strutted and preened ala Page. He plays with energy and plays his part musically. He is as good as anyone doing the Jimmy Page circuit.

As for Jason, he obviously can play the parts, and he did so with energy. He tells his stories, sometimes prowling the stage while doing so. He is amusing, self effacing and a hell of a drummer. Combined with the guys mentioned above, and he is putting on a fabulous show in the name of the father.
If Jason Bonham's Led Zeppelin Experience is coming to your town, it's well worth checking out.
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* Note: Notices at the Casino informed fans the show was being recorded for possible later use. During the show, auditorium lights often came on as songs were ending, quite obviously to film the crowd reaction.
Is Jason Bonham's Led Zeppelin Experience planning on releasing a DVD of the show, or doing a broadcast at some point in the future?
Wednesday, November 2, 2011
Sunshine Sketches of Jason Bonham’s Led Zeppelin Experience

Heading into the show, Toronto Sun’s Darryl Sterdan has a short interview that is full of information. Bonham tells Sterdan that, should there be another Led Zeppelin Reunion, he’ll find out when we all find out:
When I was last with those guys they said, ‘You will always be the last to know of anything from now on because you can’t keep your mouth shut.’
He adds defeatedly, “They said ‘What are you going to do? Say no?’”
There are a few more very interesting tidbits in the interview, including that the band had to learn “the entire catalogue.” These guys are prepared to play any Zeppelin song (note to Bonham: Fool in the Rain on Saturday Nov 5, please).
As well, he Bonham reports that Black Country Communion will be recording ‘3’ sometime next year. This was reported previously, but Glenn Hughes has since announced he’s recording a solo album and doing a world tour in 2012, which seemed to preclude also doing a BCC album.
Hopefully Black Country Communion doesn't have the same "don't tell Jason rule" as Led Zeppelin does.
Sunday, October 30, 2011
Jason Bonham Working on Original Material

Since we’re back out on the road, Jason’s band (JBLZE) started to write songs together. So we’re hoping before too long, we’ll have some stuff for everybody to check out
On a follow-up message, James said:
We are just in the beginning stage so it is just something we would all like to do right now. The idea is to write music while we’re on the road. It started last tour when we were in sound check.
The full interview with James Dylan can be heard on Ramble On Radio, Episode #6, which will be released by Tuesday.
Saturday, October 22, 2011
Podcast #5 Released

In the future, I hold for no interview, if I don't have it in my hands by the time I record, it doesn't get on. So #6 will come, interview or no, next weekend.
As usual, here's the links: Ramble On #5 on Podbean, or subscribe on iTunes.
Thanks to everyone who has been listening and making comments. I do appreciate it.
Saturday, September 17, 2011
Jason Bonham Led Zeppelin Experience Add Dates

Here is the full schedule for Jason Bonham's Led Zeppelin Experience fall tour:
- October 12: Riverside, CA - Fox Performing Arts Center
- October 13: Bakersfield, CA - Fox Theatre
- October 14: Los Angeles, CA - The Greek Theatre (make-up date)
- October 15: Las Vegas, NV - Alliente Casi (make-up date)
- October 17: Sacramento, CA - Crest Theatre (make-up date)
- October 18: Napa Valley, CA - Uptown Theatre (make-up date)
- October 27: Englewood, NJ - Bergen PAC
- October 28: Huntington, NY - Paramount Theater
- October 29: Upper Darby (Phil), PA - Tower Theater
- October 31: Boston, MA - The Wilbur Theatre
- November 1: New York, NY - Best Buy Theater
- November 2: Hartford, CT - The Webster
- November 4: Buffalo, NY - Town Ballroom
- November 5: Orillia, ONT - Casino Rama
- November 6: Ottawa/Gatineau, QC - TBD
- November 7: Quebec City, QC - TBD
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Update
New dates added:
- Nov 10: Silver Spring MD - The Fillmore
- Nov. 11: Poughkeepsie NY - The Chance Theatre
- Nov. 12: Richmond VA - The National
- Nov 13: Atlanta GA - Sun Center Stage
- Nov 16: Orlando FL. - The Hard Rock
- Nov. 17: Hollywood FL. - Seminole Hard Rock and Casino
- Nov 18: Clearwater FL. - Ruth Eckerd Hall
Saturday, May 28, 2011
James Dylan Sick Again
Well I had no idea how fucked up everything has become......we are evaluating the situation

No word yet on any other cancellations. They are, presumably, evaluating the situation.
The cancelled shows have been rescheduled for October. I would assume that means more October dates will be in the offing, possibly meaning round three of the JBZLE.
Tuesday, May 17, 2011
Going to Q107
Nice mandolin playing Stephen LeBlanc!
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For those unfamiliar, Kim Mitchell was the frontman for a seventies band called Max Webster, and had a successful solo career in the 80's. Unfortunately, seventies rock star, successful 80's solo career in Canada means day job in 2011. Rock and roll just doesn't pay the same up here as it does elsewhere.
Not being a fan, one of my favourite moments on his radio show was when he was interviewing Robert Plant during the Mighty Rearranger tour, and Plant gave a classic sarcastic response to what he perceived to be a stupid question.
Thursday, May 5, 2011
Achilles in Connecticut
Joining the Led Zeppelin Experience this time around is former Powerman 5000 bassist Dorian Heartsong (AKA Dorian 27). He replaces Michael Devin, who had a prior commitment with Whitesnake.

Saturday, April 9, 2011
Wednesday, March 23, 2011
The Return of the Led Zeppelin Experience

Between songs, Bonham would stand at the edge of the stage and talk about his life with his father, his life as a member of the Led Zeppelin family. Whether talking about his father, or about the “greatest night of his life,” Dec 10, 2007 at the O2 arena, JBLZE is a tribute to the father from the son.
When he announced the JBLZE tour last fall, Bonham suggested the band would do 30 shows, to pay homage to the fact it had been 30 years since his father’s death. The number of shows, however, became a bit fluid and the thirty shows never stood. Now Bonham is taking the JBLZE back on the road for 18 more shows (as currently announced - more could be added), and it looks like JBLZE may be a more or less permanent side project for the drummer.
Bonham appears to be taking the same band out on the road as he did in the fall. Bassist Michael Devin is the bassist of record for Whitesnake, who also have dates supporting their new album, Forevermore, beginning in May. Many Whitesnake dates coincide with the JBLZE experience shows.
The rest of the band is Stephen LeBlanc on lap steel guitar/guitar/keyboards, Tony Catania on guitar and James Dylan on vocals.
A review of Jason Bonham’s Led Zeppelin Experience performance in Kitchener last October can be found here. Steve Sauer at Lemon Squeezings has the full slate of shows Bonham is doing with JBLZE, as well as with Black Country Communion and Paul Rodgers.
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Monday, January 17, 2011
Tight But Loose #28
Well I have to say that year one of this new era of Tight But Loose has been a pretty eventful one.

For the first time since I started receiving TBL last year, I read it cover to cover. There was no superfluous articles that didn’t really interest me, nothing seemed to fill, every article interesting and relevant.
That said, it’s been a good year to be writing about Led Zeppelin as all of their former members have been busy. The last four months no less than the rest of the year, so TBL 28 had a lot to write about. Jimmy Page’s book release, Robert Plant’s Band of Joy tour, Jason Bonham’s Led Zeppelin Experience and John Paul Jones doing a mini tour with the Dave Rawlings Machine. Much of what happened also happened in Dave Lewis’ backyard, including Robert Plant playing BBC at the Proms, the Robert Plant BBC night, Jimmy Page’s book launch, the classic rock awards.
It was a good year, and the best thing you can say about a fan magazine is, they were there and they chronicled it all. TBL can make that claim for 2010, especially at the latter part of the year.
Twenty-eleven promises to be another big year in the world of Led Zeppelin. I only hope Tight But Loose is able to keep the momentum going, and provide great reading for another year.
Tight But Loose can be ordered from the TBL website. It is, depending on where you live, from $10-$13 (Canadian) for the single issue, $30-$40 for a three issue subscription. Get the subscription, you’ll be glad you did.