Jimmy Page has largely ruled out the possibility of Led Zeppelin reuniting for a tour.
The Led Zeppelin guitarist addressed the issue during an interview on BBC Radio 2 on Wednesday.
The last time the English rock band members took to the stage was for their legendary 2007 concert in London, featuring Page, Robert Plant, John Paul Jones and drummer Jason Bonham.
Appearing with the Rolling Stones’ Mick Jagger, Page said, “At the time of the O2, we thought – myself, John Paul Jones and Jason – that there was going to; it was said that there were gonna be some more dates.”
“It would’ve been really good to have done that after the O2, ‘cos we’d put a lot of work into The O2 and we were really on it, y’know? But it didn’t come off,” Page told “The Zoe Ball Breakfast Show.”
“It seems really unlikely that there would be a tour in the future,” he added. “Unlike The Rolling Stones, they do sort of know that the fans love that — also I know that with Led Zeppelin [fans too]. But it doesn’t look as though there’s anything in the future, unfortunately.”
“Scarlet,” a previously-unreleased Rolling Stones track featuring Page, was premiered during the BBC program.
Source: RTT Music News