Jason Bonham has just announced the dates he’ll undertake this fall as the drummer for “Jason Bonham’s Led Zeppelin Experience,” a multimedia spectacle featuring the music of Led Zeppelin. The tour coincides with the 30th Anniversary of the death of his father, Zeppelin drummer and rock and roll legend John Bonham. We spoke to the man behind the sticks about his upcoming trip down memory lane. Zep fans, get your lighters in the air.
Whatโs the inspiration behind the tour?
The inspiration behind the tour was, since playing with Led Zeppelin at the O2 concert, with Jimmy, Robert, and John Paul, I’ve wanted do something like this. It’s something Iโve always kind of shied away from — I just didnโt see the point of putting another tribute band out there or whatever. But then I saw the show โRainโ which is a tribute to the Beatles. I went along just to be courteous, really, and while at that show, I saw there was a whole other way of doing it which Iโd never thought of, which was telling a little bit more of a story. And basically from that moment I was thinking, โhow could I tell people how much Led Zeppelin has been a part of my life. So we started throwing ideas around, about showing my first memories of Led Zeppelin, my first time jamming with them, playing with them, as a kid, you know. Things that have never been seen before, to try and make it a show, and a very personal one.
What’s it going to be like?
I want to make it intimate, but also make it big enough to get some of the production that weโre going to use. I want to do things where I play drums on certain songs where [John Bonham] will be in the room and Iโll be playing along with him. It’s been thirty years dad passed away, and I said, let’s do thirty shows for thirty years.
It reminds me a bit of Dweezil Zappa’s project, Zappa Plays Zappa.
I havenโt seen it, but that was also why when somebody said why donโt you do it, they actually referenced that. How about something like Zappa doing Zappa, he got a Grammy for that.
Not counting the Zeppelin reunion in 2007, have you done anything similar to this before?
I played with Led Zeppelin in 1988, nineteen years prior which was my first attempt at itโฆ I was a twenty-three-year-old, yeah, I was a twenty-three-year-old guy that thought the world owed him everything and took a lot for granted back then. I was on tour with Jimmy Page, life was good, I was traveling with them. We didnโt rehearse, you know, so I was really pleased to have that second chance to do it well, with them [at the 02 concert], you know, to do it really, really well. And I hope that eventually does see the light of day. There was one other time when I did something which was purely just to get out and have a bit of fun, which was I thing I did called In the Name of My Father. It was one of those things, we just did it for two months and it ended up being three years, But this one has a very different shape to it.
I take it youโre not announcing who youโre playing with just yet.
Yeah, Iโd rather people judge the band on how we sound, do you know what I mean? People can always, with the internet and things like that, have a prejudged ideaโฆ itโs that guy, I know what that guy sounds like. I didnโt want anyone to have a prejudged idea before they saw it or they heard it. Yesterday and I put a track on which I did at my house which I kind of used as an audition track for singers and guitarists, and I was pretty pleased with the way these things sound.
What Zeppelin songs are the most fun for you to play?
Well, Iโm very lucky that I got to play, I think I actually got to play every song live with the real guys. Not many people can say that really, because after 02, when Robert wasnโt there, Jimmy and I and John Paul Jones got together and were doing some writing and playing. Every now and then, I’d ask, can we jam this, or can we jam that? And they’d say, okay, sure. It was mind blowing sometimes. One of my favorites would have to be โThe Song Remains the Same,โ I really enjoyed that at the 02. Itโs a great drummer’s piece, you know, especially the live version of that. โKashmirโ is one of my all-time favorites to play. It’s the hardest thing to do, you try and have that rocking groove the whole way. The more relaxed you can be and laid back, the heavier it sounds. And then I would say โHeartbreakerโ would be one of my favorites, and Iโll say once again, I love the live The Song Remains the Same version where he does all the different fills. I actually find that quite challenging,ย especially to play it right with all those sticks in your hands.ย Youโve got to be really relaxed with your hands. And then โIn My Time of Dying.โ The groove, the tempo and big open spaces to do what you want. That was definitely a moment at the 02. I could go on, thereโs a million and theyโre all really good in different ways.
What’s the hardest one to play?
Iโd say the hardest to play, truthfully, for me would be โRock and Roll.โ A lot of people out there try and play it, and really it’s a two-handed shuffle all the way through, playing the sixteenth notes, itโs not just boom bap-boom-bap-boom- bap, itโs boom-boom-bap-bap-boom-boom-bap-bap on the snare and the hi-hat. Itโs a hard one to play properly.
I canโt wait to hear what you have going on and to see the show.
Iโm looking forward to this, every detail. Iโm putting myself under a microscope and a chopping block, but Iโm really looking forward to going out and playing, and to pay tribute to one of the greatest drummers in the world, my father.

