top of page
Writer's pictureEMSU Media

THE LATEST ROCK CANDY MAG DELIVERS THE ULTIMATE STORY OF LED ZEPPELIN AT KNEBWORTH 1979

ROCK CANDY MAG ISSUE 26

THE LATEST ROCK CANDY MAG DELIVERS THE ULTIMATE STORY OF LED ZEPPELIN AT KNEBWORTH 1979



Issue 26 of Rock Candy Mag sees renowned Led Zeppelin expert Dave Lewis piecing together the most comprehensive forensic examination ever of the last two shows the original line-up played in the UK, with the band’s close confidant and tour manager Richard Cole confirming in a new interview that “Knebworth was never planned as some sort of grand farewell.” Sadly the death of drummer John Bonham on 25 September 1980 meant that Zeppelin split in December of that year.


On 4 August and 11 August 1979 Led Zeppelin appeared in the grounds of the English stately home Knebworth House. The band hadn’t performed in the UK since 1975, or anywhere else since 1977. Punk rock had happened in the meantime, but Zeppelin’s bullish manager Peter Grant was determined to put on a show to prove his group was still the biggest commercial juggernaut around. The fee Grant was able to negotiate for the band – £1million for one show – was reputed to be the biggest ever paid to a single act at the time, and proved beyond doubt that Zeppelin were still the kings of rock.


The two events – with artists including Todd Rundgren, Southside Johnny, and Fairport Convention in support – were huge successes. But Grant and promoter Freddy Bannister disagreed over attendance figures, leading to much bad blood between the two men. Grant even sent aerial photographs of the event to be analysed in a lab in an attempt to prove that Bannister was lying over the numbers. Grant’s intimidating manner led Bannister to claim that the dispute made him “scared for the safety of my family.” The whole Knebworth project left Bannister with such debts that he was forced to liquidate his company.


Running at over 7000 words and 12 pages, and featuring both rare memorabilia and personal photos of the event, Dave Lewis and Rock Candy Mag have produced the kind of article you rarely see these days, compiled with love and deep knowledge by people who know their rock inside out and back-to-front.


Read this and many other fascinating stories in issue 26 of Rock Candy Mag.


ABOUT ROCK CANDY MAG

Rock Candy Mag is a 100-page, full-colour bi-monthly rock mag, created in the UK. It covers the sights, sounds and smells from the greatest era in hard rock music, the ’70s and ’80s. Put together by respected UK rock journalists Derek Oliver, Howard Johnson and Malcolm Dome – all frontline writers for the legendary Kerrang! magazine in the golden era – Rock Candy Mag is available in print format with a free digital download version for anyone who buys the mag online at www.rockcandymag.com.





4 views0 comments

Comments


bottom of page