Robert Plant's Saving Grace: UK Tour, New Album, and Led Zeppelin Nostalgia
Update: 2025-09-13
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Robert Plant BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.
Big news for Robert Plant fans as the Led Zeppelin icon is all over the headlines this week. Robert just announced a major UK tour with his current band Saving Grace featuring Suzi Dian, and the buzz is building quickly. The tour kicks off December 8 in Portsmouth and winds through classic venues across England and Scotland before wrapping up in York on December 23. The band’s chemistry clearly means a lot to Plant, who recently told Planet Rock that playing with these “sweet people” is a joy and keeps him laughing—a secret, perhaps, to why at 76 he can still sell out halls at the drop of a hat. What’s driving this new momentum is the debut album Saving Grace, a project born out of lockdown wanderings and six years of artistic collaboration, finally set for release September 26 on Nonesuch Records. For diehard fans, early preorders land you first dibs on tour tickets when they drop September 18, while the rest of the public joins the race that Thursday morning. With Al Stewart’s “Year of the Cat” mood and Memphis Minnie deep cuts, the record bridges Plant’s love for roots and blues, blending gospel, folk and Americana in what he calls a “song book of the lost and found,” heard in strong previews like his take on “Chevrolet.” According to jambands.com and Planet Rock, even the supporting act for the entire UK run is set: Burr Island, an indie folk duo sure to keep the night rolling. Looking stateside, Plant and Saving Grace launch a North American tour later this fall, so the buzz is truly global. The music press is eating it up, with headlines like Led Zeppelin Legend Robert Plant Heads to West Midlands for December Tour and Robert Plant Drops New Take on Delta Blues Classic. Meanwhile, Robert has been popping up in mainstream news as Led Zeppelin nostalgia runs high, thanks to the acclaimed part-concert, part-documentary film Becoming Led Zeppelin, freshening up the myth and bringing old tales to new audiences. On the radio circuit, Plant made light of Zep’s legendary unpredictability in live shows on BBC Radio 2, an admission that delighted loyalists and critics alike. There’s already advance talk about Plant and Saving Grace playing high-profile sets in 2026 at festivals like Big Ears in Knoxville alongside David Byrne, solidifying his continued place in the musical vanguard. While there are always whispers about further Zeppelin reunions or legacy projects, nothing’s been verified beyond that surging wave of documentary attention and the rush surrounding new Saving Grace material. Social media teases and fan forums are buzzing, but verified blue ticks confirm: it’s a season of real news and fresh work, not just rumors for Robert Plant.
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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Big news for Robert Plant fans as the Led Zeppelin icon is all over the headlines this week. Robert just announced a major UK tour with his current band Saving Grace featuring Suzi Dian, and the buzz is building quickly. The tour kicks off December 8 in Portsmouth and winds through classic venues across England and Scotland before wrapping up in York on December 23. The band’s chemistry clearly means a lot to Plant, who recently told Planet Rock that playing with these “sweet people” is a joy and keeps him laughing—a secret, perhaps, to why at 76 he can still sell out halls at the drop of a hat. What’s driving this new momentum is the debut album Saving Grace, a project born out of lockdown wanderings and six years of artistic collaboration, finally set for release September 26 on Nonesuch Records. For diehard fans, early preorders land you first dibs on tour tickets when they drop September 18, while the rest of the public joins the race that Thursday morning. With Al Stewart’s “Year of the Cat” mood and Memphis Minnie deep cuts, the record bridges Plant’s love for roots and blues, blending gospel, folk and Americana in what he calls a “song book of the lost and found,” heard in strong previews like his take on “Chevrolet.” According to jambands.com and Planet Rock, even the supporting act for the entire UK run is set: Burr Island, an indie folk duo sure to keep the night rolling. Looking stateside, Plant and Saving Grace launch a North American tour later this fall, so the buzz is truly global. The music press is eating it up, with headlines like Led Zeppelin Legend Robert Plant Heads to West Midlands for December Tour and Robert Plant Drops New Take on Delta Blues Classic. Meanwhile, Robert has been popping up in mainstream news as Led Zeppelin nostalgia runs high, thanks to the acclaimed part-concert, part-documentary film Becoming Led Zeppelin, freshening up the myth and bringing old tales to new audiences. On the radio circuit, Plant made light of Zep’s legendary unpredictability in live shows on BBC Radio 2, an admission that delighted loyalists and critics alike. There’s already advance talk about Plant and Saving Grace playing high-profile sets in 2026 at festivals like Big Ears in Knoxville alongside David Byrne, solidifying his continued place in the musical vanguard. While there are always whispers about further Zeppelin reunions or legacy projects, nothing’s been verified beyond that surging wave of documentary attention and the rush surrounding new Saving Grace material. Social media teases and fan forums are buzzing, but verified blue ticks confirm: it’s a season of real news and fresh work, not just rumors for Robert Plant.
Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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