**From Legacy to Live Stages: Jason Bonham Opens Up About Carrying the Zeppelin Torch in 2025**
Jason Bonham isn’t just playing Led Zeppelin songs—he’s living them. In 2025, as he embarks on an extended tour celebrating the 50th anniversary of *Physical Graffiti*, the son of legendary drummer John Bonham is reflecting deeply on legacy, loss, and why each performance still feels sacred.
“This isn’t a tribute act,” Jason says. “It’s a connection. To my dad. To the fans. To something bigger than me.”
The tour—**Jason Bonham’s Led Zeppelin Evening**—has been selling out across North America. From Denver to Vancouver, the setlists dive deep into *Physical Graffiti*, but also explore timeless classics like “Kashmir” and “Stairway to Heaven.” And while the drumming is spot-on, it’s the emotion behind the sticks that really hits home.
“I feel like I’m having a conversation with my father on stage,” Jason says. “Every night, I hear his voice in the rhythm.”
The weight of the Zeppelin legacy is undeniable. Despite the band’s colossal influence, Led Zeppelin’s history with the Grammys remains complicated. “It’s wild,” Jason reflects. “For a band that defined rock music, they were ignored by the industry’s biggest awards for years. But maybe that’s what kept them real.”
For Jason, 2025 isn’t just about revisiting the past—it’s about channeling its power into the present. “People come to these shows thinking they know what to expect,” he says. “But when the lights go down and those first notes hit, it’s not nostalgia—it’s revival.”
As fans across generations pack venues in awe, it’s clear: Jason Bonham isn’t imitating Led Zeppelin. He’s continuing it. And in doing so, he proves that legacy isn’t just about remembering—it’s about reliving. Night after night, drumbeat after drumbeat, the Zeppelin sp
irit lives on.