Rock Royalty

Led Zeppelin

Since 1968

Blues-soaked hard rock with cinematic ambition.

After changing their name from the New Yardbirds, the quartet signed with Atlantic Records and reshaped the blueprint for stadium rock.

Led Zeppelin on stage
Led Zeppelin performing live, 1977.
  • 9 Studio albums
  • 111.5M RIAA-certified units
  • 1 Hall of Fame

Formation and early success

After changing their name from the New Yardbirds, Led Zeppelin signed a deal with Atlantic Records that afforded them considerable artistic freedom.

Although the group was initially unpopular with critics, they achieved significant commercial success with albums such as:

  • Led Zeppelin (1969)
  • Led Zeppelin II (1969)
  • Led Zeppelin III (1970)
  • The untitled fourth album (1971)
  • Houses of the Holy (1973)
  • Physical Graffiti (1975)

Page wrote most of the music early in Led Zeppelin's career, while Plant generally supplied the songs' lyrics. Jones' keyboard-based compositions later became central to the group's music, and their later albums featured greater experimentation. The latter half of the band's career saw a series of record-breaking tours that earned them a reputation for excess and debauchery. Although they remained commercially and critically successful, their output and touring schedule were limited in the late 1970s, and the group disbanded following Bonham's death from alcohol-related asphyxia in 1980.

Band Members

Led Zeppelin were an English rock band formed in London in 1968. The band consisted of guitarist Jimmy Page, singer Robert Plant, bassist and keyboardist John Paul Jones, and drummer John Bonham. Their heavy, guitar-driven sound, rooted in blues on their early albums, has drawn them recognition as one of the progenitors of heavy metal.

Enduring discography

Each of their nine studio albums placed on the Billboard Top 10 and six reached the number-one spot.

Their catalog spans blues, folk, psychedelia, and Eastern instrumentation, cementing them as one of the most eclectic bands of their era.

With 111.5 million RIAA-certified units, they are the second-best-selling band in the United States.

Led Zeppelin I–III

Laid the foundation with raw blues riffs and ambition to stretch song structures.

1969–1970
Untitled IV

A masterful blend of acoustic calm and thunderous rock, showcasing "Stairway to Heaven."

1971
Physical Graffiti

Double album brimming with experimentation, seven-minute epics, and intricate production.

1975

Legacy & influence

In the decades since, the surviving members have sporadically collaborated and participated in one-off Led Zeppelin reunions. The most successful of these was at the 2007 Ahmet Ertegun Tribute Concert in London, with Jason Bonham taking his late father's place behind the drums.

They are widely considered one of the most successful, innovative and influential rock groups in history; Rolling Stone magazine described them as "the heaviest band of all time", "the biggest band of the '70s" and "unquestionably one of the most enduring bands in rock history".

Hall of Fame

Inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1995, the museum's biography states they were "as influential in that decade (the 1970s) as the Beatles were in the prior one."

Innovation
Touring
Production