Post-Led Zeppelin (1981-2007)

The first important post-Led Zeppelin is the Honeydrippers project, a group that was formed in 1981 by Robert Plant and Jimmy Page on guitar screens, with a range of respected musicians and friends from Plant and Page, Jeff Beck, including, Paul Schaffer and Nile Rodgers. Plants have deliberately chosen to focus the group in a very different direction from Led Zeppelin, playing standards and more style R & B, highlighted by coverage of their "Sea of Love" which peaked at # 3 on the Billboard charts in 1984.
In 1982, the surviving members of this group has published a collection Coda-taking various sessions during Led Zeppelin's career, right. It includes two songs from the band's performance at the Royal Albert Hall in 1970, everyone from Led Zeppelin III and Houses of the Holy sessions, and three in through the exit door sessions. It also displays the 1976 John Bonham drum instrumental with electronic effects added by Jimmy Page, called "Bonzo's Montreux".
On July 13, 1985, Page, Plant and Jones gathered for Live Aid concert at JFK Stadium in Philadelphia, played a short set with drummers Tony Thompson and Phil Collins and bassist Paul Martinez. Collins helped plant the first two solo albums while Martinez is a member of the group's factory in going solo. The performance was marred by a lack of exercise with two drummers, the fight with the title page-of-the Les Paul and a monitor malfunction, and plant hoarsely. Page himself has described the performance as "fairly chaotic" and "clearly not good enough", while plants harder, described as an "atrocity." When Live Aid footage was released four-DVD in late 2004 to raise funds for Sudan, the group unanimously agreed not to allow pictures of their performance in use, stating that he does was not to their standards., To show their support to the campaign page Plant and promised the results of those who come and Plant Page and John Paul Jones DVD promising results in the North American tour with mutual admiration society in the project.
The three members met again May 14, 1988, the concert's 40th anniversary of Atlantic Records, with Bonham's son Jason Bonham on drums. meeting was again hampered by a disjointed performance, especially by Plant and Page (the two argued shortly before arriving on stage on the opportunity to play "Stairway to Heaven"), and a complete loss of keyboard Jones Food for live TV. Page later described the performance as "a big disappointment," said Mr. Plant and firmly that "the show sucks."
The first Led Zeppelin box set, with remastered under the supervision of Jimmy Page, presented the group's music to new fans, boosting the rise of Led Zeppelin. This set includes four new songs, including Robert Johnson tribute "Traveling Riverside Blues." The song reached number seven on the Billboard Album Rock Tracks, with a video in heavy rotation on MTV. 1992 saw the release of "Immigrant Song" / "Hey Hey What Can I Do" (original b-side) as a single CD in the United States. Led Zeppelin Boxed Set 2 was released in 1993, with two sets of boxes containing all known studio recordings and some live rarities.