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Backstage with Ron Onesti: The return of Led Zeppelin

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Jason Bonham, the son of original Led Zeppelin drummer John Bonham, brought "The Led Zeppelin Experience" to Arcada Theatre. (Photo by Lou Bilotti)

It’s 1975, I’m 13 years old, and I am just starting to figure out what it is I like musically. Chicago is going crazy because rock supergroup Led Zeppelin is coming to town.

“Stairway To Heaven,” the group’s unofficial signature song, is everywhere. I am breaking all kinds of air-guitar records and belting out lyrics at sold-out performances in front of my bedroom mirror. I had it down, note for note. Yes, I was a guitar hero in front of my throngs of fans. OK, it was in front of my younger sister and brother, but still ... they were captivated, and I rocked.

Fast forward 38 years later. I’m in the music business living a dream, producing concerts with some of my early heroes. The music of Led Zeppelin is as popular as it ever was, named on every list from Rolling Stone magazine and beyond as the all-time best. And at our Arcada Theatre in St. Charles, rock ’n‘ roll royalty came, and conquered.

Jason Bonham, the talented son of original Zep drummer John Bonham, brought his incredible live-band, multi-media “Led Zeppelin Experience” to St. Charles. His band was nothing short of incredible as he masterfully did what he was born to do behind the drums (including a 32” timpani, like his father).

Each musician, including the amazing vocalist, had the songs literally coming out of their pores. Watching them was as wonderful as hearing them. And after a two-hour extravaganza of Zeppelin hits and rare, personal video footage, I found myself chatting one-on-one with this musical-family legend on his tour bus.

The original Led Zeppelin band consisted of vocalist Robert Plant, bassist John Paul Jones, guitarist Jimmy Page and drummer John “Bonzo” Bonham.

They began in England in the late ’60s, and in the ’70s, became what the Beatles were the decade before ... international superstars. It all came to a tragic end in 1980 when the 32-year-old Bonham overdosed on vodka after a long night of rehearsals. The band announced that it could no longer continue without its dear friend and band-mate.

Bonham’s son, Jason, was an impressionable 14-year-old, and could have gone in many directions. His father’s legacy prevailed, and Jason carried the torch, becoming a drumming force to be reckoned with.

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