North America Spring 1970 | ||||
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Poster for Led Zeppelin's concert at Dallas, used to help promote its Spring 1970 tour of North America |
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Concert tour by Led Zeppelin | ||||
Start date | March 21, 1970 | |||
End date | April 18, 1970 | |||
Legs | 1 | |||
Shows | 25 (26 originally scheduled) | |||
Led Zeppelin tour chronology | ||||
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Led Zeppelin's Spring 1970 North American Tour was the fifth concert tour of North America by the English rock band. The tour commenced on March 21 and concluded on April 18, 1970. It took place a little over a week after the conclusion of their recent European concert tour.
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In many respects this tour was a tremendous success for the band, as they grossed a total of over $1,200,000, and broke attendance records at their Canadian concerts in Montreal and Vancouver.[1] The band were also made honorary citizens of the city of Memphis.[1]
However, this stint of concerts also featured many unsavoury crowd control problems, with the shows often descending into violent confrontations between young concert-goers and the police.[2] The tour occurred at a time when civil tension was very high in the United States, with numerous demonstrations taking place against the Vietnam War. On occasion Led Zeppelin were refused service in restaurants and in Texas they had a gun pulled on them.[3]
Singer Robert Plant's observations of these disturbing events would prompt him to write some reflective lyrics for the song "That's the Way", which was composed just after the completion of this tour at Bron-Yr-Aur, and was later recorded for the band's forthcoming album Led Zeppelin III.[1]
This was also the fateful tour during which guitarist Jimmy Page's 1960 Gibson Les Paul "Black Beauty" was stolen in an airport in Canada. Despite attempts to recover the guitar involving advertisements being placed in music magazines, it was never returned to its owner.
Initially, Stone the Crows were announced as the support act for the tour, but this arrangement was cancelled. During this tour and on all subsequent tours, the band dispensed with using any support bands for their concerts.[1]
The final date of this tour, at Las Vegas, was cancelled as a result of cumulative strain on Plant's voice.[1]
The fairly typical set list for the tour was:
Encores:
There were some set list substitutions, variations, and order switches during the tour.