Robert Plantβs Saving Grace review β self-effacing superstar still sounds astonishing
Royal Festival Hall, London
Playing a mix of traditional folk and radically rearranged acoustic Led Zeppelin classics, the former Zep frontman is in fine voice β but also happy to step out of the spotlight
Between songs, Robert Plant describes his latest project, Saving Grace, as hailing βfrom the west side of common senseβ. Itβs a self-effacing remark but he has a point. Most rock stars of his vintage and stature (78 next year, somewhere between 200m and 300m albums sold with Led Zeppelin) would be out there underlining their status by touring the hits. But as anyone who has followed Plantβs serpentine post-Zeppelin career will tell you, the straightforward option doesnβt seem to hold great appeal for him.
So Saving Grace are a band assembled from musicians local to his home in Shropshire β though it isnβt entirely clear if Plant is joking when he suggests he found multi-instrumentalist Matt Worley working in the local tourist information office. Their oeuvre is an intriguing stew of traditional folk songs (The Cuckoo, As I Roved Out); covers that pay testament to Plantβs famously catholic tastes (Everybodyβs Song by Low rubs shoulders with Itβs a Beautiful Day Today by 60s psych heroes Moby Grape); and a scattering of Led Zeppelin tracks that you could fairly describe as radically rearranged: both Ramble On and Four Sticks now heavily feature an accordion, with the low end provided not by a bass guitar but a cello. Moreover, this is an evening in which one of the most renowned frontmen in rock history β whose voice is in quite astonishing nick β seems happy to regularly cede the spotlight, and effectively act as a backing singer for Worley and vocalist Suzi Dian.
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Β© Photograph: Sonja Horsman/Sonja Horsman / The Guardian

Β© Photograph: Sonja Horsman/Sonja Horsman / The Guardian

Β© Photograph: Sonja Horsman/Sonja Horsman / The Guardian