
🧨 BREAKING NEWS: Long-Lost Led Zeppelin Album “Celestial Riffs” Unearthed in London Vault — Full Analog Release Confirmed as Robert Plant and Jimmy Page Announce Surprise Reunion Tour Featuring AI Resurrection of John Bonham
Rock history has just been rewritten.
In an earth-shaking revelation, music legends Robert Plant and Jimmy Page have confirmed the discovery of a never-before-heard Led Zeppelin album, recorded in 1975 and thought to be lost forever. Titled “Celestial Riffs,” the album was found in a locked vault beneath an old recording studio in London, buried among reels of analog tape, handwritten notes, and long-forgotten session logs.
The tapes, which were authenticated by audio engineers and Zeppelin archivists earlier this year, contain eight fully recorded studio tracks laid down at the height of the band’s creative powers, shortly after the Physical Graffiti sessions. According to insiders, the songs are “spiritually connected to Zeppelin IV in tone, but with the musical ambition of Presence and the raw fire of Houses of the Holy.”
Jimmy Page, speaking from his London home this morning, called the discovery “an act of fate.”
> “I always knew we had one more piece left in the vaults,” Page said. “This was our cosmic encore—one last message for the world.”
Even more shocking is the announcement that the surviving members—Robert Plant and Jimmy Page—will reunite for a global tour in 2026 to perform the newly discovered material. The tour, named The Celestial Tour, will incorporate cutting-edge AI holographic technology to bring the legendary drummer John Bonham back to the stage in stunning visual and audio fidelity.
“We’re not replacing Bonzo,” Plant said emotionally. “We’re honoring him. The spirit of Zeppelin was always four people—this way, it still is.”
The AI-driven Bonham experience is being produced in collaboration with the same team behind ABBA Voyage and the Michael Jackson hologram, but with real Bonham drum patterns reconstructed from multi-track stems and motion-captured visuals based on archival footage and family contributions.
The album Celestial Riffs is being released in full analog format, with no digital alterations, in a tribute to the band’s original sound philosophy. A limited edition vinyl pressing will launch first, featuring replica artwork designed by the late Storm Thorgerson’s studio, followed by streaming and CD formats.
The announcement has already crashed fan forums, sparked millions of tweets, and led to instant sell-outs of pre-registration for tour tickets in New York, London, Tokyo, and Berlin.
Rock critics are calling it “the most important musical rediscovery of the 21st century.”
Industry insiders predict the album will instantly top charts worldwide, while collectors are already preparing for bidding wars over the first-pressing vinyl.
As the world waits for the first official single to drop, one thing is certain:
Led Zeppelin has returned—not just from the past, but from the stars.