The Funny Reason Robert Plant Turned Down a Role on ‘Game of Thrones’
Robert Plant is a rock god, but never forget that he’s an incredibly funny guy, too.
Want proof? In a recent chat with George Stroumboulopoulos, Plant was asked whether he watchedĀ Game of Thrones.Ā He replied, “No. I got offered a part in that…I don’t want to be typecast. I mean, I started that s—. Go back to ‘Immigrant Song.’ Led Zeppelin being part of a cultural exchange in Iceland with the Icelandic government. So, they didn’t really know what they’d invited onto their little island.”
He continued, “So, on the way back on the plane, I started thinking about, because I love Western European history from maybe the Bronze Age up through all the old religion, the great, sort of, when we were really in touch with our Earth. And so, the Viking thing was obviously that whole idea of playing in Iceland and experiencing this amazing landscape and people. Yeah, I’ve got a lot to answer for, really, because I’ve never seen so many bands with double-bladed axes. And they could have all looked like Soft Cell, something like that.”
When pressed on the part that was offered to him, Plant responded, “I thought I got to ride a horse and go [mimes raising his head regally.]”
Honestly, it’s not fair he’s both musically talentedĀ andĀ funny. Leave something for the rest of us, Robert!
Did you know Robert Plant was offered a role in Game of Thrones? Here's why he turned it down. pic.twitter.com/vc00AenZNq
— George Stroumboulopoulos šŗ (@strombo) June 14, 2022
Robert Plant: His 41 Best Post-Led Zeppelin Songs, Ranked
The song marked the beginning of a new era for Robert Plant; āNow And Zenā saw him making peace with his history with Led Zeppelin in a way that he hadnāt previously. He uses his Led Zeppelin symbol (the circle around the feather) in the albumās artwork. More pointedly, Jimmy Page played guitar solos on two of the songs, including this one. It also marked the debut of Plantās new band; heād parted ways with his original backing musicians after three albums. āHeaven Knowsā was written by his keyboardist Phil Johnstone and David Barratt, who did some of the keyboard programming on the album. Apparently, the pair had recorded the song for their former group who were called The Rest Is History. Someone sent Plant the song, and that led to him wanting to record it, and inviting Johnstone to join his band.
Pearl Jam, obviously, are big Led Zeppelin fans, you can hear that in almost all of their songs. Especially āGiven To Fly,ā their 1998 single which sounded a bit too much like āGoing To California.ā Jimmy Page and Robert Plant have both been a bit vocal about that. But Pearl Jam and Plant mended their fences in 2005 when the Seattle band invited Plant to open for them at a fundraiser for Hurricane Katrina relief. Plant joined Pearl Jam for a few songs, including this Elvis Presley cover, which Pearl Jam later released as part of their Christmas single series.
A classic song written by the late New Orleans legend Allen Toussaint (under his pseudonym Naomi Neville). It had been covered by the Rolling Stones, the Who and the Strawberry Alarm Clock, among others, before Robert and Alison got to it. It tells a funny tale of some dude who learns from a fortune teller that he will find love "when the next one arrives." When he comes back the next day, he realizes that heās in love with the fortune teller. They get married and are as "happy as we could be" and -- bonus! -- and now he gets his "fortune told for free." Plant takes the lead vocals here, and sings it as convincingly as anyone could. You kind of believe that this actually happened to him!
In recent years, Plant has gotten more and more interested in electronic music, but his fascination with the blues is as strong as it was in his Zeppelin days. That clash of different musical cultures tends to make an awesome noise, as it does on this song.
Most of this album is original material co-written by Plant and his backing band, but āLittle Maggieā is a ātraditionalā ballad, like āGallows Pole.ā Even in the 2010s, Plant was bringing classic -- but overlooked -- songs to a new audience.
Robert Plantās first two solo albums were received warmly, but album #3 -- āShaken āNā Stirredā -- alienated fans. Plant found something of a āresetā with the Honeydrippers EP. āVol. 1,ā saw him teaming up with Jeff Beck, Nile Rodgers, Paul Shaffer and even Jimmy Page to tackle early rock and roll era songs. This Ben E. King cover wasnāt a hit for the Honeydrippers, but it should have been. And sadly, the Honeydrippers never recorded a āVol. 2.ā
After Page guested on two tracks on Plantās āNow And Zen,ā the vocalist returned the favor, singing on the hard rock jam āThe Only Oneā on Pageās solo album. Weāre still waiting for the follow-up. Unfortunately, Page isnāt as prolific as Plant. He hasnāt released new music since the Page/Plant āWalking Into Clarksdale album in 1998.
Plant definitely tried to put some distance between him and Led Zeppelin on his first few solo albums, but here, about three minutes into the song it starts to sound a bit like a modern update to the jams Zep used to do during āDazed and Confused.ā Which is a compliment, obviously.
Another early song where Plant seems pulled back into Zeppelinās gravity. Most of his debut album featured Phil Collins of Genesis on drums. But here, he uses Cozy Powell, formerly of the Jeff Beck Group and Ritchie Blackmoreās Rainbow, and he brings a bit of heavy metal (or hard rock) thunder to the song.
Robert Plant was the lead singer of one of the biggest bands of all time, but to his credit, heās always quick to pay tribute to the much lesser-known artists who inspired him as a kid (and surely, still inspires him as an adult). Plant recorded two songs for this Fats Domino tribute (with two separate bands, no less!). āGoinā Homeā also featured contributions from Tom Petty, Norah Jones and Elton John, among others. Lilā Band of Gold is a zydeco group, and they really give Plant a New Orleans sound here.
Who is Arthur Alexander, you might ask? Well, heās the only songwriter to have been covered by the Beatles (āSoldier of Loveā), the Rolling Stones (āYou Better Move Onā) *and* Bob Dylan (āSally Sue Brownā). Sadly, by the ā90s he was mostly forgotten and driving a bus for a living. Plant did this song justice, and (as he often does) brought a lesser-known song to a much bigger audience.
A jump-blues song dating back to 1947, Robert Plant (featuring Jeff Beck on lead guitar) took this jam to the top 40; it was a #25 hit. Ironic that while Plant was terrifying the ā50s generation with Zeppelin, he actually shared a lot of their musical tastes.
After Robert Plant and Alison Kraussās āRaising Sand,ā which won six Grammys, fans (and the record label) surely expected a follow-up. Of course, Plant has become somewhat well-known for not making his artistic choices based on money. Instead, his next project saw him working with a new group of collaborators, including Americana singer/songwriters Patty Griffin and Buddy Miller. āBand of Joyā was an album of unexpected covers, including this one by Richard Thompson. Thompson was no stranger to Plant though - heād played guitar on the āFate Of Nationsā album over a decade earlier.
A folk-rocky jam that should have been a bigger hit. Itās laid back, but shows that Plant was still good at writing aboutā¦ similar subject matter that heād covered in his previous band. Hereās a sample lyric: āHer kiss of fire/A loaded invitation/Inside her smile/She takes me down and down and down and down.ā
A lot of āRaising Sandā feels kind of dark, but this Everly Brothers cover sees Plant and Krauss having a blast.
Youād almost think that this one was from Led Zeppelin āIII.ā There was a lot of production on much of the āManic Nirvanaā album, but this was just Robert and guitarist Doug Boyle (the two co-wrote the song as well).
Plant has always been an excellent song interpreter but only did it sparingly (until the 2000s). This Tim Hardin cover is one of the highlights of the underrated āFate Of Nationsā album.
Americana singer/songwriter Patti Griffin gets a lot of respect, and rightfully so: her songs have been covered by Emmylou Harris, the (Dixie) Chicks and Kelly Clarkson. And in 2010, she joined Robert Plantās backing group, the Band Of Joy, as a backing singer and acoustic guitarist. He would later sing with her on this song, which she wrote. One of the interesting things about the last few years of Plantās career is hearing him share the mic, something he rarely did in the ā60s, ā70s, ā80s and ā90s.
The second of two songs that Plant did for the Fats Domino tribute album. Here, Plant is accompanied by the Soweto Gospel Choir and a percussionistā¦ and thatās it. Plantās voice and that of the South African vocalists on this song complement each other perfectly. Songs on tribute albums sometimes get lost, and thatās a shame. You can find this on YouTube, and you should look for it.
Jimmy Page and Robert Plant reunited for 1994ās āNo Quarter,ā which saw the ex-bandmates revisiting their Led Zeppelin classics in different settings and arrangements. They also wrote a few new songs. The follow up was all new music, and they kept it simple, stripping down to a small band - accompanying themselves with just a bass player (Charlie Jones) and drummer (Michael Lee), Led Zep-style, and using no-nonsense producer Steve Albini. āShining In The Light,ā the albumās opening track, showed that they still had some solid Zep-esque jams in the tank.
āThe Last Temptation of Elvisā was an Elvis Presley tribute album put together by British music magazine NME and which featured only songs from Elvisās movies. It was a challenge that a lot of famous Elvis fans were up for: Paul McCartney and Bruce Springsteen also contributed. āLetās Have A Partyā was written for Elvis to record for the 1957 movie, āLoving You.ā (What, you donāt remember that one?) Wanda Jackson -- the Queen of Rockabilly -- recorded a cooler version a year later. And Led Zeppelin would quote this song during their extended āWhole Lotta Loveā jams. Plant is clearly having a blast revisiting it here.
Robertās band Strange Sensation was taking him farther and farther from mainstream rock music, but thatās always been his path. Led Zeppelin didnāt cater to the mainstream: the mainstream came to Zeppelin. But in the wake of the dissolution of the Page/Plant project, this song seemed to serve as an answer to, āWill you and Jimmy ever work together again?ā Robert sings, āThese are the times of my life/Bright, strong and golden/This is the way that I choose/When the deal goes down.ā
By 1988, Phil Collins had been gone from Robert Plantās band for five years. But the drum machine in this ballad totally sounded like something the Genesis-drummer would have programmed. As does the entrance of āliveā drums 1:50 into the song. In any case, āShip Of Foolsā is one of Plantās loveliest ballads.
A descendant of Led Zeppelinās āKashmir,ā āCalling To Youā was interpreted by many fans as a message to Jimmy Pageā¦ Plant practically name drops his ex-bandmate at the end of the song when he sings, āJust fadinā away! Oh Jimmmmmmy!ā Page had recently recorded a duo album with Whitesnakeās David Coverdale, a guy who had been accused of ripping off Zep more than once. And Plant wasnāt shy about mocking the guy, either, dubbing him āDavid Cover-version.ā Alas, Plant and Pageās next project was their collaboration, āNo Quarter.ā
āDreamlandā was Plantās first project after splitting with Jimmy Page. The album was mostly ā60s covers and the highlight was this Bonnie Dobson classic (first made famous by folk singer Tim Rose). If āMorning Dewā sounds familiar to you, itās probably because youāve heard the Grateful Deadās version. Or maybe youāve heard the definitive version by the Jeff Beck Group; their lead singer was an up-and-coming guy named Rod Stewart. Plantās version is almost as good as that one. And fun fact: British pop singer Lulu covered this song as well, in 1967ā¦ and it was produced by Plantās future bandmate John Paul Jones.
A lot of artists cover songs to do a new spin on a beloved classic. Give Robert Plant and Alison Krauss credit for digging deep and looking in dusty corners for material for their first album together. āRich Womanā is a cover of a 1957 song by Li'l Millet and his Creoles. Itās fair to guess that most fans hadnāt heard the original, but the song was the perfect choice to kick off āRaising Sand.ā
A cover of a lesser-known song by legendary L.A. band, Los Lobos. Released in 1990, Los Lobosā original is rock meets mariachi. But Plantās Band Of Joy takes the song from the west coast to the mountains via their use of a mandolin.
A cover of legendary Americana singer/songwriter Lucinda Williams. One of the first releases from Plant and Kraussās long-awaited second album shows that the duo has lost none of their chemistry.
The opening track from Plantās second album was the labelās first choice for a single. Plant rejected that plan: he didnāt want to be labeled a āhard rockā singer, so they went with āBig Logā and āIn The Moodā as singles instead, which worked out pretty well.
Afro-Celt Sound System combines electronic music with traditional Gaelic and West African sounds. They recorded for Peter Gabrielās RealWorld record label. That combination seemed to appeal to Plant - much of his recent music seems to combine similar influences. He certainly gave the group a great vocal performance here, and again, exposed them to his much bigger audience.
āShaken āNā Stirredā wasnāt well-received by most of Plantās fans - it was very synthy, and seemed influenced by the Eurythmics and Talking Heads. āLittle By Littleā though, was one song that broke, topping the Mainstream Rock chart, thanks to a good amount of MTV play.
This cover of a 1959 song by Phil Phillips (it was his only hit) became Robert Plantās highest-charting song ever, hitting #3 on the pop charts. Yes, *ever*. Led Zeppelin's biggest hit single only reached #4 (āWhole Lotta Loveā).
Co-written by Plant with the members of his backing band the Sensational Space Shifters -- guitarist Justin Adams, guitarist Liam "Skin" Tyson, keyboardist John Baggott and bassist Billy Fuller, āThe May Queenā sort of felt like a trip-hop song played on acoustic instruments.
Robert really got the Led out here, so to speak. Not only did he use Jimmy Page on the track, he also sampled a bunch of Zeppelin songs, including "Black Dog,ā "Dazed and Confused,ā "Whole Lotta Love,ā "The Ocean" and "Custard Pie,ā and also borrowed from "When the Levee Breaks.ā The song, somewhat surprisingly, hit #25 on the pop charts, higher than most Zeppelin singles except for āWhole Lotta Loveā (#4), āImmigrant Songā (#16), āBlack Dogā (#15) and āFool In The Rainā (#21).
Robert Plantās original solo band gets short shrift: that crew, which included guitarist Robbie Blunt, Paul Martinez on bass, Jezz Woodroffe on keyboards and -- making time between Genesis and his budding solo career -- Phil Collins on drums. Of course, at the time, they were being compared to Led Zeppelin, which was just unfair. They had their own sound and put out a lot of great music, including this jam.
An incredible song that, for some reason, was left off of āPictures at Eleven.ā For years, it was available only as a B-side, until it was released on the soundtrack of the 1985 film āWhite Nights.ā This song seems to imagine what Dire Straits would sound like with a more exciting singer and a more exciting drummer (Phil Collins plays drums here, and he makes his presence known).
The first single from āWalking Into Clarksdale,ā this jam saw the quartet of Page, Plant, bassist Charlie Jones and drummer Michael Lee accompanied by some keyboards (programmed to sound like a hurdy gurdy) and electronic beats, in hopes to give the ā70s legends a ā90s sound. It worked: it topped the Billboard Mainstream Rock chart, and got them airplay alongside Garbage, the Verve, Smashing Pumpkins, U2 and Foo Fighters.
Coming off of the reissues of the Led Zeppelin catalog, there might have been a temptation to take the tens of millions that surely would have been offered to go on a Zep tour. But instead, Plant showed that he not only aged gracefully, but that he also aged interestingly. Not every solo song of his will hold up to the Zeppelin catalog, but you can never accuse Plant of cruising on fumes. Heās always trying new sounds and he always has something to say. āRainbowā is nearly as lovely as āThank You,ā and holds up to -- and is better than -- some of the songs on the last two Zep LPs.
Whoever had the idea to re-record an album track from Jimmy Page and Robert Plantās āWalking Into Clarksdaleā for āRaising Sandā deserves a lot of credit. Of all the songs in Plantās back catalog to revisit, this wasnāt an obvious one. And yet, it worked so well, easily topping the original. This won Record Of The Year at the Grammys in 2009, and propelled āRaising Sandā to win Album of the Year. It was a good Page/Plant song, but itās the definitive Plant/Krauss song.
This was a crucial song for Plant in the early days of his solo career. He wanted to be seen outside of the shadow of Led Zeppelin, and songs like this, which sounded nothing like his former band, helped him to get there. This song was his first solo top 40 hit, reaching #20. In 2004, bass player Viktor Krauss covered the song for his āFar From Enoughā album. You may not have heard of himā¦ but the guest vocalist on the song was his sister, Alison, who would go on to record with Plant three years later. Weirdly, Plant and Krauss didnāt perform this song on their tour, but they did play āIn The Mood.ā
The first song and lead single from Plantās solo debut. It did really well at radio, hitting #3 on the rock radio chartsā¦ and it gave the format new music from a former Zep member for the first time since the band broke up. Like most of the first two albums, the song featured Phil Collins on drums, but that wasnāt Philās most important role in the song (although his drumming is excellent). Without him, the song, and the album, may not have seen the light of day. According to the book āRobert Plant: A Life,ā Plantās record label didn't want āPictures at Elevenā released, nor did Plant's manager, Peter Grant, who had also managed Zeppelin. As powerful as the new music was, everyone who made money off of Plant clearly wanted something that sounded more like his former band. Plant felt that Grant was trying to damage his solo career so that heād get back with Jimmy Page. Collins, already in the midst of splitting his time between Genesis and his solo projects, helped convince the singer to stick to his guns and release the album. And *that* might be why Jimmy Page seemed so eager to blame the awful Zeppelin reunion set at Live Aid on Collinsā drumming. He may have just had an ax to grind (no pun intended).