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PSA Authentic Led Zeppelin Tickets Sunday July 24th 1977 unused set of 4 tickets
$ 1320
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PSA authenticated and encapsulated Led Zeppelin Tickets Sunday July 24th 1977 unused set of 4 tickets. Shipped with USPS First Class.For sale is this set of (4) consecutively numbered, unused tickets + attached stubs in their official, original KOME Radio Ticket Giveaway envelope with Advisory Insert for the July 24th, 1977 Led Zeppelin concert.It appears as though an unnamed person won these tickets and then couldn’t make it to what was to be Led Zeppelin’s last concert performance ever in North America with John Bonham on drums and, sadly, the very last concert the original band members played together.(4) tickets + stubs(1) KOME Radio Envelope(1) “Attention” InsertLed Zeppelin’s 1977 tour played two dates in July of 1977 for Bill Graham’s Day on the Green concert series. The tickets shown above are an unused example from the last of the two sold-out Oakland concerts (July 24th, 1977) and were meant, in the words of Plant himself, as an apology for the cancellation of their Day On The Green show from 1975. The two three and a half hour marathons, in the words of the press following the event, more than made up for the absence two years before. Epic.This show in northern California was meant to be followed by massive dates in New Orleans, Buffalo, Pittsburgh and ending at JFK Stadium in Philadelphia, but they were all cancelled when Plant’s son mysteriously died. Events three years later would dictate that these remain Led Zeppelin’s final shows in the U.S. There’s quite a few vintage LZ tickets floating around online, but other examples are for the many subsequent cancelled concert dates that followed the final July 24th, 1977 concert event, and none within any kind of original packaging.KOME was a radio station in San Jose, California, heard at 98.5 FM from 1971 through 1998. KOME's diamond shaped stickers were a common sight on vehicles and high school lockers around the area. Probably their most memorable on-air slogan being "Don't touch that dial, it's got "KOME" on it!" Appropriately, Playboy magazine found this newsworthy enough to mention the station.