In a new interview with Premier Guitar, Heartâs Nancy Wilson recalled the first time she ever saw Led Zeppelin live. While many fans would give anything to see the iconic band on stage, Nancy admitted that she left the show early because at the time she couldnât handle Robert Plantâs suggestive moves.
âThere was Led Zeppelin and Jimmy [Page] had his violin bow going and he was doing his echoplex magic playing, pretending that heâs summoning the music out of the air with his echoplex on repeat, which were physical tapes at the time,â Nancy said.
âAnd so we were like, âOh my God.â The singer, heâs so suggestive. Heâs got his shirts wide open, heâs got his bare chest and his jeans were really low riders and he was moving in this way that was so super suggestive and we were kind of shocked. Weâre like, âOh, my God.’â
She continued: âWe were in a little folk band at the time. So, we were from the suburbs. So we were kind of square, square little hippie chicks to be unenlightened, letâs just say. And so, they were like, âOh, theyâre so loud. Theyâre just being so suggestive and loud.â
âThen, he sang about like âSqueeze My Lemonâ and weâre like, âOh, we must leave, we must leave the premisesâ because we were just shocked. So, we actually walked out on at the Green Lake Aqua Theater.â
Despite Nancy being overwhelmed by Plantâs provocative look at the time, Led Zeppelin were a major inspiration for her and her sister/bandmate Ann Wilson. In a 2024 interview with Guitar World, Nancy explained that even though she was told women shouldnât play rock music, she and her sister disagreed. âSo we were very loud. I guess we just didnât care,â she said.
âWe wanted to channel the androgyny of rock ânâ roll. Guys like Robert Plant looked like really hot chicks, and we felt like we could be hot chicks or hot dudes on a big rock stage like that. Androgyny and a sense of humor were our basic survival tools, because there was no place for us at the time,â Nancy noted.