Robert Plant Confirms Spring 2026 U.S. Tour With Saving Grace

robert plant tour

Robert Plant is extending his late career run with Saving Grace into another major live chapter. The former Led Zeppelin frontman has announced a Spring Fever 2026 tour that brings his acoustic leaning band back to the United States for more than fifteen shows across March and April.

It is the latest move in a busy period that has seen Plant pair a new studio album with steady touring in Europe and North America.

The new shows pick up where the Roar in the Fall dates left off in late 2025. This time Plant and Saving Grace will start in the southwest on 14 March in Albuquerque, then work their way through Tulsa and a run of Texas cities including Dallas, San Antonio and Austin.

From there the tour bends through New Orleans and Memphis before heading into Nashville for a night at the Ryman Auditorium, one of the most storied rooms in American music.

Plant and Saving Grace are also on the bill at the Big Ears Festival in Knoxville during this run, a booking that underlines how strongly this project sits inside the worlds of folk, experimental and classic rock audiences at the same time.

After Knoxville, the routing moves north through Louisville, Philadelphia and Red Bank before a finale in New York City on 7 April, where the tour closes inside a cathedral venue that matches the intimate mood of the music.

The band on stage is the same core line up that recorded Plant’s recent album titled Saving Grace. Alongside Plant, the group features vocalist Suzi Dian, drummer Oli Jefferson, guitarist Tony Kelsey, multi instrumentalist Matt Worley and cellist Barney Morse Brown.

The sound is rooted in British folk, Americana, blues and spiritual music rather than straightforward hard rock. For fans who still associate Plant only with Led Zeppelin, these shows serve as a real time demonstration of how far his artistic focus has moved while still carrying traces of that history.

Set lists on recent tours give a clear picture of what Spring Fever 2026 is likely to offer. Saving Grace performances usually lean on material from the new album and older solo work, plus deep cut covers that range from traditional songs to pieces by Low and other modern artists.

Selected Zeppelin songs do appear, often reworked to fit the acoustic and percussive textures of the current band rather than delivered as carbon copies of the seventies originals. This approach has earned strong reviews from rock press and from long time fans who value reinvention over nostalgia.

The venues tell their own story. Instead of chasing stadium scale production, Plant is deliberately choosing theaters, historic halls and festivals known for attentive listeners. Places like the Ryman and Big Ears attract audiences who are willing to sit with quiet songs and shifting dynamics. It is a setting that suits a singer in his late seventies who has repeatedly said that every new project has to feel personally worthwhile rather than a victory lap for past success.

For rock fans and page owners covering classic acts, the Spring Fever 2026 tour offers several clear angles. There is the headline story of a legend who continues to reshape his catalog instead of freezing it.

There is the practical value of a clean date list that runs from the southwest to the northeast in a tight three week window, which is perfect for shareable tour guides. There is also the deeper narrative of Plant using Saving Grace to explore folk and roots music in a way that still ties back to the moodier corners of Led Zeppelin.

All of that makes this run more than a simple add on to his tour history. It is another signal that his late career phase is a creative one, not just a retrospective.

Robert Plant With Saving Grace and Suzi Dian 2026 Tour:

  • March 14 | Albuquerque, NM | Kiva Auditorium
  • March 16 | Tulsa, OK | Tulsa Theater
  • March 18 | Dallas, TX | Majestic Theatrw
  • March 19 | San Antonio, TX | Majestic Theatre
  • March 21 | Austin, TX | Austin City Limits Live at Moody Theater
  • March 22 | New Orleans, LA | Saenger Theatre
  • March 24 | Memphis, TN | Orpheum Theatre
  • March 26 | Nashville, TN | Ryman Auditorium
  • March 28 | Knoxville, TN | Big Ears Festival
  • March 29 | Louisville, KY | The Louisville Palace
  • March 31 | Raleigh, NC | Raleigh Memorial Auditorium
  • April 1 | Asheville, NC | Thomas Wolfe Auditorium
  • April 2 | Newport News, VA | Ferguson Center for the Arts
  • April 4 | Philadelphia, PA | The Met
  • April 6 | Red Bank, NJ | Count Basie Theatre
  • April 7 | New York, NY | Cathedral of St. John the Divine

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