Jimmy Page Says Led Zeppelin Reunion Is Unlikely

    LONDON, ENGLAND - SEPTEMBER 21:  (L-R) John Paul Jones, Robert Plant and Jimmy Page of Led Zeppelin attend a press conference to announce Led Zeppelin's new live DVD Celebration day at 8 Northumberland Avenue on September 21, 2012 in London, England.  (Photo by Danny Martindale/Getty Images)
    LONDON, ENGLAND - SEPTEMBER 21: (L-R) John Paul Jones, Robert Plant and Jimmy Page of Led Zeppelin attend a press conference to announce Led Zeppelin's new live DVD Celebration day at 8 Northumberland Avenue on September 21, 2012 in London, England. (Photo by Danny Martindale/Getty Images)

    Led Zeppelin fans shouldn’t hold their breath for a reunion tour.

    “It seems really unlikely that there would be a tour in the future,” guitarist Jimmy Page said Wednesday morning during an appearance on BBC Radio 2.

    “It doesn’t look as though there’s anything in the future, unfortunately.”

    The 76-year-old rock icon has not performed with Robert Plant, John Paul Jones and Jason Bonham (who replaced his late father) since 2007’s reunion show in London.

    “At the time of the O2, we thought that there was going to be some more dates,” recalled Page. “It would’ve been really good to have done that after the O2, ‘cause we’d put a lot of work into The O2 and we were really on it, y’know? But it didn’t come off.

    “We’re talking about a concert that was gigantic at the time, but that was 2007. Time passes, y’know?”

    In 2014, Plant denied a British tabloid report that he turned down an $800 million offer for Led Zeppelin to reunite for a 35-date tour. A rep for the singer called the report "fabricated."

    Page is featured on “Scarlet,” a previously unreleased track by The Rolling Stones that is out now.