Politics | Led Zeppelin Bill Clinton Tried to Broker Led Zeppelin Reunion Couldn't get the band back together for benefit concert By Evann Gastaldo Posted May 6, 2013 2:22 PM CDT Copied Former President Bill Clinton speaks at the 20th anniversary of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, Monday, April 29, 2013. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak) Bill Clinton may have both Southern charm and years of high-level diplomatic experience on his side, but even he could not convince Led Zeppelin to reunite. He asked the band to get back together and perform at last year's Superstorm Sandy benefit concert in New York, and was roundly rebuffed, the CBS 60 Minutes Overtime webcast reported today. Who did have some success in the whole attempt? Film exec Harvey Weinstein, who flew to DC to ask Clinton to approach the band, the AP reports. Led Zeppelin last played together publicly in 2007, but surviving members Robert Plant, John Paul Jones, and Jimmy Page did see fit to appear together just 10 days before the December concert; they were awarded Kennedy Center Honors. Read These Next During a stormy takeoff in Maine, plane ends up 'upside down.' Sydney Sweeney is at the center of a controversy yet again. The Blind Side actor is reportedly 'on life support.' Cops want 'Dexter' to fess up to key fob cloning. Report an error