On June 2, 1973, the crowd that attended Led Zeppelin’s concert at Kezar Stadium reached almost mythical status, with around 50,000 fans inside the venue and thousands more gathered outside.

Many of them couldn’t get tickets but refused to miss the moment, listening from the hills, fences, and nearby streets as the sound reverberated through Golden Gate Park. The crowd was packed together and talked intensely, creating a constant wall of noise that began hours before Zeppelin’s appearance and never let up, giving the afternoon a tense, festival-like atmosphere, tinged with anticipation and pure excitement.
When the band launched into their long and powerful set, the crowd reacted instantly to every drum solo, guitar solo, and vocal scream, erupting in huge waves of cheers during the epic performances of “Dazed and Confused,” “No Quarter,” “Stairway to Heaven,” “Moby Dick,” and “Whole Lotta Love.” The open-air stadium amplified both the music and the audience, so the roar of the crowd resonated like thunder within the stadium, sometimes as powerful as the band on stage.
That immense mass of people, unified in volume and energy, transformed the concert into something more than a simple performance and helped solidify Kezar Stadium as one of the most legendary crowd moments of Led Zeppelin’s unstoppable rise in 1973.
This proved why Led Zeppelin would be enshrined as the greatest band of all time; Led Zeppelin are the best rock/blues band that managed to be the band that came to change the course of rock music in stadiums.
