Since we couldn't make it to London to see Led Zeppelin

Fricke has the answers to all questions.
In case anyone was just dying to know how the Led Zep show went in London last night, David Fricke, the source of all rock knowledge, according to any of the Classic Albums documentaries, has posted a lengthy review on Rolling Stone's blog. An excerpt:
"As drummer Jason Bonham hammered with the ghostly precision and
ferocity of his late father, guitarist Jimmy Page fired dirty chunks of
Chuck Berry and bassist John Paul Jones kept iron time with familiar
reserve, singer Robert Plant sang the most obvious words of the night: 'Been a long time since I rock and rolled.' Overhead, images of a much
younger Zeppelin, in concert during the early and mid-Seventies,
flashed on a huge digital-video screen. In those films, Led Zeppelin
were the biggest, loudest and most cocksure band in rock. Jimmy Page’s
now snow-white hair was still jet black; Robert Plant was a golden god,
not yet a Viking elder, and the late John Bonham — whose death in 1980
abruptly ended Zeppelin’s reign — still ruled the engine room.
But the band that played underneath those memories last night was
not the one that misfired at Live Aid in 1985 or again in New York in
1988. This one was rehearsed, ready and out to kill. This band was Led
Zeppelin in every way."
Read the full review here.
Also, people are posting videos on YouTube from the show.