There are songs that entertain, and then there are songs that open a wound and let the light pour through. All My Love by Led Zeppelin belongs to the latter. It’s not just a performance—it’s a confession, a memorial, a father’s aching whisper to a son forever out of reach.
Written by Robert Plant in the shadow of unspeakable tragedy—the sudden death of his 5-year-old son Karac in 1977—All My Love is more than a ballad. It is the sound of a heart trying to keep beating after it’s been shattered. While Plant had built a career conjuring worlds of fantasy and fire, this song left all mythology behind. No golden gods. No stairways. Just grief.

By the time Led Zeppelin performed it live during their final tour in 1980, the song had taken on a sacred weight. On stage, Plant didn’t look like the lion-maned rock icon who once howled and danced with abandon. He looked like a man trying to speak across time. His voice, usually a force of nature, became something quieter, frailer—reaching, not roaring.
And in those moments, the distance between him and the crowd dissolved. Tens of thousands of fans stood not before a legend, but beside a grieving father. You could see it in the way he closed his eyes during the chorus, as if hoping his words might cross the veil. “All of my love, all of my love to you”—the line didn’t just float into the arena air, it hung there like a prayer.

There’s little video that fully conveys the gravity of those performances—not because cameras weren’t rolling, but because certain truths can’t be captured. You had to be there. You had to feel how still the night became, how every guitar note seemed to tremble with unspoken sorrow.
And yet, within the sadness, there’s something beautiful: the act of turning pain into something eternal. All My Love reminds us that even in the darkest corners of life, music can be a lantern. That love—real love—doesn’t die. It transforms.
Robert Plant never wrote another song quite like it. Maybe because All My Love said everything that needed saying. Not to us, but to Karac. A lullaby for the beyond. And every time it’s played, the silence between the notes carries a name, a memory, and a love that never stopped.