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Get the Led Out, the American Led Zeppelin, Returns to the Capitol Center

By: Dec. 13, 2016
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Get the Led Out (GTLO), "The American Led Zeppelin", returns to the historic Capitol Center for the Arts in Downtown Concord on Saturday, January 14, 2017 at 8PM. Tickets are $25-45, plus any applicable fees for phone/Internet sales.

GTLO are professional musicians who are passionate about their love of the music of Led Zeppelin and who bring the studio recordings of "the mighty Zep" to life on the big concert stage. While many acts perform the music of Led Zeppelin, Get the Led Out is the only act devoted to painstakingly recreating Led Zeppelin songs in all their depth and glory. When you hear three guitars on the album...the band delivers three guitarists on stage. No wigs or fake English accents here. GTLO brings the Concord audience what it wants...a high-energy Zeppelin concert with honest, heart-thumping intensity.

The Get the Led Out concert experience is designed for those who want to play air guitar, air drums, air keyboards, and sing along all night to what many consider to be the greatest rock music ever made. Tickets for the January 14 show may be ordered by calling the Capitol Center for the Arts at (603) 225-1111 or online at www.ccanh.com. Tickets may also obtained at the CCA's box office at 44 South Main St., Concord, NH, which is open Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday from 11AM to 6PM and Saturdays from 11AM to 2PM.


About the Capitol Center for the Arts The award-winning Capitol Center for the Arts (www.ccanh.com) inspires, educates, and entertains audiences by providing a quality venue for the performing arts as well as an eclectic variety of professional-level, artistically-significant presentations. The Center is conveniently located off Rt. 93 in downtown Concord, New Hampshire and is close to several quality restaurants, shopping boutiques, and other area attractions. The facility first opened in 1927 as the Capitol Theatre, a prime stop on the Vaudeville circuit; it later became Concord's premier movie house and concert hall. After closing in 1989, it underwent a multi-million dollar renovation / modernization and reopened in 1995 as the Capitol Center for the Arts. Today, the Capitol Center is home to the 1304-seat Chubb Theatre, the Spotlight Café, The Governor's Hall ballroom, and the Kimball House, a stately Victorian mansion.

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