Two nights at Daryl’s House is a statement. Zoso has earned that distinction by spending decades at the top of the Led Zeppelin tribute tier — a band that does the technical and theatrical work the catalog requires without turning it into a museum exhibit. Night Two on June 6 follows Night One on June 5, and anyone who caught the opener knows that Zoso calibrates their sets for repeat audiences.
If June 5 was the foundation — “Whole Lotta Love,” “Black Dog,” “Kashmir,” the mountain-moving set anchors — Night Two typically pushes into deeper territory. The extended live workouts: “Dazed and Confused” at full stretch, “Achilles Last Stand,” the acoustic interlude in the middle of the electric assault. Zoso has the catalog coverage and the stamina for it.
What distinguishes them from the field isn’t any single element — it’s the integration. The Jimmy Page figure plays lead with a bow when the song calls for it. The Robert Plant figure’s voice holds through two sets. The rhythm section understands that Bonham’s drumming was architecture, not decoration. Together, they produce something that regularly surprises people who thought they knew what a Zeppelin tribute could be.
Daryl’s House in Pawling seats a few hundred. Doors at 8:00 PM. Tickets on sale now. If you missed Night One, Night Two is not a consolation prize — it’s a different show.