October 2 [12:00 EDT] -- If you heard that Jason Bonham, the son of the late great Led Zeppelin drummer John Bonham, had sampled his father's work on his own new album, you might think Jason was pulling a Puffy a la "I'll Be Missing You."

In fact, Jason Bonham's track, called "Out On The Prey" [500k Audio File], is not what you'd expect, even though it does sample some of his dad's licks from the Led Zep classic "When The Levee Breaks."

Of course, any Led Zep fan who's seen the movie "The Song Remains The Same" knows that it shows Jason starting off on drums at a very tender age.

"It was fun in those days," Jason said. "I don't really remember the party and 'The Song Remains The Same,' but definitely being woken up at two in the morning by my father to come down and play some drums, and I went, 'Aww dad I'm tired.'" [500k QuickTime]

"We used to come back from where ever we' d been together and all sit down and start messing around and start dancing about," Zeppelin frontman Robert Plant once explained. "Jukebox would be real loud, and Jason would get on his little kit, poor little tot, and he'd have to play all this stuff, you know. I mean he was better than the drummer with Steely Dan, better than the Temptations drummer, better than Bonzo, better than everybody because he was sober." [1MB QuickTime]

Bonham's new album, "When You See The Sun" is due out next week.

Jason says that to further honor his father's memory, he'll give his personal proceeds from the album and his band's upcoming tour to the Big Sisters of Los Angeles, and to the John Bonham Memorial Motorcycle Camp in Hungry Valley, California. The camp offers work skills and responsibility to inner city kids by showing them how to ride and maintain bikes.