DEF
LEPPARD

Def
Leppard, in many ways, was the definitive hard rock band of
the '80s. There were many bands that rocked harder, and were
more dangerous, than the Sheffield quintet, but few others
captured the spirit of the times quite as well. Emerging in
the late '70s as part of the New Wave of British Heavy Metal,
the group actually owed more to the glam rock and metal of
the early '70s -- their sound was equal parts T. Rex, Mott
the Hoople, Queen, and Led Zeppelin. By toning down their heavy
riffs and emphasizing melody, Def Leppard was poised for crossover
success by 1983's Pyromania, but skillfully used the fledgling
MTV network to their advantage. The group was already blessed
with photogenic good looks, but they also crafted a series
of innovative, exciting videos that made them into stars. They
intended to follow Pyromania quickly but were derailed when
their drummer lost an arm in a car accident, the first of many
problems that plagued the group's career. Def Leppard managed
to pull through such tragedies, and they even expanded their
large audience with 1987's blockbuster Hysteria. As the '90s
began, mainstream hard rock shifted away from Leppard's signature
pop-metal and toward edgier, louder bands, yet the group maintained
a sizable audience into the late '90s and were one of only
a handful of '80s metal groups to survive the decade more or
less intact.
Def Leppard had their origins in a Sheffield-based group Rick
Savage (bass) and Pete Willis (guitar) formed in their late
teens in 1977. A few months later, vocalist Joe Elliott, a
fanatic follower of Mott the Hoople and T. Rex, joined the
band, bringing the name Deaf Leopard. After a spelling change,
the trio, augmented by a now-forgotten drummer, began playing
local Sheffield pubs, and within a year they had added guitarist
Steve Clark, as well as a new drummer. Later in 1978, the recorded
their debut EP, Getcha Rocks Off, and released it on their
own label, Bludgeon Riffola. The EP became a word-of-mouth
success, earning airplay on the BBC. The group members were
still in their teens.
Following the release of Getcha Rocks Off, Rick Allen was added
as the band's permanent drummer, and Def Leppard quickly became
the subject of the British music weeklies. Soon, they signed
with AC/DC's manager, Petter Mensch, who helped them secure
a contract with Mercury. On Through the Night, the band's full-length
debut, was released in 1980 and instantly became a hit in the
U.K., also earning significant airplay in the U.S., where it
reached number 51 on the charts. Over the course of the year,
Def Leppard relentlessly toured Britain and America, including
opening slots for Ozzy Osbourne, Sammy Hagar, and Judas Priest.
High 'n' Dry followed in 1981, and it became the group's first
platinum album in the U.S., thanks to MTV's strong rotation
of "Bringin' on the Heartbreak." MTV would be vital
to the band's success in the '80s.
As the band recorded the follow-up to High 'n' Dry with producer
Mutt Lange, Pete Willis was fired from the band for alcoholism,
and Phil Collen, a former guitarist for Girl, was hired to
replace him. The resulting album, 1983's Pyromania, became
an unexpected blockbuster, due not only to Def Leppard's skillful,
melodic metal, but also to MTV's relentless airing of "Photograph" and "Rock
of Ages." Pyromania went on to sell ten million copies,
establishing Def Leppard as one of the most popular bands in
the world. Despite their success, the band was about to enter
a trying time for their career. Following an extensive international
tour, the group re-entered the studio to record the follow-up,
but producer Lange was unavailable, so they began sessions
with Jim Steinman, the man responsible for Meat Loaf's Bat
Out of Hell. The pairing turned out to be ill-advised, so the
group turned to its former engineer, Nigel Green. One month
into recording, Allen lost his left arm in a New Year's Eve
car accident. The arm was reattached, but it had to be amputated
once an infection set in.
Without a drummer, Def Leppard's future looked cloudy, but
by the spring of 1985 -- just a few months after his accident
-- Allen began learning to play a custom-made electronic kit
assembled for him by Simmons. Soon, the band resumed recording,
and within a few months Lange was back on board, but once he
joined the team, he judged the existing tapes inferior and
had the band begin work all over again. The recording continued
throughout 1986, and that summer, the group returned to the
stage for the European Monsters of Rock tour. Def Leppard finally
completed their fourth album, now titled Hysteria, early in
1987, releasing it that spring to lukewarm reviews; many critics
felt that the album compromised Leppard's metal roots for sweet
pop flourishes. The record was slow out of the starting gates
-- "Women," the first single, failed to really take
hold. But with the second single, "Animal," Hysteria
began to take off. It became the group's first Top 40 hit in
the U.K., but more importantly, it began a string of six straight
Top 20 hits in the U.S., which also included "Hysteria," "Pour
Some Sugar on Me," "Love Bites," "Armageddon
It," and "Rocket," the latter of which arrived
in 1989, a full two years after the release of Hysteria. During
those two years, Def Leppard was unavoidable -- they were the
kings of high-school metal, ruling the pop charts and MTV,
and teenagers and bands alike replicated their teased hair
and ripped jeans, even when the grimy hard rock of Guns N'
Roses took hold in 1988.
Hysteria proved to be the peak of Leppard's popularity, yet
their follow-up remained eagerly awaited in the early '90s
as the band set to work on the record. During the recording,
Steve Clark died from an overdose of alcohol and drugs. Clark
had long had a problem with alcohol, and following the Hysteria
heyday, the band forced him to take a sabbatical; he did enter
rehab, but to no apparent effect. In fact, his abuse was so
crippling that Collen had to play the majority of the guitar
leads on Hysteria. Following Clark's death, Def Leppard resolved
to finish their forthcoming album as a quartet, releasing Adrenalize
in the spring of 1992. Adrenalize was greeted with mixed reviews,
and even though the album debuted at number one and contained
several hit singles, including "Let's Get Rocked," "Have
You Ever Needed Someone So Bad," and "Make Love Like
a Man," the record was a commercial disappointment in
the wake of Pyromania and Hysteria. After the release of Adrenalize,
the group added former Whitesnake guitarist Vivian Campbell.
In 1993, Def Leppard released the rarities collection Retro
Active, featuring a new single, "Miss You in a Heartbeat," which
scraped the lower reaches of the Top 40. Two years later, the
group released the greatest-hits collection Vault while preparing
their sixth album. Slang arrived in the spring of 1996, and
while it was more adventurous than its predecessor, it was
greeted with indifference, proving that Leppard's heyday had
indeed passed, and they were now simply a very popular cult
band. Undaunted, Leppard soldiered on, returning to their patented
pop-metal sound for Euphoria, which was released in June of
1999. Despite a hard push from both band and label, the record
failed to produce a hit, resulting in a return to adult pop
balladry on 2002's X. The two-disc Rock of Ages: The Definitive
Collection arrived in 2005, followed in 2006 by Yeah!, a collection
of covers.
Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide