Def Leppard guitarist Vivian Campbell has recalled the bitter experience of seeing the first song he’d written for the band bombing when it was released as a single, even though the track had been well-received.
He’s hoping to put the bad memories behind him now that Slang, the first Def Leppard album he played on, has been re-released.
Campbell joined the band in 1992 following the death of Steve Clark, and his first writing credits came with Slang four years later, including the single Work It Out.
He tells Death And Taxes, “The first single in the States was my first writing contribution – here I was, stoked that the label had decided to go with it, and I remember someone from the management calling me up to tell me the bad news. Modern rock stations had tested the song and got a great reaction to it. But they realized they couldn’t play it because DJs couldn’t announce: ‘That was new from Def Leppard.’ They figured they’d lose so many listeners. They were playing Pearl Jam, Nirvana, Soungarden – they couldn’t slot in Def Leppard even though they liked the track.”
With Slang the band had made a conscious effort to move away from their 80s credentials in an attempt to remain credible in the grunge era. Campbell recalls: “The underlying brief was: ‘It can’t sound like a Def Leppard album.’”
He admits: “My personal opinion is we went a little too left-field. There’s no backing vocals, which was a big trademark. There’s no real sense of that melody, the hooks. Being the new guy I didn’t rock the boat too much, but I think we went a few degrees too far left.”
But the guitarist – who recently successfully fought off cancer – is optimistic about the re-release, saying: “It’s nice that it will get a second run and be judged by a different generation. We’re glad that, with the passing of the last twenty-odd years, we can put it back out there. Hopefully it will be judged impartially this time round. It is fresh sounding. It’s sonically very vibrant.”
Def Leppard have just begun work on a new studio album.
additional source: classicrockmagazine.com
7 Responses
Def Leppard are in my top two or three bands of all time- likely number one, actually. However, it seems that a lot of that had to do with Mutt Lange producing Pyromania and Hysteria. Adrenalize was also okay, but after that, it all went to crap. I don’t blame Campbell for that, but likely Elliott, who wanted to stay “trendy” even when the trend was crap- grunge garbage. Leppard need to get back to releasing something with deeper psychology and philosophy like the lyrics on those early albums… That means getting away from the 12-year-old bubble gum pop. Will they do it? I know I’m waiting…
Chris,
Mutt also produced Hign N’ Dry, which is a great record. My two favorite Leppard albums happen to be: Hign N’ Dry and Pyromania.
Dana from ET.com 🙂