Best Before: 1987
I used to be a Def Leppard fan. I admit to owning a copy of the band's Hysteria opus from 1987 - an album fellow Knucklehead Martin Popoff so accurately describes as "tasteless and devoid of all life" in his Collector's Guide To Heavy Metal. It was the beginning of the end of my fanboyship, although their first three albums kicked my ass and continue to do so to this day. Gritty, raw, bare bones hard ass rock-to-metal packages, On Through The Night ('80), High 'N' Dry ('81) and Pyromania ('83) were laid down by a band with stars in its eyes, grateful for every pancake they sold because it meant an extra round of pints at the pub. The gazillion-selling hit that was Hysteria changed all that, of course, with each album that followed offering up more and more ultra-layered processed cheese based on producer Mutt Lange's original blueprint of How To Make A Better Sellout, which incidentally, actually began to take shape during Pyromania. Present day feedback and sales suggest that I'm not alone in my thinking, as Def Leppard hasn't had a major blow-the-doors-off hit since Adrenalize ('92). Their last album, X, sewered out worse than Ashlee Simpson on SNL, yet the band's label recently saw fit to release a Best Of compilation featuring, lo and behold, lots of older pre-hysterical material.
Needless to say I was surprised. I mean, the schmalz-loving Top 40 cuddle-rock contingent that keeps Def Leppard afloat today either doesn't know, or more likely doesn't care about the old classic songs. Given the chance to speak to guitarist Phil Collen and ask him what gives - could this perhaps be a sign that times and sound are changing? - I jumped at the opportunity.