Friday, January 25, 2013

Def Leppard Isn't Just Another Las Vegas Cover Band

One of the best Rock scenes recently spotted on primetime weekend TV was during the hot new TBS show Wedding Band. A Def Leppard cover group meets up with a client, "We're writing new songs. We've played the original band's music so much that we think before they think. " Then I bump into a Charleston, SC story about a former AC/DC cover band lead vocalist being chosen to play Bon Scott. Copycat cover bands aren't new. I spent all of 2012 writing and producing commercials for Radio parties featuring the next best thing. One of my favorite nights in Los Angeles was at the House of Blues which featured a group called Diamond; all night they did it right: Neal Diamond. I was convinced the smooth crooner was standing on that stage. But away from it do cover bands return to a normal life and style? Or...do the Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley look-a-like's physically believe they're the second coming. With so many cover bands flooding bars and clubs (because they're affordable) when the real players stand up and make noise not a cheer is risen therefore nothing is given and all that once was returns to a land of "We used to be." Thank God we've still got Las Vegas. Popping their heads up inside the realms of Sin City is Def Leppard. Who wants fans to know they're aiming to write new material. Absolutely I started laughing out loud. Did they consult the cover band on the TV show Wedding Band first? Classic Rock Magazine reports that fans should expect a new album. Frontman Joe Elliott hopes to hire an extra hotel room and set it up as a recording studio in between concerts. First, however, the band have to complete preparations for performing classic album Hysteria in full – including songs they haven’t played in decades. Elliott tells Rolling Stone: “It’ll not be too hard; we’re not changing arrangements like Bowie or Tom Waits might do. We’re going to play the songs as they are on the record. We’re going to revert back to the original versions.” He admits delivering Pour Some Sugar On Me partway through a show, when it’s usually reserved for encores, will be “a bit of a head trip” but he adds: “I think it’s okay. It’s going to be weird, but people are going to be expecting it.” With the Vegas shows during March and April based on a schedule of three days on, four days off, the band should find time to concentrate on writing material. “I don’t know if we’ll do an album,” Elliott says. “Maybe the way to go is put one or two tracks out at a time and see how it goes – almost like a seven-inch single.” That’s not the priority at the moment. “We’ve got a golden opportunity,” the singer reflects. “We’ve got ample opportunity to look each other in the eye and go, ‘What you got?’” Meanwhile, he’s marked the 30th anniversary of the release of Def Lep’s third album Pyromania, which saw guitarist Phil Collen replace Pete Willis. “It had been a labour of love to make,” he recalls. “Little did we know, in comparison to Hysteria it was a piece of cake.” His memories include “multiple studios in London, one guitarist out, one guitarist in, equipment breakdowns, tapes turning transparent because of the thousands of times they were rewound and fast forwarded for multiple overdubs.” But he continues: “We found our sound on this record, with the help of a great producer in Mutt Lange, the new studio technology that we eagerly embraced – unlike many of our peers – and an incredible enthusiasm to make a record no one else had ever made. “Whether we did or didn’t isn’t important. What is, is that we made the record we wanted to make. We finally sounded like the us we wanted to be.”

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