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Rockn'deano wrote:Hey, let's face it, there is nothing wrong with playing with a softer edge..Journey does it, and better than anyone..However, when you build your "base" on harder stuff, then go soft? oops.
I have seen Def Leppard on tour with Bryan Adams now twice this year, and Adams absolutely blew away DL...He played ballads and he rocked harder too.. I am not piling on, but come on? What are you guys, in love?
Have DL lost their collective nutsacks?
Trinity wrote:The bottom line....a wider fan base.
You can all whine about DL losing their "edge" as a rock band but where would they be if they didn't change with the times?
I'll give you a clue...
Whitesnake, Quiet Riot and Cinderella.
The bottom line....a wider fan base.
You can all whine about DL losing their "edge" as a rock band but where would they be if they didn't change with the times?
I'll give you a clue...
Whitesnake, Quiet Riot and Cinderella.
...why not come back with a kick ass rock record? I think if they did it would be at least as successful as "Euphoria," maybe even "Adrenalize." If they got Lange to come back and produce an entire album in a heavier High & Dry/Pyromania style, I think it could do pretty well.
Pyromania isn't particularly "metal." It's just a solid rock record.
But I think of metal as being dark in some way, musically and lyrically. It's partly about being heavy, but also about being dark...
According to this view, Dream Theater certainly isn't metal, which would be news to me.
I don't think AC/DC is metal either. They're from the classic Stones/Chuck Berry/blues tradition, just taking those influences and playing them a bit harder.
As for the Scorpions, I think I could name 2 or 3 songs, and that's about it...just never grabbed me I guess. But I think "Rock You Like A Hurricane" fits squarely into the same category as Pyromania - melodic hard rock in a pop song format.
Yeah, "The Glass Prison" and a concept album about a murder are really happy, optimistic themes.
And thankfully, I don't think I've ever heard any "christian metal," but man that's a scary idea.
Cato Alumni wrote:Uh.. Here we go again. .

Well obviously the Lepps must be doing something right because they're drawing between 17-21,000 fans per show the last few weeks
and I found the Lepps to be quite rock and roll...not metal!...
WalrusOct9 wrote:And thankfully, I don't think I've ever heard any "christian metal," but man that's a scary idea.

I can't believe people are still comparing Def Leppard to Iron Maiden and Judas Priest just because they were the NWOBHM. The Lepps sounded nothing like Priest or Maiden now or in 1983......and unfortunately they got lumped in with those bands.
The Lepps were different..... much more melodic, a style I preferred and obviously 6 million other fans as that was what the Lepps sold of Pyromania right off the bat. And they put bands like Ratt, Winger, Warrant, Quiet Riot, Cinderella, Poison to shame. Sure these bands had a few good tunes....I'm not disputing that.
Maiden is impressive live. But they are not in the same genre as the Lepps now or then.
Cato Alumni wrote:Well in in the late 70s and early 80s, they did sound like those bands, hence their link to the NWOBHM.
Cato Alumni wrote:"The music of Def Leppard is a mixture of hard rock, glam rock, AOR, and heavy metal elements. The band has occasionally been associated with the pop metal movement of the 1980s, although its sound is more accurately associated with the contemporary NWOBHM genre of the late 1970s."
Cato Alumni wrote:The only point I am trying to establish here is that they were metal through Hysteria. I don't know why I need to exert such an effort because it is painfully obvious they were.
Cato Alumni wrote:With that in mind -- coming back to my original comment -- was that it irritates me when bands, like Def Leppard, say they were never metal. Whether the definition of metal has changed or not (a contention that I dispute) is irrelevant. Def Leppard were considered metal, at the time, for over a decade (at least). To now turn around and stab metal fans in the back with their words -- just because they are ashamed of their past -- is pathetic. It is also peculiar given that 1) all their good songs/hits come from that era and 2) metal fans are the most loyal in the business.
Cato Alumni wrote: It is a shame they lost their identity and started to go trendy by the end of the 80s. When the trend changes.. oops.. you're lost at sea without a paddle.
Cato Alumni wrote: Their first two records are very NWOBHM-ish
Cato Alumni wrote:and that is the group they got lumped into for obvious reasons. And note the NWOBHM isn't just Priest and Maiden. Def Leppard fits right along side Diamond Head, Girlschool, Raven, Samson, and Saxon.
Cato Alumni wrote:Of course, by pyromania they had mutated into pop-metal, while still keeping some of their NWOBHM sound. They were full-blooded pop-metal by Hysteria. Adrenalize to the present has been almost pure (unpopular) pop.


"The only point I am trying to establish here is that they were metal through Hysteria. I don't know why I need to exert such an effort because it is painfully obvious they were. "
Maybe because you seem to be the ONLY person who feels this way.
BTW, as an after-thought to one of our earlier discussions about this, I thought of this point. You have said that Def Leppard is metal because a record label said so and because the band played metal festivals. Wouldn't that be the same as saying "Jethro Tull is metal because eMpTyV told us and gave them the 'Best Metal Performance' Award" (or some such shit)?
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