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JOE ELLIOTT: Why The Album Format Is Still Important For DEF LEPPARD

todayMay 31, 2022 20

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As rock superstars DEF LEPPARD return with a brand-new album, “Diamond Star Halos”, vocalist Joe Elliott insists that the album format is still important — at least for DEF LEPPARD.

“When we got together in 2014 we noticed a trend of people releasing one song a month,” Elliott tells Rock Candy writer Jon Hotten in an exclusive cover story that runs over 12 pages in the new issue of the magazine. “They might bang them all together on an album two years later. Other people were just doing EPs. Maybe for a younger generation, an album isn’t important, because they didn’t grow up when it was. But we did. We grew up in the era of ‘Ziggy Stardust’‘Dark Side Of The Moon’‘Goodbye Yellow Brick Road’ — the greatest double album of all time, in my humble opinion. That’s where we come from. You can’t unscramble an egg. We invested in laying on the bed and looking at the sleeve, reading every word.”

“There’s still a feeling of the early ’70s to the new album for me, when you’re just approaching teenage years and everything’s great,” he tells Hotten. “It’s fresh, it’s new. For us that’s anywhere between 1971 and ’74, when color TVs were coming into homes, bands were getting more outrageous with their clothes, songs were getting more produced, sounding better. We were gravitating toward the pop side of it — EAGLESElton JohnFLEETWOOD MAC… For me there’s a lot of that type of ’70s in the new record. A lot of it has such a nice flavor of our teenage years.”

The band will begin a U.S. stadium tour with MÖTLEY CRÜE in Atlanta on 16 June, but don’t expect LEPPARD to be playing lots of songs from the new album at the expense of the classics.

Read this 12-page DEF LEPPARD feature and many other fascinating stories including YESKISS guitarist Tommy Thayer, and “The Greatest Double Live Albums Of The ’70s” in issue 32 of Rock Candy.

Rock Candy is a 100-page, full-color bi-monthly rock mag, created in the U.K. Covering the sights, sounds and smells from the greatest era in hard rock music, the ’70s and ’80s, it was put together by respected U.K. rock journalists Derek OliverHoward Johnson and Malcolm Dome — all frontline writers for the legendary Kerrang! magazine in the golden era.

Source:  www.blabbermouth.net

Written by: Andy

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