Def Leppard, in many ways, was the
definitive hard rock band of the '80s. There were many
bands that rocked harder, and were more dangerous, than
the Sheffield quintet, but few others captured the spirit
of the times quite as well. Emerging in the late '70s
as part of the New Wave of British Heavy Metal, the group
actually owed more to the glam rock and metal of the early
'70s -- their sound was equal parts T. Rex, Mott the Hoople,
Queen, and Led Zeppelin. By toning down their heavy riffs
and emphasizing melody, Def Leppard were poised for crossover
success by 1983's Pyromania, but skillfully used the fledgling
MTV network to their advantage. The group was already
blessed with photogenic good looks, but they also crafted
a series of innovative, exciting videos, which made them
into stars. They intended to follow Pyromania quickly
but were derailed when their drummer lost an arm in a
car accident, the first of many problems that plagued
the group's career. Def Leppard managed to pull through
such tragedies, and they even expanded their large audience
with 1987's blockbuster Hysteria. As the '90s began, mainstream
hard rock shifted away from Leppard's signature pop-metal
and toward edgier, louder bands, yet the group maintained
a sizable audience into the late '90s and were one of
only a handful of '80s metal groups to survive the decade
more or less intact.
Def Leppard had its origins in a Sheffield-based group
Rick Savage (bass) and Pete Willis (guitar) formed in
their late teens in 1977. A few months later, vocalist
Joe Elliott, a fanatic follower of Mott the Hoople and
T. Rex, joined the band, bringing the name Deaf Leopard.
After a spelling change, the trio, augmented by a now-forgotten
drummer, began playing local Sheffield pubs, and within
a year they had added guitarist Steve Clark, as well as
a new drummer. Later in 1978, the recorded their debut
EP, Getcha Rocks Off, and released it on their own label,
Bludgeon Riffola. The EP became a word-of-mouth success,
earning airplay on the BBC. The group members were still
in their teens.
Following the release of Getcha Rocks Off, Rick Allen
was added as the band's permanent drummer, and Def Leppard
quickly became the subject of the British music weeklies.
Soon, they signed with AC/DC's manager, Petter Mensch,
who helped them secure a contract with Mercury. On Through
the Night, the band's full-length debut, was released
in 1980 and instantly became a hit in the U.K., also
earning significant airplay in the U.S., where it reached
number 51 on the charts. Over the course of the year,
Def Leppard relentlessly toured Britain and America,
including opening slots for Ozzy Osbourne, Sammy Hagar,
and Judas Priest. High 'n' Dry followed in 1981, and
it became the group's first platinum album in the U.S.,
thanks to MTV's strong rotation of "Bringin' on
the Heartbreak." MTV would be vital to the band's
success in the '80s.