Part Twenty-Three of the Def Leppard Review Series
DEF LEPPARD – Rarities 2 (CD Collection Volume 2 Disc 5) (2019)
Quick explanations first:
“Hey, what’s with this Rarities 2? You didn’t review Rarities 1!” This is true! Def Leppard Rarities 1 is in the first volume CD Collection box set. For this review series, I opted to go with The Early Years box set to cover a lot of those albums and rarities. Between that set and the Hysteria super deluxe box set that I reviewed in great detail back in 2017, I have written about all the rarities up to this point. Though packaged together in one sleeve in this box set, we will tackle the Rarities series one disc at a time.
We open with the earliest tracks: two demos with Steve Clark on guitar. “Tonight” is brilliant, with the thick opening layered harmonies intact right from the demo stage (would not surprise me if they used the demo intro for the final track). The quieter acoustic arrangement of the opening is very different from the more standard album cut. It kicks in hard during the chorus, which is a cool aspect of this arrangement. The chorus really slams on this version.
Steve’s final Def Leppard appearance was also the final guitar solo he ever recorded (and likely played). It’s the demo for “When Love and Hate Collide”, the overly soft ballad from 1995’s Vault. What a solo, too! He was on to something, with its big Hysteria-esque hooks. The demo overall is much rougher (programmed drums) but also harder edged. Joe’s more screamy, the last vestiges of the old style still hanging on.
The Acoustic Hippies From Hell — yes, that is how Def Leppard & Hothouse Flowers billed themselves on the B-side of the “Have You Ever Needed Someone So Bad” single — are next with the original track “From the Inside”. This is the original version from the single, slightly different from the one on Retro-Active. Please welcome Vivian Campbell on the second guitar solo slot! With tin whistle, mandolin and grand piano it’s a very different kind of song for the guys in Leppard. Lyrically it’s even darker than their previous work like “White Lightning” or “When the Walls Came Tumbling Down”. This time the subject matter is addition, but with a twist of the perspective. The lyrics are the drug speaking to the user.
You may recall the Acoustic Hippies From Hell cut three songs together, including covers of “Little Wing” and “You Can’t Always Get What You Want”. We used to wonder why they weren’t included here on this CD. Those further two B-sides were held back for a covers disc in the next box set. We’ll get to them when we get to that set!
Def Leppard’s first acoustic song was “Two Steps Behind” from the “Make Love Like A Man” single. Here is the original track from that B-side, unadorned with strings or electric guitars like the ones on Retro-Active. If you recall, Michael Kamen dubbed some strings over this one for the Last Action Hero soundtrack, and “Two Steps Behind” became an A-side hit in its own right.
Joe Elliot’s screamin’ hot 1987 demo of “She’s Too Tough” is up next. Why a 1987 song? Because its first release was on the B-side of “Heaven Is” in 1993. (That single also had live versions of “Women” and “Let’s Get Rocked”. “Elected” is on a live covers disc later on in this series, and “Let’s Get Rocked” will be discussed shortly.) “She’s Too Tough” was covered by Helix on their Wild in the Streets album in 1987. While Brian Vollmer does an admirable job of the lead vocal, Leppard’s recording is hands down the better of the two, even though it is just a demo.
Another demo: Phil Collen’s impeccably arranged “Miss You in a Heartbeat” is all but complete except for the vocals. Phil did the lead on his own demo versions, and not a bad job of it. Paul Rodgers used “Miss You in a Heartbeat” for his 1991 album with Kenney Jones called The Law. It’s cool hearing Phil do his own lesser-known version. “Miss You in a Heartbeat”, once a B-side like “Two Steps Behind”, was eventually released as its own single too. That’s where Phil’s demo was original taken from, though it is mislabelled as “Acoustic, Acoustic Version”. Nope – just Phil’s demo, same as this one here.
Two awesome acoustic versions from the “Tonight” CD single are next in a row. The acoustic version of “Tonight” itself could surpass the album version. It just had vibe. Loads of vibe. Fabulous guitar solo. Then Collen’s “S.M.C.” (named for Steven Maynard Clark) features just he and Vivian on acoustic guitar. It’s a very brief, often forgotten instrumental in a neo-classical style. This is its first re-issue since the original single. Play it for your friends and ask them to guess who it is. (They won’t be able to.)
This CD closes on the four tracks from the rare EP In the Clubs…In Your Face, recording in Bonn Germany. Four solid hits: “Hysteria”, “Photograph”, “Sugar”, and the aforementioned live version of “Let’s Get Rocked”. The club crowd is obviously pumped! “Hysteria” sounds awesome; “Photograph” is as strong as ever. “Pour Some Sugar On Me” and “Let’s Get Rocked” are sort of two of a kind live, a little clunkier but the crowd sure loves ’em. The new song is a happily received as the old.
This disc makes for a solid listen. Hits in alternate, lesser heard versions are sure to be pleasers. The tunes that aren’t hits are all solid themselves. Although it’s a little disappointing when you scan the track listing and realize such-and-such a B-side is missing, the folks in Leppard know what they are doing. They’ve re-organized this material to sit next to like material later in the series, and it’ll all be coming up in due time…and perhaps in a more enjoyable track listing too. We’ll just have to hear how it goes disc by disc! Rarities 2 is a lot of fun and a great (almost) hour on its own.
5/5 stars
Previous:
- The Early Years Disc One – On Through the Night
- The Early Years Disc Two – High N’ Dry
- The Early Years Disc Three – When The Walls Came Tumbling Down: Live at the New Theater Oxford – 1980
- The Early Years Disc Four – Too Many Jitterbugs – EP, singles & unreleased
- The Early Years Disc 5 – Raw – Early BBC Recordings
- The Early Years 79-81 (Summary)
- Pyromania
- Pyromania Live – L.A. Forum, 11 September 1983
- Hysteria
- Soundtrack From the Video Historia – Record Store Tales
- In The Round In Your Face DVD
- “Let’s Get Rocked” – The Wait for Adrenalize – Record Store Tales
- Adrenalize
- Live at the Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert
- Retro-Active
- Visualize
- Vault: Def Leppard’s Greatest Hits / Limited Edition Live CD
- Video Archive
- “Slang” CD single
- Slang
- I Got A Bad Feeling About This: Euphoria – Record Store Tales
- Euphoria
Next:
24. Rarities 3
You being thanked in Leppard liner notes is unimaginably cool.
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That’s next week.
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Leppard knows how to package box sets like Old Coverdale. I need to hear the Helix/Lepp version of STT again as when I heard the version on Retroactive I liked the Helix cover better at the time which was 29 years ago!
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I like Joe’s version better. Helix’s is a bit overproduced for my taste. The whole Wild in the Streets album suffered from production issues.
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Whacha Bringing To The Party?
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I love these rarity discs. It is so nice having them all in one place.
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Well, two or three places.
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Yeah…but you know what I mean.
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Much fewer places! Yep they pretty much covered it
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I only bought the Volume 2 box set for that demo version of “When Love and Hate Collide,” and that’s not a bad thing!
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Except you could have got it for $5 on the single!
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True, but I don’t buy singles! It was a win for me because I wanted to add ‘Adrenalize’ and ‘Slang’ to my collection anyways.
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Man you have missed a lot of good songs by not buying singles! 634-5789 by Bon Jovi for example. Oh man!
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Yeah, but it saves me a lot of money by not buying the singles.
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Not really. They can be bought very cheaply if you hunt.
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If you say so. I’m just don’t feel the need to buy singles.
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You’re talking to a guy with hundreds and hundreds of singles so you’re gonna have to trust me when I say they’re essential to a collector.
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That’s right! You know your stuff! I admire music collectors like you because there are a lot of cool singles out there and I’m sure they’re not easy to find.
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Some are really easy to get like the Def Leps.
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Don’t you need a vinyl player or a special kind of player to play the singles?
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CD singles? No just push play.
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Huh. I guess it’s a lot simpler than I thought.
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Right now CD singles are the cheaper option — vinyl singles are so expensive to ship.
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I didn’t even know CD singles were a thing. I thought only vinyl had single releases. It’s not like I can purchase new music now anyways since all my CDs and CD player are back in Hawaii. :(
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But… but… I’ve reviewed so many of them!
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I thought they were vinyl singles. My eyes saw “CD singles,” but I was thinking vinyl singles because I’m dumb.
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Isn’t “S.M.C.” named after Clark?
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Oh you may be right. I’ll change that.
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Yeah, I think the music may have written as a lullaby for his firstborn son. The name came later.
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Thank you for the insight, it makes sense as a lullaby!
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