DEF LEPPARDÂ – “Slang” (1996 Souvenir Pack, Mercury)
I think Slang is a great album, and I think I’m going to talk about it soon , as I’m on a bit of a Def Lep kick these days. Â Yesterday I ripped this CD single, a 1996 “souvenir pack” with two bonus tracks and four post cards commemorating the band’s “Three Continents in One Day” concerts. Â Vancouver was the last stop — look how tired Rick Allen must be in the photo.
Slang, in many respects, was as forward-looking from Hysteria as Hysteria was from Pyromania. Â It was a reset, a brand new way of doing things, more organic and modern. Â Yet at the same time, even though it sounds nothing like classic Leppard, it still retains the impeccable attention to detail. Â Production-wise, it’s not the same beast, but it’s still a beast.
“Slang” itself was a brave choice for a single, and it did alienate many old-school fans, at least where I was working. Â Others dug it and got it. Â It’s a fun song verging on rap-rock, but really, isn’t that OK? Â Didn’t Def Lep kinda-sorta probe those waters with some of the singles from Hysteria? Â Bottom line, it’s catchy, fun, has the Def Leppard vibe without sounding like anything they’d done before. Â It’s a good song. Â The fact that they played it live during Viva! Hysteria in Vegas is proof!
The B-sides on the single include a “strings and piano only” version of “When Love & Hate Collide”, perhaps the most overrated Def Leppard song ever. Â I have so many versions of it, I really am not certain if this version is on anything else. Â It does have vocals, and even a guitar solo despite the description! Â This is just a remix with most of the instrumentation stripped off.
The other B-side is a really cool non-album track called “Can’t Keep Away from the Flame”.  It’s acoustic but upbeat and cool.  Production-wise, this is very basic compared to Slang:  acoustic guitars, vocals, shakers.  But it’s also really good, with a cool guitar part, totally memorable.  Since then, Leppard’s recorded a lot more acoustic music but for 1996 this was definitely a standout.
According to the price tag, I bought this at Dr. Disc in Kitchener Ontario in May 1996, for the princely sum of $13.99. Â Money well spent, I have enjoyed these songs a lot over the years.
4/5 stars






