Def Leppard - Yeah! (CD)

Album Details: Yeah!

Release Date:05/23/2006
Label:Island / Mercury
UPC:602498323113

Other Available Formats: Yeah!

User Reviews: Yeah!

  • Overall:

    Lyrics:

    Music:

    Bringin' On The Heartbreak

    By The Metal Maniac  May 31, 2006 | 1 out of 1 found this Yeah! review helpful

    Pros: "No Matter What"

    Cons: But, but, but you're Def Leppard ?!?!?!

    "It's better to burn out, then fade away". Why didn't Def Leppard listen to their own words before they recorded this album ? I appreciate the fact that they want to pay tribute to bands that influenced them, but didn't they alr...eady to that in the songs THEY wrote and recorded ? Considering the last album of new material was X released in 2003, 3 years is plenty of time for them to come up with new material. Def Leppard is just following the trend set by Guns'N'Roses, Aerosmith, Ozzy Osbourne, and of course Rod Stewart (who has been doing this for a long, long time). The recordings were okay, but like most Leppard fans, I would rather hear an album of THEIR songs. Read more Less

  • Overall:

    Lyrics:

    Music:

    Let them be

    By alaska storm  Jul 22, 2008

    Pros: They can do whatever they want, they're Def Leppard.

    Cons: Could be a better choice for some of the songs.

    Let them be, how many people would choose to record music they grew up listening to? I would! if was in a band as great as Def Leppard, I would do an album with Def leppard songs on it, then in 30 years, someone would listen to it and think I was cra...zy... maybe I am! Look at some of the other older recording artists, Rod Stewart records lounge music, figure that one out. I don't care what they sing and I don't care what other people think of them! They always have been and always will be one of my favorite bands ever! Bravo! Hugs & Kisses to Def Leppard. Storm Read more Less

Pro Reviews: Yeah!

  • All Music Guide

    Def Leppard has always had a streak of glam running beneath their heavy rock listen to "Armageddon It" or "Photograph" for proof so it's no surprise that when the quintet decided to record a covers album in 2006, they devoted it to the '70s glam and hard rock that inspired them to pick up their guitars and play. What does come as a surprise is that the resulting Yeah is a sheer delight, a roaring rock roll record that's their best album since Hysteria. Often, cover albums get bogged down in reverence or ambition, as artists either offer interpretations that are straight copies or fussy reinterpretations as they busily try to make a favorite song their own. That's not the case here. Def Leppard alternate between fairly faithful renditions of familiar classics like T Rex's "20th Century Boy," Badfinger's "No Matter What" or David Essex's "Rock On," to subtle reinterpretations where they make seemingly difficult covers seem easy and unmistakably Def Leppard. It's true on their streaml...ined, muscular take on Electric Light Orchestra's swirling psychedelic "10538 Orchestra," but it's most notable on their remarkable reworking of the Kinks' "Waterloo Sunset," which now sounds like a power ballad from Hysteria without ever once sounding like it's an affront to the immortal original. This take on "Waterloo Sunset" because it's informed by a palpable love of the original, and that love is apparent throughout this terrific record. But there are plenty of good covers albums that are fun merely because the band is having a good time what makes Yeah exceptional is that Def Leppard is reconnecting with the reason why they're even in a band by playing the rock roll that inspired in the first place. They're reinvigorated by this material, and by playing these songs, it's easier to appreciate what makes Def Leppard a great rock roll band. Compare their versions of Free's "A Little Bit of Love" or Thin Lizzy's "Don't Believe a Word" to the originals they're not as big and bluesy as Free, but the huge riff that drives the song is a direct forefather of Leppard's powerful signature song, and "Don't Believe a Word" hammers home that few bands built on Lizzy's twin guitar harmonies as well as this group. But it's not just that these covers put Leppard's music in context, it's that they sound more like a genuine rock roll gang than they ever have: listen to the truly raw take on the Faces' "Stay With Me," which may not be quite as sloppy as the original (how could it be?), but it's equally greasy and riveting plus, it's sung with raw gusto by guitarist Phil Collen, whose turn on the mic emphasizes that this is a sound of a true group. They still sound like Def Leppard there are still cavernous drums, huge guitars and driving harmonies but they no longer sound as slick and calculated as they did on their albums after Hysteria; they sound alive and vigorous, making a convincing case that they're now their own best producers. If they could carry this sound and feel onto an album of originals, they would have a killer record, but saying that diminishes the accomplishment of Yeah it's a killer record in its own right, and more pure fun than anything yet released in 2006. Few bands could achieve an artistic comeback via a covers album, but as this glorious record proves, there are few bands like Def Leppard. - Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Def Leppard

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 ear... Read more