How ‘Pyromania’ Turned Def Leppard Into Overnight Top 40 Stars
Up until Jan. 20, 1983, when Pyromania arrived, Def Leppard wanted to be Led Zeppelin. Just look at their name.
But then producer Robert John “Mutt” Lange, who worked on the band’s 1981 sophomore album, High ‘n’ Dry, decided to try something new for the follow up. He added tons of digital elements to the group’s traditional rock-band setup, sharpened their pop harmonies and filtered everything through a processor that, in effect, became a sixth member of Def Leppard.
It immediately paid off. Thanks to MTV, three of the album’s songs received constant airplay: "Photograph," "Foolin’" and "Rock of Ages." And the band immediately rose from hard-rock radio filler to overnight Top 40 stars.
No wonder: Pyromania’s super-packed hooks (especially on "Photograph," one of the most well-crafted singles of the era) were made for maximum exposure. They were literally designed for it.
Watch Def Leppard Perform 'Photogrpaph'
The group’s first two albums – High ‘n’ Dry and 1979’s debut, On Through the Night – barely cracked the Top 40 and just missed the Top 50, respectively. Pyromania’s hit singles sent the album all the way to No. 2 (it’s since sold more than 10 million copies). The three big singles all reached the Top 40, with another four tracks logging some serious airplay on rock radio stations. Mission accomplished.
You can also blame Def Leppard for every lazy pop-metal band that sprung up in the mid-‘80s. Suddenly, synthesizers and giant-hook choruses were all over the place. Of course, very few bands did it as well as Leppard did on Pyromania and the even-better follow-up, 1987’s Hysteria.
They didn’t count on it at the time, but Def Leppard changed the way rock bands made music and the way that music sounded. Just turn on your radio for proof.
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