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The CD Collection, Vol. 2
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The CD Collection, Vol. 2
Current price: $99.99
Barnes and Noble
The CD Collection, Vol. 2
Current price: $99.99
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Def Leppard
's success through the '80s helped define not just the sound of the era's hard rock, but popular music in general. They'd already risen to multi-platinum success with their first three records, but 1987's blockbuster
Hysteria
broke through to unprecedented heights. The album's seemingly unending series of hit singles and the band's equally ongoing touring kept records selling, eventually making it one of the best-selling albums of the decade. Where
The Collection: Volume One
repackaged albums and rarities from the band's commercial peak throughout the '80s,
Volume Two
takes a look at their output through what would be a tumultuous and shifting '90s. This began with their fifth album, 1992's
Adrenalize
, which came not just as the tide of popular music was quickly shifting from metal excess to grunge angst, but also after the 1991 death of longtime guitarist
Steve Clark
. Rather than jumping ship to follow the trends,
was a continuation of
Def Lep
's infectious hard rocking pop, and the record still topped the charts and sold respectable multi-million numbers. Though the group's next studio album, 1996's
Slang
, took steps away from their established formula, even its raw production and experimental dabbling couldn't disguise the blend of swagger and melody that made it a
album.
The Collection: Volume Two
also includes 1993 B-sides comp
Retro-Active
, 1999's return-to-form
Euphoria
, and a small vault's worth of rarities from this phase. The rarities are made up largely of live recordings that only superfans and completists will absolutely need, but there's also a fair amount of alternate versions, outtakes, and songs from soundtracks the group was involved with throughout the '90s. Various demos, working tapes, and acoustic versions of songs like "When Love and Hate Collide" give insight to
's creative process as they continued to evolve through a decade that was less than kind to many of the bigger names of '80s hair metal and arena rock. ~ Fred Thomas
's success through the '80s helped define not just the sound of the era's hard rock, but popular music in general. They'd already risen to multi-platinum success with their first three records, but 1987's blockbuster
Hysteria
broke through to unprecedented heights. The album's seemingly unending series of hit singles and the band's equally ongoing touring kept records selling, eventually making it one of the best-selling albums of the decade. Where
The Collection: Volume One
repackaged albums and rarities from the band's commercial peak throughout the '80s,
Volume Two
takes a look at their output through what would be a tumultuous and shifting '90s. This began with their fifth album, 1992's
Adrenalize
, which came not just as the tide of popular music was quickly shifting from metal excess to grunge angst, but also after the 1991 death of longtime guitarist
Steve Clark
. Rather than jumping ship to follow the trends,
was a continuation of
Def Lep
's infectious hard rocking pop, and the record still topped the charts and sold respectable multi-million numbers. Though the group's next studio album, 1996's
Slang
, took steps away from their established formula, even its raw production and experimental dabbling couldn't disguise the blend of swagger and melody that made it a
album.
The Collection: Volume Two
also includes 1993 B-sides comp
Retro-Active
, 1999's return-to-form
Euphoria
, and a small vault's worth of rarities from this phase. The rarities are made up largely of live recordings that only superfans and completists will absolutely need, but there's also a fair amount of alternate versions, outtakes, and songs from soundtracks the group was involved with throughout the '90s. Various demos, working tapes, and acoustic versions of songs like "When Love and Hate Collide" give insight to
's creative process as they continued to evolve through a decade that was less than kind to many of the bigger names of '80s hair metal and arena rock. ~ Fred Thomas