• Hey, guest user. Hope you're enjoying NeoGAF! Have you considered registering for an account? Come join us and add your take to the daily discourse.

26 Years Ago: Def Leppard Guitarist Steve Clark Dies

Status
Not open for further replies.

Cranster

Banned
06d0b2aa96925402bb3d0ad86795f93f.jpg


On the morning of Jan. 8, 1991, Def Leppard guitarist Phil Collen received a phone call from his manager Cliff Burnstein, bearing news he had been dreading for close to five years. His best friend, co-guitarist Steve Clark, had died while sleeping on a couch. He was 30 years old.
An autopsy revealed the Clark died from an unintentional overdose of alcohol, Valium and Codeine. “He had been drinking and he cracked a rib earlier on,” Collen wrote in his biography Adrenalized. “The doctor told him not to drink while taking his pain medication. He drank anyway. The coroner’s report, I believe, read that it was due to a swelling of the brain.”

Clark joined Def Leppard in 1978, a year after their formation, and was a key songwriter on the band’s biggest albums — 1983’s Pyromania and 1987’s Hysteria. Like his bandmates, Clark celebrated the band’s success and the perks that came with it, especially free alcohol. During the time Pyromania was blowing up, Clark and Collen became known as “the terror twins,” because of their drunken antics and the pranks they pulled on other musicians. In addition to relishing their drinking adventures, the two guitarists bonded on a deeper level.

“We quickly became best friends,” Collen wrote. “It wasn’t just the guitar playing or extreme boozing. We both found that we were soaking up all that we could and learning more on the road than we had ever learned at school, with a healthy appetite for new and exciting cultural discoveries. We also found that we loved each other’s company. We could get into deep conversations that would last for hours.”
When Collen quit drinking in the late ‘80s he realized Clark was spinning out of control. For years he had been a functioning alcoholic, but he had developed a serious problem and his behavior had become erratic and unpredictable. Every morning he woke up shaking and had to go to a bar and drink until he stopped trembling. At one point, he went on a bender in Paris and wound up in a hospital with alcohol poisoning. Then, in the winter of 1989, several members of the band were in a studio when their co-manager Peter Mensch called to tell them that Clark was found unconscious at a bar in Minneapolis and had been rushed to a nearby hospital, Hazelden Addiction Treatment Center.
Read More: 26 Years Ago: Def Leppard Guitarist Steve Clark Dies | http://loudwire.com/def-leppard-steve-clark-death-anniversary/?trackback=tsmclip

IMHO I think he was a much better guitarist than even Eddie Van Halen and who knows what kind of impact he would have had in the 90's and beyond if he survived his addictions.
 

Herne

Member
Such an incredible loss. No disrespect to Vivian Campbell, but Def Leppard lost a vital spark when Steve died. I'll be playing some Wasted, Gods of War and Switch 625 in his memory. Leppard's tribute songs White Lightning and Paper Sun are also very worthy of him.

RIP the Riffmaster.
 

Cranster

Banned
Such an incredible loss. No disrespect to Vivian Campbell, but Def Leppard lost a vital spark when Steve died. I'll be playing some Wasted, Gods of War and Switch 625 in his memory. Leppard's tribute songs White Lightning and Paper Sun are also very worthy of him.

RIP the Riffmaster.
I feel they are still a great band, but what Steve brought to the band from a songwriting perspective was unique that helped separate the band from other acts by the late 1980's and early 90's.
 

Herne

Member
I feel they are still a great band, but what Steve brought to the band from a songwriting perspective was unique that helped separate the band from other acts by the late 1980's and early 90's.

Agreed, I still love their stuff, but Steve was something special. Though he might not have continued with them given the leave they had given him to try and sort himself out, what he could have gone on to do had he not drunk himself to death we'll never know.
 

zerotol

Banned
No disrespect to Steve, but c'mon. He wasn't better than Eddie Van Halen and Def Leppard was mostly irrelevant by the early 90s.
 

Herne

Member
No disrespect to Steve, but c'mon. He wasn't better than Eddie Van Halen and Def Leppard was mostly irrelevant by the early 90s.

I have to agree, Steve was amazing but he certainly wasn't the most technically proficient guitarist. I remember Phil Collen saying he would wear his guitar slung really low, which made him "play weird". He brought other things to the table, though, as said above. He was pretty damn unique and his riffs were insanely good.
 

zerotol

Banned
I have to agree, Steve was amazing but he certainly wasn't the most technically proficient guitarist. I remember Phil Collen saying he would wear his guitar slung really low, which made him "play weird". He brought other things to the table, though, as said above. He was pretty damn unique and his riffs were insanely good.

Fair enough. And like I said, I meant no disrespect. But sometimes history gets a bit skewed
 

Cranster

Banned
No disrespect to Steve, but c'mon. He wasn't better than Eddie Van Halen and Def Leppard was mostly irrelevant by the early 90s.
Maybe not technically. But he had his own unique style in both playing and writing that in my mind made him a more memorable guitar player in a time filled with hundreds of Eddie Van Halen clones.
 

Ensoul

Member
No disrespect to Steve, but c'mon. He wasn't better than Eddie Van Halen and Def Leppard was mostly irrelevant by the early 90s.

So were most heavy metal bands thanks to the grunge movement. I loved Def Leppard at the time and Hysteria was one of my favorite albums. I do agree with you though he was not better than Eddie Van Halen.
 

norm9

Member
No disrespect to Steve, but c'mon. He wasn't better than Eddie Van Halen and Def Leppard was mostly irrelevant by the early 90s.

Adrenalize came out sometime in the 90s and that was still pretty rocking. Played it nonstop in my walkman
 

Herne

Member
To be fair to Leppard, they did recognise at the time that their 80's sound wouldn't work and they gave grunge a fair go with Slang. It came out too late and it remains a divisive album, but I'm one of it's fans and I'll always stick up for it. It was much more raw and stripped down than Adrenalize, Hysteria and Pyromania were, and very experimental with it's use of atypical stuff like sarangi. Take a listen to Pearl of Euphoria and Turn to Dust and see how different they are to the fare Leppard is more usually known for.

Sadly, it didn't set the charts alight and they went back to the 80's sound with the next album.

Fuck, I really wish they'd experiment again. They did try once more with X, going for a more pop rock sound, but the less said about that one the better. I love Joe, but if he speaks any more about bands like Mott the Hoople, T Rex and all those I'll scream. They've done too many tributes to their influences as is, and they're not pushing anything. They have actually done some nice songs in recent years, such as Undefeated, but I don't think it's anything near to what they're capable of doing.

I guess I can't blame them, they tried to experiment in the 90's (successfully, in my opinion) and early 2000's (not so successfully, again in my opinion) and they got reamed for it by fans and critics alike. They continue to perform on massive successful tours where they mostly play their older stuff, as is the crowd's demands. But it's such a damn shame.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top Bottom