Slang

05/14/1996 | Island / Mercury 

All Music Guide Review

After the lackluster performance of Adrenalize, Def Leppard realized it was time to abandon their trademark wall-of-guitars sound. Jettisoning producer Mutt Lange -- who, admittedly, was busy producing his wife, country singer Shania Twain -- the group stripped its sound to the basics for Slang. There are very few layers-of-guitar effects on the album, just straight, crunching chords. Most notably, Rick Allen has returned to playing acoustic drums after playing an electronic kit for nearly a decade. The change in approach is apparent and welcome -- Def Leppard hasn't sounded so immediate since Pyromania. Furthermore, they decided to expand their musical vocabulary slightly, working elements of R&B and funk into the rhythms. Not all of the experiments work, but Def Leppard sound revitalized, particularly when they attack a straightforward rocker. Slang would have been even better if they had come up with a set of hooks that sounded as alive as their performance, but the album is a much-needed return to form for the group. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

Track Listing

  • Track#
  • Title
  • time
  • 1
  • Truth?
  • 3:00

  • 2
  • Turn to Dust
  • 4:21

  • 3
  • Slang
  • 2:37

  • 5
  • Work It Out
  • 4:49

  • 7
  • Deliver Me
  • 3:04

  • 8
  • Gift of Flesh
  • 3:48

  • Credits

    • Craig Pruess
    • Conductor, String Arrangements, Percussion Arrangement
    • Rick Savage
    • Synthesizer, Guitar (Acoustic), Bass, Vocals (Background), Vocals
    • Vivian Campbell
    • Dulcimer, Vocals (Background), Vocals, Guitar (Acoustic), Guitar (Electric)
    • Phil Collen
    • Guitar (Acoustic), Mandolin, Vocals (Background), Vocals, Guitar (Electric)


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