ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED ON SEPT. 24, 1992
By Steve Newton
When Def Leppard guitarist/co-founder Steve Clark died of a drug overdose in 1991—six years after drummer Rick Allen lost his left arm in a New Year’s Eve car accident—rumours were rampant as to who would replace him in one of the world’s most successful and least lucky rock acts.
One name floating around was that of former Whitesnake guitarist John Sykes, but it was another Whitesnake alumnus, Vivian Campbell, who actually scored the most enviable guitar gig in the galaxy.
“I’ve known [Leppard singer] Joe Elliott for a few years,” says Campbell. “He lives in Ireland, where I’m originally from, so I would see him every time I’d go there—we have a lot of mutual friends and stuff. And a couple of months after Steve had died, he had said that they were gonna continue, that they were gonna finish the record as a four-piece, but that they were eventually going to look for a new guitar player—and that he would like it to be me.
“Obviously, I didn’t know the other people in the band very well, and they all had their own opinions. So about a year passed, and they made the record, and they had a short list of three or four people that they wanted to play with. So they came to L.A. and played with some folks, and dat was dat.”
A happy tone colours Campbell’s voice as he explains the details of his induction into the Def Leppard camp.
“Well, it was weird!” he says with a laugh. “It was strange for a number of reasons. I’ve never played with a drummer with electronic drums before, and that’s a different thing, ’cause normally when you’re in a small room and you play with an acoustic drum kit, you hear it because of the proximity—you’re standing next to it and it’s loud. With an electronic drum kit, you don’t hear it from the source, you hear it comin’ through monitors, so that was a little strange from a musical point of view.
“The other thing was, most of my ‘audition’, so to speak, was them asking me questions as opposed to me playing guitar. I mean, it was more a personality test than it was to see whether the guy can sing or play.”
Although the financial prospects of joining a band like Def Leppard must be staggering, it wasn’t just the lure of big bucks that attracted Campbell to the band. He maintains that he’s a true fan of the group’s music, and has been since he was a teen.
“I actually remember buying their first independent release in ’79,” says the 30-year-old rocker. “At that time, though, I was more interested in them because they were my competition. I was in a band called Sweet Savage, which was in exactly the same position at the time—a young hard-rock band tryin’ to get a record deal in that whole ‘new wave of British heavy metal’ thing that was goin’ on.
“But, anyway, I bought that record and I got their first [major label] album when it came out. The band started to change around Pyromania, when they really developed the Def Leppard sound, and since that stage, I’ve been a huge fan.”
Anyone who’s heard Campbell light six-string fires as a member of Dio, Whitesnake, or his own band, Riverdogs, can testify to his own pyromaniacal skills on guitar. But Campbell hasn’t pushed his weight around on fellow Leppard guitarist Phil Collen by trying to hog the coolest lead solos.
“Phil Collen has always been more the lead player in the band,” says Campbell, “he’s a great guitar player, a great soloist. And, obviously, he played all the solos on the Adrenalize record, so he plays all of those. I have taken over playing whatever solos Steve would play, and maybe on future Def Leppard records it’ll be a bit more split. But, to be honest, I really don’t care about that; that’s never been an objective of mine, to be Joe Guitar Hero—at least not in the last six or seven years, you know. Maybe when I was 20 it was.”
Campbell was a lot closer to 20 when he joined up with former Black Sabbath singer Ronnie James Dio in the latter’s early-’80s outfit. After his hitch with Dio, he scooted over to join former Deep Purple screamer David Coverdale’s soon-to-be-famous (and soon-to-be-forgotten) Whitesnake. But neither group offered Campbell a decent balance of kinship, creativity, and cash.
“Dio and Whitesnake were always someone else’s band,” he says, “and that’s always been evident, I think, to everyone. In Dio, I contributed a lot creatively, but that’s where it ended. I mean, I had absolutely no say in the direction of the band or who produced the records or anything at all. I took absolutely no money from the band, got paid less than the road crew. And in Whitesnake I got paid very well, but my contributions weren’t welcome because David was very specific about what he wanted to write—where, when, and who with.
“Riverdogs was a real band, though, and that’s the only thing that I’ve been in that’s somewhat akin to this, except that, obviously, Riverdogs weren’t successful and Def Leppard is one of the most successful bands on the planet.”
Campbell’s right about that: his current band’s melodic brand of pop-metal sells like crazy. But is joining a big-time band like Def Leppard the be-all and end-all of Vivian Campbell’s musical existence?
“All I ever wanted was to be in a band,” he says, “and, unfortunately, I’ve been in too many. This will definitely be the last one, and, God willing, everything will work out. I don’t see any reason why it wouldn’t. I mean, if I can’t work with these guys, I can’t work with anyone.”
To hear the full audio of my 1992 interview with Vivian Campbell–and my interviews with Def Leppard’s Steve Clark and Joe Elliott as well–subscribe to my Patreon page, where you can eavesdrop on over 400 of my uncut, one-on-one conversations with:
Dave Martone, 2020
Ian Gillan of Deep Purple, 2006
Joss Stone, 2012
Glenn Tipton of Judas Priest, 2005
Jack Blades of Night Ranger, 1984
Vivian Campbell of Def Leppard, 1992
Colin James, 1995
Kim Simmonds of Savoy Brown, 1998
Tom Cochrane of Red Rider, 1983
Ed Roland of Collective Soul, 1995
Taj Mahal, 2001
Tom Wilson of Junkhouse, 1995
Mike McCready of Pearl Jam, 2003
David Lindley, 2002
Marty Friedman of Megadeth, 1991
John Hiatt, 2010
Nancy Wilson of Heart, 2006
Jeff Golub, 1989
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Joe Bonamassa, 2011
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Eric Johnson, 2001
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Gene Simmons of Kiss, 1992
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Allan Holdsworth, 1983
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Rick Richards of the Georgia Satellites, 1988
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Dickey Betts of the Allman Brothers, 1991
Jake E. Lee of Badlands, 1992
Rickey Medlocke of Lynyrd Skynyrd, 1997
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Joe Perry of Aerosmith, 1987
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Buck Dharma of Blue Oyster Cult, 1997
Michael Schenker, 1992
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Steve Harris of Iron Maiden, 1988
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Bill Henderson of Chilliwack, 1999
Paul Rodgers, 1997
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Guthrie Govan of the Aristocrats, 2015
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Carlos Santana, 2011
Walter Trout, 2003
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Rob Hirst of Midnight Oil, 2001
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Mark Farner of Grand Funk, 1991
Chris Robinson of Black Crowes, 1990
Jennifer Batten, 2002
Mike Fraser, 2014
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Lemmy Kilmister of Motorhead, 2002
David Gogo, 1991
Booker T. Jones, 2016
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Mike Cooley of the Drive-By Truckers, 2016
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Lindsay Mitchell of Prism, 1988
Buddy Miles, 2001
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Tom Hamilton of Aerosmith, 1983
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Mick Fleetwood of Fleetwood Mac, 2016
Doc Neeson of Angel City, 1985
Rik Emmett of Triumph, 1985
Sonny Landreth, 2016
Tosin Abasi of Animals as Leaders, 2016
Jeff Beck, 2001
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Johnny Ramone of the Ramones, 1992
Peter Frampton, 1987
Otis Rush, 1997
Gord Downie of the Tragically Hip, 1989
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Steve Howe of Yes, 2017
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Steve Clark of Def Leppard, 1988
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….with hundreds more to come