Def Leppard
Diamond Star Halos


3.0
good

Review

by Pedro B. USER (364 Reviews)
May 28th, 2022 | 18 replies


Release Date: 2022 | Tracklist

Review Summary: The aural equivalent of a cold beverage on a hot day – not a particularly impressive or even memorable experience, but pleasurable enough in the moment to be worth revisiting again.

The world of music – like that of any creative art – is one where stagnation is as undesirable as it is inevitable. No matter how hard musicians (and artists in general) strive to stay relevant and continue innovating into the twilight of their career, it is but the very notable exception which manages to avoid settling into its own status quo in the long run.

The hard rock scene is certainly no exception to this rule – on the contrary, it is somewhat infamous for it; one of the genres most prone to having bands stick around for multiple decades after their peak, it stands to reason that it should also be one of the genres where conformity and repetition most often rear their heads. It is, therefore, up to each individual act to choose whether to go softly into that gentle night, or continue the fruitless pursuit for innovation in a career often entering its third or fourth decade; and while examples of the latter are certainly not uncommon (one has but to think of the likes of Poison, for instance) most major bands have opted for the former path, choosing to age gracefully deep inside their comfort zone. Case in point: Def Leppard, who, forty-five years and twelve albums deep into an already extremely successful career, choose to offer up another dose of the exact same formula they have been pursuing for almost a quarter of a century at this point.

For that is precisely what Diamond Star Halos is, no more and no less: fifteen tracks of the same sort of pop-adjacent, radio-friendly AOR/MOR the British five-piece have been serving up since 1999's Euphoria. Most of these fifteen tracks present the kind of perfectly listenable, mostly forgettable pop-rock fare - with the occasional moderately heavy guitar thrown in to preserve the hard rock cred - which makes up the bulk of the group's discography since the late 1990s, with every single trope that might be expected from an album of this genre being checked along the way: here are the three power ballads - one of which, This Guitar, fully acoustic and heavily reminiscent of smash hit Two Steps Behind - each situated precisely where they would be expectable; here the radio-ready country-rock number (Lifeless); here the obligatory failed attempt at recreating the lightning in a bottle of Pour Some Sugar On Me and Let's Get Rocked (Fire It Up, an obvious standout even if it does fall short on its impossible mission); here the somewhat catchy singalong lead single (Kick); here the slight bit of innovation put in to justify the inevitable 'trying something new' statement (the electronic beat behind Unbreakable). Everything is as predictable as it is pleasant, the aural equivalent of a cold beverage on a hot day – not a particularly impressive or even memorable experience, but pleasurable enough in the moment to be worth revisiting again.

Not that any of that matters, of course – twelve albums and four and a half decades into their career, it is unlikely Def Leppard are trying to entice new fans. Rather, much like recent offerings from fellow veterans AC/DC and Iron Maiden (not to mention its own four or five predecessors) Diamond Star Halos shows the group openly and unabashedly going through the motions and preaching to the choir – though, as 'spinning their wheels'-type albums released by veteran hard'n'heavy bands these past twelve months go, Diamond Star Halos is both a more even listening experience than the patchy Power Up, and a more pleasurable one than the interminable Senjutsu (even if it, too, could do with a couple of songs culled from its middle section). In fact, though far from the group's stratospherical glitz-and-glam days (and unlikely to Adrenalize its aging audience overmuch, or indeed cause much Hysteria or Euphoria), Leppard's twelfth studio album sees the group soldier On Through The Night and will leave no fan High 'N' Dry, both maintaining the five-piece's credibility and justifying their continued existence (if only just). Not bad for a band with absolutely nothing left to prove...

Recommended Tracks
Kick
Fire It Up
This Guitar



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user ratings (33)
3
good

Comments:Add a Comment 
rockarollacola
May 28th 2022


2184 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0 | Sound Off

Pyromania and Hysteria are two of my all time favorite albums. This is nowhere near as good, but I can't say I didn't enjoy it. Certainly more enjoyable than Senjutsu, thats for sure.

Dewinged
Staff Reviewer
May 29th 2022


32021 Comments


I always got the feeling this band was never good to begin with.

rockarollacola
May 29th 2022


2184 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0 | Sound Off

Nah, their 80's output is fantastic. Most of their greatest material was heavily influenced by their producer Mutt Lange; so when he dipped the quality of the music did too.

Batareziz
May 29th 2022


314 Comments


I thought their 2015 album was a pretty good "return to form", and the first several tracks made me think Halos would be on the same level. But having listened though it, it is not. Good review, not very good album.

wutang4ever
May 29th 2022


1443 Comments


imagine listening to this band in 2022

SitarHero
May 29th 2022


14702 Comments


Enjoyed the singles from this. Actually looking forward to check a Def Lep album for the first time in a looong time.

Also, good review. My only quibble is with saying lep have been around for over five decades. They old, but not yet THAT old lol.

wutang4ever
May 29th 2022


1443 Comments


i can only think of 1 good Def Leppard song, Too Late

ChrimzonCanine
May 29th 2022


2080 Comments


Another Hit And Run is probably my favorite song by them. Really fun to play on my Strato

wutang4ever
May 29th 2022


1443 Comments


Photograph and Foolin', but there were some decent songs on Hysteria, too bad it was a pop corporate recording

ChrimzonCanine
May 29th 2022


2080 Comments


It’s fun but listening to the entire album is kind of a chore to get through

cageofman
May 29th 2022


254 Comments


You made the comment so I’ll only raise it because you did, complete opposite for me, this is just far too standard and ordinary, senjutsu is a far better effort for a latter career album

Voivod
Staff Reviewer
May 29th 2022


10710 Comments


Their albums up to Adrenalize are fine, but they became AOR thereafter.

wutang4ever
May 29th 2022


1443 Comments


Adrenalize sucked lol LETS GET LETS GET LETS GET ROOOOOCKED! pathetic

ReturnToRock
May 29th 2022


4805 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

@wutang I actually love that song.

wham49
May 31st 2022


6341 Comments


they stole the title from T. REx

SitarHero
May 31st 2022


14702 Comments


More likely homage. They've never hidden their love for T. Rex.

MrSirLordGentleman
May 31st 2022


15343 Comments


"I always got the feeling this band was never good to begin with."

High 'n Dry, Pyromania and Hysteria are pretty cool fun and catchy pop rock records. They don't aim at anything more than simple light-hearted fun

"Their albums up to Adrenalize are fine, but they became AOR thereafter."

Not necessarily a bad thing! but yeah it didn't work for Def Leppard

IcoHolic
June 6th 2022


23 Comments


I liked it, it's a nice effort for a band that's been around for 40+ years. It sounds like Def Leppard, but with a bit of a modern twist. While the hooks aren't as stellar as Pyromania or Hysteria, there are still a bunch here.

One thing that shocked me was how poor the ballads are. Def Leppard has always had those oozing cheeseball ballads that were always great when you're in the mood.



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