Armageddon Hits! Joe Elliott Of Def Leppard Baker's Dozen | Page 11 of 14 | The Quietus

Baker's Dozen

Artists discuss the 13 records that shaped their lives

10. Ian HunterIan Hunter

This was the same year as the Roxy record. Mott has split up by that point. They splintered: Mott the Hoople became simply Mott and Mick Ronson and Ian Hunter went off doing their own thing. You could follow them both. I saw Mott at the Top Rank and I saw Ian Hunter and Mick Ronson at Sheffield City Hall. This still sounds fresh today: it was raw, done in a month. His guitar playing here is as good as it was on any record. There was a solo on a song called ‘The Truth The Whole Truth And Nothing But The Truth’ – it’s one of those things you’d play to a kid whose learning how to play the guitar. The way he winds it up; the sheer pain in the song. Apparently at the time he’d read a scathing review and was fucking furious. He went in and did the whole thing in one take. And I’m thinking ‘in a parallel universe, this would have been the next Mott the Hopple record’ you know? But my god did the other guys blow it; my god did they blow it. This would have been such a great Mott record. To this day, Phil Collen [Def Leppard guitarist] will say his vibrato is Ronson’s vibrato. A lot of people can’t do vibrato properly – Phil was definitely influenced by it, also by that beautiful open whammy tone. I’m not sure how it leaks into Leppard as a whole. I think the most logical theft we ever did was the ‘Whooaah’ section on ‘Photograph’. The guys in the band are all great singers; they’re arguably better than me. Put the four of us together and it’s like Queen round the mike. Well: almost…

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