JOE ELLIOTT’S SONGS FROM THE VAULT – SIRIUS XM (FEBRUARY 2026 EDITION)

GREETINGS MUSIC LOVERS – AND WELCOME BACK TO JOE ELLIOTT’S SONGS FROM THE VAULT SHOW ON SIRIUSXM’S DEEP TRACKS CHANNEL.

In the FEBRUARY 2026 hour’s show, Joe highlights and tells stories about some of his favourite songs and artists from his own personal collection.

February’s Show features music and stories from T. Rex, Sex Pistols, Brian Eno and more!

WHO: Def Leppard frontman, musician, and musicologist Joe Elliott

WHAT: Joe Elliott’s Songs from the Vault

WHERE: SiriusXM’s DeepTracks (Ch. 27)

WHEN: Show Schedule HERE

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In his youth, Def Leppard frontman Joe Elliott was creatively influenced by the music of the late 60’s and early 70’s. From legendary acts like T. Rex, Mott The Hoople, David Bowie’s Ziggy Stardust and so many others. Each month, listen to Elliott play “Deep Tracks” from his personal music collection. Expect to hear songs from Joe’s vault and some of the stories behind them.

Live Review: Stepping Inside Def Leppard’s Monumental Caesars Palace Residency

via Atwood Magazine

“I would like to introduce you to someone who I have known this August coming for… too long,”

Def Leppard vocalist Joe Elliott laughed, looking over at bandmate and longtime friend Rick Savage from across the stage at Caesars Palace. “49 years, it will be. We formed this fucking thing in August 1977, me and him. Him being, on the bass guitar, mister Rick Savage.”

49 years ago, in congruence with that fateful meeting in Sheffield, rock was changed forever when founding members Elliott and Savage created Def Leppard. It started as a project in art class for the then-teenage Elliott: tasked with titling a fictitious band, he settled on the rowdy, somewhat nonsensical Deaf Leopard. In the five ensuing decades, the real band – made up of vocalist Elliott, bassist Savage, guitarists Vivian Campbell and Phil Collen, and drummer Rick Allen – rose to the summit of rock in all ways imaginable, but not without their fair share of heartaches in-between.

While the current lineup has been a steadfast brotherhood for decades, tragedy has always loomed over Def Leppard. Whether it be the 1984 car crash that cost Allen his left arm, or the unimaginable passing of guitarist Steve Clark in 1991, the band has endured – and more importantly, come out the other side stronger for – a series of events that could have torn any other recording group apart. But here they are, nearly 50 years into the ongoing creation of their legacy, optimistic and powerful as ever.

Most recently, the band kickstarted a monumental residency at The Colosseum at Caesars Palace. Spanning the month of February, the Las Vegas shows feature a brand new production including a fresh setlist, intricate stage design, and a return of fan-favorite tracks seldom explored in previous tours. From the venue to the onstage visuals to the detail poured into the band’s pop-up shop, it’s a truly one-of-a-kind show experience tailored for longtime and new fans alike.

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Def Leppard rocks biggest hits, surprise songs at stunning Las Vegas residency

via USAtoday.com

 

LAS VEGAS – Even if you’ve been to a Def Leppard concert before, you’ve never seen them like this.

The enduring British quintet kicked off their 12-show residency at The Colosseum at Caesars Palace Feb. 3 with a 100-minute blitzkrieg of stunning visuals, frenetic lasers and a set list deftly curated to hopscotch between nearly 50 years of classics and dashes of newer material that verifies their vitality.

In recent years, Def Leppard has primarily played stadiums, arenas and festivals, which makes the confines of the 4,100-capacity Colosseum feel especially intimate.

The new production designed for this monthlong, mostly sold-out run is spackled with Def Leppard hallmarks – the lighted “Hysteria”-era trianglethat rises and lowers to bookend the show, the 3D graphics of a menacing leopard, the zigzagging lights that prompt sheer euphoria.

Def Leppard's new Vegas residency includes rarely played songs, such as their cover of Depeche Mode's "Personal Jesus." Onstage (from left) at Caesars Palace: guitarist Vivian Campbell, bassist Rick Savage, singer Joe Elliott, drummer Rick Allen and guitarist Phil Collen.

Denise Truscello, Getty Images

It’s all delivered around a sleek set that features drummer Rick Allen, his Union Jack headphones firmly in place, atop a platform reachable by lighted stairs, and plenty of open space for the band to roam.

Led by silver fox frontman Joe Elliott, Def Leppard exudes the confidence of a band that has absolutely nothing left to prove, but wants to anyway.

Guitarists Phil Collen – he of ripped bare chest under vest and sparkly sneakers – and Vivian Campbell – unassumingly cool in dark glasses – frequently crisscrossed on stage, their dual guitar attack so integral to Def Leppard’s sound.

The band, which has played two other Las Vegas residencies since 2013, kicked off the show with their new song, “Rejoice.” Filled with layered harmonies and a gripping drum loop, it sounds like classic Def Leppardwith a glow-up.

As Elliott told USA TODAY in an exclusive interview at Caesars Palace after the band’s final rehearsal, the goal of new music is “not to sound old-fashioned, but at the same time maintain our identity. (“Rejoice”) has all the ingredients – great guitar riffs, melodies, drama. We like a bit of onstage drama; we don’t like drama in the dressing room.”

Casual fans of the band’s abundant hits – “Animal, “Armageddon It” and “Love Bites” among the smashes from 1987’s 12-million-selling album “Hysteria” and “Bringin’ on the Heartbreak” and “Foolin’” from earlier that decade among them – can devour the familiar. But what makes this residency special are the outliers.

In 2018, Def Leppard recorded a cover of Depeche Mode’s “Personal Jesus” for a hits collection, yet never performed it live.

Until now, with the dark electronica of the original pairing perfectly with Def Leppard’s chiming guitars and a flurry of white lights added to the vibe.

The band also hadn’t played their hit version of David Essex’s “Rock On”since 2019. The clever live production finds cool cat bassist Rick Savage thrumming out a solo before dovetailing into the song’s familiar opening riff, which gives Elliott enough time to dash to the top level of the theater to belt the evocative anthem.

Diehard fans will appreciate the resurrection of “White Lightning,” a 1992 “Adrenalize” track written in tribute to Steve Clark, the band’s early guitarist who died in 1991. Elliott clearly had his old friend top of mind at song’s end as he raised his fist and blew a kiss skyward.

The endurance of Def Leppard is not only due to their stability. Yes, they’re one of the few rock bands to boast an original/longtime lineup and yes, while all of the members are in their 60s, they still ooze rock star fire.

Vivian Campbell (left) and Phil Collen of Def Leppard play off each other repeatedly during the band's new residency at The Colosseum at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas.

Denise Truscello, Getty Images

Elliott’s voice, while occasionally husky on the high notes in “Rocket” and “Photograph” (a visual nostalgia-fest showcasing a retrospective of the band in, well, photos), still contains plenty of heft. And the blistering fretwork from Collen and Campbell injects every Def Leppard song with adrenaline.

But it’s the band’s atypical ability to experiment without altering their musical DNA that adds to their legend.

The underappreciated, near-electronica “Slang” has returned after several years, and the combination of zippy neon green lighting, a midsong detour into David Bowie’s “Fame” and Elliott’s stroll through the crowd to slap hands with fans made it a set highlight.

But Def Leppard can just as adroitly spin into the defiant “Rock of Ages”(complete with a special feathered guest to handle its illustrious “gunter glieben” intro) or the delicate guitar strains and emotional longing of “Hysteria.”

The band famously sings in “Rock of Ages” that “it’s better to burn out than fade away.” But Def Leppard has proven yet again that it won’t be doing either anytime soon.

 

Record Store Day UK Exclusive: Slang 30th Anniversary

Def Leppard’s sixth studio album Slang celebrates its 30th anniversary with a brand new exclusive release for Record Store Day! Releasing for the first time featuring a second LP personally curated by Joe with B-sides and rarities from the time. This package is presented on pink vinyl with brand new enhanced artwork.

Pick up your copy on Saturday 18 April from your local participating indie record shop. Find a store near you at recordstoreday.co.uk