Jeff Pilson on Don Dokken's "MASSIVE" Drug Use, George Lynch, The End Machine, Foreigner - 2024
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- Опубліковано 29 лют 2024
- 2024 full in bloom interview with Dokken/Foreigner bassist Jeff Pilson. Jeff talks about Foreigner, The End Machine's New Album - The Quantum Phase, Black Swan, Revolution Saints, Don Dokken, drugs, George Lynch, Mick Brown, Steve Brown, Dio, Vivian Campbell, Vinny Appice, Aerosmith, & more.
The End Machine 'The Quantum Phase' Order on Amazon:
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full in bloom Interview w/ Jeff Pilson PART 2:
• Jeff Pilson Slams Don ...
full in bloom Interview w/ Don Dokken on Money Issues, Drugs, & Mick Brown:
• Don Dokken on Money Is...
George Lynch Fires Back at Don Dokken:
• George Lynch Fires Bac...
The End Machine "Silent Winter":
• The End Machine - "Sil...
The End Machine "Killer of the Night":
• The End Machine - "Kil...
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Intro & Outro by FOOL OF FATE
#dokken #ronniejamesdio #aerosmith #georgelynch #viviancampbell
Pilson is just a working man's musician. Been to the top of the mountain and toiled everywhere in between. Such a level headed professional. Respect the hell out of this man.
The best part of Dokken’s Unchained the Night video is Jeff’s banter with George while recording in the hotel room.
Scrotum Sound 😂
Deep knee bends.
Yeah! Compare THAT to "The DON," OVER in Germany showing OFF "HIS other house (castle)" and "HOW YOU like it, HE LIKES IT TOO" and OR?.."Get tha STINKING camera outta my face!".... Yeah, DON'S A REALLY COOL GUY!". 🤨😕🙄😒 Dude's ALWAYS BEEN a colossal pryck 😒
As a teen, I would sit outside Burbank Studios room Dokken would be rehearsing in. After hours of jamming, Jeff would emerge, energy level one past 10, pinned at 11, huge smile for a total stranger: "Man you wanna hear the new album!!?" We sat in my Toyota pickup listening to every track, it was awesome. He is the most humble, gracious and kind musician I've ever met.
I feel Jeff is probably the most reliable source for anything Dokken past.
Back For The Attack is a great album ... I think it is them at their peak ...would have been hard to top it musically
Definitely has its moments, but could have been better, like Jeff said. Probably more compact in a way. ✌️
I agree, this was next level Dokken
Jeff Pilson's 'side of the story' in this interview I think is the closest to being the 'real story' of what happened with Dokken. He seems to be a credible person.
Jeff is the most honest man I have ever heard in the music business.
Cool he talked about the Dio tour as I saw Dokken open for Dio on Jeff's birthday (Feb 19th) in Saginaw MI on the Tooth and Nail tour. They were GREAT. From my memory, they played the entire album with the exception of Heartless Heart. and also Breaking the Chains. I used to memorize the best I could what bands played. On a side note, I saw that Dio tour twice- the first with Twisted Sister in Clarkston MI
Jeff Pilson is not only a bass guitar God. He's one of the most down to earth, nicest guys you could ever meet. Talked to him many times at the Rainbow in Hollywood and at countless NAMM shows. Always has time for others. Really great guy.
why is he an imposter ? how come these dudes don't write and play their own shit ? oh okay - cause they aren't talented enough -
Whatever - knock Don Dokken all you want - at least he sings songs he wrote or stole from George
@@davidrice3337 WTF are you talking about?
Only one God! God of the Bible! God bless you. Jesus saves!
Jesus. Be nice.
I always saw him around the Valley. Man… is the Bow still open? I’d love some of that pizza again🔥
Back for the Attack is my absolute favorite Dokken album. For me, that is where George took the gloves off as a guitar player.
Tooth & Nail was great but you can tell in terms of the solos that the phrasing was a tad simpler & George even said early on he was still figuring things out. Back for the Attack’s solos by comparison were elite. The one for Heaven Sent still is blistering. Such a great tone, as well.
BS
The first Don Dokken album after Dokken broke up was fucking great. The first 2 Lynch Mob albums were awesome. We got cheated out of some awesome Dokken music for sure.
- yes, I agree first two Lynch Mob albums were bad ass. I never listened to the Don Dokken solo album.
@@debu9374Up From the Ashes - I recommend it, some good ones on there in my opinion.
Hey man I was at the same Dio/Dokken concert at Reunion Arena! It was my second concert, the first was Judas Priest about six months earlier. I remember all the church people were outside trying to save us from Satan and I told them I went to church every Sunday haha. Wish I could go back to '84 and stay there forever.
People who weren't around in the 80s have no idea how great it was..Rockin With Dokken-Dealin With Dio!
Wow! That might've been my second concert, too. My first concert was Judas Priest/Great White at Reunion on their Defenders tour. Was that your first concert?
Yep that was my first, it was in April and I was 17. I went by myself and sat way in the back on the 2nd level. It was just me and this older Vietnam veteran and he came over and shared a joint with me haha. @@fullinbloom
Met this band back in 86 monsters of rock tour, my buddy was tending bar at the embassy suites hotel in troy mi called me up and said dokken was hanging out at the bar, me and another friend went up to the hotel and got hammered and hung out with these guy's for a bit, Don was stuck on himself, George was kinda laid back and didnt say much, Mick brown was yelling at them to hurry up for the band meeting, Jeff pilson hung out and bs'd with us for a good 30 mins, totally cool and down to earth, i mean we were just 19yr old punks at the time but he didnt care was very curious on how dokken was being perceived in detroit at that time and what we thought about hair metal and what not, just a really cool dude!
The year was 88 . I was at the first of two shoes at the Silverdome. I've always been a fan of Dokken, but I felt horrible for them having to play after Metallica. The crowd for Dokken was worn out .
Right 88, my mind isnt what it used to be🤣 still it was really cool meeting them!
Met Jeff in 1998 with Dokken. Such an awesome guy that just talked with us for about an hour. Awesome guy! 🤘🏽🤘🏽🤘🏽
What stood out to me was on that monsters of Rock tour when Mick Brown went into that double bass attack on tooth and nail..........tearing it up in the daytime........burning it down at night!
I remember this guy when he played in STEEL DRAGON.
🤘😜
With Michael Starr
And Curt Cutty.
@@vermontbred 🤣 would love to hear Steel Panther cover We All Die Young
I love that Jeff is so honest. By the way, I really miss Dio.
I saw Dokken open for Twisted Sister in Feb. 1986. They were great! I was blown away when I heard them in 1984.
Where was that -Sundance? Hammerheads? Dokken was the loudest band I've ever seen but that was at the live show at CPI.
@@victormihai3929 It was at The Summit in Houston, TX. Funny, I thought Twisted Sister was the loudest band I've ever seen (the night Dokken opened for them)! 😆😆
Back for the Attack was an INCREDIBLE album! I really can't imagine it getter any better.
Dokken was one of my favorite bands growing up, I only got to see them once back in the 80s.
I opened for Dokken in like 97 or so? My band was popular in the Harrisburg Pa area. We would get a lot of the big openers then. Jeff, George and especially Mick were GREAT! Mick brought my drummer and myself on the tour bus. Don acted like we should be humbled by meeting him. I am singer and guitar player at that time I was playing 5 nights a week and working a day job. Don couldnt sing the songs and kept pointing to his throat like it was too high or something. I sang everything from Van Halen, Queen, Soundgarden, Pearl Jam, Aerosmith to my own songs. 5 nights a week and he gave me a dead fish handshake and said your welcome. Mick Jeff and George, thank you for a memorable night
I too, have experienced the Dokken dead fish handshake. He was cordial though and sighed my vintage vinyl for me.
@@RaymondGinn1978 Not hard to tell at all. This was my experience. Not bragging at all
@@brianseneca3546Heard the SAME/similar on the road stories time and time AGAIN from plenty of OTHER opening bands players throughout the decades, man.... ONE thing that ALWAYS HAS BEEN THE SAME? THAT wet fish handshake of Donny's 😬....Lol. Loved Dokken's MUSIC and Lynch in the 80s.. ALWAYS knew/thought DON WAS the problem... He HAS ALWAYS thought that "his singing" was soooo much better than ALL the other Hard ROCK/ Hair METAL bands from then.... SMDH 😒
First time saw Dokken was early 1984 at age 16 in Lakeland Fl. I think was triple header Twisted Sister Y&T, Dokken. Twisted was headliner. At the time Tooth and Nail had just came out and I didn’t even know who Dokken was. Really was going to see Twisted Sister they were huge at the time. I was pretty blown away by Dokken and Lynch’s guitar playing. I was right up against the stage. I ran out and got Tooth and Nail after that day and was a fan since. I saw them again at Tampa Stadium at Monsters of Rock 1988 after Back for the Attack came out. Then didn’t see them again until 1995 when they got back together for the Dysfunctional album. Very good album imo. That was at small outdoor venue Janus Landing maybe 4,000 people. I was front of stage again. Don looked wasted and was on a stool a lot. lol. Lynch was ripped and on steroids back then.
That Tooth & Nail album was one of the few store-bought cassettes I had back in the day. Cool album! Most of my cassettes were dubs / mix-tapes! 😂
Saw that same tour in Salt Lake City...well most of it. My friends and I lit a joint right as the house lights went down for Twisted Sisted and when everyone rushed the stage, we were left there like sitting ducks and got busted and thrown out😂😂😂
I too saw the Last in Line tour with Dokken opening. I saw them in Evansville Indiana. As a guitar player it was great. Seeing George and Vivian the same night was awesome.
Jeff still kicks serious ass 🎉
Back for the Attack is my favorite Dokken album. "Even better"? WOW
Back for the attack was one of the all time best records ever. The guitar tone was just the apex of tone. Georges later stuff was great too, but that tone on BFTA was just other worldly..
I was a huge Dokken fan back in the mid to late 80's. George is probably the biggest reason I picked up a guitar. I thought Back for the attack was killer. When it came out, I was blown away. The band was just getting better and better!
Met Jeff back in 2009 in Germany at a Foreigner show….. one of the coolest and nicest guys I’ve met…
One thing that seems to get left out or even altered is that it was in the press that Don was breaking up the band right before the Monsters Of Rock tour. They make it sound like it happened on the tour, but I went to one of those shows and I clearly remember reading that he was breaking up the band and thinking how crazy it was that they were about to go on a stadium tour and they were done. And just how insane it was that he couldn't wait until after the tour to announce it. It's no wonder George didn't want to be there. Not only did that kill there vibe, but going on right after Metallica when they were absolutely on fire didn't do Dokken any favors either. But yeah, I'm surprised no one ever mentions that, Don killed the band BEFORE the stadium tour!
SHOCKED to hear that 80s metal bands used cocaine. Who knew. 🙄
I visited Jeff's studio Pilsound in Van Nuys about 33 years ago. He showed me the demos of these Craig Goldie recordings. It was amazing. Sounded better than anything out at the time.
13th Floor I believe.I was Craig Goldy's student at the time and Craig was playing stuff for me,insane.tone raven-guitar(We Are The Black Things)Hollywood
@@TONERAVENTUNES whatever it was he alluded to it being known players but he couldn't tell me who it was. We were going to do a demo and he was just showing me the studio discussing the plan. He just played a little bit of it for me and I was blown away.
I've been a Dokken fan since forever and every time I hear Jeff speak, I hear the voice of reason in the band. He's one of the reasons I learned bass and how to sing backup.
Good band name...VOR - Voice of Reason 😂
I was in a band long ago, did a gig at Niles Station. The other band on the bill was a Hendrix impersonator named Randy Hansen, and Jeff was the bassist. After the show , Jeff and I were having a beer and talking, and I said he needed a stand up real singer, and needed to do original songs. He shushed me! Didn't want Randy to hear that. But that's exactly what he did.
Randy Hansen. What a good guitar player.
Back for the Attack was a great album front to back all killer no filler!
Yeah I was surprised he thought it could have been even better because that’s their best IMO. George’s guitar sounded freaking amazing & the songs were some of their best.
Jeff is a great guy who I have had the pleasure of meeting and he is an extremely talented musician as well, a class act.
I remember seeing Dokken during the Aerosmith tour, and it still ranks as one of my favorite shows. After the concert we got to talk to Jeff and Don out in the parking lot. It was just so cool. Very down to earth, and very appreciative to the fans. I recall seeing George running to the bus and I yelled "George!" he waved and went into the bus. Don and Jeff looked at me, and said "Oh, he's shy, he won't come over. " Just such a cool experience. Hopefully Jeff sees my comment. Another super cool interview! 🤘❤️
I also got to meet George and Mick in Oakland after their show. I didn't stick around to watch Aerosmith. George talked to a small group of us behind the building for a very long time and signed autographs. He checked his pockets for guitar picks but didn't have any, so he went back inside Oakland Coliseum and brought back guitar picks to give out! The picks said Mr. Scary, of course. ☠️ I was over the moon!!! George Lynch is still my absolute favorite guitar player of all time!
May 1986 I was 14 years old and saw my first concert at the St.Paul Civic Center. Judas Priest/Dokken. $20 for decent seats. My mind and ears were blown when it was over. The lights came on and you could cut the reefer and marlboro smoke with a knife. So glad I grew up in the decade of metal
Massive respect to Jeff! If you’re playing bass or just starting out, you can listen to the early Dokken stuff and that, imo is the blueprint for rock solid bass playing, intelligently done, with a great tone and his sound comes through. No easy feat to shine through when George Lynch is your guitarist! That being said, what a humble, down to earth guy. Never hear of any drama coming from him, stays busy, looks like he’s still in great shape - just a phenomenal influence for guys starting out and veterans alike. As a fan how could you not love this guy and wish him the absolute best?? Now and I think everyone has figured this out, man when you hear the others talk, it just seems more and more that Don was not an easy guy to be in a band with. Great talent but, it sounds like studio time, tour bus time…man I’m sure you needed a certain level of patience to make it work!
Would love to hear the Pilson/Goldy songs
Nice shout out to "Wild" Mick Brown!
Back for the attack was one of the best all around records of all time. The mix, the solos, the arrangements...pure magic.
I'm a guitarist and play along with Back for the Attack almost daily as my warmup! You're right about best record of all time!
I thought Don was the Sober one Lol
Excellent interview..
enjoyed it..☝️
Tooth and Nail - Under lock and key - THAT is the Dokken we fell in love with at that time. And MTV was the other part to their success, a lot of bands success of that time. It was visual, they could put out a video that painted the right vibe, right theme - so many vid were dumb as fuck and got weirder as the music video/artistic expression crossed over.
Imagine a world back then with the internet? All we had were press statements, magazine interviews, radio DJ's and of course, with MTV, we got news/rumors? shit about bands - But no matter how bad it was for some people, a lot of it was "What has Ozzy done now?" that took the spotlight, or Motley Crue busting up hotels, drunk, OD, Razzle (rest in peace dear Rocker) ~ but even with that, Don Dokken was heavily rumored, Heavily, to being a real dickhead sob. That was kind of the message I recall was out there, or someone wanted out there. And of course, the split with he and George got real public for the time. Fans didn't give a fuck about that, we wanted more Dokken but it got pissed away, gone forever.
But hey man, the radio only plays a few songs in total, there's no bad shit on their records man, not those 2 albums anyway. But that's how it was then. People came and went like a fucking mini mall. Jeff for example, how many fkn bands are in his credits? I mean, he was everywhere. Like whenever someone needed a bass player, a better bass player it's like someone would say "Hey, What's Pilson doing right now?" ... HAHA!
But like Jeff said - Don on Val's and booze? Jeff and everyone else on the planet in the 80's were lining it up day and night man - they can both point at each other and claim "You're a buzz kill dude" and they're both right - Should've got Don on the train man, might have been different.
But to be real? Lynch Mob release? Fucking badass! and overnight, there's George on MTV slashing it! Hey, same guitar, you know you're listening to Dokken's guitarist. Guitar players all had their own accent and voice through strings - like a fingerprint for a true fan Like yeah man, wish you had worked it out but oh well, we'll take what we can! Rock on! Drawing on memory? Don blamed it all on George wanting the musical direction to go his way, shine on his guitar - Don wanted to elevate to some cerebral awakening stage of enlightenment - fuck if I know, but it didn't fly, Don was the dick in the peanut butter is what we all walked away with, least in our bubble. But like I said, no internet, no real way of knowing, that's what we were fed.
Wasn't there also an age gap with Don? He was kind of long in the tooth I seem to recall - without looking it up, that's what I'm vibing on memory recall - one thing for sure, we're all old as fuck today looking back to those glorious times.
Dokken was a big part of my youth and for some reason “Under Lock And Key” always reminded me of winter time! Great time in my life thank you Jeff!
Yeah same here. It came out in December 85 so I played the hell out of it all winter. I can remember cruising 40 miles to a new years eve party with some friends when there was a foot of snow on the ground and very cold. Good times.
....I should add that we played ULAK the whole way and back. Ahhh to be able to go back to those times eh?
ULAK definitely seems to have a ‘mood’ to it that none of their other albums did. Great record.
Back for the attack was a phenomenal album
Great interview
The end machine is what dokken could have been and I absolutely love dokken
It’s strange how Don is the only one who thought George was difficult to deal with. Meanwhile, everyone else said he was a wonderful guy.
Not true couldn't deal with him in studio's while recording alone they'd be calling Don they did recent interviews states that the producers
Jeff is the coolest guy! He is always so nice.
Dokken may have been lumped in with other hair/glam metal bands of the time, but their music was always more complex and heavier than say bands like Poison, Motley Crue, Quiet Riot, and Ratt etc, even on Under Lock and Key, with it's commercial appeal, and slick production aimed at radio play, they we're still able to pull off the difficult balancing of growing their fanbase and maintaining their integrity.
Has Jeff ever written a book,I'd love to read it.
That would be amazing
I saw a video were Don said he didn’t do drugs. Then I see an interview of George Lynch talking about them all doing lines off of Freddy’s blades on his glove during the filming of the Dream Warriors music video. What is there to be ashamed about it was the 80’s everyone was doing coke
And the coke was😊 much better
Its called holier than thou and being full of shit
What? Back for the Attack could have been better? I always thought that was a masterpiece! That's a true rocking album with every song smoking hot. There's no ballads or slow songs on that one and George's lead playing is phenomenal!
I like it A LOT more than Under Lock and Key. It seemed like there were more songs on it than there needed to be, but I can't say any of them are weak.
I love TAN and ULAK but BFTA is their masterpiece!!!
I saw Dio & Dokken in Dallas in 1984 too. The old Reunion Arena. What a great show that was!!
Saw that tour in Madison at the Coliseum.
Jeff and George are great guys.
LoL.😝
It's awesome seeing rockers meditating!!!🙏❤
Jeff, you're the dream band member every musician should have, SIr! \m/\m/ Thanks for the great legacy of tunes you've made for us 80's rockers to fall back on in this age of lame mass produced music.
Never heard of The End Machine but I'm going to check them out right now
Back for the Attack had more bang for the buck than many of their peers albums released around the same time. Nothing sucked like buying a metal album based on a hit video only to find only 2 or 3 songs actually good and the rest filler. In the age of the cassette that meant time spent rewinding of fast forwarding which was inconvenient while riding on my skateboard. BFTA could be listened all the way through, both A and B sides.
My first concert at age 13 at the Cow Palace. I was blow away by Jake. Then I saw them on ultimate sin and came home to find all my guitars and equipment stolen while at that show. I love jakes playing. One of the greatest!
Relevance?
@@whamsie4022TY..... I'm like ...😵💫 "Ohhh kay....So ...WHAT in TH does Ozzy and Jake era HAVE TO DO WITH "DOKKEN".....AT ALL?....😕. 🫨🔫
_Back for the Attack_ is their best record. Great riffs, and Lynch's solos are phenomenal. He was at his peak at the time, and deservedly recognised as one of the best in the business. World class phrasing, a unique sound, great tone, and that vibrato.
Agreed 👍💯
Indeed.
I believe I have all these dates correct....
In Nov 1987, I went to see Aerosmith at the Capital Center near DC. My whole reason for going was Dokken. They hit the stage and were tearing it up. Suddenly, around the second or third song, there was no guitar. I didn't see what happened. They finished the song, and then one of them said something like, "George is on his back. He's had the flu. He's very sick and can't continue." I was so pissed.
Then, in June 1988, I saw the Monsters of Rock tour at RFK Stadium in DC. Dokken was there and kicked ass!!! Great show. All the bands were great.
But the highlight is, in Aug 2001, my band got to open for Lynch Mob at Jaxx in Springfield, VA. What a great night. George and the guys were very cool. After the show, we grabbed some food, chatted a little, and took some photos.
I feel very honored to have been able to have experiences like that.
Mr. Scary is my favorite song from Dokken. I liked the Freddy Krueger movies and the Dream Warriors theme also.
I saw both of those tours back in the day...Damn...What a great time in music we were lucky enough to witness and be a part of. It really was a way of life...Still is.
Cheers,
J
One of my all-time fav bands, with that 80s lineup
Man great interview
Saw Dokken with Judas Priest at Cobo Hall in Detroit. Under Lock and Key tour I believe. Priest was on the Turbo tour. Great concert.
“We did a lot of cocaine”, I would never expect to hear that from any 80’s rock band. I wonder if there was a constant supply of young women too…..nah.
No. No women. Just concentrated on their music lol.
Where their is coke, their are hot women who live to party 😂
Yep. We called them "bag chasers". @@toddaldworth2272
Part of playing bass in a band is the ZEN zone of being the low-key glue.
That zen zone feels amazing too🤘
I met Don Dokken in the mid 90s, he was a total dick back then. Hopefully he’s grown up and become a more humble man than he was back in the day.
Maybe he still was bitter.
@@buckster2575 - that’s quite possible, Dokken had just recently reunited then, so maybe he was still trying to sort out his feelings and emotions with the other band members. They had just released the “Dysfunctional” album so that title alone may have been a bit telling as to the state of mind that he and the band were in during those days.
I think he’s jealous of George since he was originally also a guitar player
I heard he was such a down to earth humble guy
@@debu9374 I guess that grunge thing was still lingering to.
Saw DIO in mid 90’s with Jeff on bass. Dude is solid.
That was Dio Strange Highways Tour 1994, Saw that tour twice in Florida. Dio was back playing clubs after years of playing arenas, That show was 🔥 🤘
@@sds4life17 Yep! Saw them at the House of Blues on Sunset.
Love the interview as always. Good job. Wish Jeff and the guys will release those old days live videos he said he was watchin', whatever the quality 😜 It's a sin we just have Philly and little bit more.
Excellent interview!!
Well that kinda explains the disconnect- if the 3 of them were doing cocaine and Don was doing valium... you're never going to be able to hang together.
I was the drinker among a group of cocaine users growing up- they saw me as a drag and I saw them as a movie playing at 4x- there was no middle ground to communicate
Jeff Pilson sounds like a cool dude. It's great to see and hear his long success in music. Dokken was awesome... and his musicianship in Foreigner is elite. Definitely going to check out The End Machine. Great interview.
Interesting to hear projects Jeff Pilson is involved with. I gotta have a look at those.
true story George's guitar techs would turn the volume up hella loud during concerts so you can barely hear Don's vocals because he sings kind of soft.... That was their main strife 😂
As far as guitar goes, I don’t know if BFTA could be better. It is a relentless, punishing and coke-fueled masterpiece for George.
I just finished my blog on 'Shadowlife.' I am 45, so Dokken for me were just about to break up by the time i really discovered them and fell in love with the band. For years, I only had what was written in magizines and older people who had more inside knowledge on what happened. When the band got back together i was in High School and listened to a lot of Pantera, Sepultura, Type O Negative, Rollins Band, Stabbing Westward, White Zombie, Fear Factory, you get the point but I still came back to Dokken.
I always attibuted the issues to George and Don as egos that couldn't communicate to a level where they could hash out their greievences towards one another. I feel like this is still present in 2024. Jeff has always been the senseable one. Mick always seemed like he was just glad to be there and then you have Don and George. As Jeff said, when the band was focused on 'making kickass music and the live performance to go with it," the band was at its best. I would love to sit down with Jeff and talk about some of those records, specifically the heavier direction the band was going with their music from 'Back for the Attack' through 'Dysfunctional' and than, we get to 'Shadowlife.' Then "Erase the Slate.'
Even George was getting heavier as a gututarist. It was there, they could have done some real wild stuff. Going through old video peformances the live shows to me seemed much heavier than the recorded albums did and I always wished the Dokken would have pushed the heavier more metal sound than the arena, popular rock that was being pushed out at the time.
How many bands from that era that had the arena sound could transition into actual heavier metal? A few but not all and certainly not many. I'd put Dokken in there that if they wanted to be heavier/darker band, sonically, they could have pulled it off. Instead, Elektra tries to sell them as a glam band. I know it is retrospectively but I always felt this.
Give me a time machine, the raw recordings. pro-tools, and a pitchshifter and I will give you a Dokken sound that sounds live but in the studio. That is how I always was hoping the sound would evolve and the best we got was a handful of shows over the course of 15 years that showcase these things from the band.
I like what he was saying at the very end about how Back For The Attack could have been stronger had they been more focussed. It’s a longer album so we got more Dokken on that album. But the songs aren’t as strong as a whole.
The album the ruined and did in the 90s was terrible which Don himself had talked extensively about as well.
Jeff Pilson isn’t one of those rockers that has an ego issue. E doesn’t strike me as someone who ever really has a bad day to the point that he upsets or offends others. He doesn’t s em to have resentment, hatred, or anger in his makeup. He truly is a professional in his trade.
Don says this, Jeff says that, George says something else, Mick goes along with whoever he sits with. Who do you believe?
In a recent interview, Don admitted that he was bipolar. That condition can make a person lie outright.
I dont waste anytime with it..
This is any 80s band just switch the name
@@Oc3anb0rn You are so right! Man, I used to watch those "Behind the Music" episodes on VH1, and they always seem to be the same story, with different faces and lots of dysfunction!
Mick actually backs up George in an interview with Brian Sword and the Double Stop podcast. There’s also one with Jeff I cannot recommend enough. Those interviews are here on UA-cam.
@xdreampcs8554 What about the producers and mixing engineers that helped them make the albums? Tom Werman and Michael Wagener
Literally every interview the story becomes more complex. Don says it happened one way then George says it happened another then Jeff Pilson says what seems like the reality.
Jeff is so smart and so diplomatic. I wouldn't hold my tongue if somebody asked me about the old days.
Music to my ears. Are you THE Racer X/Badlands Jeff Martin?
@@fullinbloom Not unless Jeff Martin identifies as Hispanic now. I think this guy's name is Jeff Martinaz 😄
@@user-ys9mf8sx7p I thought it was az as in Arizona, which I believe is where Jeff is from.
I'm just kidding around. Easy mistake. I love your channel. You should have far more subscribers. You have a really distinctive voice which is a good thing 👍@@fullinbloom
Bloom- once again, another Puzzle Piece on a Saturday morning here in Phoenix as I sip my coffee! ☕️
Jeff Rules!
That Cow Palace ticket is priceless. I actually have to move back to the Bay to look after my mom and dad soon. Keep rockin brother🎶🎸🎤
Dude your interviewing technique and skill and questions are fucking awesome! Very well done man
Full In Bloom has to be a CIA asset!
💯🎶🎸
Thank you, Leo! I appreciate you taking the time to listen.
Strong interview, well done. Interesting professional discussion, good audio quality, and nice & compact. Kudos.
Mr. Ron Keel. Thank you, sir. Good to see you in the comments!
I was at the Dio/Dokken show here in Dallas.
Jeff’s the man
Another great interview, love Jeff
full in bloom…
Thanks brother for keeping my Bands that I love alive with great interviews
Thank you for listening!
Thank you 9
back in the 80's dokken was the thin line between heavy metal and LA hair metal. They were right there on the border so you could still like them if you liked metallica or slayer but you couldn't like anyone further toward the hair metal end of the spectrum.
That’s funny I just liked whoever I wanted to like.
That's kinda funny Lol...I had a jean jacket with Iron Maiden back patch, Slayer, Metallica , Ozzy/Rhoads patches AND...? That one DOKKEN patch too...I was a HUGE Lynch fan then so....😎🤘🔥🤘
If Dokken had stayed together and cut back a bit on the nose candy, they’d be huge today
I agree 100%
Used to see Dokken at the Troub. Those were the days.
Great Dude!
Best rock content out there More of an in depth conversation than by the numbers interview Fantastic
Did a show with Steve's band many years ago. Great guy!
Jeff is always a great listen he is not about the bullshit and says it like it is. All that and he is an incredible artist!
Funny, Don Dokken never mentions he had a drug problem in interviews. Always kind of pointed the finger at other bands in the 80s
He has explicitly said the exact opposite in recent interviews haha. Said everyone else in the band had problems while he was sober writing music lmao.
He only mentions the cocaine, which in his mind, puts the others beneath him.
Love Jeff
@@whamsie4022 He's the type that thinks that because they're prescription drugs they're not as bad. A drug addict is a drug addict regardless of whether they're prescription or not right.