Kingdom Come (band)

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Kingdom Come
Background information
Genre(s) Hard Rock
Years active 1987-1989, 1993-present
Label(s) Polygram
Website http://kingdomcome.de
Members
Lenny Wolf, Eric Foerster, Yenz Leonhart, George Maycock jr. & Hendrik Thiesbrummel
Former members
Danny Stag, Rick Steier, James Kottak

Kingdom Come is a hard rock band fronted by Hamburg-born vocalist Lenny Wolf. The group's first album, Kingdom Come become quite popular and is remarkable for its classic hard rock sound, reminding such bands as Led Zeppelin and Scorpions.

Contents

[edit] History

The group was formed in 1987 after the breakup of Wolf's moderately successful rock project Stone Fury. Wolf's new record company, Polygram, allowed him incredible freedom to assemble Kingdom Come's lineup and direct its sound, recruiting Pittsburgh-based lead guitarist Danny Stag, Louisvillians Rick Steier (guitar) and James Kottak (Drums) and Northern Californian Johnny B. Frank on bass. Kingdom Come marked the first band where Wolf sang without playing guitar. (The frontman later admitted that, for a while, it was a very awkward adjustment.)

Kingdom Come's sound was thought by many to be highly derivative of Led Zeppelin's, to the point that some listeners initially thought that Kingdom Come was actually a Led Zeppelin reunion.[1] In 1988, Lenny & company released their debut LP, Kingdom Come.

They toured in England supporting Magnum on their Wings Of Heaven tour during that year.

The band's first single, "Get It On," was a big enough hit on AOR stations that the band's eponymous debut went gold. Their second single/video for the power ballad "What Love Can Be" received much airplay on US radio and MTV. By the time the single/video "Loving You" was released, the album had sold to platinum status in the United States, Germany and Canada, among other music markets. The band was chosen to open for the North American Monsters of Rock tour in 1988, supporting Dokken, Scorpions, Metallica and Van Halen. Following that, they were tapped to support the Scorps on their North American "Savage Amusement" tour, until they were forced off. (According to Stag, Lenny Wolf found the stage ramps reserved for the Scorpions' set irresistible. After several reprimands from The Scorpions' management, the singer continued to use the full stage and the band were asked to forfeit the rest of the tour.)

Quickly, the band were directed by management and Polygram to get a new recording available. In 1989, Kingdom Come released their next LP, called "In Your Face". However, the subsequent backlash against the band's perceived appropriating of the Zeppelin sound (earning them the derisive moniker "Kingdom Clone") hurt their commercial appeal, and after the band's second album failed to sell well, all members other than Wolf quit the group.

Stag went back to Pittsburgh and immersed himself in blues and classic rock projects. Steier and Kottak went back to Kentucky and assembled the short-lived Wild Horses who released a poor-selling album on Atlantic Records. Both would later resurface in Warrant. James Kottak is now in Scorpions. Frank has kept a very low profile for the last few years. With a new lineup, Kingdom Come managed one more international release on Polygram (Hands of Time). By 1993, Wolf had returned to Germany to regroup. With a new, mostly-German lineup, Kingdom Come remains active with several subsequent releases and tours in Europe under their collective belt.

[edit] Members

  • Lenny Wolf -- Lead vocals
  • Eric Foerster -- Lead guitar
  • Yenz Leonhart -- Rhythm guitar
  • George Maycock jr. -- Bass guitar
  • Hendrik Thiesbrummel -- Drums and percussion

[edit] Trivia

The 1989 song "Led Clones" by Ozzy Osbourne and Gary Moore is about the band's status as a Led Zeppelin clone.

On the 1988 Monsters of Rock tour, it is said that the members of Metallica would walk by Wolf and "cough" while saying Robert Plant's name.

[edit] Discography

  • Kingdom Come (1988)
  • Get It On (Single) (1988)
  • What Love Can Be (Single) (1988)
  • In Your Face (1989)
  • Hands of Time (1991)
  • Bad Image (1993)
  • Twilight Cruiser (1995)
  • Live & Unplugged (Live) (1996)
  • Master Seven (1997)
  • Balladesque (Compilation) (1998)
  • Too (2000)
  • Independent (2002)
  • Perpetual (2004)
  • Ain't Crying For The Moon (2006)

[edit] References

  1. ^ allmusic.com bio

[edit] External links

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