An English hard rock institution founded by former
Deep Purple vocalist
David Coverdale,
Whitesnake emerged in the late 1970s with a style steeped in the driving British blues-rock of bands like
Thin Lizzy,
Led Zeppelin, and of course,
Deep Purple. After recalibrating their sound to better adapt to the burgeoning '80s hair and pop-metal scene, they found commercial success with 1984's
Slide It In and then cannonballed into the mainstream in 1987 with the release of their multi-platinum-selling eponymous seventh effort, which spawned the power ballad "Is This Love" and the massive crossover number one hit "Here I Go Again."
Whitesnake weathered the onslaught of grunge and alternative rock for as long as they could but eventually ceased operations in the early '90s. A one-off studio album,
Restless Heart, appeared in 1997, but the group didn't officially re-form until 2002. Since then,
Coverdale and company have released a string of well-received studio albums, including 2008's Good to Be Bad and 2011's Forevermore; the former hit number seven on the U.K. Albums Chart. In 2019, they celebrated their
Deep Purple roots with the covers-based The Purple Album and again cracked the U.K. Top Ten with 2019's
Flesh & Blood. They also released a trilogy of retrospective anthologies, 2020's
Love Songs, 2020's
The Rock Album, and 2021's
The Blues Album, detailing their legacy at the nexus of commercial hard rock, pop, and heavy metal.
Yorkshire native
David Coverdale honed his powerful vocals in local groups in the late '60s and early '70s, so when he saw that
Deep Purple was looking for a replacement for the recently departed Ian Gillian, he jumped at the chance to audition. He officially joined the band in 1973 and made his first studio appearance on the group's gold-selling 1974 effort
Burn. He stayed on for two more albums,
Stormbringer (1974) and
Come Taste the Band (1975), the latter of which marked the beginning of an eight-year hiatus for the group and the dawn of a new era for
Coverdale.
In 1977, he released his debut solo effort, White Snake, with Northwinds arriving the following year. Both LPs featured a core backing group consisting of Mick Moody (guitar),
Bernie Marsden (guitar),
Neil Murray (bass), and
Dave Dowle (drums) operating under the moniker The White Snake Band, which
Coverdale officially shortened to
Whitesnake for the 1978 EP
Snakebite. The EP featured a brooding cover version of
Bobby "Blue" Bland's "Ain't No Love in the Heart of the City," which became the newly minted group's first hit. Continuing in the blues-rock style of its predecessor, the full-length
Trouble arrived later that year and saw
Coverdale reunite with former
Deep Purple bandmate keyboardist
Jon Lord. 1979's
Lovehunter courted controversy with its lurid cover art created by fantasy artist Chris Achilleos, but still managed to reach the number 29 slot on the U.K. Albums Charts. It also marked the end of the road for kitman
Dave Dowle, who was replaced by another ex-
Deep Purple member,
Ian Paice;
Paice made his studio debut on 1980's Ready an' Willing. The group's most successful effort to date, the LP peaked at number six in the U.K. and entered the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 on the strength of the fiery single "Fool for Your Loving." Fan favorite Come and Get It, released in 1981, brought
Whitesnake even closer to the mainstream, securing the number two slot on the U.K. albums charts and finding favor with European audiences as well, but momentum stalled the following year while
Coverdale took some personal time off to look after his daughter, who was battling bacterial meningitis.
A new iteration of the group reconvened in 1982 that saw
Marsden,
Paice, and
Murray replaced by guitarist
Mel Galley from
Trapeze, bassist
Colin Hodgkinson, and drummer
Cozy Powell, all of whom appeared on that year's
Saints & Sinners. The album spawned the U.K. hits "Guilty of Love" and "Here I Go Again," the latter of which would find new life in 1987 when it was re-recorded for the band's eponymous seventh outing.
Whitesnake beefed up their sound for 1984's
Slide It In, which featured the hits "Slow an' Easy" and "Love Ain't No Stranger" and became their fourth Top Ten album in the U.K. It also found favor in the U.S. thanks to a more muscular remix by producer David Geffen and featuring guitarist
John Sykes, and would later go double-platinum following the massive success of the group's next LP.
Having largely ignored the American market in the past,
Coverdale elected to relocate to the States, where he assembled a new version of the group that featured
Sykes on both rhythm and lead guitars,
Murray, drummer
Aynsley Dunbar, and keyboardist
Don Airey from the
Ozzy Osbourne band and
Rainbow. Applying ample amounts of studio sheen, the band emerged from the studio in 1987 with the career-defining
Whitesnake, a commercial juggernaut that struck a balance between powerful rockers ("Here I Go Again," "Still of the Night") and sultry power ballads ("Is This Love"). The LP was certified eight-times-platinum in the U.S., with the singles and their accompanying videos becoming near-ubiquitous by the end of the year; they starred actress Tawny Kitaen, who was briefly married to
Coverdale and featured guitarists
Vivian Campbell and
Adrian Vandenberg miming
Sykes' guitar parts; the latter, along with the rest of the band, had been fired prior to filming. Now arena headliners,
Whitesnake headed into 1988 with a full head of steam, but creative differences led to the departure of
Vivian Campbell and a serious wrist injury forced
Adrian Vandenberg to step back for a time, leaving
Coverdale to once again assemble a new team. He managed to enlist
Frank Zappa and
David Lee Roth guitar phenom
Steve Vai, who along with a rehabilitated
Vandenberg, made for a formidable six-string duo. Bolstered by the addition of bassist
Rudy Sarzo (
Quiet Riot) and drummer
Tommy Aldridge (
Ozzy Osbourne), the group released
Slip of the Tongue in 1989, which reached platinum status and included the hits "The Deeper the Love" and a new version of "Fool for Your Loving." Upon completing the tour in support of the album,
Coverdale announced that
Whitesnake had run its course, and that he would be taking a break from music. During this time,
Vandenberg,
Sarzo, and
Aldridge formed a new group, Manic Eden, while
Coverdale began working with former
Led Zeppelin guitarist
Jimmy Page, resulting in the 1993 release Coverdale-Page.
A new
Whitesnake lineup emerged in 1994 to tour in support of a recently issued Greatest Hits LP, and in 1997
Coverdale teamed up with
Vandenberg for a solo effort, but the record company persuaded the pair to release the bluesy, R&B-based
Restless Heart under the
Whitesnake moniker. While on tour,
Coverdale and
Vandenberg performed an intimate acoustic show in Japan that was later released as Starkers in Tokyo, but by the end of 1997,
Coverdale had once again put the band into hibernation, where it would stay for the next five years.
Whitesnake re-formed in 2003 as a touring entity to celebrate their 25th anniversary with a lineup consisting of
Coverdale, guitarists
Doug Aldrich (
Dio) and
Reb Beach (
Winger), bass player
Marco Mendoza, drummer
Tommy Aldridge, and keyboard player
Timothy Drury. In 2006 the band inked a deal with Steamhammer/SPV Records and released a double-live LP, Live: In the Shadow of the Blues, with an all-new studio album Good to be Bad, arriving two years later, which swapped out
Mendoza for bassist
Uriah Duffy and
Aldridge for drummer
Chris Frazier. Experiencing voice issues resulting from severe vocal-fold edema and a left vocal-fold vascular lesion,
Coverdale spent the next few years recuperating but returned in 2011 to helm the band's well-received 11th studio effort Forevermore, which was released via
Frontiers. 2015's The Purple Album saw the band re-record a set of
Coverdale-era
Deep Purple songs. Digging deep into their recorded work,
Whitesnake issued
Unzipped in 2018, which collected rare and unreleased acoustic performances recorded over two decades. It was followed in early 2019 by the band's 13th long-player,
Flesh & Blood, which hit number seven on the U.K. albums chart and cracked the Billboard 200. They also released a trilogy of themed retrospective anthologies, including 2020's
Love Songs, 2020's
The Rock Album, and 2021's
The Blues Album. ~ James Christopher Monger