Jake E. Lee should’ve been a household name.
He wrote the riffs that kept Ozzy Osbourne relevant in the mid-’80s, carved lightning out of mahogany, and made the guitar sing like a wounded animal trying to escape the zoo. Then he was gone.
Fired.
Forgotten.
No explanation. No headlines. Just silence.
And yet, he never stopped playing.
Because the lifers never do.
We came from that generation that thought music could save us. We weren’t trying to become content creators, we were trying to become gods. The Beatles had turned black-and-white lives into Technicolor, and by the time Sabbath, Zeppelin and Van Halen hit, we wanted to plug in and join the revolution.
Our parents told us to get degrees. We bought Marshalls instead.
They told us to settle down. We chose distortion.
Back then, the sound wasn’t an accessory, it was oxygen. Every riff was a rebellion, every rehearsal a prayer. We learned how to solder cables before we learned how to pay bills. We thought tone could change the world.
Jake understood that.
He was too good for compromise, too strange for the machine. When he left the limelight, everyone thought he’d vanished, but he’d just retreated to the desert, still playing, still writing, still chasing the ghost of the perfect note.
After Ozzy, Jake E. Lee should have ruled the world. He formed Badlands, and for a moment, it felt like redemption.
It wasn’t corporate. It wasn’t polished. It was alive, beautiful, human.
Ray Gillen could sing like the gods were tearing open the sky. Jake’s tone was molten iron, all feel, no filter. They had the songs, the chemistry, the hunger.
And then it imploded. Not because of drugs, or label politics, or creative differences, although they did have disagreements which carried over into the live show, but because real life crashed the party.
Those albums will never be reissued on CD. The reasons are complicated, contested, and not mine to litigate, but the silence around them is deliberate.
Atlantic Records buried the catalog. The albums vanished from stores, from streaming, from history. A digital scar where greatness once lived.
And that’s the ruinous truth about rock and roll: it’s not built to last. It’s built to burn.
For every band that becomes immortal, a hundred vanish not because they weren’t good enough, but because they flew too close to something human, desire, tragedy, ego, love, disease.
We talk about “legacy” like it’s something we can engineer. But the universe doesn’t care how good your solo is. There are no guarantees. No justice. No moral equilibrium that balances out the riffs.
Sometimes the guy who gave his life to the craft ends up selling insurance. Sometimes the band that could’ve changed everything gets wiped from the archives because life doesn’t want to play fair.
But maybe that’s the point.
Maybe rock and roll was never about permanence, maybe it was about risk. The willingness to live without a safety net. The courage to make something beautiful in a world that erases beauty every day.
Jake E. Lee is still out there, still playing, still alive, still searching for a sound no one can algorithmically predict. Badlands may be gone, but that’s what makes them holy. You can’t stream them, you can only remember them, or, if you were lucky enough, you can feel the ghost of their frequencies vibrating somewhere under your ribs. Like YouTube. Which has basically the history of music on its side.
So yeah, the world forgot. The label buried the tapes. But the lifers remember. Because some of us didn’t just listen to the music. We were the music.
We didn’t lose the dream.
We lived it, scars, silence, and all.
Meanwhile, the world changed.
MTV collapsed. Algorithms replaced A&R men. Guitar solos went out of fashion. The kids traded fretboards for touchscreens. And the rest of us, the ones who built our lives around the volume knob, we watched the dream shrink until it fit in a playlist.
But here’s the thing: the fire never dies.
A few solo albums here and there and Jake came back decades later with Red Dragon Cartel, not to reclaim a throne, but to prove the riff still mattered. It wasn’t nostalgia; it was a declaration of faith. Every note said, I’m still here. I never stopped believing in the noise.
And that’s us too, the forgotten believers. We rent apartments instead of owning homes. We have tinnitus instead of retirement plans. We can’t remember passwords, but we can tell you the exact pickup configuration Randy Rhoads used on “Crazy Train.”
We’re not failures. We’re pilgrims who never found the promised land but kept walking anyway.
When Jake bends a note, it’s not just music, it’s defiance. It’s the sound of every dreamer who refused to clock in, every musician who still hauls a 4×12 cab into a bar for gas money and applause from thirty people who actually listen.
We sacrificed our lives for rock and roll. And if you have to ask why, you’ll never understand.
Because the show, that fleeting, electric communion between the amp and the crowd, that was the home we were looking for all along.
And when the lights go down and the first chord hits, everything that never worked out suddenly makes sense.
We didn’t miss out on life. We lived it louder.
The tragedy of Badlands isn’t ancient history, it’s prophecy. Every artist today lives on the same knife’s edge. One bad headline, one algorithmic shadow-ban, one rumor whispered into the right inbox, and you’re erased. Your catalog disappears, your legacy gets rewritten by people who never even heard your work. We don’t burn on stage anymore; we burn in silence, beneath the scroll.
But here’s what separates the lifers from the tourists: the lifers keep playing.
They know the system’s rigged. They know the world rewards the shallow and forgets the sincere. And they do it anyway.
Because somewhere inside the noise, the heartbreak, the lost royalties, there’s still that kid who picked up a guitar and thought sound could save the world.
That’s who Jake E. Lee still is. That’s who we are. We keep writing riffs in an era that doesn’t believe in permanence, because the truth was never meant to be preserved, only felt.
In a digital wasteland of content and convenience, the act of creation itself is rebellion.
And rebellion, like rock and roll, doesn’t die, it just goes underground and waits for the faithful to find it again.
Great writeup. You’re correct that Badlands has been erased from musical history which is a total shame. I was lucky to be at a record fair a few years back and grab a mint original pressing of the debut on vinyl for $50 Canuck bucks. I couldn’t believe it at the time. Now its like tripled in price. Voodoo Highway I grabbed on vinyl as well but its not an original pressing but I was not going to pay hundreds for it. Thats why the prices for Jakes stuff in Badlands is sky high as its all been erased by Atlantic Records. A shame really but thats the music biz for you.
Thanks Deke. I only have “Voodoo Highway” on CD. I had Badlands on vinyl but unfortunately it was one of the boxes I lost in my many house moves.
As a fan, I want this era of Jake E Lee to be remembered for its incredible music and how he merged his 80s metal tones with his love for 70s blues rock.
“The story everyone whispers, that Ray Gillen knowingly passed HIV to a record exec’s daughter, didn’t just destroy a band. It erased them.”
I had a guy on my blog comment about this. I never came out and said it, I just said “Those albums will never be reissued on CD and there’s a sad reason why.”
The guy commented that I should not perpetuate lies.
I said “What lie? Ray used to leave the bathroom door open after taking a shit. Nobody likes that.”
The guy never replied so I deleted his comment.
Anyway just beware, some people don’t like that being said.
Thanks for the heads up.
My point was really about how controversy, real or perceived, can bury catalogs rather than deal with complexity.
Yeah and sadly you are right.
I love your writing sir! This was awesome. Like Deke, I have an original Badlands on vinyl and I have it on cassette. The CD is impossible to find and at a good price. Still looking. I need Voodoo Highway though. Great band with an interesting story for sure. Recently I picked up Jake’s two Red Dragon Cartel albums and love those. As far as his stint with Ozzy, Shot in the Dark was my intro.
Red Dragon Cartel. I’m just happy that Jake was back and writing original music. I thought they were building momentum, and that third album never materialized.
I don’t know what it is. Two Ozzy albums, two official Badlands albums with Dusk unofficially released afterwards and two RDC albums.
And after i saw him on stage playing “The Ultimate Sin” at Ozzy’s farewell gig, I’m like, “this guy is a lifer… he needs to keep creating”. So hopefully he does that.