Dokken have shared some photos on social media along with the following message:
"Hey everybody! We just finished a great music video shoot at Meow Wolf's House Of Eternal Return with Director Chris Eyre for our new record coming out in September titled, Heaven Comes Down. If you haven't heard about Meow Wolf, check them out! And check out my cool jewelry by Cody Sanderson!"
Dokken's previous studio album, Broken Bones, was released in 2012.
Former Dokken guitarist George Lynch recently spoke with Vintage Rock Pod about his new record with Stryper vocalist Michael Sweet (Sweet & Lynch's Heart & Sacrifice). The topic of conversation got on to his former band Dokken, and the chances of the classic lineup of he, Don (Dokken), Mick (Brown) and Jeff (Pilson) reforming for any projects.
George shares his wish for something to happen, that he's sad not to have a relationship with Mick anymore, that he still works regularly with Jeff, and that any project, if it were to happen, would have to live up to the quality of the 80s version of the band and not just be a "cash grab". He also talks about what his relationship is currently like with Don Dokken.
Vintage Rock Pod: Will we see the classic lineup of Dokken reform for an album/tour?
George Lynch: “No. In a short, short version, the answer's no. The reason is, for one Mick has retired sold his drums, got rid of his drums, he doesn't play anymore. Maybe he goes and jams here and there but, he's kind of, I think, first of all mental and physical health, he's just kind of disconnected from that whole world. You know, he doesn't return our calls. It's just, that's okay. I think that's probably what he needs, needed to do. And I respect that.
It's sad in a way, because, you know, we're friends for decades and build something together, we came up together, you know, it was Mick and I, before anybody else before Jeff or Don. But I would love to still be friends with him, you know, maintain a relationship, but that's alright.
But, you know, Jeff has been in, I think, Foreigner for, I don't know, maybe 15 years, doing very, very well, keeps him very, very busy. And we do our side things, you know, The End Machine, which we're working on right now. Other projects, heavy hitters projects, we do that together, we live down the street from each other. So we're always working together, we love each other. And we always dream of kind of doing something else band wise that we can take out on the road and kind of do that whole Dokken building the band process again, and even at our age, we talk about that and hope that we'd be able to do that someday.
But doing it in the context of Dokken I think that ship has sailed because we tried so many times to put it back together, and it's like Humpty Dumpty. Don's got his thing, you know, he owns the name, his hired guys are great. And he's very happy with that. And they've been together for a lot of years. And they service the songs and people dig it. And if it's not broken, why fix it?
And, you know, for him to come back into a true band situation where everything's split up equally, and he's not the king, and he's not getting all the lions share of the money. I think that has something to do with the fact that it probably won't happen.
Jeff and I would probably do it. But we would do it with Steve Brown, which is Mick's brother who we use in The End Machine Records. Who looks just like Mick, plays just like Mick, the younger version. So that would work. But I really don't think it's gonna happen.
And you know, maybe if we were still in our 50s, maybe early 60s, but I'm going to be 69, Don's gonna be 70 I mean, I would want to make sure that if we did that last record, it would be a great book end to the whole story. And if it was anything less than that, I don't think it's worth doing because it would be, it's better to leave people with the memories of the good stuff like the first four or five albums whatever they were just leave it at that rather than going for a cash grab.”
Vintage Rock Pod: How is the relationship between you and don these days?
Lynch: “Wonderful. We're old men. We don't care. We're out there grateful for where we are and we're having fun. The band sounds great. Don's band sounds great. I go out you know, Lynch Mob opens up the show. We've been doing this for a few years now. So Lynch Mob opens the show. We do our thing, obviously don't play any Dokken songs, Don and comes out does his thing. And then I come out the end and I play three or four songs and it's all Kumbaya and everybody's happy.”
Watch the video below, and find the full interview here.