Career
Stag was noted for his soulful blues rock playing, a style that by the late 1980s had been somewhat of a lost art with many hard rock guitarists at the time playing a more technical approach to guitar. Prior to joining Kingdom Come, Stag played in Los Angeles based bands Population 5, and WWIII. Along with future Kingdom Come bandmate, Johnny B. Frank, a former keyboard player for Josie Cotton.
Wolf had asked Frank if he knew any blues guitarists and Frank recommended Stag. At the audition, Wolf asked Stag to improvise a solo for their upcoming single, "What Love Can Be," which resulted in Stag landing the lead guitar duties for Kingdom Come.
The band"s debut album Kingdom Come quickly climbed the billboard charts peaking at number 12, with worldwide sales greatly exceeding one million copies.
Kingdom Come were one of five bands selected (Scorpions, Metallica, Van Halen, and Dokken, the others) to appear on the Monsters of Rock Tour 1988. Of the several tour dates included a stop in Stag"s hometown of Pittsburgh, where the band played in front of over 30,000 people at the Three Rivers Stadium. The album managed to break into the top 50 of the Billboard 200 and the album had sold over 486,000 copies when the band suddenly broke up in August,1989, while in the middle of a co-headlining tour with the band Warrant.
Upon leaving Kingdom Come, Stag would later resurface with the band Royal Jelly, (Island Records, 1994).
While on tour in America in 2008 during Rocklahoma, Lenny Wolf and the classic lineup of Kingdom Come reunited for a one off gig at a Los Angeles club, Stag was the only member not present at the reunion. He is the brother of Pittsburgh Penguins television play-by-play man Paul Steigerwald and KDKA-television Sportscaster John Steigerwald.