October 2nd, 2007
From: http://www.newsobserver.com/
GREENSBORO -- It's always a cool moment when the lights go down and a roar
goes up. But there are certain shows where that anticipatory energy is
just overwhelming, which was definitely the case Saturday night at
Greensboro Coliseum. At long last, after 22 years of estrangement,
original hambone lead singer David Lee Roth is back in the Van Halen fold
and it's about damn time.
"We came here to entertain you...I'm the one, the one you love," Roth sang
on the second song of the set, and there was not a person in the room who
doubted it.
Of course, it's easy to be skeptical or even cynical about this much-
ballyhooed reunion tour, as well as creeped out by the cash-in aspect --
and disappointed that original Van Halen bassist Michael Anthony has been
seemingly excised from the band's history, replaced by guitarist Eddie Van
Halen's teenage son Wolfgang. Nevertheless, there's just something so
right about seeing Roth up there where he belongs again, even without the
mane of hair he used to sport.
By the end of the very first song (a crushing "You Really Got Me") Roth
was scatting his vocal and Eddie Van Halen was duplicating it syllable for
syllable on his guitar. That goofy sense of fun is exactly the dimension
Van Halen lacked during those long, dark Sammy Hagar years.
From Eddie's opening guitar salvo, the band came rampaging out of the gate
at a pace that would have been impossible to maintain -- and things did
flag a bit midway through. This was the second show of the tour and
Wolfgang is still getting his sea legs as Van Halen's bassist and backup
vocalist. So there were some rough spots, especially on the songs
requiring a lighter touch ("Dance the Night Away," "Jamie's Cryin'").
Still, there were only a handful of clunkers, and virtually the entire
soldout crowd stayed on its feet for the entire two-hour show. It was
classic in every sense of the term, right down to the extended drum- and
guitar-solo interludes. And here's one aspect where having Wolfgang rather
than Anthony in the band is an advantage: no bass solo. Wolfgang did fine,
by the way, although he's not exactly overflowing with stage presence. You
just sort of lost track of him for long stretches, which was fine because
he was anything but the focal point.
When Roth departed Van Halen in 1985, there were some hard feelings that
seemed to deepen over time. So the singer's onstage interactions with his
old bandmates were as much a point of interest as his singing. He and
Eddie both seemed to be having great fun, even hugging a few times (and
drawing roars of approval). It seems like only a matter of time before old
tensions emerge. But given the fact that Roth has the most to gain from
this reunion, one might hope for the best there. Roth pulled off just
about every song credibly, even though his voice has undeniably lost some
of its higher range. But he hasn't lost a thing in the showmanship
department.
Roth's saving grace has always been that he's onto himself, which is even
more important now that he's starting to look like your skeevy older uncle
who likes to tell dirty jokes and flirt with girls young enough to be his
daughter. He'd be creepy if he weren't so funny. The great thing about
Roth being back in Van Halen is being reminded all over again that he and
Eddie Van Halen both make each other funnier. Some of the most amusing
jokes of the night were skronky noises on guitar.
The set list concentrated on Van Halen's early glory days, 1978-84,
peaking with a couple of for-the-ages classics, "Hot for Teacher" and
"Panama." The former song was almost speed-metal, multiples faster than it
used to be. And on the latter song, Roth hit those high-pitched yelps just
right and it felt like 1984 all over again.
For a couple of hours, at least, it was.
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