October 8th, 2007
From: http://www.thestar.com/
Ben Rayner
Pop Music Critic
Skip the turkey, get a little ham -- it all evens out.
Actually, make that a lot of ham: Any of the 20,000 or so concertgoers who
might have skipped Thanksgiving dinner to catch David Lee Roth's reunion
with long-estranged bandmates Eddie and Alex Van Halen at the Air Canada
Centre last night were instead fed incontrovertible truth: that the one
place the unrepentantly showboating Roth truly belongs is onstage with Van
Halen. Not on the radio, not circling the casino circuit on his iffy solo
catalogue, not tending to sucking chest wounds as a paramedic, but onstage
fronting the band whose status as one of American hard rock's defining
standard bearers has noticeably dwindled in the 22 years since his
departure.
This appears obvious to all involved in the reunion endeavour, since there
was no evidence of the legendary bad blood between Eddie and Roth
displayed in the wide grins and re-emerging onstage camaraderie that lent
last night's sold-out ACC gig -- another follows on Thursday night -- an
infectiously joyous spirit that extended beyond the well-oiled long-
weekend throng jamming the stands.
All four band members were genuinely beaming throughout the two-hour-plus
show, and none more than proud papa Eddie, whose 16-year-old son Wolfgang
justified the doting-dad treatment he was repeatedly accorded during the
show for his precocious ability to fill ousted original bassist Michael
Anthony's shoes. The way Eddie kept looking at his kid -- fawning
sometimes, encouraging others and often simply awed -- was actually kinda
touching, and melted much of the cynicism one often can't help but feel
towards these big-ticket rock revivals.
What put this one over was the feeling that the band, only a half-dozen
dates into the tour, is still getting a grip on not just how much Van
Halen fans have been waiting to hear the classic material from its
superior first six records with Roth -- from 1978's "Runnin' With the
Devil," "Jamie's Cryin'" and "Ain't Talkin' 'Bout Love" to 1984's
indelible "Hot For Teacher," "Panama" and "Jump," there wasn't a lapse of
momentum in the set list -- but also on how much it's missed playing them
to noisy arenas seething with jubilant devotees.
Roth, shorn of his blond mane and decked out like a top-hatted mariachi
musician, isn't quite the athletic livewire he was 20 years ago, but his
voice and his wit are perfectly intact. Eddie, likewise, still manages to
surprise with the kinetic fervour and evolving sonic strangeness of his
virtuoso guitar playing. It's a pity, really, that these two parts had to
piss away two dodgy decades before finally realizing the value of the sum
they'd lost.
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