October 18th, 2007
From: http://leisureblogs.chicagotribune.com/
One of the more admirable qualities about that lip-smacking would-be
gigolo in leather bell-bottoms, David Lee Roth, is that he could always
laugh at himself.
And Roth did a lot of laughing Tuesday at the sold-out Allstate Arena,
where the partially reunited Van Halen rocked songs that date back to the
eight-track cassette era: an atomic cover of the Kinks' "You Really Got
Me," "And the Cradle Will Rock," "Ain't Talkin' 'Bout Love," "Jump."
Van Halen doesn't have this reunion thing down to a science yet: They
ousted founding bassist Michael Anthony and replaced him with guitarist
Eddie Van Halen's 16-year-old son, Wolfgang. The kid did just fine, but
his presence on this tour is emblematic of the ego wars that derailed the
band in the last decade. During these wayward years, Van Halen briefly
reconciled with its second most-famous lead singer, Sammy Hagar, for a $54
million tour.
This time the band ignored the nine top-40 hits it scored with Hagar in
1985-96, and focused on a different kind of nostalgia: the six albums it
recorded with Roth, from 1978 to 1984. Though not a singer or musician on
par with Hagar, Roth is a more entertaining front man, and the personality
associated with the band's most durable songs. It was a much leaner show
than the '04 Hagar tour, 25 songs packed into two hours with a minimum of
pyrotechnics and only one drum solo (the band plays a second Chicago show
Thursday at the United Center).
Roth didn't sing, exactly, but he did bark, yelp, and smile a lot. He was
on his best behavior, focusing on the songs and deferring to the Van Halen
family members. He even hugged Eddie Van Halen a few times; the least he
could do for walking back into a job that pays the band about $1.5 million
a night.
For the fans, it was the tour they'd been anticipating since they were
sporting mullets. With the notable exception of Anthony, it was an
adequate reincarnation of the band in its leering, pop-metal glory. The
boys may be in their 50s now, but they still screamed about hot girls, hot
teachers and runnin' with the devil like hormone-addled teenagers.
Roth's boys-will-be-boys shenanigans were balanced by the still awe-
inspiring virtuosity of Eddie Van Halen. While the rhythm section clubbed
away, the guitarist turned six strings into a mini-orchestra. The night's
finest entertainment was on the big screen behind the stage, which showed
close-ups of Van Halen's hands at work. In "Jamie's Cryin'," he alternated
raffish commentary with a lost-in-space solo.
After recovering from cancer, hip surgery and alcoholism, the still-lean
guitarist made sure that Roth wasn't the only one having a laugh on stage.
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