November 25th, 2007
From: http://www.ocregister.com/
Review: Led by a re-energized Eddie Van Halen and the hammy howling of
David Lee Roth, the original VH served up fierce nostalgia at its
homecoming show.
By BEN WENER
The Orange County Register
Pardon a bit of nostalgia, but two dozen songs in two hours from Van
Halen tends to bring out the gawking 8th grader in me. All it takes is a
few seconds of Eddie Van Halen's feverishly tapped arpeggios at the
start of "Mean Street" and I'm right back at El Rancho, summer '81,
wasting afternoons away with my fellow dweebs, wearing out Columbia
House cassettes of VH's "Fair Warning" until David Lee Roth sounds as if
he's singing underwater.
Mind you, I wasn't the only one who grew so wistful during the recently
inducted Hall of Famers' first major-scale show on home turf in 23 years
Tuesday night at Staples Center, the first of five Southern California
dates on this once-unimaginable reunion tour. (The band plays Sunday in
San Diego, then returns in mid-December for a Staples repeat and two
shows at Honda Center in Anaheim.)
At the outset, Roth, donning the first in a multicolored series of
ringmaster jackets and oversized top hats, declared himself "revved-up
in my get-up with no letup." That wasn't just boasting as usual -- the
barrage of blasts from the past came at a relentless pace here.
Virtually every classic-rock fixture in the band's catalog (from
"Runnin' With the Devil" to "Hot for Teacher") was revived and smartly
balanced by a brace of dusted-off gems (from "Romeo Delight" to "Little
Guitars") that surely satisfied long-suffering original-VH fans, for
whom Sammy Hagar's "Cabo Wabo"-ing presence in this swaggering sex
machine of a band remains as sacrilegious now as it did in '85.
But by the 20th tune and his fifth or sixth roundhouse kick -- the dude
sure can leap for 53 -- Roth had calmed down enough to give his
gape-mouthed carnival-barker shtick a rest and get pensive for a minute.
Doodling around a blues figure in anticipation of "Ice Cream Man," he
journeyed back to a misbegotten Thursday night in '72, back when the Van
Halen brothers were forming their surnamed outfit by playing backyards
in Pasadena. ("You know," said the showman, "the suburbs -- where they
tear out the trees and name the streets after them.")
Back then, Roth pointed out, "Everyone had a friend named Kenny."
Diamond Dave's Kenny used to roll him spliffs, then brush the pot seeds
off Pink Floyd LP covers. Mine camped out with me in front of Music Plus
at the Orange Mall for the better part of a weekend before tickets went
on sale for Van Halen's 1984 Forum shows -- the last local shows the
proper lineup played before Roth's buffoonish persona, increasingly at
odds with Eddie VH's quest for six-string and studio wizardry, took him
away from a group at its commercial peak and into a solo career of
steeply diminishing success.
Like so many other lifelong devotees, then, I've waited 23 years for
this oft-rumored return to materialize. Was it worth pining for, you
wonder? Mostly yes.
It helped that by some stroke of good karma I had ridiculously sick
seats, so close I think Roth could tell I was taking notes, and with my
boyhood crush (and Eddie's ex) Valerie Bertinelli a head-turn away,
singing along to "Panama" and radiating motherly pride over the
impressive accomplishment of son Wolfgang. (All of 16, yet clearly
infused with his father's virtuosity, the younger Van Halen skillfully
assisted his Uncle Alex in anchoring these heavy rockers, often with
more fluid finesse than I imagine former bassist Michael Anthony can
muster these days.)
Given that vantage point, it would have been difficult for this already
well-reviewed hype to come up short. Not that Roth kept from undoing
things. It's funny: When Van Hagar played the Pond three years ago,
Sammy was up to snuff but Eddie was haggard and huffy; now, physically
robust after a stint in rehab earlier this year, the smiling boyishness
having returned to his 52-year-old mug, Eddie is in superb form -- but
Dave is, well, if not haggard then definitely huffy.
He's simply not up to the task of carrying such a long haul of hits,
songs that decades ago could push him to his vocal limits and which he
hasn't the stamina for now, much less the capability to conjure the
outrageous screeching howls of yore. Instead, after the first half-dozen
tunes, Roth -- whose sense of tempo is, to put it kindly, loose --
resorted to fragmentation that emphasized choruses and his patented
wailing yet left key verses drastically clipped.
He rarely responded with a hearty "I want some too!" whenever Eddie and
Wolfgang would holler the title of "Everybody Wants Some!!" Nor did he
fill in many of the intentional gaps in "So This Is Love?" or
"Unchained," though he was never so off that any song was
unrecognizable. Strangely enough, he seemed to coast through the final
third of the set as if just gaining a second wind, coming across
especially strong on "I'll Wait" and "Jamie's Cryin'."
Granted, it didn't hurt to have thousands of fans (including teenagers
who weren't alive the first time 'round) chanting every word of every
song and covering up Roth's fumbled phrases, anymore than it was harmful
to have Eddie and Wolfie's backing vocals sweetened by tapes, presumably
of Anthony's considerably high harmonies. (Note, too, how the
barbershop-quartet bit from "I'm the One" was excised.) Call that impure
if you wish, but with such a scattershot frontman, such
behind-the-scenes bolstering was welcome.
Whatever persistently hammy Roth lacked, however, the rest of the band
compensated for with power and precision. Where Alex was so slack as to
seem bored during the 2004 reunion, here he hammered away with the fleet
force of a stickman half his age, motoring the atomic punk of "I'm the
One" and "Hot for Teacher" unerringly and thundering through "And the
Cradle Will Rock ..." and "Ain't Talkin' 'Bout Love."
Eddie's recovery, however, is a marvel that extends well beyond his
toned physique. His playing here -- lightning-fast yet never mushy,
still teeming with new tricks -- was a stunning reminder of his largely
unparalleled expertise, his stormy sonic squalls surpassed only by what
few greater giants of the instrument (Hendrix, Zappa) there are. His
spotlight turn, a composite of his most famous solos (from "Eruption,"
"Cathedral," "Women in Love" and more), was at times positively
mesmerizing. All these years later, you still watch the guy astonished
at how effortlessly such complex fretwork comes to him.
To see him doing split kicks and tearing up so many monster riffs on his
custom-made striped Charvel after such a long, rocky period out of the
limelight was not just nostalgic but heartening -- and, I suspect, well
worth the admission price to many attendees. That Van Halen served up a
generous, few-frills set in which the quartet played nearly all of its
1978 debut while touching on almost all of the high points from every
record that followed undoubtedly added value.
Where it all goes from here, well, that really doesn't matter. There's
talk of a new album next year, and there's reason to think such an
endeavor wouldn't be lame. Yet let us not forget that it was only a year
ago that Eddie was calling Roth "Cubic Zirconia" and "a loose cannon."
(Hagar? "The little red worm.") Eddie seems like a changed man, and this
outing (with Bob Marley's son Ky-Mani capably warming up with racked-up
reggae) is obviously re-energizing.
But I'd almost rather it all flame out once more. Keeps things in
character -- and makes these shows that much more special.
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