December 26th, 2007
From: http://www.knac.com/
By A Headbanger, Do You Bang Head?
At Key Arena
Written by R. Scott Bailey
With 22 years since I last had an unsuccessful opportunity to see the
original Van Halen, a lot has changed, but certainly not my love that
classic Van Halen sound. So when tickets went on sale in the summer, I did
it old school. I went to a ticket seller 2 and 1/2 hours before tickets
went on sale. Since I live about 3 hours from Seattle and that fact that
the concert was in December, is probably the reason that I was the only
person in line at this location. I had stopped at another location before
this one, and was given a ticket to hold my 4th place in line. I could
come back 15 minutes before they went on sale and get my spot back. Well,
for the Mighty Van Halen, 4th place in line was not good enough. So off I
went to another location. There, I was first in a line of 1. This was
perfect. 180 minutes later I had 2 tickets for Row 24 center stage floor
seats. I can almost hear "Look at all the People Here TONIGHT!" ringing in
my ears.
After waiting a few months...a few long months, the show date has arrived.
And of course a snowstorm has hit the mountain pass between Seattle and
me. So in my quest to make sure I get to the show, I take the long way
around to Seattle, through Portland, Oregon. After 6 1/2 hours of driving
in the torrential rain, I arrived in Seattle the night before the show.
On Monday, I met my friends in front of Key Arena and we headed in. We
immediately stood in line with the throngs of Van Halenites in line at the
merch booth. With a small spattering of t-shirts and some expensive other
merch, I decided on a nice retro logo shirt. (Side note: if you are buying
a shirt at the show, make sure you go a little larger than normal. They
are thin shirts that will shrink like you won't believe.)
With concert time coming on soon, we got to our seats, hopeful that the
opening band would be decent. With Ky-Mani Marley (son of Bob) selected as
the opening band by a certain Mr. Roth, I knew it would be different. And
after a 30 minute set of pretty good reggae from Mr. Marley, (including 2
of his dad's songs), the crowd cheered him and his band as they thanked
Van Halen and left the stage.
Only 30 minutes pass when the lights go down and the boys hit the stage to
the opening crunch of "You Really Got Me". Dave and Eddie bounded onto the
stage like they have been doing this forever. The energy from the stage
was electric. The band was in fine form. Dave and Ed are both in
tremendous shape and Alex continues to pound the skins with gusto. You
could almost feel the crown dissect Wolfgang's presence on stage. Well,
the kid plays well, and is a pretty good backup singer. I don't know if he
could fill the energy and stage persona of the missing Michael Anthony,
but an admirable job was put forth. Keep up the good work kid.
Each song from the band was met with thunderous applause from the crowd.
Some of these songs have not been heard live for a long time. Having Mr.
Roth back is the shot in the ass the band needed. Not to bash Sammy Hagar,
but the past 10 years worth of Van Halen has been emotion free and energy
free. Sammy may be the first to admit that, too.
As the band tore through songs from Van Halen I in what started out as
almost a chronological time trip through their albums (yes I said albums
dammit), each song was a welcome breath of high energy rock. By the time
Dave screamed out "Somebody Get Me a Doctor", the crowd was in the palm of
his hand. Eddie wailed on some blues riffs that Dave would vocalize and
they seemed to be really enjoying some of that comradery that they made
famous so long ago. Dave kicked, wailed and strutted, his vocals sounding
better and his smile getting bigger with each song. Eddie The band played
gem after gem of long missed Van Halen. My only down time for the show was
the drum solo. I guess I am just not a fan of that certain throwback. But
Eddie's guitar solo was certainly welcome. After seeing a train wreck of a
solo on the last tour with Sammy, Eddie really redeemed himself. A nice
long flashy and energetic version of "Eruption" and other Van Halen
pyrotechnics, made this solo one the crowd favorites, though it was
unusually placed towards the end of the set.
Dave gave us a cool story about from his youth (ice cream trucks used to
store beer, joints passed around and the high quality of 1970's weed) to
lead off "Ice Cream Man". Dave is no slouch on the guitar and the intro
was great. Eddie's guitar screamed as he and the band joined in. I true
highlight for me. Afterwards they lead into the hits from 1984. "Panama"
was great to here again, but the surprise was getting to hear "I'll Wait".
They closed with "Jump". The crowd ate it up and the band took its' bow. I
hoped for one more encore, maybe "Hear about it Later" or "Top Jimmy", but
alas no additional encore. They had played a long stretch of songs, and I
can only hope this band continues to tour. I will be first in line for
tickets again. Lets hope I don't have to wait another 22 years.
For those of you that are not really Van Halen fans, do those of us that
are a favor and do not attend. If you didn't like them before this, you
won't like them now. They are, aside from a small line-up change and some
age, the same Van Halen we all fell in love with so long ago.
Here is a set list of songs. They are not in order, but I think I hit all
the songs from the show. Anyone who has a complete and correct set list,
please let me know.
* You Really Got Me
* Running with the Devil
* I'm the One
* Little Dreamer
* Jaime's Cryin'
* Ice Cream Man
* Ain't Talkin' Bout Love
* Eruption
* Dance the Night Away
* Somebody Get Me a Doctor
* Beautiful Girls
* ...And the Cradle Will Rock
* Everybody Wants Some
* Romeo Delight
* Meanstreet
* Unchained
* So This Is Love?
* Oh, Pretty Woman
* Little Guitars
* Panama
* I'll Wait
* Hot for Teacher
* 1984
* Jump
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