May 15th, 2008
From: http://www.stltoday.com/
By Terry Perkins
SPECIAL TO THE POST-DISPATCH
Three decades after releasing a debut recording that literally rewrote
the rulebook on how to succeed in rock and roll, Van Halen's original
lineup -- three-quarters of it anyway -- finally made it to its
long-delayed concert at Scottrade Center Saturday night.
Brothers Eddie Van Halen on guitar and drummer Alex Van Halen were
joined by long-exiled vocalist David Lee Roth and Wolfgang Van Halen on
bass (Eddie's 17-year-old son). Judging by the non-stop, two-hour
barrage of rock energy generated by the quartet at Scottrade Center--
and the unbridled enthusiasm of the close to capacity crowd for the
music, Van Halen seems to be back at the top of the hard rock hierarchy
among St. Louis rock fans.
How long the group might stay there is debatable, given its past
history, which reads like a rock and roll soap opera since Roth was
fired from the band in 1985. After Eddie Van Halen dumped Roth, vocalist
Sammy Hagar kept the Van Halen juggernaut rolling with a string of hits
that continued until 1996, when Hagar was dumped and the band began
recording once again with Roth.
But Roth's vocals only appeared on two cuts of a greatest hits release,
and the band moved on without him, using Gary Cherone briefly instead.
Hagar rejoined the band for a 2004 tour, but soon departed again -- as
did original bassist Michael Anthony, who also was fired unceremoniously
after the tour.
Despite all these "can't tell the players without a scorecard"
maneuvers, the current Van Halen lineup -- described by Roth Saturday
evening as "three-quarters original and one-quarter inevitable" --
blasted through 23 classic Van Halen tunes from the 1978--84 era with
energy, style and undeniable talent.
Opening with a no-hold-barred remake of the Kinks classic, "You Really
Got Me," the band immediately took the crowd back to its 1978 debut
album, and followed with two more tunes from that recording, "I'm The
One" and "Runnin' with the Devil."
Roth bounced around the stage with a Cheshire cat-like grin,
occasionally walking out into the audience on a semi-circular ramp. Roth
still has the same energy he had three decades ago, but his mane of hair
has been shorn to a short two-tone surfer cut, and those signature leg
kicks don't make it quite as high anymore. (Hey, he is 53.)
But Roth still looked buff after doffing his shirt, can still hit all
the notes and can still twirl a microphone stand like a demented drum
major, which he did to great effect throughout the show.
Alex Van Halen was a dynamo behind his massive drum kit, and his
obligatory drum solo was actually concise and enjoyable. Wolfgang Van
Halen proved to be an adequate replacement for Anthony on bass, although
he wasn't required to do too much heavy lifting on his instrument.
Of course, the heart and soul of the band is Eddie Van Halen, and his
guitar work throughout the evening once again underscored his amazing
technique, tone and unerring ability to create sizzling rock riffs.
The band rolled out hit after hit -- from "Dance the night Away," "I'll
Wait" and "Hot For teacher" to "Panama," "Ain't Talkin' About Love" and
the inevitable encore, "Jump."
Van Halen may have disappointed local fans with two previous
cancellations on this current tour back in October as well as March, but
Saturday night, all was forgiven. For at least the time being, Van Halen
rocks on.
Vocalist Ryan Shaw opened the show with a short set that featured his
soulful renditions of classic tunes by Janis Joplin, Otis Redding and
the Beatles.
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