May 24th, 2008
From: http://weekly-recorder.com/
By Steve Chess
The Weekly Recorder
The long awaited and much heralded David Lee Roth/Van Halen reunion tour
is finally underway and on Wednesday, April 30th, made a stop at Mellon
Arena. The childish Rock and Roll excesses of their callow youth largely
behind them, the band seems intent on maintaining a level of
professionalism in their current configuration. Van Halen's 2007 induction
into the Rock and Roll Hall Of Fame seemed to be an inevitable milestone
for the band. To many(most) musicians, the band is really the brothers,
Eddie and Alex. To the guitar geeks(term of endearment) the parade of
vocalist front men seems almost incidental. Despite health problems and
failures in personal relationships, that essential core of the band(the
brothers) has remained solid. Eddie Van Halen's pioneering two hand
tapping guitar technique has influenced several generations of guitar
players across the full spectrum of genres...including Classical(Dominic
Frasca - Eddie Van Halen For Eggheads). Bass player, Michael Anthony has
been replaced by Eddie's seventeen year old son, Wolfie (Wolfgang, for
Mozart).
Opening for Van Halen was the young R&B artist, Ryan Shaw. This fellow has
obviously studied the masters of previous eras and interprets his chosen
material armed with one of the finest vocal instruments to come along in a
while. His interpretation of Otis Redding's, "Try A Little Tenderness," is
nothing short of spectacular. It would be surprising if one were not to
hear of greater things from Ryan Shaw in the future.
Van Halen opened their show with their first hit to chart (back in the
seventies), "You Really Got Me." The Kinks cover tune has since become
associated as much with Van Halen as with the Kinks. The driving, major
second riff was enough to enliven a crowd looking for an excuse.
There was a circular "runway" extending in front of the main stage and
David Lee Roth would periodically use it to get a little more up close and
personal with audience members. A martial arts devotee since the age of
twelve, Roth, now 53, would frequently integrate classic martial arts
moves into his stage choreography. He even spun a chromed staff as if
fighting multiple imaginary opponents. His voice seemed to wane a little
in both intensity and range, as the evening wore on. Eddie and Wolfie
managed to take up some of the vocal slack, but the absence of bass player
Michael Anthony's high harmonies did leave a void that wasn't totally
filled.
The performance of "Somebody Get Me A Doctor" proceeded with predictable
grace until Eddie's outro gave a preview of the virtuosic mastery to come.
"Dance The Night Away," "Atomic Punk," "Mean Street" and "Panama" with
their often sophomoric themes and the somewhat incongruous ages of the
deliverers, were performed with such technical ferocity and musicianship
that the band was able to pull it off convincingly.
Halfway through the show, Alex Van Halen took a drum solo that was
performed as though by a Twenty-first Century incarnation of Jazz drumming
icon Buddy Rich. Using his acoustic and synthetic drum kit Alex went
through meter changes, syncopations and contrasting dynamics that made for
a drum solo that one didn't have to be a percussionist to enjoy.
Speaking of solos, Eddie Van Halen took a guitar solo between 'Panama' and
'Ain't Talking About Love' that was nothing short of high art. To the
casual listener it might have sounded like just any good Rock and Roll
guitar solo. It was not. He began by milking a carefully controlled
feedback from his eight double stacked amplifiers. Then while playing an
intricate passage he transitioned to his pedal board to sparingly
integrate digital effects to fashion a tone to accommodate the fingerboard
antics. Both hands tapping, natural and synthetic harmonics, manual volume
swells with onboard knobs, whammy bar, all of these factors coalesced to
build through numerous visceral crescendos and eventually morphed into a
pretty, almost symphonic coda.
After the last song of the regular set, the encore ("Jump") seemed bring
an energy the was strangely anticlimactic. There was a huge burst of
confetti and the performance was just fine, but the energy blocking just
seemed a little off. No Problem. The brothers once again proved to any
doubters that they still have 'it" and perhaps have taken it to another
level.
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