VAN HALEN NEWS DESK

“The Foot” Comes Down in Denver

From Voice of The Spirit:

Concert Review—Chickenfoot at the Fillmore in Denver, Colorado

September 11, 2009

IMG_3407I am a writer. And when one is striving to maintain professionalism, it is one’s duty to present an unbiased account of the subject matter, is it not?

I tried. I really tried, but I just couldn’t do it. I was swept “Down the Drain” and it was so, so fine…

I first saw Chickenfoot perform at the Fillmore in San Francisco on May 17, 2009. It was their third live performance as a band; their debut CD had not yet been released. That show blew me away.

The Denver show topped it.

Chickenfoot was tighter than ever. And they delivered the kind of rock music that’s timeless and unforgettable.

IMG_3318The thing that continually amazes me about this band is that none of them upstages the others. They are all top-notch musicians in their own rites but they complement one another beautifully and it seems so effortless.

That evening, I had a backstage tour ticket. Our group was escorted into the venue to watch Davy Knowles and Back Door Slam, the band who would be opening for Chickenfoot, do their soundcheck. Davy is only 22 years old, but he has the soul of an old blues man. His music is in the same vein as that of Jonny Lang. Rock and the blues will never die as long as there are talented people like Davy keeping the soul alive.

IMG_3331We were then escorted into Chickenfoot’s dressing area, a room a little larger than a closet, where all the trunks of clothes stood open and waiting for the band. I think Sammy’s trunk had more shoes than shirts! Michael Anthony’s still had the “VH” logo on it from his Van Halen days.

We were then taken to the hospitality room where the band hangs out before the show. There was a small drum set for Chad Smith, guitars, amps and equipment for Joe Satriani and Mikey, including Mikey’s signature Jack Daniel’s bass with two small shooters of JD stuck in it, a portable wine trunk stocked with about two cases of wine for Sammy, and platters of fruit, sweets and snacks. And of course, Sammy’s bottle of Cabo Wabo tequila was chilling in the refrigerator.

IMG_3332

They then took us onstage and showed us all the guitars in sectioned crates, the sound board, the snakes of cords, floor lights all in position, amps and Chad’s drums. What a strange feeling being up there and looking down at the empty room which would soon come to life with music and screaming fans. The Fillmore has huge glass chandeliers hanging from the ceiling over what used to be its massive dance floor.

I couldn’t help but think about the many people it takes to put on a show of this caliper and how hard their lives must be.

IMG_3338After the tour, those of us who wanted to participate were given a digital recorder to record the song “Sexy Little Thing.” Apparently the band wanted audience footage to use for an upcoming video for their website. What a great way to get the fans involved! I took one but couldn’t figure out how to use it until about half-way through the song. But it was fun anyway.We were then allowed into the venue to wait for the show.

When Chickenfoot came onstage—with their square peace sign logo lit up above them, lights flashing, their energy tore from them like an avalanche breaking loose. “The Foot” had been unleashed!

“Avenida Revolution” was just as powerful and exciting as it was the first time I heard them play it–thundering, brazenly grabbing you by the throat and never letting up.

After a few songs, Sammy joked about the altitude, saying: “You only have to smoke one joint and do three shots and you’re f—ed up in Denver!” He also said that the last time he was here, it snowed and he and Mikey were hoping that didn’t happen again. You never know in Denver.

This time the setlist was arranged differently and I liked how they changed it up so that it didn’t follow the same sequence as their album.

IMG_3514 Chad Smith demolition squad

Throughout the evening, Chad must have thrown out at least six dozen drumsticks into the crowd. He even pulled a woman out of the audience and had her sit next to him during Hagar’s “Bad Motor Scooter,” inserting drumsticks into the front of her low-cut top, pulling them out one by one, playing a few beats and then tossing the stick into the audience. Drumsticks were bouncing all over the stage and landing in the audience. At the end of the show, he kicked his drums over, then grabbed his high-hat cymbal and held it over his head before tossing it to the ground. The man is a maniac! The way he pounds those drums shakes the entire earth. He doesn’t sit obediently behind the drums and keep the beat like all the other drummers I’ve seen. Chad messes with your mind. He’s all over the stage; he gets up and sits on the speakers or his drums, and he teases Sammy: “You’re f—ed up when you come out of the dressing room, Sam, and when you come out of the hotel!”   IMG_3379

He also announced that the RIAA (Recording Industry Association of America) had officially certified that Chickenfoot’s self-titled debut album had gone gold! (Sold over 500,000 copies)

Satriani outdid himself. He was such a pleasure to watch, as he made his guitars move mountains, sing ballads and erupt in ferocious blazes with ease. Then he just stood there and smiled while Sammy and Chad hammed it up. This man has more talent than anyone I’ve ever heard and yet he remains humble. At one point, Joe took out his video camera and filmed everyone onstage and off.

Mikey was more outgoing than in the past—he walked to the edge of the stage and interacted with people in the audience. He sang an occasional lead vocal—and did a great job of it. His backing vocals and signature bass style are well-known in rock music and that night he did not disappoint. His vocals were spot on and his playing better than ever. Rarely is he as front and center as he’s been in Chickenfoot and he deserves to be! At one point, Mikey brought Sammy a cup with booze in it. Sam took a swig, then Mikey finished it off, and went over and screamed into the microphone. Crazy!

Sammy’s voice never wavered; it was strong and solid, yet melted into velvet for “Learning to Fall.” He delivered a stellar performance from the first note to the last. He jumped, danced, pranced across the stage, reached out and acknowledged the audience and had them singing along, fists in the air and jumping up and down. The Denver crowd really seemed to love his performance of Montrose’s “Bad Motor Scooter,” which he played on his slide guitar, and “Oh Yeah,” in which he had them all fully engaged and joining in.

IMG_3364He asked the crowd how well the Denver radio stations were playing their music and the audience booed. I have to agree–Chickenfoot needs more air time in Colorado.

Their rendition of “My Generation” by The Who and a teaser of Led Zeppelin’s “The Immigrant Song” were a real treat. I wished they would have played the whole thing because what they did play sounded phenomenal. I think Sammy sang “My Generation” even better than Roger Daltry. Apparently these guys can play anything.

Notably absent from the setlist was “Running Out.” Don’t know why they didn’t play this.

IMG_3445I lost it again during “Learning to Fall.” I’d seen them perform this live before, but I just couldn’t help myself. There is something about the music, Sammy’s voice, and the harmonies in this piece that takes over and rips me apart. I couldn’t stop the tears. There was however, a moment where Joe usually plays a note that rises up out of the music like a fast-forward video of a rose blooming, rising out of the ashes into its glory. For some reason, Joe chose to change the notes he played this time; he didn’t take it all the way up like he did before and the impact wasn’t as great. It was still an awesome song and a great performance, though.

IMG_3363

“Sexy Little Thing” exploded. The band was so tight on this—I think this had to be one of my favorites of the night. Also “Get It Up,” where the lights flashing on and off accented the sheer muscle of this band, who were all over the stage.

“Down the Drain” was dirty, nasty and solid. It made me feel like I was being sucked into something forbidden, glorious, dark and full of soul. Joe’s guitar solo went over the edge—a wild and wonderful trip into his heart.

Through this entire concert, I tried to maintain a professional approach, to be able to relate this experience to my readers in a professional manner, (which I’m obviously still not doing) but how can you remain professional when the music is so captivating that it pulls you in and forces you to lose control? (Because that’s what it’s supposed to do!) Where do you draw the line for the sake of objectivity—maintain an equitable distance as opposed to becoming so involved in the moment that you don’t even care who you are anymore?

IMG_3398

How can you be disciplined when Sammy is so into the music that he’s standing on his tiptoes, holding the microphone in both hands, bending backward and screaming: “it’s all… down… the drain… Yeahhhhhhhh” and Joe is cranking out sounds on his guitar so fast and furious that you can’t even see his fingers moving over the strings, Mikey is pounding his bass, Chad is owning the night and it’s all blending like one big fusion of music and spirit?

As spectators, we have no ammunition. We are blown to smithereens.

It doesn’t get any better than this.

  • ROB5150

    Same old stories like “Sam w/out Ed, Ed w/out Sam”, the truth is that Sammy is out of van Halen and, my opinion, the only big mistake of Mike was to join Sammy when he is still in Van Halen, I think Eddie is not to blame for fire him.
    It’s good the internet visibility by Eddie, for sure better then the absolute silence of the past 9 years (except the 2 reunion tour).
    Good for Chickenfoot but I repeat I don’t care of them, I respect Mike but no more Sam, he disappointed me.

  • sammyvanroth

    rick, you are a true idiot! it took both sam and ed to keep VH from falling like all the other rock bands did when grunge came along in the early nineties. how many hard rock acts sold multi platinum albums and sold out tours in the early nineties? not many, but van halen did it. and they did it with sammy! so rick, maybe you should ask: where would van halen be without david lee roth or sammy hagar?

  • john

    a shorter article would have done the trick….too much info leaves nothing to the excitement of going to the show and checking it out myself. I am a guitar player and I will go to check out Joey….they need to do “surfin with the alien”

  • john

    for the fools dicussing sam and dave and ed and who carried who…….Sam was in Montrose and later went on his own….but when he was in montrose, there wasnt a better rock voice back then…..Dave was in bands and owned the P.A. so anybody working with him did it his way….Ed would have never been noticed without Dave ……Ed was just another player in CA……a dime a dozen back then

  • john

    not to say Ed wasnt good, just saying he wouldn`t have had the exposure without the bad ass frontman that talked it up to club owners…..

  • D.O.A. 5150

    John, nothing against the Diamond one, but Ed would have been noticed regardless who his singer was back then. Ed was not “just another player in CA…… a dime a dozen back then”. Maybe your confused, it’s YOU that’s just another guitar player…..a dime a dozen these days. You can’t out play Ed, so what do you do, you talk smack about him like a little whinny baby. Yea John, your the man, you JACKASS.

  • swade

    What some people say blows me away. Wasnt Dave singing with a Banjo player just a few years ago. That Youtube clip to show Dave’s great voice is a joke to. Wait a minute, there was a banjo in that clip. Dave should thank whoever takes him on stage cause he is a disaster. Anybody catch the Sam vs Dave tour. That showedhow truly mediocre Dave is and How much better Sammy is.

  • swade

    John, your an idiot. So we should thank Dave for Ed changing the way guitar was played and recreating Rock music. I dont think so. Eddie is in no way a dime a dozen. I give him a hard time now for making us all wait but nder no circumstance
    would he have been overlooked.

  • Weepy WIllie

    As I read the above review, I lost it again. The tears flowed down my cheeks as I realized I was reading a kick ass review of Chickenfoot, and yet will never be able to see them live, due to my living in Bum F Egypt.

    And again, I lose it, and the tears fall like diamonds on my floor, as I read my own comment on the above review, which was kick ass.

    And, sorry, I am continuing to lose it, tears streaming like wateralls, as I see the Van Halen versus Chickenfoot war heat up.

  • daveman5150

    For those of us who were actually familiar with the rock scene back then… EVH was just another guitarist. Granted, he’s fucking good, but there are hundreds of great guitarists out there who aren’t getting noticed – or who are getting noticed way to late to make much of a difference.

    It’s all about being in the right place at the right time with the right team (DLR the peddler).

    EVH is/was a great guitarist, but there are many many guitarists who are up to the same caliber (see how to spell) or better than EVH. The music world is littered with people who are equivalent or better – who are just not getting the same recognition because they are/were not in the right place at the right time. In my opinion, that is what makes the arts so great – because there is ALWAYS someone who is better… always!

    Sure, people perhaps got their interest in guitar from EVH, but… that’s where it starts. You emulate, and then you surpass.

    The musically interested may know of a famous violinist named Itzak Perlman. Well, he was good, but nowadays, there’s another who is better – someone by the name of Josh Bell. There is ALWAYS someone who is better. It’s a FACT and it’s just a matter of time.

    Had it not been for Gene Simmons, where would Van Halen be? Perhaps discovered, perhaps not – who knows? The fact is that, not only did someone front the money for the first demo for VH, but they were also in the right place at the right time.

    Let’s pose that question.

    Where would VH be without DLR or Sam? Where would VH be without Gene? Any takers?

  • Ron

    “I still think that if it was not for Eddie letting Sammy join VanHalen back in ‘86, Sammy would be in some shopping mall somewhere singing folk music with a banjo…lol.”

    And VH could very well be playing small venues on a 25 year reunion tour, with no new music since 1984. Instead of playing large venues on a reunion tour with no new music since 1984, I suppose.

    Who the hell knows what would have happened to either the band or Sammy if they hadn’t joined forces back then?

    I’d love to hear some (good) new music from VH next year, but there are 11 years of history that indicate that’s highly unlikely. Go back through the archives on this site and you can read the same stuff – tons of new music, wants to get back into the studio, things are coming together, etc – for the last 11 years.

    So now they’re joining Facebook, Twitter, etc. Wow, way to catch up to two years ago guys. Where was their Myspace page when practically every other band in the world had one?

    I saw the AC/DC show in Vancouver a few weeks ago, and those guys kicked ass. They look old as hell, but they’re still busting their asses for the fans (and the money, granted). It would sure be nice to see even half the effort from VH.

  • sammyvanroth

    john, “ed just another player”…….hahahahahaha that’s the funniest thing i’ve read in a long time. you beat out rick for biggest idiot!

  • Karl

    “Ed would have never been noticed without Dave ……Ed was just another player in CA……a dime a dozen back then”

    Your level of ignorance is simply monumental.

    You say you’re a guitar player yet you also say that Ed was a dime a dozen guitar player? Edward is the least dime a dozen guitar player that has ever lived. The whole point of Edward Van Halen is that he is unique. He is the guitarist who re wrote the rule book. And it’s Edward’s rule book that the likes of Satriani now follow.

    I suspect you are quite young and have not bothered to learn any history. Two things about that: First, it’s not like it’s hard to know. Every single decent current rock guitarist will mention Ed at some point so you should be picking up clues as you go. Secondly, anyone who doesn’t learn the history of what they’re doing is not that interested in the subject so will never be any good at it.

    On the other hand, if you’re not young then God help you as a guitarist…

    You’ve got FAIL written all over you.

  • pushtoshove

    I think everyone here has got to remember ……New Rock is Great and Sammy and Mikey are now self employed so give them your support morons!!!!

  • Rick

    Sammyvanroth…Enough with calling people “idiots” Im just saying …Alot of people never even heard or cared about Sammy Hagar until he joined Vanhalen. His career got a boost.

  • RickieVanWhalen

    Karl

    I don’t know why you even try. The kid is a dumbass. End of story.

  • swade

    Rick, you go find this group of people in 1985 who never heard of Sammy Hagar. Are you serious? By then he was multi platinum solo artist with at least two Rock anthems to his name. I was 11 at the time an I knew well enough that he was a pretty big name. And I am still a huge fan today.

  • Dooley

    Rick:

    Most informed fans did hear of Sam prior to joining VH. Casual fans maybe not. And yeah, his career got a boost when he joined VH, but he earned every bit of it. VH is fortunate to have had both, and fortunate to currently have Dave back.

  • D.O.A. 5150

    Rick, you know, Sammy had quite a solo career before Van Halen and he was doing pretty damn good. If you don’t want to be called an idiot, then don’t post like one. You obviously don’t know very much about Sammy’s past.

  • Aftershock

    Karl, please do not worry. You don’t disappoint me at all. In fact, you are performing exactly down to my expectations.

    How do I know that a new album is on the way? The same way I knew that “Me Wise Magic” and “Can’t Get This Stuff No More” were on the “Best of: Volume 1.”

    That being said, I do agree 100 percent with your response to John. He has missed the boat entirely.

  • pushtoshove

    George Lynch , Randy Rhoads , Glenn Tipton ,Rudolph Schenker ,Tony IommI ,Angus Young , KK Downing , Dave Murray , Adrian Smith are ALL guitar players that were around not only in that Era but some of them were on the SAME club scene as Van Halen and got signed around the same time. You frustrated band geeks who hold hands pointing out how many other people are ignorant are RETARDS!!! HAHAHAHAHA!!!! It is mind blowing how ignorant you boys are. Eddie was part of a Movement of Great guitarists who got signed because the BAND he was in. Nerds!

  • Karl

    And you, Aftershock, are playing exactly to my expectations. How did I know that when called on something you can’t back up you’d resort to diversion tactics again? Would it have been so hard to simply admit you know no more than the rest of us instead of acting like the board prick again?

  • D.O.A. 5150

    Pure comedy Karl and Aftershock, fuckin unreal.

  • Karl

    Jesus pushtoshove, do you actually know nothing? Eddie is different from all those guitarists you listed because he came at guitar playing in a way that no-one had before or since. Sure, it was the band that got signed but that does not change the fact that Edward is arguably the most innovative rock guitarist of all time (yes, including Hendrix). All the other guitarists you listed are fine in their own ways (and Angus is probably my faourite guitarist), but none of them were pivotal in the history of guitar playing. Eddie wasn’t part of a ‘movement’, he’s the guy who started one.

  • pushtoshove

    Uh huh….That’s why ALL the albums with Hagar , Although great records ( I owned most of them ) never reached the inspired guitar plateau Ed reached while in the band with David Lee Roth…..There has Been NOTHING on any Van Hagar that rivals the technical heights Ed reached during the recordings of Van Halen 1-6…..Fact. And asking me if I know nothing doesn’t make anything you say true no matter how many times you say it. I mean what about Page? Or Angus for instance , he did two hand tapping years before Van Halen One came out. I suggest you re-read and re-check your History cause you couldn’t have been there or you would know this. Captain Nemo??? ( Micheal Schenker Group ) Jeff Beck , ‘Wired’??? You are programmed so there is no reasoning with you. C-Ya!

  • http://www.myspace.com/redlover Jeanette

    For those of you who have been shocked that the writer was moved to tears by some of the show, maybe it would help to know that the author, “Baja Rock Pat” is a woman…and one helluva great one at that!

    Loved this review, she’s SPOT-ON!
    Can’t wait till I see them again!

    ~JA~ /|\

  • http://vhnd surfsno2008

    the guitar playing on 5150 and balance easily matches the roth era albums and is technically more crisp and clean…

    go listen to summer nights, get up, feelin and dont tell me what love can do…

    please.

    the ablums may be over produced but that was the pop edge ed was taking the band in anyway with songs like 1984/jump, and ill wait, on a DLR album!!!!
    rememeber dave was against it and then the DLR band broke up because dave wanted to do rap and crazy stuff like on his last major label album that sealed his deatha as a solo artist… i still think the real reason he left was the fighting the egos and that fact ed was wasterd ALL the time.
    go listen to the stern show and dave tells it how it is…

  • Bluesbro

    …..There has Been NOTHING on any Van Hagar that rivals the technical heights Ed reached during the recordings of Van Halen 1-6…..

    You might be able to attribute that to his escalating drug and alcohol abuse too … at least partly.

  • pushtoshove

    I would agree with you Bluesbro….At least partly

  • Pete

    HELLO…this article was about CF kicking ass live, and DOING it right in 2009.

    Why does everything have to come down to a hypothetical “VH will be doing something really great…soon…next year…just you wait…ohhhhhhhhhh it will be something…”

    I’m tired of all that hypothetical BS. Show me something. Play me something.

    Right now, Chickenfoot is kicking ass, and making and playing great music.

    Right now, Van Halen…is wasting even more time doing nothing, and you can follow Ed on Twitter, MySpace, etc. and keep up on the latest “lack” of VH news.

    Until VH produces something, you can hang onto your hypothetical reviews that it will be awesome, because after 3 songs and 2 greatest hits tours in 11 years, I think I will need to hold their next release in my hands and hear it with my own ears before I agree with you that there is any will or life left in this once great band.

    Peace.

  • Pete

    I love great music. Thank you Chickenfoot!

  • pushtoshove

    GOOGLE THIS BOY-O’S…..http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qIqlDdU_jGY&feature=fvw….You will be amazed!…..Listen Well…..

  • D.O.A. 5150

    Right now you guys look like a bunch of cry babies.

  • Aftershock

    Karl, you are priceless. Whenever you get called out, you resort to juvenile name-calling — and yet I’m the board prick?

    Look, as I told you long ago, you can post on every thread: “Where’s the new music? Van Halen hasn’t done anything! Ed is a fool for discussing his alcoholism during his Guitar God acceptance speech. Meanwhile, Ed’s appearing on a second-rate TV show.” You can keep posting all this — right up until VH actually releases its new album. I guess you’ll proclaim yourself the wise one until then. At which point I’ll be right.

    I don’t need to explain how I know what I know to someone who can’t even keep their VH history straight.

    But, please, by all means, keep asking where the new music is every couple days or so. That’s pretty productive.

  • Karl

    You’re absolutely correct that there is nothing on the Van Hagar albums to rival the guitar work on the earlier albums. But that’s got nothing to do with Roth. That’s just the natural progression of an artist. All artists burn brightly for a certain period. The Roth years was Edward’s period. Which is not to say that should he ever get round to making another album that it won’t be absolutely killer. But don’t expect him push back boundaries like he did before. Just to note that we’re talking strictly about guitar playing here.

    Where the Roth factor does come into play is in the overall picture. Song wise the Roth years are definitely the classic years and this has much to do with Roth (although Edward burning brightly is a huge part of the equation). Although I like the Hagar era and have all of the albums, the music is definitely less substantial. And on the subject Roth and looking ahead to a possible new albums, a disc full of Me Wise Magics will do nicely, please!

    As for Angus doing two handed tapping. First, is that what you think Edward brought to guitar playing? That was just the headline. Edward is about so much more than tapping. And Angus two handed tapping? I’ve got every piece of recorded material they’ve ever put out and I’ve seen them more than twenty times (last time a couple of months back). Never seen Angus doing two handed tapping aside from getting the pick on the fretboard occasionally. If I’m wrong, name the songs.

    And the Page connection is not strictly a two handed tapping connection. The page connection is Eddie using two hands to get the kind of legato that Page got with one hand.

    And it’s probably you who need to re-read otherwise your history lesson would have included names such as Emmett Chapman, Billy Gibbons and Randy Resnick rather than the list you posted. There’s even a guy who was round in the fifties who’s name I can’t remember right now who was doing something of the sort (probably easy enough to Google if you wanted).

    Anyway, whether you agree with any of the above or not, one thing is fact. Edward re-wrote the rules that everyone else thought were written in stone. And everyone and his dog now plays by his rules. He didn’t need Roth to do that.

  • Karl

    Aftershock: Yeah, whatever.

  • RA 8 1 2

    Tapping was used way before Eddie. Steve Hackett in Genesis used in in the early 70′s. Listen to the solo in Dancing With the Moonlit Knight on the Selling England by the Pound album. Eddie just perfected tapping and made it his own trademark. He took something raw and made melodies and solos out of it rather than people just using it for a quick bar or so and a trick. He popularixed it with the use of effects, proper delay, etc.

  • RickieVanWhalen

    OMG – please stop these senseless rants.

  • paul

    this is the silliest review I have ever read. Did a 16 yo girl write this? please…….

  • Steve K

    no offense but Dave would be no where without Eddie. Eddie would be as great as he is today whether he started out with Sammy or Dave. Ed is by far the greatest guatarist of all-time. Every review that I read from the Sam and Dave tour said that Sammy kicked Dave’s ass all during the tour. Another thing is for all the “Dave is God” and “Dave made Van Halen” fans. Where in the hell were you when Dave left Van Halen??? By the time the late 80′s hit, his career was almost dead and could not sell out anything. IF Dave is as good as you guys say he is, he could have made it on his own. Don’t get me wrong, I like Van Halen with Sammy or Dave, but give me a break on this Van Halen would have not been anything without Dave Bullshit. Van Halen was great with Dave and it was great with Sammy. If you think otherwise, you are not a Van Halen fan. You are just a DLR
    fan.

  • Adam

    Steve K,

    Dave and Sammy are both very successful solo artists. But let’s get one thing straight. You ask “where were all the DLR fans AFTER he left VH?”… implying that his solo career went nowhere. The answer to your question is, they were buying up MILLIONS of each of his albums. The most popular that EITHER VH singer one EVER was (as a solo artist) was David Lee Roth’s solo career heyday – the mid to late ’80′s. Roth sold millions of each album during that time, which was when he peaked, but Sammy never got to that point. (Sure, his VOA album did manage to barely go platinum, but only after he joined Van Halen, just because of all the curious VH fans who bought it just to hear what this “Sammy Hagar” guy was going to bring to their favorite band).

    Sammy has always had his respectable number of hard core fans, and he has ALWAYS been successful, but even he couldn’t even get close to how big Dave was a solo artist from 1985 – 1988 (granted, a short period of time, but it happened nonetheless).

  • http://none Ducky / Dirty Duck

    I think im being honest and fair to say if it wasnt for “Eddie and Dave” there would have never been a VH….

    At least not the one that made the impact it did.

  • Aftershock

    Karl, channeling the classic response of a teenager who has no viable retort, wrote: “Yeah, whatever.”

    Translation: It’s 3rd and 18, I’ve got the arm of Chad Pennington, so I’ll quick kick and try and salvage field position rather than try and pick up the first down.

  • Pete

    ADAM – actually, “Marching to Mars” went platinum too. (It actually outsold “III”.)

    Sammy’s solo sales are impressive in their own right, for those that are concerned with numbers. The last time I saw his solo sales he was in the 24-28 million range. It’s impressive given that he’s never been a huge flavor of the month, or had one particular album that sold a bunch for him.

    It kind of reminds me of Rush – they never sell “huge”, but they have always had a consistent following for their albums and tours. This is the kind of thing record companies have always loved – a low-maintenance artist that works hard and keeps their following.

    Sammy has been successful in every sense of the word: solo, replacing a marquee front man in a top band, or starting a new band like CF.

    Mostly, he’s must made so much great music, and to his credit, has never succumbed to addiction and lost all his dough to his pushers. It’s probably why he sounds even better today than when he was in his teens with Montrose, or his 20′s or 30′s, etc.

  • Pete

    P.S. I love ALL Dave’s solo work too. He took some chances too, which is part of being an “artist”. That’s one thing Dave doesn’t get enough credit for: he is an “artist”.

  • http://none Ducky / Dirty Duck

    Lets talk about the Dave and Sam tour shall we?
    (*this may not be the right time but I need to set some people straight here…)

    To start off…I was at the concert in new jersey summer of 2002. What I’m about to write is the absolute truth. No reason to make this shit up…..its old news now.

    Dave opened for sam. The min dave and his boys came on stage and ripped into “hot for teacher” the roar of the crowd was unbelievably LOUD I actually got goosebumps. I have no clue what shows some of you saw or heard from word of mouth (which i believe many of you fall into the latter catagory)but I was extremely IMPRESSED by how good dave and the band sounded! There were actually moments when I would close my eyes and i sware it sounded like VH from 78-85! Yes…it was that damn good. I have never seen a crowd so INTO the music as i did that day watching dave perform. His vocals were spot on and I SWARE there were a few times he was actually able to get a few of the classic screams in. The man did not stop once (except to tell one of the young girls in the front row that he prob had sex with her mother back in the 80′s-typical dave!)and he was all high kicks and raw rock and roll. Wasnt feeling his thinned out long blonde hair but hey…the guy was in his late 40′s at the time. Who am I to judge? It wasnt about hair….it was about rock and roll…and roth and his band delivered! I will argue this until the day i die. They sounded AMAZING! Dave even closed the show with him jumping off the drum riser and the crowd went fuckin’ nuts! The roar of the crowd was so deafining and the applause was for so long I even saw some tears well up in dave’s eyes (*my girlfriend at the time pointed that out to me). The crowd was so happy to have dave on stage.

    Now not to sound like a basher….but again…the following is all true.

    Sammy goes on next and to start off his stage set up was so lame man. It looked like bleachers with a bar in the middle.
    On these bleachers were randomly picked people to sit up there and cheer while sam performed. I kid you not. The guy opens with “shaka doobie” (I think that was the name of the song)and nobody seemed intrested except the die hard sammy fans…..gotta love em! Then he did his signature songs including “give to live” which gave the audience the pleasure of seeing sam sweat so bad that his “got tequila” shirt was drenched. And it was only his 4th song….
    He just wasnt entertaining at all and it was sad he needed all this backdrop shit to put on a rock show. Especially the drunken fraternity boys screaming out sammys name constantly. Gay….
    By the time he started playing “eagles fly” i sware I never saw a place clear out faster than that. A good percentage of us (including me)knew that the “rock” show was over by that point while others used the time to go have a piss or beer break. Empty seats within 2 mins. But the drunken franternity boys were still yelling “sammy” and “cabo”….well at least they enjoyed it!

    My point is fellas, enough of the he say she say garbage. If you werent at the shows dont add more fuel to a burned out fire. I was at the dave and sam show and It was obviuos who ruled the playground that night. Dave.
    Now maybe the other shows sam did. But what i saw that night was a pure rock and roll show from dave and the boys, with a standing ovation at the end. By sammy’s 5th song most were leaving. Maybe jersey isnt a fan of sammy? Who knows. Just telling it how I SAW it. Not HEARD about it.
    One of the best concerts ive been to….sware to god.

    Sorry! Had to get that off my chest!

  • Bluesbro

    I love everything about Chickenfoot. And I love Sammy’s voice, but I have always preferred the studio to his live stuff. Not that his voice is bad live, just sort of a goofy frontman sometimes. An example would be someone handing him a little home made sign, and he takes it and tries to make a do-rag out of it, or something else corny. Some may like this, I just want to see the best live music I can … and I think Sammy gets distracted easily. Maybe he’s ADD … lol.

    I only saw VH once with Roth, and that was at a Day On The Green in a stadium, so I can’t judge him as much as I can Sammy. He certainly had the rock frontman look back in the day, no doubt about that. I bet he was servicing female groupies by the roomful every night.

    I think the best rock frontman I ever saw was Axl Rose, in the beginning ‘Appetite For Destruction’ era. He could sing, had the rock bad boy thing going in spades … and the band kicked ass too. Too bad he was such a jerk, and basically flamed away most of his career.

  • Steve K

    Main point of what i was trying to imply was that to many on here. Sammy is not Van Halen. Sammy destroyed Van Halen. Sammy was very successful in his own right with Van Halen. To take his part out of the history of Van Halen is simply pathetic. He brought a new generation of fans to the group (Me for example. I grew up more with Sammy than Dave.) For all Dave’s fans to act like his shit stunk with Van Halen is pathetic. At least, Sammy did do some Dave songs during his tours with them. Which also made the younger generation go buy his old cd’s. I liked Dave also as a solo artists but after Skyscrape, to me it all went downhill. Sammy also had a couple cds before Chickenfoot that sucked too. Guess suck is too harsh of a word, they just weren’t what you look for from Sammy. Guess he took some chances like Dave.

    Last point I would like to make before I go to bed, is that for all to say Chickenfoot should not be on here. Sammy and Mike were part of Van Halen. Whether you like it or not, they will always be a part of their history. Before Dave rejoined Van Halen, he had solo posts on here too. So Sam and Mikey should be on here too.

    I hope Van Halen does make a new cd with Dave, it will be great to have. Honestly the only cd I have ever been disappointed with was VH3. Not that the material was bad. A few of the songs I liked but Gary sounded too much like Sammy. Just think that Sammy or Dave would have been a better move for VH3. But at the time VH was pissed with Sammy and they were still not too thrilled with returning Dave back to the fold.

    I still believe though that VH would be here today if Dave was part of the group or not. Ed had a unique sound. Dave delivered great songs to go with it. But the sound of VH would be here either way. Just sometimes wonder what it would be like if Sammy started with VH over Dave. If you think about it, most fans prefer the originals of any group over the ones that took their place. Whether they are better or not.

  • john

    this is for Kackling Karl the Kueen of Kwazy…..number 1: I have worked with most acts that were on tour from 78 to 88….I was 18 years old when I started and I learned alot of tricks from alot of guitar techs. so as far as me being young and uninformed, you are mistaken. The rest of your rant was just opinion. Back in those days, record companies were signing anybody that had any metal sound to them. Van Halen was just one of the many acts to get signed from that coast. Some bands made it and some did not. The executives didn`t care if they sold albums because they needed write offs and signing a band that was mediocre was the best chance of achieving that goal. This was happening all over the country. Guitar players were a dime a dozen and Roth knew it. He had to promote the band himself because Ed wasn`t the best in dealing with the business side. He was naturally a shy dude that drank to build his confidence. Dave pushed the band and thats why they got noticed by club owners, The End.

  • john

    Steve Vai had the best pedal board…..#1 meat,#2 meat and potatos, #3 GOD……..please feel free to correct me if i`m wrong….lol