VAN HALEN NEWS DESK

Readers of Rolling Stone Select Ten Favorite Van Halen Songs

Rolling Stone just released another Van Halen related Top Ten List. This list, however, was put together by their readers, so it’s not merely one person’s opinion, or a small group’s opinions, but rather, a list of what rock fans, in general, think about Van Halen songs. (Or at least what RollingStone.com readers think, in general).

From Rolling Stone:

The last two decades have been a strange time for Van Halen. The band’s last three tours have featured three different singers, and there hasn’t been an actual studio album since 1998. The band also made the highly controversial move to oust original bass player Michael Anthony in favor of Eddie’s teenage son, Wolfgang Van Halen. According to Anthony, they didn’t even tell him he was out – he had to read about it on the Internet. Despite all that, the band has an intensely loyal fan base. It’s impossible to argue with the quality of their early work, and it’s beyond debate that their 1978 self-titled LP is one of the greatest debuts in rock history. The group appears to be on the verge of announcing a new album, so we figured it was a good time to poll our readers to learn their ten favorite Van Halen songs. The results aren’t shocking. It’s 80% David Lee Roth era, 20% Van Hagar and 0% Gary Cherone era. That feels about right.

10. ‘Dreams’ (1986)

A lot of bands don’t survive the departure of a lead singer, especially one as charismatic and famous as David Lee Roth. But Van Halen brought former Montrose frontman Sammy Hagar into the band in 1985 and had a huge hit right away with 5150. “Best of Both Worlds” was a smash right out of the gate, and they scored again with “Dreams,” the follow-up single. They shot two videos for “Dreams.” One showed the Blue Angels doing aerial stunts, and the other showed them playing the song live at the Whiskey A Go Go, when they were celebrating the band’s 15th anniversary. We included the latter one here. Right around this time, David Lee Roth hired Steve Vai as the guitarist in his newly formed solo band. He started scoring hits of his own, and for a couple years it seemed like both Van Hagar and David Lee Roth would be equally popular, but that was not to be.

9. ‘Right Now’ (1991)

A lot of old-school Van Halen fans who felt the band sucked ever since David Lee Roth left secretly thought that “Right Now” was an amazing song. “That was the first serious lyric I had written for Van Halen,” Sammy Hagar writes in his memoir Red: My Uncensored Life In Rock. “It was a big statement.” The video – featuring text like “Right now someone is walking onto a nude beach for the first time” – went into heavy rotation on MTV in 1992, and it even won Video of the Year at the MTV Video Music Awards. “It was the biggest video of our career,” writes Hagar. “Crystal Pepsi paid us 2 million bucks to use it as a soda pop commercial.” If you want to take a time warp back to early 1993, watch that Crystal Pepsi commercial.

8. ‘Eruption’ (1978)

This blazing instrumental on the first Van Halen album instantly established Eddie Van Halen as the new king of the electric guitar. The song had been a part of Van Halen’s stage show for years, but producer Ted Templeman heard it one day and decided it should go on the record before their cover of “You Really Got Me.” It’s been a key part of Van Halen concerts ever since. Eddie often gets credit for inventing two-handed tapping with the song, but the technique had actually been around for years. Genesis guitarist Steve Hackett was doing it was back in 1972, but he didn’t quite have the showman’s flair of Eddie Van Halen.

7. ‘Mean Street’ (1981)

This song first appeared under the title “Voodoo Queen” on Van Halen’s 1977 Warner Brothers demo CD. When working on their fourth album, Fair Warning, they wrote new lyrics for the song and gave it a new title. This became standard working practice for the band. Many of their most famous latter-day songs were cobbled together from old riffs and melodies. According to Sammy Hagar, that’s how the group is composing their new record with David Lee Roth. They must have been incredibly productive during those early days.

6. ‘Runnin’ With the Devil’ (1978)

It’s harder to think of a better first song from a band’s debut album than “Running With the Devil.” The song begins with the sound of car horns, which were actually from the band’s own cars. They connected them all with one car battery. A few years back, David Lee Roth’s isolated audio track from the song hit the Internet. It’s wildly entertaining. Take a listen here.

5. ‘Jump’ (1984)

Van Halen were a huge success before the release of 1984, but that album pushed them into the stratosphere. This song hit number one and, in many ways, has remained their most famous composition. The heavy synth sound turned off some older fans, but the video on MTV brought in countless new ones. Though the album kept producing hits, David Lee Roth quit the band after the supporting tour wrapped. Van Halen had many huge moments in the Sammy Hagar era, but they never quite seemed to own a moment in time again like they did when “Jump” was all over the radio and MTV in early 1984.

4. ‘Ain’t Talkin’ ’bout Love’ (1978)

Another classic from Van Halen’s 1977 debut, “Ain’t Talking ’bout Love” is one of the handful of Roth-era songs that Sammy Hagar was willing to perform in concert during his time as frontman. Velvet Revolver played this at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2007. Oddly enough, the only two members of the band to show up were Sammy Hagar and Michael Anthony – and they were both out of the band by then.

3. ‘Hot for Teacher’ (1984)

“Jump” may have been a bigger hit from 1984, but “Hot for Teacher” was clearly the better video. The group had four young actors play miniature versions of themselves, and they turned a classroom into a strip club. MTV played it about five billion times that year. Just last week, Glee covered it. David Lee Roth was made for MTV, and in his solo career he built on the wacky persona from this video. The best thing about the video, however, may be watching Alex Van Halen attempt to dance. They supposedly filmed countless takes and were eventually forced to use what they had. The man’s a drummer, not a dancer. But it was 1984, and dancing was practically required in videos. Even Bruce Springsteen submitted.

2. ‘Panama’ (1984)

The big albums of 1984 produced a ludicrous amount of hits. Think about Born In The USA, Purple Rain, Like A Virgin, Footloose, Private Dancer, and Van Halen’s 1984. Now, at first glance one might think that “Panama” is a serious political song about the country of Panama. That would be incorrect. It’s about a car. More specifically, it’s about a car called the Panama Express that David Lee Roth saw race in Las Vegas. It also contains one of David Lee Roth’s greatest spoken-word moments: “Yeah, we’re runnin’ a little bit hot tonight. I can barely see the road from the heat comin’ off of it. Ah, you reach down between my legs. Ease the seat back…” The man has a way with words.

1. ‘Unchained’ (1981)

It’s not quite as famous as “Jump” or “Hot for Teacher,” but “Unchained” has frequently been voted the favorite song of Van Halen fans. During the interlude, producer Ted Templeman breaks in and says “Come on, Dave, gimme a break!” Dave responds with, “One break, coming up!” According to legend, Ted felt that Dave was being too over the top and he scolded him. The band liked the moment and kept it in. Recent evidence suggests that the bit was rehearsed, but it’s hard to say for sure. Like most things in the Van Halen world, there are two competing narratives of one event.

  • SCAR

    Leaps take your meds…you are not a VH fan!!!!

  • FrankenFan

    It’s tough to choose a top ten, but I’d just like to show some love for “Could This Be Magic,” the first (perhaps only) time in his life Eddie played slide- acoustic no less! Also love “Little Guitars,” “Push Comes to Shove” (great clean tone) and anything else off Fair Warning.

    From the Hagar era, I love “Love Walks In.” Sure it’s keyboard laden and very poppy, but still cool.

  • Alex Jossi

    1. Jump
    2. Right Now
    3. Dreams
    4. Ain’t Talkin’ ‘Bout Love
    5. Hot For Teacher
    6. Panama
    7. When It’s Love
    8. 5150
    9. Unchained
    10. Top Of The World

  • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7P1d8BVvY-I 5150

    Freddiegirl says..

    “Jump My least fav Dave-era tune…I still remember the sinking feeling I had that my band was going in a more pop direction”

    No apology necessary. I felt (feel) the same way. My least fav VH song is “I’ll Wait”. My favorite VH song is Unchained. I think “Jump” and “I’ll Wait” is at the opposite extreme. No pun intended to anyone who enjoys those songs. I fully understand. After all, It’s Van Halen!

  • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7P1d8BVvY-I 5150

    @ Leaps

    In response to your “platinum” comments, each Van Hagar albums out-sold all the DLR solo albums combined!! Even VH3 outsold each DLR solo albums except “Eat em and smile” and “Skyscraper”.

    Again, I am a CVH fan. I love VH1 and Fair Warning. Those are my all time fav albums. But, I just wanted to share this information with you since you seem to pad your numbers a bit.

  • Chris

    Rolling Stone once again has their facts all messed up. By the time Van Halen did the Whiskey video for “Dreams” to promote the Live album, Steve Vai was long gone from DLR, who was struggling after “Little Ain’t Enough” flopped.

  • Humbucker

    Still get a rush from this lot;
    1.Runnin’ with the Devil
    2.Atomic Punk
    3.Light up the sky
    4.Somebody get me a doctor
    5.Romeo Delight
    6.Mean Streets
    7.Unchained
    8.Panama
    9.Drop Dead Legs
    10.House of Pain

  • DiamondDean

    WORST VAN HALAN SONGS

    Big fat money
    How many say i
    Little dreamer
    Dancing in the streets
    Woman in love
    once
    from afar
    take me back
    appolitical blues
    in n out

  • http://None Dirty Duck

    DiamondDean:

    Woman in love is a great song man.

  • DiamondDean

    Just doesnt do much for me bar the intro , also BLACK N BLUE is terrible !!!!! it started to go down hill from that point for VH

  • Halen High

    5150 says:
    “@ Leaps – In response to your “platinum” comments, each Van Hagar albums out-sold all the DLR solo albums combined!! Even VH3 outsold each DLR solo albums except “Eat em and smile” and “Skyscraper”.

    Yes – but of course Eddie, Alex, Mike and Sammy had the advantage of the ‘Van Halen’ brand name, which by 1985 was the biggest in hard rock. And we keep hearing from Sammy and some of his fans that he was HUGE by 1985, as big as Van Halen (LOL), so if they are going to claim that, then we should expect at the very least that the combination of these two forces in hard rock should have managed to outsell David Lee Roth. Now if we compare Van Hagar with serious competitors in the genre during the same time frame……not too good is it?

  • Halen High

    Lupercal – Amsterdam in the top 10? Lyrically that song is shocking. Fire in the Hole? Ahead of Runnin With The Devil, Mean Street, Panama, Romeo Delight, Fools? Interesting choices mate – but that’s cool.

    I agree with you on One Foot Out The Door. Love it.

    DiamondDean says:
    “from afar”

    One of their best post-CVH era songs.

  • Deano Pottserelli

    In a Simple Rhyme
    From Afar
    Little Dreamer
    Feelin
    5150
    Me Wise Magic
    Without You
    Secrets
    Humans Being
    Judgement Day

  • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7P1d8BVvY-I&safety_mode=true&persist_safety_mode=1&safe=active 5150

    @ Halen High

    I personally don’t care about album sales. To me, “Fair Warning” in my second favorite VH album. But, sales don’t show that. My point was a stab at leaps and his silly claims that DLR was the reason VH was popular and that as soon as DLR left VH, VH went down. My point is, so did DLR. Leaps keeps bashing the post DLR VH albums. I am just keeping it in perspective. I love VH and I have been a fan since the late 70s. I continued to be a fan even through the Sammy and Gary years. Though, I must admit, the DLR era was my favorite. I agree with your comments to Lupercal. Great Point!

  • bryan macomber

    1.5150
    2.dreams
    3.feelings
    4.summer nights
    5.316
    6.one I want
    7.top of the world
    8.meanstreet
    9.Amsterdam
    10.learning to see

  • Halen High

    5150 says:
    “I personally don’t care about album sales. To me, “Fair Warning” in my second favorite VH album. But, sales don’t show that.”

    Yeah same here. When we were listening to ‘Fair Warning’ or ’1984′ for the first time, I’m sure none of us cared how many copies it would eventually sell, or how much money these guys would make.

  • Hev

    Jump, Panama and Dreams don’t belong. There are too many to fit into a top ten list but if I had to:

    Whiskey Home, 5150, Loss of Control, DOA, Outta Love, Feelin’, Cabo Wabo, In and Out, Fools, and on and on….