January 9th, 2007
From: http://www.billboard.com/
Hagar Hoping Van Halen Takes High Road At Rock Hall
January 08, 2007, 8:05 PM ET
Gary Graff, Detroit
Van Halen's appearance at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction
ceremony on March 12 "could go a lot of different ways," according to
Sammy Hagar. That said, Hagar -- the group's second frontman, from
1985-96 -- tells Billboard.com he has high hopes that the famously
combative group will take the high road on that particular night.
"My hope is that everyone lets everything go and we go there in
complete respect of each other and in a loving way, with the attitude
that 'I couldn't have done it without you' towards everybody," says
Hagar, who received the official word of Van Halen's selection at his
Cabo Wabo Cantina in Mexico, where he and Van Halen bassist Michael
Anthony have spent the past week jamming with Red Hot Chili Peppers
drummer Chad Smith in a newly developing side project called Chickenfoot.
But he also notes that, "The biggest fear for me is there'll be
animosity and 'I won't talk to that guy' and maybe some harsh words
towards each other or some sly remarks in speeches ... and it's not
out of the question that that could happen. But in the end, no matter
what happens, when you hear the music you're gonna go, 'That's one of
the greatest rock'n'roll bands in the world, ever, and well-deserved
the inauguration into the Hall of Fame."
Hagar says he hadn't spoken to anyone other than Anthony about the
induction but planned to put in a congratulatory call to drummer Alex
Van Halen. He expects that manager Irving Azoff "is gonna try to spin
everyone together somehow" and says he'll "go with the flow" with
induction ceremony plans, which Hagar expects will include a live Van
Halen performance.
However, Hagar deemed talk of a Van Halen tour this year with original
frontman David Lee Roth and guitarist Eddie Van Halen's 15-year-old
son Wolfgang on bass speculative and voiced concern for that
particular turn in the band's course.
"Wolfie's a great guy; I love Wolfie. But I don't think Van Halen
should bring a 15-year-old kid to replace Sam, Dave and Michael
Anthony," Hagar says. "That's a lot of pressure for Wolfie. Just
'cause he's Eddie's son doesn't mean he can go out and play in arenas
and perform and entertain an audience for two hours. I would love to
see Eddie and Alex get behind Wolfie, with a kid of his age singing,
and produce the record for him and help him launch a career. I'd
rather see it go that way than come out and say 'Wolfie's the bass
player in Van Halen and maybe singing, too.' Van Halen's got way too
much history to have that put on him."
From: http://www.pe.com/
Rocker
05:22 PM PST on Monday, January 8, 2007
By PAUL SAITOWITZ
The Press-Enterprise
Sammy Hagar was admittedly excited about the news that his former band,
Van Halen, would be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame during a
ceremony at New York's Waldorf-Astoria Hotel on March 12, but it still
wasn't enough to trump the Fontana-reared musician's already ebullient
mood.
After all, the announcement is just the frosting on an already charmed
career.
"I'm in Cabo right now so the smile is already almost as big as it can
get. ... This is kind of like a double-whammy," Hagar, who owns a cantina
in Cabo San Lucas called Cabo Wabo, said. "But seriously, I feel very
honored to be a part of something like this."
Hagar, who replaced original Van Halen lead singer David Lee Roth on the
band's seventh album -- 1986's "5150" -- was the mouthpiece for the
Pasadena group's most commercially successful period. Roth loyalists
dubbed the group Van Hagar and resented his acute pop sense, but his
presence was undeniable.
Beginning with "5150" and follow-ups "OU812," "For Unlawful Carnal
Knowledge" and "Balance," the man known as the "Red Rocker" spearheaded a
string of four consecutive No. 1 albums.
He left the group under precarious circumstances in 1996. Eddie Van Halen
maintains he quit while Hagar claims he was fired, but the singer feels
the Hall of Fame Induction proves the quality of the songs is more
important than any personality clashes.
"You get a chemistry together when you play and it's really special," he
said. "Just because it turned into a big dysfunctional family doesn't mean
we all aren't proud of what we accomplished and proud of the music we
wrote."
Word about Van Halen's inclusion has sparked a lot of speculation over the
Internet as to whether the band will reunite during the March ceremony.
Hagar, who toured this past summer playing Van Halen songs with the
group's former bass player, Michael Anthony, under the name The Other
Half, said he'd be open to anything, but has not yet spoken to any members
of the group other than Anthony.
"I'm open-minded and I think everyone realizes that during these
circumstances it's best to be on good behavior. ... Anything is
possible," he said. "If the other guys aren't into it then Michael and I
will go out there and play some songs; I think that either way you can
expect there to be some live music."
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