October 1st, 2007
From: http://www.usatoday.com/
Location: Bobcats Arena, Charlotte
Day: Thursday
Attendance: A sellout crowd of more than 18,000
The opener: Ky-Mani Marley incurred favor with the crowd by opening his
half hour set with Roots, Rock, Reggae and finishing with No Woman, No
Cry, two songs from his late father Bob Marley's repertoire. However, he
flashed his own charismatic side by enthralling the crowd with The March,
a hip-hop/reggae hybrid song from his new album, Radio, that juxtaposed
the war in Iraq with street violence.
The crowd: Straight out of 1984. Lots of baseball jerseys and classic rock
band shirts (think Rolling Stones, Ratt, The Who, Rush, AC/DC, Def Leppard
and Foreigner). Many in attendance were in their forties or older, but
twentysomethings and teens were present, too. "We brought them because
they want to see (16-year-old bassist) Wolfgang (Van Halen, the son of
Eddie and ex-wife Valerie Bertinelli)," says Mandy Mashburn, 38, of York,
S.C. She and husband Ric, 37, brought son, Rick, 14, and his friend Quin
Magee, also 14, to the show. Both boys play guitar and heard Van Halen
songs at home, but watched Wolfgang on YouTube. They already had souvenir
T-shirts on.
Says neighbor Jim Gilkeson, 39, a Van Halen concert veteran who
accompanied them, "I prefer (the band's original lead singer) David (Lee
Roth)," he says. Roth fronted the band, founded in L.A. by brothers Eddie
and Alex, for about seven years. Later, Sammy Hagar took over as lead
singer for a decade and a 2004 reunion tour. "Really in my mind, I think
they've all realized (Roth as the lead singer) is what works."
Stage setting: An S-shaped walkway swooped from above Alex Van Halen's
drum kit and flowed into a catwalk that allowed Roth and others to cavort
through the crowd. The billboard-sized video screen often displayed an
"Eddie cam" view that zoomed in on and captured guitarist Eddie Van
Halen's fretwork. Green laser lights occasionally came into play.
The merch: Pretty conservative, considering the modern-day merchandising
frenzy that has led to many bands offering logo-monikered baby outfits.
One on-the-edge offering for the ladies: a $15 red Van Halen thong. Also:
a $70 hoodie, $15 tote bags, $10 sweatbands and a selection of $35-$40 T-
shirts sporting the classic VH logo.
The lowdown: For longtime Van Halen fans, question marks were answered.
First to take the stage, Eddie, 52, emerged . clean-cut, bare-chested and
buff . and fired off some Eruption-era riffs to a rowdy and affectionate
reception from a standing crowd. Any lasting effects from his rehab stint
earlier this year and past treatment for tongue cancer were not evident.
Returning to the band he parted ways with 22 years ago, Roth, also 52,
smiled like a Cheshire cat . and clad in skintight leather pants and
sparkling embroidered tunics . and strutted like Chanticleer. His flowing
locks are gone and his voice sported a slightly lower register, but Roth
sounded virile and satisfied the faithful with some high-pitched screams
and spinning karate kicks. On drums, Alex, 54, continued to stoke the
band's fire and Wolfgang wooed the crowd with his self-effacing demeanor.
Musical highlights: Showing their teamwork from the get-go, Roth scatted
to Eddie's playing during their cover of the Kinks' You Really Got Me. "It
only took us 20 years to get this far," Roth told the crowd during the
next song, I'm the One (another song from the band's 1978 debut album),
referring to decade-long reunion rumors. Two-thirds of the way into the 2-
hour-plus show, Alex and Eddie collaborated on a crunching intro to
Everybody Wants Some!! During Hot for Teacher, Roth happily exclaimed with
emphasis, "I heard you missed us, we're back." The non-stop barrage that
also included Beautiful Girls, their cover of Roy Orbison's Oh, Pretty
Woman and Panama, another from hit album 1984 (released in 1984), filled
the arena with hard rock energy rarely generated since, well, the band's
previous forays.
Memorable moments: The absence of bass player Michael Anthony was obvious,
but Wolfgang missed nary a beat neither on bass or background vocals. In
fact, he had his own rock star moments standing at the stage's crest to
strike the opening notes of Runnin' with the Devil and slapping hands with
crowd members while stalking the runway during Atomic Punk. (Also not
mentioned: Sammy Hagar, who served as lead vocalist after Roth, set to
tour with Anthony this fall. Those two attended the band's induction into
the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame this year.)
He and his father had a couple touching moments including a smooch after
Dance the Night Away and Eddie sliding across the stage on his knees .
while playing Little Guitars. and coming to a stop at Wolfgang's feet.
Eddie and Roth also had a good rapport and the two slapped hands after
Jump.
"They were like a family up there," said Matt Long, Greenville, N.C.. 36,
who attended the concert with his brother Andrew, 33. Both have listened
to the band since they were teens. "Honestly, it was something I didn't
think I would see," he said. "The core of the band is Eddie and Alex, but
the alpha male is David. I thought the crowd was going to be older, but
this proves their influence and that the interest goes beyond
generations."
Both were more than pleased with the performance. "I think David held
back. He hasn't been in front of 20,000 people in 20 years," Long said.
Knowing the group's volatility, he said, "you want to be at the first show
because you don't know what will happen with them."

By Robert Padgett, Reuters

By Jason E. Miczek, AP
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