October 4th, 2007
From: http://www.nj.com/
Eddie Van Halen and David Lee Roth reunite for big stage tour
BY BRADLEY BAMBARGER
Star-Ledger Staff
PHILADELPHIA -- The ostentatious hugs may be as stage-managed as a G8
summit, but at least the smiles appear genuine on the original Van Halen's
reunion tour -- finally, after a decade's on-again, off-again soap opera.
Guitar whiz Eddie Van Halen and singer/showbiz-ham David Lee Roth are
famous opposites, with no love lost since they first split in the
mid-'80s. But Roth is beaming at being back on big stages, fronting a
legendary band. And though an ear-to-ear grin is Eddie's default
expression when playing, the fresh-from-rehab guitarist seems truly
ecstatic to be roaring through the songs that inspired generations of
acolytes.
And Van Halen fans -- at least those at Monday's show at Philly's Wachovia
Center -- are smiling at seeing the band's original incarnation again, and
in shockingly good form, besides. Except that it's not quite the band that
went from ruling the Sunset Strip in the mid-'70s to topping the charts in
1984. Eddie kicked out bassist Michael Anthony for siding with Sammy
Hagar, the singer who never really replaced Roth.
For all Eddie's six-string pyromania, Anthony's bass lines always seemed
like something a 16-year-old could play. On this tour, a 16-year-old does
play them -- Eddie's son, Wolfgang. Though tutored well by his proud
father, the husky teen looked like a kid who won a "play with Van Halen"
contest. Strangely, though, he had Anthony's vital high harmonies down.
Roth got it right when he described the band as "three-quarters original,
one-quarter inevitable."
In Van Halen's party-band heyday, Roth was part scissors-kicking rock god,
part ironic strip-club emcee. Few front men stood to lose more with age,
and he turns 54 this month. Although he has less hair, Roth is hardly less
fit, retaining his martial-arts skills with a mic stand and a few
Chippendales dance moves. He was never much of a singer, but his growls
and squeals remain intact, mostly.
New to Roth's menu of well-oiled stage patter is a kind of nostalgic
charm. Strumming an acoustic guitar for his intro to "Ice Cream Man," he
put on a one-man "That '70s Show," reminiscing about smoke circles in the
suburbs (memories the mostly fortysomething male crowd could share). The
band then kicked in behind him, exploding the cover of bluesman John
Brim's tune into carnivalesque metal, just like in the '70s.
Back in the day, Eddie's post-Cream/Hendrix virtuosity almost made old
guitar heroes seem obsolete. It was soon apparent that his supersonic
flash could only express one emotion: excitement. But his playing is still
an aural thrill ride. Eddie, his hands like the sinewy tools of a
blacksmith, wrests a tone from his instrument that is always warm and
real. But with a dizzying battery of tricks -- string- and neck-bending,
hammer-ons, pull-offs, rubbing strings against pickups, effects with
whammy bar, volume knobs and toggle switch -- he made his guitar sound
like a weird orchestra.
The drum solo by Eddie's brother, Alex, was a test of endurance, for him
and the audience. The night-capping "Jump" should've been stripped down,
ditching the dated synths on a backing track. Mostly, though, the set was
an impressive race through the band's 1978-84 songbook, from the
reputation-making Kinks cover "You Really Got Me" and gleeful MTV hit "Hot
for Teacher" to hard-grinding lesser-knowns "Little Dreamer" and
"Everybody Wants Some." With nothing new to say, the show was a guilty
pleasure, but a pleasure nonetheless.
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