October 8th, 2007
From: http://www.masslive.com/
By DONNIE MOORHOUSE
Music writer
UNCASVILLE - Meet the new Van Halen, same (almost) as the old Van Halen.
Taking his rightful place as the front man of one of rock's legendary
bands, David Lee Roth led Van Halen through a triumphant two-hour
performance at the Mohegan Sun Arena on Friday night.
"This is the new band," shouted Roth, describing the outfit as "three
quarters original and one quarter inevitable," in reference to the cherub-
faced Wolfgang Van Halen, son of Eddie, filling in on bass.
The new band, like the original version and the Sammy Hagar version (in
fact, all but the failed Gary Cherone experimental version) rocks like a
muscle car, vintage for sure, but still hot off the line.
Eddie Van Halen, who just a few short years ago looked like Ghost of Rock
Stars Passed due to his bad hip, battle with cancer and carpal tunnel
syndrome, appeared ripped and sinewy with his shirt off in front of the
curtain to open the show with a searing guitar introduction to "You Really
Got Me."
After "Running with the Devil," the band received a wild, disruptive and
deafening ovation.
"Look at all the people here tonight," shouted a relatively subdued Roth,
who retained just a few high leg kicks and the occasional hip shake from
his once-flamboyant stage routine.
The band offered the hits right alongside some more obscure fare, going
from "Dance the Night Away" and "Beautiful Girls" to "Mean Street" and
"Little Dreamer."
While the famously feuding Roth and Eddie Van Halen did partake in a few
phony, choreographed embraces, the pair did at times seem genuinely
entertained by each other and engaged in some subtle on-stage
acknowledgments that suggested the hatchet, if not buried, has at least
been hung on the wall for this tour.
The highlights of the set were surely the hits, from "Pretty Woman" and
"Hot for Teacher" to "Jamie's Crying" and "Panama." Roth also scored with
his acoustic kickoff of the "Ice Cream Man."
Roth was in good voice, Alex Van Halen's lengthy drum solo showed he still
has the chops, and the young Wolfgang, who stayed mostly in time and out
of the way, proved to be a viable vocal harmonizer with both his father
and Roth.
For his part, Eddie Van Halen was the guitar beast he has always been,
hammering chirps and squeaks out of his instrument during the solo that
introduced the set-closing "Ain't Talking 'Bout Love."
The band encored with "Jump" as confetti sprayed around the arena and Roth
rode the stage on a giant inflatable microphone.
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