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Van Halen Live, Sept. 27, 2007
October 9th, 2007
From: http://www.ew.com/
By Dan Snierson
Before we get to what happened during Van Halen's first concert with
David Lee Roth since 1984 -- and, oh, lots did! -- here's what didn't
happen. Diamond Dave didn't break out the assless chaps. Eddie Van Halen
didn't trip over his whammy bar. His bassist son, Wolfgang, didn't wet
himself. The band didn't even break up on stage. Actually, something
more startling did go down: Van Halen took an encouraging step toward
reclaiming their hard-rock throne (neh-neh, Axl!) -- or at least their
good name. Not bad for a few fiftysomethings and a 16-year-old.
How would VH kick off this 40-date tour that once-mulleted, now-graying
fans have prayed for since high school detention? (They trekked here
from all over the country, fearing the band might implode before
reaching a venue near them.) Roth waved a giant red flag -- holy omen?
-- and then VH blazed through their multiplatinum catalog of
catchy-as-an-STD rockers (''Panama,'' ''Unchained,'' ''Beautiful
Girls'') as if there was much to prove. Which, of course, there was.
After the bitter '85 split with Roth, myriad botched reunions, and
lead-singer musical chairs with Sammy Hagar (successful) and Gary
Cherone (suckcessful) -- plus the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame no-show and
the dumping of original bassist Michael Anthony for Wolfgang -- the band
had transmogrified into Spīnal Fīnger Tap. Yet on this night, the Halen
turned rather mighty again. Without the aid of pyro. Midway through
''I'm the One,'' the first of several cool surprises, they stopped cold
and soaked in the whoo!'s for a solid minute. ''It took us 20 years to
get this f---in' far!'' bellowed a touched Roth, who left any tensions
with Eddie behind, or backstage. The duo were all smiles and high fives.
(Cue Naked Gun scene in which dog embraces mailman, Muslim hugs Jew.)
Among the sights and sounds: a tight-abbed Roth in Vegas-y matador
jackets, his well-worn voice sounding unusually fresh 'n' focused.
Despite perching a top hat on his crotch, he radiated as much giddiness
as horniness -- grateful for redemption. Ditto for Shreddie. After
spotty work on 2004's reunion tour with Hagar, the newly rehabbed guitar
wizard stunned with mean riffs, otherworldly squeals, and blistering
fretwork, anchored by drummer brother Alex Van Halen's thunderstickery.
(Still, their indulgent solo showcases begat a few urinal breaks.) And
up there with his decades-older mentors, Wolfie resembled a contest
winner, but calmly issued sturdy grooves and vocals. Anthony's
conviviality and sublime harmonies were missed, yes, but not mourned.
What to make of this? Is it one-time wonderful? A triumph of middle-aged
will? A future of CDs, tours, breakups, and makeups? We've got devil
horns on one hand, fingers crossed on the other. A-

RAWK AND AWE Ax and ye shall receive: David Lee Roth joins Eddie and the rest of Van Halen live, and it's still hardcore like '84
Kevin Mazur/WireImage.com
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