October 11th, 2007
From: http://www.chartattack.com/
Before Van Halen hit the stage, the hallways of the sold-out Air Canada
Centre were ringing with an endless series of "Eddie! Eddie! Eddie!"
chants. And, sure enough, his guitar theatrics would go on to melt many
minds that night. But the real story of the night was two other Van Halen
members -- returning singer David Lee Roth and newly installed 16-year-old
bassist Wolfgang Van Halen.
It's taken 23 years of fits and miss-starts, but there was DLR waving a
giant red flag when the curtain came down and Eddie ripped into the
opening of their Kinks cover, "You Really Got Me."
There was no discernible sign of the years of feuding and acrimony between
Roth and Eddie that led to Diamond Dave's two decade-long exile. Indeed,
the two hugged and made multiple, pointed displays of bro-manship
throughout the evening.
Roth dug deep into his bag of showy tricks all night. There were the
obligatory staff twirling and spin kick exhibitions, a session of mic
stand phantom baseball playing, bedazzley sequined jackets, top hats,
harmonicas and a Razhel-worthy imitation of a motorcycle engine revving.
In pretty much any other band, antics like this would quickly be
considered irritating. But Roth's role in Van Halen is still clear after
all these years. He's the trickster, the joker and the party maker, and it
works to conceptual perfection against Eddie's potent riffing and an
endless series of songs about chicks 'n' rockin' 'n' gettin' unchained.
Eddie's son Wolfgang joining the band is an entirely different and
intriguing new element to Van Halen. VH traditionalists are bent out of
shape by Eddie's ousting of longtime bassist Michael Anthony in favour of
his son. But, let's face it, Halen are a family business. So if anyone was
going to replace Anthony, the fact that it's an actual blood relation
softens the blow. And besides, Eddie seems to really, really dig playing
on stage with his son. They bumped into each other, played from their
knees together and ran around in a way that arguably very few fathers and
teenage sons will ever have a chance to relate to in any type of scenario,
let alone on a stage in front of thousands.
Better, though, was that Wolfgang seemed smart enough to know his place.
VH2007 are definitely the Ed and Dave show, so, save for a run around a
circular catwalk that extended into the crowd from the stage during
"Atomic Punk" and a grandstanding platform moment to intro "Runnin' With
The Devil," he stayed mostly in the background. Sure, it's fun to joke
that if Wolfgang was still a virgin before the tour, he certainly wouldn't
be by the end of it. Or to suggest that when he turned 16, Eddie told him
he'd have to start paying rent and get a real job, so he did. But the
truth of it was that Wolfgang's presence was entirely accepted by the
audience -- the drunken, wildly manic audience.
That audience had a lot to "yearrgghh!" and fist-pump about. Halen pretty
much stuck to the hits all night, delivering a set list of familiar
anthems. "Everybody Wants Some" had a fun twist, with Roth segueing into
The Who's "Magic Bus" during the breakdown. Likewise, a shirtless Eddie
looked remarkably limber and healthy (even though he's still smoking
cigarettes, apparently), and he riffed on Deep Purple's "Smoke On The
Water" in the midst of some guitar theatrics. These moments and excellent
takes on "Jamie's Crying," "Little Dreamer" and "Unchained" had people
literally stumbling over themselves in the aisles. It was, however, the
mega-hits that sealed the deal.
A home stretch run of "Hot For Teacher," "Panama" and "Ain't Talkin' 'Bout
Love" both showcased Eddie's relentless guitar playing and Roth's
perfectly shameless frontwork. By the time the band hurled into "Jump,"
their final song and biggest hit, Eddie hammered at a phantom keyboard
with a free hand between playing, Roth ran around with a giant inflatable
microphone and wore a captain's hat, confetti rained from the ceiling, and
wobbled fists were hoisted throughout the arena.
After just six dates on the tour, it's impossible to predict if Roth and
Eddie are going to keep it together, but there was no indication this
night that Van Halen would be back-stepping any time soon. It's safe to
say the party is definitely on.

Van Halen at the Air Canada Centre on October 7, 2007.
Photo by Richard Beland
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