November 30th, 2007
From: http://www.sacbee.com/
By Chris Macias
"You Really Got Me" roared through Arco Arena, and for a moment, Eddie Van
Halen and David Lee Roth had their arms around each other like old
buddies. It might seem like a small gesture. But in the saga of Van Halen,
any embrace between the two counts as a triumph.
Previous attempts to reunite Roth with his old band left only puddles of
bad blood. But the Van Halen that played Sacramento on Tuesday night was
all about perma-grins - or at least great game faces - and a powerful two-
hour set of Van Halen classics. There was none of that "Van Hagar" stuff,
and Roth's solo work was thankfully left for another time. (Whew, no "Just
a Gigolo").
Van Halen circa 2007 brings the band back to its party rocking best:
Diamond Dave and Eddie Van Halen sharing a microphone during the high
harmonies of "Dance the Night Away," and a capacity crowd of 15,000-plus
going bonkers during "Beautiful Girls" and "Panama."
It was enough to make you forget that Sammy Hagar was once the voice of
Van Halen. And that Gary Cherone guy who fronted Van Halen for a
millisecond after Hagar left, we'll just pretend that didn't happen.
Eddie Van Halen meanwhile looked elated, speed-picking his custom guitars
with a smile and ripping through "Eruption" like it was 1978 all over
again. It was a whole different Van Halen than the frazzled guitar god who
performed in Sacramento a couple years ago.
Van Halen's rejuvenation is obviously inspired by the band's 16-year-old
bassist. That's Wolfgang Van Halen, the son of Eddie and replacement for
original bassist Michael Anthony. (Roth described the line-up as "three-
quarters original, one-quarter inevitable.") The elder Van Halen played a
dual role of guitar hero and proud papa, giving his son numerous kisses
and doting on Wolfgang as he rumbled away on bass.
Together with his uncle Alex on drums, the two generations of Van Halens
made for a mighty rhythm section. The flipside is that Roth's vocals were
overpowered at times, especially with Eddie's guitar riffing away.
But for a teenager who'd normally be studying for finals right about now,
he did an admirable job of anchoring the band and singing Van Halen's
signature harmonies. The young dude could loosen up a little more, but
he'll certainly get more comfortable with a few more tours under his belt.
By the time he's the ripe old age of 19, he'll be a pro.
But there'll only be one Diamond Dave, the mouth behind "Mean Streets" and
archetype for high-kicking singers everywhere. At 53, Roth is less
airborne than the "Jump" video days of yore but still has a few good leaps
left in him.
He didn't hold back much on his vocals either - "And the Cradle Will
Rock" and "Hot For Teacher" were delivered righteously - but Roth's
phrasing was so loose that it sometimes sounding scatterbrained. And who
knew that Roth played such tasty acoustic guitar, like he did on "Ice
Cream Man?" Once the rest of the band kicked the tune into high gear, the
song rarely sounded hotter.
The night started off on a much mellower note with an opening set by Ky-
Mani Marley. Van Halen's party rock is about as far away as you can get
from reggae, but the son of Bob Marley and his band eased the crowd (at
least the ones who weren't in line for beer and t-shirts) into 30 minutes
of Jamaican music. Marley's versions of "No Woman No Cry" and "I Shot the
Sheriff" were received just fine.
An opening set of hard rock might've made the night feel overloaded. Van
Halen rocked with more than enough wattage of its own, like when Eddie and
Wolfgang Van Halen kneeled side by side and pounded through "Romeo
Delight" with Roth singing away.
At least the fireworks were in Van Halen's music this time, not some
behind the scenes flare up.
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