November 16th, 2007
From: http://www.washingtontimes.com/
In Concert/Scott Galupo
David Lee Roth can thank his lucky Netherlanders.
Last night at Verizon Center, Mr. Roth was back as the triumphantly cheesy
lead singer of '80s hard-rock superstars Van Halen.
Before his rapprochement with brothers Eddie and Alex Van Halen, however,
Mr. Roth was less than just a gigolo; he was a human wax figure willing to
croon with anyone who'd ask -- from bluegrass pickers to the Boston Pops
Symphony Orchestra.
Then came this fall's semi-reunion tour, on which original bassist Michael
Anthony has been unceremoniously discarded to make room for Eddie's 16-
year-old son by Valerie Bertanelli, Wolfgang Van Halen.
Newbie nepotism aside, it's hard to knock these fiftysomething bubble-
metalists. They debuted in 1978, a year when punk rock was scorching the
earth of mainstream rock. Van Halen figured a third-way: They eschewed the
self-importance but held onto the bombast.
Things have changed little since then. Seemingly, that is: Van Halen circa
2007 would have you believe that the band went on hiatus in 1984, and that
the singer Sammy Hagar never existed.
The show opened with the chordal crunch of the Kinks cover "You Really Got
Me," and the band would eventually tear its way through fully eight tracks
from its eponymous debut -- hits like "Runnin' with the Devil," "Ain't
Talkin' 'Bout Love," "Jamie's Cryin'" and less-frequently-flogged cuts
like "Atomic Punk."
Lots more Roth-era faves followed: "Beautiful Girls," Dance the Night
Away," "Hot for Teacher," "Panama" and, finally, the synth-driven slab
"Jump." For its two-hour set, the band quite purposefully stuck to a pre-
Hagar script.
Wearing a succession of spangly waistcoasts -- unbuttoned for six-pack-ab
exposure -- Mr. Roth, 53, looked like a Vegas bullfighter and acted every
bit like the unapologetic crotch-rock star. At one point, as he stalked an
elliptical pit in front of the stage, he even placed a fan's cell phone in
his pants.
If Mr. Roth's unchecked ego was an insurmountable obstacle for Eddie and
Alex, who more than 10 years ago came within a platinum-hair's breadth
from burying the hatchet with the singer, one could never have guessed it
last night, judging from all the grins and back-pats and microphone-saliva
swapping.
Eddie, 52, emerged shirtless and in baggy camouflage pants. Post-rehab and
post-cancer, the legendary guitarist looked fit and ferocious as he wound
his way through many of his classic riffs and trademark, two-hand-tapping
instrumental theatrics.
After trading bluesy phrases, in the call-and-response style of Robert
Plant and Jimmy Page, Mr. Roth and co. quoted the Who classic "Magic Bus"
with a twist: "You can have it," Mr. Roth sang, adding, "you can have a
little extra for free tonight."
At a time when affectless shoegazing indie-rock is the order of the day,
Van Halen is nothing if not an anachronistic throwback. Not that anyone in
last night's capacity audience seemed to mind, of course.
Nor did anyone seem to protest the absence of Mr. Anthony; young Wolfgang
handled not only the latter's basslines but his high harmonies as well --
much to his father's proud delight.
Van Halen is now three-quarters a family affair. And David Lee Roth is,
once again, very much his own equation.
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