November 20th, 2007
From: http://www.canada.com/montrealgazette/
David and Eddie show was a high-volume, scissor-kickin' expression of
eternal youth
T'CHA DUNLEVY, The Gazette
Sparks flew as David Lee Roth joined old bandmate Eddie Van Halen and
family for a stop on Van Halen's reunion tour last night before 14,400
fans at the Bell Centre.
The band last toured in 2004 with singer Sammy Hagar, but it is Roth's
first stint with his old mates in over 20 years. And surprisingly, where
there was once tension, there now appears to be - could it be? -
camaraderie between him and Eddie Van Halen.
The wailing guitarist was beside himself last night, giddily shredding his
way through the set, flanked by his brother Alex, and his 16-year-old son
Wolfgang, who recently replaced longstanding member Michael Anthony on
bass.
"We've got the brand new Van Halen, here," Roth announced, "three-quarters
original, one-quarter inevitable."
It was the David and Eddie show, as the two buff 50-somethings took turns
proving their eternal youth, while playing songs from their shared heyday.
They opened with their old version of the Kinks' You Really Got Me, the
first of three straight off Van Halen's self-titled 1978 debut. Roth stood
on a raised platform waving a giant red flag, while Eddie unleashed an
opening solo. Roth's infamous scissor-kicks weren't far behind, and the
night was under way.
The band stuck strictly to its early era repertoire over the next two
hours, not playing anything from after 1984. But that still left lots to
choose from. Runnin' With the Devil rocked hard but suffered from
distortion, as Roth walked the circular catwalk twirling a red top-hat.
On Romeo Delight, from 1980's Women and Children First, he went from
twirling his microphone stand to practicing mock-martial arts moves, while
Van Halen ripped out another riff.
Beautiful Girls was a dumb, fun, shout-it-out anthem, and Dance the Night
Away swung with radio-playlist accessibility. The Roy Orbison cover Pretty
Woman was a crowd-pleaser.
Alex Van Halen got a chance to shine in a mid-show drum solo. The band
returned, revived, for Unchained, in which Roth delivered a few roundhouse
kicks before strolling onto the catwalk for the '80s-synth-laden I'll
Wait.
The sound was an ear-bleed-inducing mess most of the time, particularly
for And the Cradle Will Rock, during which the vibe took a serious dip. It
returned during the high-speed Hot For Teacher.
The sheer volume, Van Halen's guitar grandstanding and Roth's flamboyant
antics offered diversion, but not enough to mask the fact there was
something missing. These guys were sputtering when they should have been
launching into orbit.
"Is this a good show tonight or f---ing what?" Roth asked. The crowd
replied with the requisite roar, and a good show it may have been. But it
was far from great.
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