November 20th, 2007
From: http://www.variety.com/
(Madison Square Garden; 19,000 seats; $165 top)
By DAVID SPRAGUE
Presented by Live Nation. Reviewed Nov. 13, 2007.
Band: David Lee Roth, Eddie Van Halen, Alex Van Halen, Wolfgang Van Halen.
Clean. Well-oiled. Smooth. These aren't words one would have associated
with the first coming of the David Lee Roth-fronted Van Halen, but they
were the first adjectives that came to mind when the band took to Madison
Square Garden's stage on its much-anticipated reunion tour.
Professionalism is, of course, nothing to be sneezed at, but the members
of Van Halen -- with the exception of Eddie Van Halen's bass-playing
teenage son, Wolfgang, recruited to replace the unceremoniously dumped
Michael Anthony -- played their assigned parts so close to the vest this
evening as to make a skeptic wonder if they'd been replaced by animatronic
doubles.
Roth played up his ringmaster shtick from the opening chords of an
undeniably powerful version of "You Really Got Me," and while there were
moments when he recaptured the Borscht Belt-meets Sunset Strip-vivacity of
his first stint with the band, the singer's moves had something of a by-
the-book feel to them.
Roth's singing voice, however, was in top form. Often underrated as a
vocalist, he showed off his full range here, segueing easily from crisp
pop tenor (the mortar that held together a soaring "Jamie's Crying") to
lustful faux-blues growl (the linchpin of a gritty "Somebody Get Me a
Doctor").
Eddie Van Halen held up his end of the bargain much of the time, strafing
songs like "Atomic Punk" and "Runnin' With the Devil" with bracing and
acrobatic lead lines. The non-stop barrage of technique got in the way on
more than one occasion, however, putting an unneeded spin on what
should've been a straightforward "Hot for Teacher" and sidetracking an
otherwise spot-on "Pretty Woman" (on which Roth and Wolfgang traded vocals
affably).
The 16-year-old bassist acquitted himself more effectively than naysayers
might've expected, plowing through the classics with a hereditary
flashiness -- a marked change from the more brutish, to-the-point playing
of his predecessor -- particularly on a stinging encore version of "1984."
While Wolfgang didn't take a solo turn, both his father and uncle took
their customary extended showcases. Those interludes -- tailored for
diehards in the first place -- seemed particularly superfluous at this
perf, given the lack of genuine interaction the musicians displayed during
the songs that surrounded them. Granted, resurrecting the gang mentality
of bygone days would seem a bit disingenuous at this point in Van Halen's
history, but a little bit of sparring would've added a few welcome twists
to the overly straight path they're navigating on this trek.
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