December 27th, 2007
From: http://www.straight.com/
Concert Reviews By Steve Newton
At GM Place on Wednesday, December 5
The vast majority of people at last week's Van Halen show appeared to be
males between the ages of 30 and 50, eager to reconnect with the unbridled
guitar-rock noise that erupted straight outta Pasadena when David Lee Roth
and Eddie Van Halen hooked up. I was hoping to relive that
late-'70s/early-'80s vibe too, so I brought along a buddy I used to hang
with back in the day, when skunk weed, Baby Duck, and Van Halen II were a
triple threat to our already scarce brain cells.
The show started off strongly, with Roth staking out a ramp above Alex Van
Halen's drum kit, waving a huge red flag while Eddie churned out his famous
take on the riff from the Kinks' "You Really Got Me". Sporting a yellow
version of the matador-style bolero jacket he's been partial to of late,
Roth strutted around the stage looking so elated you'd have sworn he'd just
been handed a platinum membership card to the Hair Club for Men. Two songs
later, he donned a red top hat for "Runnin' With the Devil", another ear-
busting gem from Van Halen's self-titled 1978 debut, glancing at an
imaginary wristwatch while crooning "I live my life like there's no
tomorrow."
Next up was "Romeo Delight", one of the quartet's more forgettable ditties,
and green lasers kicked in as if to make up for its aural deficiencies.
These weren't mind-blowing lasers though, and their ineffectiveness was in
line with the show's other drawbacks. The staging was basic, the lights no
great shakes, and the sound passable. Folks who had paid upwards of $160
deserved better.
What they were mainly shelling out for was the chance to see Roth back in
the lineup for the first time in 20 years, replacing his replacement, Sammy
Hagar. Despite the fact that Eddie couldn't stop grinning the whole time, it
didn't seem as if there was any deep connection between the long-lost
bandmates. Roth's vocals were weak in spots; perhaps the massive reunion
tour has sapped his vitality. He was much more of a powerhouse a few years
back, when he played the Orpheum as a solo artist.
While not energetic, both Roth and Eddie VH looked in shape. The shirtless
Eddie was the picture of sinewy strength. The same couldn't be said of his
teenaged son, Wolfgang, who handled the bass and backup vocals normally
assigned to long-time member Michael Anthony. But so what if the kid could
stand to shed some baby fat? He's 16 and he's in Van Halen.
It would have been cool to hear Roth tackle a tune or two from Van Halen's
Hagar era instead of padding the set with such mediocre numbers as "Mean
Street" and "So This Is Love?" After a tedious drum solo.is there any other
kind?.things improved with the dynamic "Unchained", the smouldering "I'll
Wait", the ribald "Hot for Teacher", and the intense "Little Dreamer". When
Eddie was left alone on-stage for his own extended solo, he repeatedly
twiddled his volume knob to mimic the sound of a string section, apparently
forgetting that nobody wanted to hear the sound of a string section.
As expected, the group encored with its biggest hit, "Jump", but by then I
was already pondering the question that has raged among Van Halen fans for
decades. After this unspectacular gig, I'd say the jury's still out on
whether Dave's the best or Sammy rules.
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