January 29th, 2008
From: http://www.pegasusnews.com/
Concert review: Van Halen / Ky-Mani Marley
By Ron Dempesmeier
DALLAS -- Even at 53 years of age, Eddie Van Halen and his band can still
incite a riotous reaction from an arena full of fans. The reunited (minus
bassist Michael Anthony) Van Halen Mk. I came to Dallas on Eddie's big day
and gave the ravenous crowd a present they'll long remember.
2007 (when this current tour began) saw the reunions of some of the most
beloved bands of the Seventies. The Police, Led Zeppelin and Van Halen
with original lead singer David Lee Roth were all thought never to tread
the boards together again, but they proved us wrong. Too bad Zeppelin's
reunion was a one-off in London, but getting to see Van Halen a second
time around with the flamboyant front man Roth was an opportunity not to
be missed.
The band kicked off their set with their remake of the classic Kinks'
rocker "You Really Got Me." They quickly went into their early catalog
with songs like "I'm the One," "Runnin' with the Devil" and "Romeo
Delight" (which had a brief section by Roth and the audience to serenade
Eddie with a rendition of "Happy Birthday" and then a bit of The Who's
"Magic Bus"). When they performed "Somebody Get Me a Doctor" the band
incorporated Humble Pie's "I Don't Need No Doctor" and Cream's remake of
the blues classic "Spoonful" as homage to acts that influenced the young
Van Halen and Roth.
Van Halen was always a band that had serious hard rock chops, but it also
had a penchant for writing pure pop gems like "Beautiful Girls" and "Dance
the Night Away" from their second album. These songs provide a bit of
relief from the relentless rocking and the proficient manner in which the
show was presented. When the band got to "Everybody Wants Some!!" from
their Women and Children first album, the entire show felt like another
gear had been reached. This was probably due to the primal, tribal beat
that drummer Alex Van Halen uses to drive the song and the slightly
lascivious spoken middle section in which the ever ready Roth tries to
talk sexy to an imaginary girl.
When Van Halen went into Fair Warning's "Mean Streets," Roth swung his
microphone stand like a crazed baton twirler. After a quick run-through of
the their great remake of Roy Orbison's "Pretty Woman," Alex Van Halen got
to demonstrate his percussion skills during a rather tidy (and not
tedious!) drum solo. Somewhere offstage extra keyboard sounds were added
to spice up the sound.
This led into an energetic "Unchained" and the first song off of their
1984 album: "I'll Wait." During that tour, Eddie insisted on playing the
keyboard parts on stage instead of guitar, but in this one they were
either pre-recorded or piped in from offstage. The harmony vocals also
seemed a bit suspect on this song (formally handled by ex-bassist Michael
Anthony and EVH, but now "sung" by EVH and his son Wolfgang), but there
was no doubt that DLR was putting his all into the performance.
Going from the punkish/ultra macho "And the Cradle Will Rock..." and "Hot
for Teacher" and the sublime "Little Guitars" showed the range of this re-
energized quartet. Roth came out with an acoustic guitar and strummed
while reminiscing about his days as a teenager in suburban Southern
California. He claimed to have had a friend that actually drove an ice
cream truck which they emptied out and stored beer for weekend parties and
smoked herb with a neighborhood kid named "Kenny" while listening to Pink
Floyd. This led into the Van Halen I classic "Ice Cream Man." When Van
Halen performed "Panama" the entire audience joyously joined in on the
single word chorus.
Finally, the audience was treated to Edward's wizardry on guitar during a
10-12 minute guitar solo. Van Halen started while sitting on the slope of
the near "figure 8" stage and with a bit of flamenco/classical style
picking. He then went into a distorted Hendrix-like section before going
into the soothing, pipe organ-like sounds of his "Cathedral" solo from
1982's Diver Down. The final movement of the solo was his seminal double
handed tapping "Eruption" which whipped the crowd into frenzy. The only
song that could possibly follow this display of genius was the ferocious
"Ain't Talkin' 'Bout Love."
After a brief exodus from the stage, Eddie, Alex, Wolfgang Van Halen and
David Lee Roth came back on stage with the synthesized strains of "1984."
They launched into the buoyant, crowd-pleasing "Jump" and all the stage
props like David's 4th top hat of the evening, a giant, inflated
microphone and showers of confetti came out. Roth even managed to do more
drum major twirling and his highest jumping karate kick of the evening (he
didn't do one of those splits jumps from the drum riser, but he's not 29
anymore either). There was no doubt that Van Halen could still deliver the
goods. Actually, this was better than the last time I saw this version of
the band because they were not on speaking terms then and Roth seemed to
have taken a few too many drinks before the show and kept forgetting
lyrics.
Finally, the opening act for this great show was Ky-Mani Marley, son of
deceased Reggae superstar Bob Marley. He fronted a band very similar to
his father's in that he had female background singers with who he could
rely on for excellent support. The music he performed was a mix of his own
and his father's ("No Woman No Cry" and "I Shot the Sheriff"). It was
rather interesting to have an act whose music was so different from the
headliner's style. He was very grateful for the opportunity to tour with
Van Halen. Like his brothers (Ziggy, Damian, etc.) it will take a bit of
luck (and some amazing songs) for him to ever stand outside his father's
large shadow. I hope for their sake this will happen some day!
Van Halen setlist
You Really Got Me | I'm the One | Runnin' with the Devil | Romeo Delight |
Somebody Get Me a Doctor | Beautiful Girls | Dance the Night Away | Atomic
Punk | Everybody Wants Some!! | So This Is Love? | Mean Streets | Pretty
Woman | Drum Solo | Unchained | I'll Wait | And the Cradle Will Rock... |
Hot for Teacher | Little Dreamer | Little Guitars | Jamie's Cryin' | Ice
Cream Man | Panama | Guitar Solo | Ain't Talkin' 'Bout Love
Encores: 1984/Jump
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