February 17th, 2008
From: http://www.jacksonville.com/
By ROGER BULL, The Times-Union
The best thing about Saturday night's Van Halen concert at Jacksonville
Veterans Memorial Arena was seeing almost all of the original band back
together. The reunion that started last year brought lead singer David Lee
Roth back on stage with the band for the first time in more than 20 years.
The worst was that you just couldn't hear Roth well enough. It went past
the usual not being able to understand all the lyrics. We could barely
hear him at all over the guitar, bass and drums of the three Van Halens.
(It's even more a family affair these days now that 16-year-old Wolfgang
Van Halen has taken up the bass and joined his father Eddie Van Halen and
uncle Alex Van Halen.)
Maybe Roth still has the voice, maybe not. He seemed to be working hard at
the vocals. He not as active as he once was, who is? All three original
members are in their 50s, but still look more than fit.
Roth still pulled off a few of his signature leg-kicking jumps. And he
mugged and preened for the crowd and the cameras, one part rock star, one
part circus ringmaster. (Though I confess that the image of a game show
host on a cruise ship came to mind from time to time.)
The music, however, was classic Van Halen. Eddie Van Halen is still one of
the guitar gods and the show featured lots of Eddie, from the minute he
showed up on stage, shirtless and solo. And he knows lots of ways to get
notes out of an electric guitar. Tapping the strings, twisting the knobs,
working the pedals and filling the arena with walls of feedback.
With the vocal so lost, it was Van Halen's trademark riffs that signaled
the songs.
"You're going to get a free history lesson from Van Halen tonight," Roth
announced. And the crowd - mostly 30s-50s, with a few scattered teens here
and there - did. If they didn't sell it out the place, it was close. Even
those sections along the side almost behind the stage were full.
The band took them back in time, moving quickly through about two hours
worth of their songs, pretty much all from 1978 to 1984: You Really Got
Me, I'm the One, Romeo Delight, Somebody Get Me a Doctor, Beautiful Girls,
Dance the Night Away, Everybody Wants Some, So This Is Love, Pretty Woman,
Unchained, And the Cradle Will Rock, Hot For Teacher, Little Guitars,
Jamie's Cryin', Panama ...
Just for fun, bits of other songs like Magic Bus and Spoonful showed up
here and there.
Alex Van Halen had his drum solo, Eddie Van Halen his guitar solo. Roth
probably went out a little too long talking about teenage years in
Pasadena before kicking of a fine acoustic-turned-electric version of Ice
Cream Man.
It didn't take the band long to come back out for an encore. The
synthesized sounds of 1984 came from somewhere while Roth waved a big red
flag. Then they kicked into Jump and the big disco ball spun and confetti
blew down from the ceiling.
Ky-Mani Marley, one of Bob's many singing sons, opened the show with a
solid 30-minute set of reggae. It was a bit odd to have an opener play
such completely different music, but it was fun and the crowd particularly
responded to two of his father's best-known songs: No Woman No Cry and I
Shot the Sheriff.
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