October 22nd, 2007
From: http://blogcritics.org/
Van Halen returned to Detroit Saturday at Joe Louis Arena for the first
time in 23 years with original singer David Lee Roth at the mic and for
the first time ever without founding bassist Michael Anthony.
In the long Van Halen soap opera, Anthony had a falling out with the Van
Halen brothers around 2002, when he joined Sammy Hagar during his joint
tour with Roth. This was seen as breaking ranks with the brothers as both
Roth and Hagar were out of the band at that point and therefore mortal
enemies of Eddie and Alex Van Halen.
Anthony toured with the band on their 2004 tour with Hagar, but only
because Hagar refused to do the tour without him. When that tour finished
amidst rumors of fighting and substance abuse problems for Eddie (he did a
stint in rehab this year), Hagar was once again out and Eddie saw a
perfect opportunity for him to take Anthony with him.
Enter Wolfgang Van Halen, Eddie's 16-year-old son. Turns out, during all
those years when Eddie was locked away in his home studio, he was grooming
Wolfgang to be the new bassist in Van Halen.
Wolfgang rehearsed with the brothers for over a year when they decided
they wanted to take the show on the road. Problem is, they didn't have a
singer. David Lee Roth, whose recent gig as a radio personality fizzled
and whose recent solo career wasn't doing much better, needed Van Halen.
Likewise, the band could ill afford to bring in a fourth singer,
especially considering their third singer, Gary Cherone, was not accepted
by a majority of fans. With Hagar on the outs again, Roth was the only
option.
The band announced their tour earlier this year, but postponed it soon
after as Eddie entered rehab, suspiciously around the time the band was
inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Only Hagar and Anthony
attended the event. However, when tickets went on sale in August for the
tour, fans who had waited 23 years to see the band's charismatic original
front man at the helm would soon get their wish.
In the first of two Detroit shows, the band played to about an 80 percent
full house, opening with their cover of the Kinks' classic, "You Really
Got Me." Roth was a little low in the mix for the first several songs, but
that got sorted out and he sang and performed well, punctuating his vocals
with Elvis-style karate moves. He described the new lineup as being three
quarters original, one quarter inevitable.
Eddie played with great intensity and passion -- a far cry from the hit-
or-miss nature of the 2004 tour, which was marred by sloppy playing and
band fighting. He had a lot of interaction on stage with his son, high-
fiving him a few times (and missing cues as a result) and he had some
timing issues during "Hot For Teacher," but for the most part, Eddie was
the Eddie of old -- playing well, smiling, running and jumping around.
For having big shoes to fill in replacing fan-favorite Anthony, Wolfgang
did an admirable job. He doesn't have the dexterity on bass, vocal ability
or stage presence of Anthony, but he didn't bring the show down either.
Roth took it upon himself to educate him in the ways of rock and roll,
saying, "Look out there, that's Detroit."
The biggest star of the show was drummer Alex Van Halen. He played as well
as he ever has and, more importantly, kept the band together when some
songs started falling apart.
With a band as volatile as Van Halen, and with no definite plans to
continue after the tour ends in December, fans wanting to catch a glimpse
of the (mostly) original band should do so while they still have a chance.
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