October 29th, 2007
From: http://www.kansascity.com/
The anticipation for this show was so high that Ky-Mani Marley started his
opening set eight minutes early. Sooner in, sooner out, and on with the
main event.
So after a 35-minute set that included reggae classics like "No Woman, No
Cry" and "I Shot the Sheriff," one of several sons of Bob Marley said good
night and relinquished the stage to the headliners, who had brought some
offspring of their own.
The Van Halen 2007 Tour is most famous for the reunion of original lead
singer David Lee Roth with the band that made him famous. The reunion
ended an estrangement that has lasted nearly 25 years. It gets an
asterisk, though, because original bassist Michael Anthony is now the
banished one. In his place: Wolfgang Van Halen, 16, son of guitar legend
Eddie and nephew of drummer Alex. Who says heavy rock has no family
values?
Van Halen the band took the stage at 9 p.m. sharp, and it wasted no time
igniting the place. It opened with its famous Kinks cover, "You Really Got
Me." Nice choice, and expected, too: The setlist hasn't changed all tour.
Nonetheless, it got the crowd off its chairs and into gear. Two songs
later, the place got a little crazier when the crowd immediately
recognized the intro to "Runnin' With the Devil."
Roth's voice was adequate most of the night. He hit and sustained some
high notes, and missed others. Mostly he stuck to the original versions of
each song. He's not the acrobat he used to be, though he did fire off
several of his high kicks several times. When he wasn't singing, he was
smiling, big and wide, like he was happier to be there than anyone in the
place.
Wolfgang has been getting some catty reviews, but frankly he didn't
detract from the show in the least. In some ways, he added to it: Eddie
ran across the stage several times to interact with his son. During "Romeo
Delight," Wolfgang took a swipe at Eddie's guitar and then got a hug for
it. They played like that all night.
Eddie, too, seemed elated to be back on the road, all rehabbed and buffed,
playing his old songs and not sharing any of them with Sammy Hagar.
The liveliest moments of the night were the poppy-est. The setlist was
loaded with classic hard and heavy stuff, like "Atomic Punk" and "Mean
Street." But the crowd responded loudest to the top 40 hits like "Dance
the Night Away," "Pretty Woman" and "Jump," the closer. "Hot for Teacher"
and "Panama" got raucous responses, too.
Roth's vocals were uneven throughout; a few times, they nearly disappeared
in the hail of noise around him. Not sure if that was a soundboard or
microphone issue or just rugged acoustics.
The sound wasn't an issue during solos by the Van Halen brothers. Alex is
a monster on drums, up there with all the other legends, and he showed
why. And Eddie is still hard to believe. His solo lasted about 10 minutes
-- maybe too long -- but it was impossible to look away. Yes, his fingers
can be faster than the eye, but he also coaxes noises and sounds out of
his guitar that sound like ensembles of other instruments. He's at his
best when he throws one of his whirlwind rock-meets-jazz solos into the
middle of a song, as he did in "Jump."
During that song, Roth grabbed a big metal pole and twirled it like a
baton. He also hauled a huge, inflated microphone on stage, mounted it
like a horse and rocked, like Roy Rogers on Trigger. By then, the disco
ball above the floor was spitting bits of light around the arena, and
confetti rained on fans in the lower section. And it felt like 1984 all
over again.
Setlist included: You Really Got Me; I'm the One; Runnin' With the Devil;
Romeo Delight; Somebody Get Me a Doctor

Eddie Van Halen clowned around with his son, Wolfgang Van Halen, during a
concert Friday at the Sprint Center.
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