November 16th, 2007
From: http://www.washingtonpost.com/
By Dave McKenna
Special to The Washington Post
As sure as the rivers will flow and the sun will rise, David Lee Roth will
get canned from Van Halen. Again, that is -- just as he was canned in
1985.
But for more than two hours at Verizon Center on Thursday, Roth was in the
fold, and the giggles were back. By the time Roth yelled, "We're back! I
heard you missed us!," as Eddie Van Halen plucked the golden riff that
carries "Hot for Teacher," it was clear that hard rock was never more fun
than when these guys were making it together.
Roth, now 52, described the current Van Halen lineup as "three-quarters
original and one-quarter inevitable," the originals being himself and
Eddie and Alex Van Halen. The inevitable is ingenue bassist Wolfgang Van
Halen, the teenage son of the onetime "It" couple Eddie Van Halen and
Valerie Bertinelli. (During a brief walk-through of the arena, proud mom
Bertinelli, now a spokeswoman for Jenny Craig, got more cheers than the
Van Halen dirigibles that floated above the crowd just before showtime.)
The night had flaws, for sure. The sound mix was often horrendous, with
Wolfgang's bass muddy from first note to last. And although every audience
member knew every word and how and when it should be sung, Roth
occasionally seemed lost: He missed every vocal cue on "Jump," rendering
perhaps the band's trademark tune unlistenable.
But the minuses got pancaked by the pluses. The old guys were far fitter
than tabloid reports indicated. Since the first parting with Roth, Eddie
has survived: oral cancer, a hip replacement, the breakups of his marriage
and his partnerships with Sammy Hagar and original bassist Michael
Anthony, and enough trips to rehab to embarrass Lindsay Lohan. He didn't
even show up at Van Halen's Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction this
year, reportedly because of health issues. But here he was at 52 shirtless
and so ripped you could see every tendon in his upper body whenever he
launched himself off the drum riser for any of his countless flying split
kicks.
Eddie's fingers can still walk, too. For "Ain't Talkin' Bout Love," he
nailed the solo break that, back in 1978, announced him to the pop world.
By now, other folks have adopted his fret-tapping, hyper-fast playing
style, and even surpassed him in technique. Then again, Picasso wasn't the
only guy ever to paint a bent nose: Eddie introduced tapping to the
dirtball masses and thereby changed the way electric guitar was played.
Roth, too, flaunted a physique that can come only from a diet of tofu and
pull-ups. Roth let his Dirty Dave side hold court for most of the night.
He told the crowd he was "lookin' for my own Hannah Montana!" during
"Running With the Devil." He stuffed a fan's cellphone into his leather
pants during "Everybody Wants Some," then launched into a monologue that
had him telling an imaginary partner to "Lose the dress, keep the shoes."
All in fun, mind you.
Roth dropped the nutty act only briefly, while introducing "Ice Cream
Man," as he recounted how great life was when he first joined the band in
the early 1970s and they charged $1 a head to play local house parties.
The band's melding of gaiety and ingenuity was clearest during "Panama."
While Roth frolicked and led the crowd in a screamalong of the title,
Eddie and Wolfgang sang falsetto harmonies. Like much of the band's
vintage output, it mixed the power-chord crunch of the heaviest metal with
the high-lonesome angst of bluegrass. Nobody before or since ever made
such a sound.

Ripped and ripping it up: Eddie Van Halen and most of his old band rocked
Verizon Center on Thursday.
Photo Credit: By Ricky Carioti -- The Washington Post
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