November 25th, 2007
From: http://news.yahoo.com/
By Erik Pedersen
LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - "Are you guys having as much fun as we are?"
The question posed about 15 minutes into Tuesday's show at Staples
Center was Arena Rock 101. But it was delivered by David Lee Roth as he
fronted Van Halen, which meant the world to the aging headbangers who
had waited 22 years for this night.
For the record, the answer from the crowd that was on its feet the
entire night: "Oh yeah."
The original members of Van Halen -- sans bassist Michael Anthony,
replaced by Eddie Van Halen's 16-year-old son, Wolfgang -- simply tore
it up during the first homecoming stop on their reunion tour. The sheer
novelty of seeing Roth and Eddie onstage together might have been enough
for many in the sold-out crowd, but the two-hour slugfest they delivered
was genuine sweaty fun.
Back in the day, a Van Halen concert presented a dilemma: Who do you
watch? Did you follow the wild-maned, high-kicking frontman who
swaggered and staggered around the stage while threatening to defile the
girlfriend of some wasted lout in the first few rows? Or did you study
the most influential guitarist of his generation, the guy whose flying
fingers and virtuosic tapping launched a thousand '80s metal bands --
maybe 100,000.
It's different now because Roth has reined in his act. Sporting leather
pants and unbuttoned toreador jacket, he deployed an older man's version
of those old leg kicks, but he didn't even attempt the trademark shouts
and squeals that peppered those half-dozen killer albums from 1978-84.
His infamous cockiness was all but absent, and he didn't address the
crowd much; still, it was a kick to see Roth back in his natural
habitat.
The band that once defined rock excess onstage and off has resurfaced as
a study in joy. There were more smiles onstage than an Up With People
halftime show as Roth relished his long-dimmed spotlight and Eddie Van
Halen was free to shred again. The obvious pride and glee he showed in
sharing the stage with his boy invigorated his work. As if shaking off
the long national nightmare that was the band's post-Roth years, he tore
into his solos, often tweaking them just enough to make the air
guitarists look bad. He was simply outstanding.
A natural highlight was his thrilling 11-minute guitar solo that
included most of "Eruption" and plenty of knob-twisting shenanigans. It
was a reminder of just how little Eddie Van Halen has really let loose
since the Roth era.
Wolfgang mostly sidestepped the spotlight, but his playing was meaty and
his backing vocals sturdy. And the kid already has picked up on a rock
requisite: tossing picks to the female fans. Atta boy.
The set list was peppered with songs that enjoyed heavy rotation on FM
radio and a handful of album cuts for the hard-core. The gents got
playful during "Somebody Get Me a Doctor," tossing in physician
rapid-fire references from "I Don't Need No Doctor," "Life in the Fast
Lane" and "Rocky Raccoon" -- seemingly just to see if anyone was paying
attention. Eddie assumed the faux-pained guitar-god expression during
the speedy, shoulda-been-a-hit "Romeo Delight," which included a snippet
of the Who's "Magic Bus" during the breakdown.
If only Roth and Van Halen could have stuck it out for all those years
like Daltrey and Townshend.
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