December 31st, 2007
From: http://www.lvrj.com/
By JASON BRACELIN
Who: Van Halen
When: Friday
Where: MGM Grand Garden Arena
Attendance: 13,000
Grade: B+
David Lee Roth, left, and Eddie Van Halen perform Friday with other
members of Van Halen at the MGM Grand Garden Arena. The band plays another
show at the venue tonight.
It was the very first song, and already David Lee Roth was smiling as
widely as his tight flesh would allow, his mouth round and agape, like a
cross between a yawning crocodile and a basketball hoop.
It was a knowing grin, the sly smirk of a kid who's just escaped from the
candy store with pockets loaded with stolen contraband.
"With this reunion, I believe in miracles," beamed the cocksure Van Halen
frontman, the ultimate hard rock huckster, who recoils from understatement
like it was a rattlesnake.
At the MGM Grand on Friday night for the first of two shows at the venue
-- the band also performs tonight -- Van Halen's core lineup harnessed all
their hard-charging pomp and bluster in Vegas for the first time in close
to 2 1/2 decades.
"I know this town like I know the roof of my mouth," Roth boasted at one
point. "I even got fired from this hotel once.
"What job have you ever been fired from?" he taunted. "Burger King?"
Never one to miss the chance to pound his own chest, Roth bounded about
the stage like a dude who's spent the past 25 years locked away in a
charisma deprivation tank, determined to make up for all that lost time in
a single night.
He's a never-ending series of dramatic gestures -- the trademark leg
kicks, busted out early during a heated "I'm The One;" the banshee wails,
that upper register still well-preserved after all these years; the wild
twirling of the mic stand, done with the manic energy of a cheerleader
with chest hair.
Van Halen's songs mimic Roth's flamboyance: this bunch is defined by their
instrumental peacockery and their rare, enviable gift for grounding such a
high level of musical proficiency in concise, fist-in-the-air tunes that
arenas full of revelers can chug beers to.
Live, nearly every move the band makes is awesomely overwrought.
Perhaps the only thing known to man that's somehow chattier than David Lee
Roth is Eddie Van Halen's guitar. The shirtless, rail-thin rocker filled
any and every opening in the band's vast repertoire with frothing solos
and impressively dexterous finger tapping exercises.
"You got a little extra for free tonight," Roth announced after Van Halen
buffered "Romeo Delight" with several extra minutes of fret board
acrobatics.
Later, Roth would scat with Van Halen's guitar lines during an extended
"Everybody Wants Some," with Roth attempting to mimic vocally the wild
sounds screaming from Van Halen's six-string.
"I can't beat that," he eventually relented as Van Halen made something
that resembled whale calls spring from his instrument.
Of course, any time a band has been apart from one another as long as
these guys have, there's bound to be some signs of rust, and the group
wasn't immune to the occasional stiff moment.
They opened with a lumbering take on their popular cover of The Kinks'
"You Really Got Me," and two songs later, still seemed a little over-
starched during a slightly plodding "Runnin' With The Devil," which was
more of a stroll than a gallop.
Notably absent through it all was sparkplug bassist Michael Anthony,
replaced by Eddie's teen son, Wolfgang.
The fresh-faced rocker doesn't possess the kinetic stage presence of
Anthony, but he still turned in a poised, sure-handed performance,
anchoring the bottom end with the incredibly concussive rhythms of drummer
Alex Van Halen, who utilized four double bass drums to approximate a herd
of buffalo stampeding through every tune. When he launched into his
signature percussive intro to "Hot For Teacher," you half expected chunks
of the ceiling to rattle loose and start raining down on the crowd.
As for Anthony's trademark backing vocals, they were handled capably by
Eddie and Wolfgang, and it was hard to detect much of a discernible
difference between the way songs were originally delivered and what they
sounded like on this night.
It was like 1984 all over again, sans Ronald Reagan and Punky Brewster.
Well, sort of.
"Nothin' stays the same," Roth howled during a heart pounding
"Unchained," and of course, he was right.
But as this show demonstrated, the pleasures of group air guitar and
singing along to tunes about drinking beer from the back of an ice cream
truck remain largely immutable.

Photo by Ronda Churchill.
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