The Van Halen Concert Synopsis:
Ted Stocke and I went to see the Van Halen
"Best of Both Worlds" concert at the Excel Energy
Center in St. Paul on Thursday night. We had Club Level
seating, which turned out to be very nice. Drinks were
expensive, but we didn't go overboard.
Kick-ass
show, with the Van Halen brothers looking at the top of
their game even at 49 and 51 years of age. Michael Anthony
still looks and acts like he is 30 years old, and really
kept the energy level going. Sammy Hagar belted out the
notes like he is always great at doing, however the higher
frequencies were a little rough on the ears, especially
if Edward was hitting a high note at the same time.
Edward even brought his 14-year-old son
Wolfgang out to play guitar. Wolffie played the song 316
from Van Halen's For Unlawful Carnal Knowledge album,
a song that was released when Wolffie was only 13 months
old. The kid can play guitar! He has an excellent instructor,
though, so I am not surprised.
I thought the show was a little short
of "Dave-era" Van Halen songs, but then again,
who wants Sammy to sing Dave's songs?
I give the show a 4.5 stars out of 5 on
music quality, and a full 5 out of 5 on showmanship and
entertainment value. It is always cool to see a personal
hero perform live, and Edward Van Halen is one of personal
heroes.
Review: Van Halen makes the jump into
classic rockdom
Chris Riemenschneider
Star Tribune
Published July 23, 2004
Turns out, an eight-year hiatus was the
best thing that ever happened to the Sammy Hagar-fronted
Van Halen. It made them a little bit dumber.
Thursday's two-hour concert by the '80s
guitar-god band at St. Paul's Xcel Energy Center was such
a macho, fist-pumping, nostalgia-riding affair, it mooted
all the endless debate over how Hagar compares to original
VH singer David Lee Roth. The 14,722 fans on hand were
excited enough -- and in many cases, intoxicated enough
-- to be happy with either version of the California-reared
group. What they got was something a little more in-between.
Before their hiatus in 1996, Van Halen
was only sort of a classic-rock act. Hagar would always
sing several of the dimmer-witted, innuendo-laden songs
that Roth sang, but the concerts often concentrated more
on newer, touchier-feelier songs about soaring eagles,
world problems and unrequited love. Can you imagine Diamond
Dave singing about unrequited love?
The band members, looking fitter than
most their ages (49 to 56), still played several of those
mushy songs, including "Right Now" and "When
It's Love" during the two encores, as well as "Where
Eagles Fly," which came during a solo Hagar set (clearly
the bathroom-break moment).
However, from the show-openers "Jump"
and "Runaround" to the encore versions of "You
Really Got Me" and "Panama," this concert
was more about that manly band of old, and about having
a good time. Hard-rockers such as the Roth-era "Somebody
Give Me a Doctor," the newer "Poundcake"
and the totally new "Humans Being" all fit the
old Van Halen mold. So did another new tune, the cheeky
"Up For Breakfast," which Hagar coyly introduced
by saying, "I wanted to sleep in, but my wife wanted
me [insert song title here]."
The fun almost seemed forced in parts.
Once feuding, the band mates did so many bear-hugs, hiney-kicks
and hand-holding gestures, their beefier, ball cap-wearing
fans could've feared something less than manly was going
on.
Of course, nothing pumps up the testosterone
and brings back heavy-metal nostalgia like a guitar, bass
and drum solo. Yep, drummer Alex Van Halen played one.
So did bassist Michael Anthony. And yep, Anthony brought
a bottle of Jack Daniels out with him.
Thursday's 15-minute solo guitar jam by
Eddie Van Halen was the climax of the night. The moment
was sweetened by the fact that Eddie had defeated cancer
in the band's off time. It got all the more sentimental
when his 13-year-old son, Wolfgang, joined him on a second
guitar.
That's when it became clear this was classic
Van Halen. At what other concert could a guitar solo mean
so much?
Some Ed golf fashions...
(Below)
- Edward and Son Wolfgang golfing at the 2001 LAPD Charity
Golf Tournament.
(Below)
- Edward posing in his 5150 Recording Studio before the
2001 Bob Hope Desert Classic Pro-Am.
(Below)
- Edward showing how to properly express golf angst at
the 2001 Bob Hope Desert Classic Pro-Am.
(Below)
- Edward doing Jim Flick balance routines. Jim Flick taught
me this exact thing as a warm-up on the range when I got
1 hour of his services for an insanely inexpensive dollar
amount in July of 2000.
|