By Michael Swanger
Photos by Darren Tromblay
A
few years ago, when hip-hop replaced
rock as the dominate form of music
on television and the pop charts,
and pundits debated whether rock
was dead, a few celebrity musicians
like the Smashing Pumpkins’ Billy
Corgan pleaded for the original
Van Halen lineup to reunite in
an effort to save rock music and
“kick everybody’s ass.” But had
they witnessed Van Halen’s show
on Feb. 6 at Wells Fargo Arena
in Des Moines, they might have
recanted.
On tour to promote one of the
most improbable reunions in rock
history, given the bad blood since
their split in 1985, the return
of David Lee Roth to Van Halen
last Wednesday seemed more than
a ploy to cash in on fans’ nostalgia
than an effort to revive rock.
While on one hand it was difficult
to ignore the excitement of seeing
“Diamond Dave” onstage again with
Eddie and Alex Van Halen, on the
other it was painful to see the
one-time rock warriors occasionally
limp through some of the musical
doors they used to kick down with
attitude to spare.
By the way, don’t call this a
reunion. As Roth acknowledged
to an Omaha crowd a few nights
before the Des Moines show, saying
the lineup was “three-quarters
original and one-quarter inevitable.”
In Des Moines, it was clear the
band missed the driving rhythms
and stage presence of founding
bassist Michael Anthony, whose
shoes were left unfilled by Eddie’s
pudgy-pimple-faced-goth-geek 16-year-old
son Wolfgang.
On the upside, credit Van Halen
for not making the more than 9,500
Generation X and Baby Boomer fans
(and their children and grandchildren)
sit on their hands while playing
songs from a new album that few
likely would have cared about,
as is the case with so many veteran
rock bands these days. Fans who
shelled out big bucks to see and
hear Van Halen perform their pre-1985
classic hits, sans Sammy Hagar,
weren’t disappointed as the quartet
ripped through a bevy of them
like the Kinks’ “You Really Got
Me,” Roy Orbison’s “Oh, Pretty
Woman,” “Runnin’ With the Devil,”
“Jamie’s Cryin’,” “Panama,” “Hot
For Teacher,” “I’ll Wait,” “Somebody
Get Me A Doctor,” “Dance the Night
Away,” “Everybody Wants Some,”
“Beautiful Girls” and the late
bluesman John Brim’s “Ice Cream
Man.” The band also performed
a few obscure older tunes, like
“Atomic Punk” and “Mean Streets,”
though when played at half speed,
seemed tame. When
Van Halen stayed on task and performed
record-length versions of their
hits they were very highly effective.
Roth’s 53-year-old voice and near
bare-chested physique were surprisingly
spry, though by the end of the
night it appeared as though he
labored a tad to hit the high
notes. Gone are the days of Roth’s
high roundhouse leg kicks and
wild stage antics, replaced by
short hair, muttonchops, geeky
grins, shiny matador outfits and
little banter.
The same, however, can’t be
said for the Van Halens. A shirtless
Eddie, who hung close to a microphone
in front of brother Alex’s drum
kit most of the night, provided
ample rhythm guitar and back-up
vocals, but not much showmanship.
His solos, when reigned in, provided
the spark many songs needed —
even when he quoted a few less
hard rock blues licks (the kind
he swore during the ’80s he would
never play).
But when they were excessive —
like the schizophrenic 10 minute
“Eruption” he smugly ho-hummed
his way through with the help
of boring volume swells — his
playing was cliché, which
one could chock up to the downside
of being a legend after having
inspired generations of guitarists
who have advanced the ground he
pioneered. The same went for Alex,
who is starting to look like the
exhumed body of the late jazz
great Buddy Rich, and who relied
on effects and double bass-drum
beaters to bash his way through
an uneventful 10 minute drum solo.
But by the end of the night, after
two hours of sing-a-longs, all
was forgotten by the confetti-draped
audience as the band climaxed
the evening with a rousing version
of “Jump” from the band’s classic
“1984” album. Whether or not Van
Halen and Roth can save rock is
doubtful, but at the very least
they’re skilled at preserving
its past. CV
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