T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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168.1 | Gimme I, II or Women & Children First | CIVIC::FAHEL | Amalthea Celebras/Silver Unicorn | Fri Mar 13 1992 09:25 | 11 |
| Van Halen was an excellent group. Van Hagar isn't. (IMO, of course.)
To me, Van Halen is nothing without David Lee (Ego) Roth, and DL(E)R is
nothing without VH.
I'm sick of the jeuvenile titles (OU812, For Unlawful Carnal Knowledge)
and their newer songs seem weak.
But all that is no secret. ;^)
K.C.
|
168.2 | Robbie Valentine, | JGODCL::KWIKKEL | The dance music library 1969-20.. | Fri Mar 13 1992 10:30 | 7 |
| Speakin' about rock-pop in this matter, checkout a dutch newcomer
who had several Euro rock-pop hits. His name(band)is Robbie Valentine.
His style is like Van Halen,Vanden Berg,Ozzie ect.
Check him out.
Jan.
|
168.3 | | ARRODS::OHAGANB | Meals on Wheels of Steel | Fri Mar 13 1992 11:34 | 5 |
| mmmmmm....Vandenberg. Now there's a group whose first album deserved
more than it got. Truly a classic. Did'nt the man himself end up
as yet another member of Whitesnake?
barry.
|
168.4 | | VCSESU::COOK | Have a day. Have two. | Fri Mar 13 1992 12:30 | 3 |
|
Yep. I saw Vandenberg when they toured here in MA. I forgot who they
were supporting at the time.
|
168.5 | Good but not great | ASABET::HOWARD | | Fri Mar 13 1992 12:32 | 5 |
| Van Halen always reminds me of the Chicago Bulls early in Michael
Jordan's career--that is an average band carried by one star performer
(eddie). The have managed to put out a few decent songs however.
Darnley
|
168.6 | | RENOIR::MARKEY | Grand Parade of Lifeless Packaging | Fri Mar 13 1992 12:48 | 33 |
| Ah, Van Halen...
You have Eddie, who whether anyone admits it or not, defined a style of
playing. But now... let's just say Eddie hasn't "grown" much and
there's a long list of people who run circles around him (kinda like
Jimmy Page, who I also respect).
Then you *had* David Lee who has become better known for his clowning
than his singing. He's done OK on his own, but nothing to knock anyone
over...
Now you've got Sammy who was better on his own than he is with VH. His
singing style has degraded to sreaming.
Then you have Alex, who's servicable but who flogged that one drum
pattern he knows to death ages ago.
Then you have... WHAT IS HIS NAME? ... the bass player. Clearly the most
incompetent musician I've ever seen playing in a major band. I have no
respect for anyone who I can dust. Sorry, it might sound egotistical,
but that's how it is. Most players would dust this guy... see I'm so
impressed I can't even remember his name. um... something Anthony.
Marc? :-)
As for the song-writing, some of it is excellent, some of it is
pretty lame. They're one of those bands who could go on forever on some
incredible work from their early career and who are now on cruise
control.
Bottom line: if I'm feeling nostalgic I love VH, but I don't feel that
nostalgic very often so must of the time I couldn't care less...
Brian
|
168.7 | New video = Cool | WEORG::WIEGLER | | Fri Mar 13 1992 13:37 | 6 |
| Getting back to the original question, I saw the video for "Right Now"
the other night and I really liked it. Very clever, quickly paced, and
it looks like something I'd want to see several times to see if I've
caught all the messages.
Willy
|
168.8 | | WMOIS::MAZURKA | Son of the Dawn | Mon Mar 16 1992 23:25 | 7 |
| "Right now guilt is turning someone Inside_Out"
Crazy_Right_now_someone_is_building_A_better_ToMaTo_Al
And gettin em taken out,if they're
Smart.
|
168.9 | | CAMONE::WAY | Son House RULES! | Wed Mar 18 1992 15:54 | 31 |
| re .0:
Yo! B.A., what's happenin? 8^)
re Van Halen:
I guess I'm strange, but I've liked this band from Day 1 and
have liked them through the change of vocalists.
To me Van Halen is this:
Hot day in July, temp around 95. Roll down the
windows in the pickup, throw in a VH tape (any VH tape)
crank the volume, and hit the road.
or this:
Hot day in July, temp around 95. A few lawn chair
set up on the shade in the back yard, around a big
old washtub filled with ice and beers. Stereo
speakers in the window, VH CD (ANY VH CD) playing...
I love music, and know a bit about it (was a music major in another life)
but I don't care too much about whether or not Eddie's grown, or Mike
Anthony can play phenomenal bass... It's just good party music...
frank
|
168.10 | | RAVEN1::B_ADAMS | I'm too tough to tame! | Wed Mar 18 1992 16:09 | 9 |
| .9� old washtub filled with ice and beers. Stereo
.9� speakers in the window, VH CD (ANY VH CD) playing...
We are not worthy!!!!! :*)
Sounds like a party to me..
B.A.
|
168.11 | party on dudes | REFINE::BARKER | Billy Thorpe rules!!! | Wed Mar 18 1992 16:59 | 5 |
| re: .9
I just couldn't agree more. It wasn't until he left VH that I
started to get irked with DLR and I've always loved Sammy Hagar.
Nuff said.
|
168.12 | | RAVEN1::PINION | Hard Drinking Calypso Poet | Thu Mar 19 1992 07:01 | 5 |
| Personally I like VH a lot better with Sammy. I cannot stand
David Lee (look-at-me) Roth!!!!! I think 5150 is still my fave,
though.
Capt. Scott
|
168.13 | It's my life, get off my a$$, get out of my face ! | RAVEN1::JERRYWHITE | Hey you're pretty good - NOT ! | Thu Mar 19 1992 08:36 | 7 |
| I look at pre_dlr and post_dlr as 2 different bands. I like 'em both a
lot, but in different ways. Pre_dlr was the backstreet brat that
wouldn't behave. Post_dlr is the grown up version, that still wear
tennis shoes to board meetings.
Jerry (who listens to "Judgement Day" at mega-volume to get out of a
bad mood)
|
168.14 | | VCSESU::COOK | Son, you've gone too far. | Thu Mar 19 1992 09:49 | 2 |
|
How can anyone hate "Atomic Punk", "On Fire", etc...? 8-)
|
168.15 | | BUSY::SLABOUNTY | HereComesTrouble&ItLooksLikeFun | Thu Mar 19 1992 12:24 | 5 |
|
And IMO, "I'm the One" is one of EVH's best "wailing songs" ever,
if not THE best.
GTI
|
168.16 | 1 and last | REFINE::BARKER | Billy Thorpe rules!!! | Thu Mar 19 1992 12:57 | 7 |
| In general, my two favorite albums are the first one and the last one.
This is, of course, not to say that the others are bad in any way,
shape, or form, just my feeling right now. In a lot of ways, it seems
as though this last album has come the closest (if not overtaken) to
the level of pure, raw energy that exists in the first one. IMHO.
-Jesse
|
168.17 | Stealing your own songs ? | WLDWST::EDWARDS | | Thu Mar 26 1992 01:30 | 14 |
| Well, here goes. I like some of the stuff that their doing now, but as
a guitarist myself I can't stand when someone takes from another song
of theirs and makes a song out of that. Eddie took that last riff in
Jump and made it into Top of the World, I think that 's what it's
called. I liked Halen and Sammy in seperate bands, the tunes are
O.K. but I think their rep. from old carries this band a long way.
Their live show now doesn't even compare to that of old, at times
I found it to be boring, with the old band you were on the edge of
your seat all of the time. Plus I think Halen and Roth need each
other, Roth was the man that would sit there and say to Eddie this
will work, this won't, I like the groove, or I hate this, there is no
one to do this now. This I believe is where Eddie's writers block came
from. Just my opinion, but live with Roth rippin into "On Fire" can
not be denied, Light Up The Sky, so many more.
|
168.18 | | RAVEN1::JERRYWHITE | Hey you're pretty good - NOT ! | Thu Mar 26 1992 08:15 | 6 |
| Anyone seen Roth lately ? He's *old*. When VH first split, it was
Roth who was in the spotlight - "Eat 'Em And Smile" was a monster. Now
it's VH's turn I guess. The new album (IMO) is great. No, it's not
like when DLR was there, but great in it's own way.
Jerry
|
168.19 | In a *junior high* locker room... | CARTUN::CARTUN::BDONOVAN | I believe I'll dust my broom. | Fri Mar 27 1992 14:25 | 49 |
|
re. 17
I agree about Eddie more or less need DLR to act as his foil.
No doubt Eddie was a genius and reinvented guitar in 1978, but
he seems to be one of those rockers who says "Wait until I'm on
my own and then see what I can do without so-and-so hassling me."
Eddie parted company with DLR and stopped working with VH producer
Ted Templeman and the resulting music, IMHO, has been mediocre
at best, although I liked the rockabilly "Finish What You Started."
Sometimes groups and/or collaborations create a certain tension that
my be downright unpleasant for the collaborators, but yield great
music. The players always lament about how hard it is, and then
they go on their own. The music almost always suffers:
Jagger's solo stuff
Any of the Beatles solo stuff
Townsend's solo stuff
Any of the Car's solo stuff
Joe Perry Project
Aerosmith, without Joe Perry
Peter Wolf (of J. Geils fame)
This phenomenon has an interesting corollary: The brilliant artist
who surrounds himself, or herself, with mediocre side musicians,
just to be sure no one steals the spotlight:
Michael Schenker
Y. Malmsteem
Artists, for the most part, need someone to say, "Hey, this idea really
blows" or "Have you tried doing it this way, it may work better."
Of course, famous companies and US presidents could use the same thing,
too. It must be easier to surround yourself with "yes-men"
and buff your ego all of the time.
I still have the unfounded opinion that Eddie dislikes DLR as
much as he does because DLR stood up to him.
VH has become a adolescent boy's group, what, with all of their
Cro_magnon references to F***, and "Poundcake" and everything else.
You'd think they discovered sex just last year...in a locker room
someplace.
Brian
|
168.20 | Like em' both | AIMHI::ROY | | Fri May 29 1992 13:30 | 27 |
| re. 19
Malmsteen has a bigger ego than most and this has probably killed his
career thus far. He doesn't like other people producing his material.
If he hooked up with a good producer that would tone down his non-stop
mega-riffing, he could probably make himself more than a bargain-bin
musician. As far as mediocre side musicians, maybe mediocre as far as
name but not talent. I have most of Yngwie J.'s stuff and have always
found both the bassists and drummers on his albums to be quite adept.
Back to Van Halen, I like others look at VH as two bands. The David
Lee era was during my junior high and high school years so it holds a
special sentimental value. I'll never forget my older brother getting
the first album in 78' and saying "Listen to this guy play guitar"!
Eddie was one of the major reasons for me to pick up a guitar. I really
believe Eddie had as much influence as Hendrix did on the previous
generation of players. I liked all the VH albums with DLR, even
Woman and Children First. VH with Hagar is a totally different band.
Different sound, different direction. They use a lot more keyboards
now, something they were really just starting to do when DLR left.
I will admit, I do miss the harder edge VH that was more prevalent on
the early stuff. If I want a good crankin' VH tune I tend to rely
on the old stuff. I guess if I could ask something of the new VH it
would be to get some of the old grit back. I just don't know if Hagar
could provide that.
|
168.21 | Bring back DLR | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Soaring on the wings of dawn | Mon Jun 01 1992 14:27 | 15 |
| re: .20
That's pretty much how I feel about Van Halen.
It's a new band with Sammy Hagar. It's a good band with Sammy Hagar,
but I feel there was a unique flair and chemistry with David Lee Roth
that the new band just doesn't have.
In fact, I thought part of it might be that David Lee Roth sung sorta
like a vocal personification of Eddie's guitar playing. Wild, rude,
flashy, and more than a touch of panache.
I greatly prefer the old Van Halen.
db
|