In 1978, heavy metal/hard rock was tired and bloated. It seemed like all rock bands were only interested in creating dirge-like long songs about mysticism or Satan and one couldn’t listen to a rock album without six minute organ suites and self-indulgent guitar solos that didn’t go anywhere. Rock was almost an afterthought as the Southern California light rock sound, disco, and nascent rumblings from the punk scene dominated popular music at the time.
It’s this background that Van Halen’s first album exploded on the rock scene. Short (no song is over 4 minutes), punchy rock songs that were fun but freakin’ rocked! Make no mistake, even though the songs weren’t about evil wood nymphs, this was metal as Eddie Van Halen’s guitar work and David Lee Roth’s screams was straight from the heavy metal handbook.
The album kicks off with Running with the Devil, a common theme in mid-70’s metal. But at the two-minute mark, you realize something is different as EVH’s short guitar solo screams for attention. Followed by Eruption, an extended guitar solo that kicks off a very muscular You Really Got Me and Van Halen has taken all of five minutes to grab you by the balls. This wasn’t your older brother’s metal.
Not only were the songs short and about partying and hitting up the chicks, they had 3-part harmonies, something unheard of in metal circles. David Lee Roth is a fine frontman and singer, and the rhythm section is top notch, but let’s face it, the album belongs to Eddie Van Halen. Every song has a scorching guitar solo that just wasn’t heard before. It’s style that’s been copied many times in the nearly 40 years Van Halen came out, but at the time it was mind blowing.
For me the highlight of Van Halen is Feel Your Love Tonight. This is a classic “I’m going to make you mine” song, but it’s so infectious, while also hard rocking you have to be practically comatose not to enjoy it. This song should be the national anthem to teenage Friday night (live version from 1977 below). Ice Cream Man is a song David Lee Roth had been singing since he was a teenager, while Eddie takes over the last third with another classic guitar part. Unfortunately the album ends with I’m on Fire, which is more a vehicle for Roth’s screaming, but by that time who cares, you’ve been thoroughly rocked.
Van Halen would change rock, not always for the better. While the tired old 8-minute drones fell by the wayside, unfortunately it was replaced by hair bands more interested in copying David Lee Roth’s sexual swagger or emphasizing the party, not the rock. Plus let’s face it, there is only one Eddie Van Halen. But let’s also not end up on a sour note. Van Halen came out when I was 15, which was probably the perfect age for that album. But I still listen to it fairly regularly and along with Cheap Trick Live at Budokan, one of the few albums I still have on a regular rotation from the era. If you like the rock,Van Halen should be in your music collection.
I also once "live tweeted" listening to this album. If interested I think this link will bring you to those tweets.
https://twitter.com/search?f=tweets&vertical=default&q=freealonzo%20%23vanhalen&src=typd
I wouldn't group Van Halen any differently than Boston, for example (of which Don't Look Back came out in the same year...with three part harmony)
I wouldn't group Van Halen any differently than Boston
That cuts me to the core, Runner. Cuts me to the core.
Hey, if you wiki they're both listed as hard rock. Just sayin'
Isn't that a little like comparing Metallica and Bon Jovi?
I go by Cheap's Friday set lists, and never seen Bon Jovi there. Or Van Halen.
I agree with Rhu. Neither is metal. Both would qualify as "hard rock," I guess. Or just plain "rock".
I mean, c'mon. Both were mostly about the guitar solos.
When I wrote this I thought the discussion could go in a couple of directions. Not even in my worst nightmare did I considered that Van Halen would be lumped in together with Boston.
hey, it's not like we lumped VH in with Deerhoof.
"Ain't Talkin' 'bout Love" alone makes this a top shelf record in my collection. I could listen to that song 100 times in a row.
For the longest time I paid no attention to Van Halen. Perhaps it was hearing "Jump" 500,000 times in my lifetime made me dismiss them. Most of the time when I heard a VH song pop up, I would change the station. But about a year or so ago I heard "I'm the One" on the radio (I think it was on the rock station out of Mankato) and I was like whoa, what is this? Bought the album and was floored how much toe-tapping energy was in every song (except the mid tempo simmer of "Little Dreamer").
10/10 stars.