Van Halen with Hagar was the best era ..
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Van Halen with Hagar was the best era ..
I been spending most of the day listening to Van Halen and I have to say like I said before; they were at their best with Hagar (I think a lot of it has to do with the fact that I like Hagars voice better than Roth's). Anyone agree or dissagree?
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- bassist_25
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I like both eras. I think the material was a little more consistent with Roth. Some of the stuff with Hagar kicked ass (i.e., Humans Being, Poundcake, Seventh Seal) but some of it ventured into schlocky over-produced AOR territory (i.e., Why Can't this be Love, Dreams). Baluchitherium is still my favorite instrumental from them.
I didn't care much for what they did with Cherone, and I consider myself a pretty big Extreme fan.
I didn't care much for what they did with Cherone, and I consider myself a pretty big Extreme fan.
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I always liked Sammy Hagar better as a person, and have always thought that David Lee Roth was arrogant. But in my opinion Women and Children First, and 1984 are two of their best albums.
I will agree though that the album they did with Gary Cherone was a joke.
I will agree though that the album they did with Gary Cherone was a joke.
Videos destroyed the vitality of rock and roll. Before that, music said, "Listen to me." Now it says, "Look at me."
I always liked both for individual reasons. I never divided it into a Roth vs. Hagar kinda thing...I just went with the flow and appreciated each era for what it was.
And I never even tried the Cherone stuff.
And I never even tried the Cherone stuff.
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- sunsetbass
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I'm in the same boat. I'm not really split on it, as I just liked both. Roth's days were fun, goofing off, being a bunch of "kids". Hagar put a sharper, more grown-up feel to that band. The entire sound was tuned up and it became more of a human minded idea as opposed to just doing what sounds good then
Never heard the Cherone years. From what I've heard, that's probably a good thing... Heh
Never heard the Cherone years. From what I've heard, that's probably a good thing... Heh
- DrumAndDestroy
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lol so the cherone era was the questionable rebound fuck after the divorce.banderson wrote:Roth era seemed like the party phase i.e bangin chicks, drinking, drugs, rock and roll, and being hellions. Hagar era was like the settling down and getting married phase.
i personally like the roth stuff best.
Montrose with Hagar was definitely some great stuff. The first Montrose album is still one of my favorites. I also liked Sammy's solo stuff leading up to Van Halen. I liked both the Roth and Hagar lineups and agree that Hagar polished up the band's sound from the rawness they had early on. The other thing though with Hagar is that he also plays guitar and added that to the live shows. Check out this live video.lonewolf wrote:I always thought that Montrose with Hagar was the best era.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YyyLshCQUEU
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I like this also ...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tk52nGxF-jc
Then there is this also ...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=on_vF_i8 ... re=related
and this ... I loved this movie ...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6PuUflTc ... re=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tk52nGxF-jc
Then there is this also ...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=on_vF_i8 ... re=related
and this ... I loved this movie ...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6PuUflTc ... re=related
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- bassist_25
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I actually think that his performance was very good. His voice has a similar timbre to Hagar's voice. It's just that the material was so weak. I don't know how much of a hand he had in the songwriting.sunsetbass wrote: he was great in extreme but not in van halen.
"He's the electric horseman, you better back off!" - old sKool making a reference to the culturally relevant 1979 film.
- whitedevilone
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Sooooo tru.Never a huge Extreme fan,but the wifey is gaga over Nuno so i've been forced to adapt lol.Going in i knew the dude had vocal chops,add on top of that my guitar geek status and considering it's a new Van Halen album i'm kinda obliged.Couple listens and i'm scratching my head.Man you guys call this record Van Halen III and this is the best you got?Terrible songs,very weak.Not good.bassist_25 wrote:I actually think that his performance was very good. His voice has a similar timbre to Hagar's voice. It's just that the material was so weak. I don't know how much of a hand he had in the songwriting.sunsetbass wrote: he was great in extreme but not in van halen.
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- bassist_25
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Indeed. The two songs they recorded with Roth for their Best Of album slammed (i.e., Can't Get this Stuff no More, and Me Wise Magic), so they still have the ability to write some kick ass music. It just sucks that they haven't done so as of late and have opted, instead, to become one of those classic rock bands that tours but doesn't bother releasing any decent new material anymore.whitedevilone wrote:Couple listens and i'm scratching my head.Man you guys call this record Van Halen III and this is the best you got?Terrible songs,very weak.Not good.
I don't know if I would want to see a Van Halen without Michael Anthony. People who have seen them lately say that Eddie and Wolfgang must have a stressed relationship because it shows in Van Halen's performance; Wolfgang looks like he'd like to be anywhere except with his father on stage.
"He's the electric horseman, you better back off!" - old sKool making a reference to the culturally relevant 1979 film.
- bassist_25
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Some great vocal stylings by Hagar, for sure (not to mention Ronnie's scorching git-playing), but I've seen more captivating stage presence from garage bands playing their first gigs at the local firehall. Honestly, I expect a little more from Sammy. But hey, who is some dude in North Carolina to criticize Sammy Hagar?f.sciarrillo wrote:That I liked ...

"He's the electric horseman, you better back off!" - old sKool making a reference to the culturally relevant 1979 film.
I have to agree with a lot of the responses here.
I personally prefer the Hagar-era overall, but they all had their moments.
The Roth era was so carefree & wild, but I hated Roth's attitude. Music videos, interviews, whatever, he always came across as "this is my band, I make it what it is, these jokers are nothing without me". Eddie was SO far ahead of the times, & was making a guitar do things that most people thought was impossible.
The Hagar era was a little shaky at first, not to many people knew what to think of 5150. F.U.C.K. is still one of my all-time favorite albums, & when I first heard "Don't Tell Me" (the video premiered right after midnight, New Year's Day 1995 on MTV) I was blown away! DV8 & I saw them live on the Balance tour in 1996 at Coca-Cola Starlake, badass concert.
I like Gary Cerone's voice, but he was trying WAY too hard to be Sammy on VH3. His work with Extreme was awesome (Pornographitti is still a fav of mine), but the songs on 3 were very thin, seemed almost rushed. Pity.
I personally prefer the Hagar-era overall, but they all had their moments.
The Roth era was so carefree & wild, but I hated Roth's attitude. Music videos, interviews, whatever, he always came across as "this is my band, I make it what it is, these jokers are nothing without me". Eddie was SO far ahead of the times, & was making a guitar do things that most people thought was impossible.
The Hagar era was a little shaky at first, not to many people knew what to think of 5150. F.U.C.K. is still one of my all-time favorite albums, & when I first heard "Don't Tell Me" (the video premiered right after midnight, New Year's Day 1995 on MTV) I was blown away! DV8 & I saw them live on the Balance tour in 1996 at Coca-Cola Starlake, badass concert.
I like Gary Cerone's voice, but he was trying WAY too hard to be Sammy on VH3. His work with Extreme was awesome (Pornographitti is still a fav of mine), but the songs on 3 were very thin, seemed almost rushed. Pity.
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For him (Wolfgang) it's probably like having to work in your dad's store. Mebbe he and Gene Simmons kid, who seems pretty cool and smart, should start something.bassist_25 wrote: Wolfgang looks like he'd like to be anywhere except with his father on stage.
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