David Lee Roth
David Lee Roth can be booked through this site. David Lee Roth entertainment booking site. David Lee Roth
is available for public concerts and events. David Lee Roth can be booked for
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representing YOU, the buyer.
In fact, in most cases we can negotiate for
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David Lee Roth Biography
In the eyes of countless hard rock fans, David Lee Roth is the
prototypical frontman. With a flamboyant, larger than life stage
presence and a party-hearty surfer dude persona (not to mention his
acrobatic leaps, long mane of blond hair, and skintight spandex
outfits), Roth was an integral part of Van Halen's meteoric rise to
global dominance from 1978 through 1984. Born on October 10, 1955, in
Bloomington, IN, Roth was introduced to music at an early age, via his
father's affinity for Al Jolson, Ray Charles, Frank Sinatra, and Louis
Prima. By the dawn of his teenage years, his family had relocated to
California, and by the early '70s, Roth had become a major rock fan
(Led Zeppelin, Black Oak Arkansas, Grand Funk, ZZ Top, Alice Cooper,
etc.). Roth was soon singing in local bands, including the Red Ball
Jets, who would play shows along with another up-and-coming rock band
from Pasadena, CA -- Mammoth.
The members of Mammoth, including brothers Eddie and Alex Van Halen on
guitar and drums, respectively, would often borrow Roth's PA system for
their gigs, and a friendship was struck up. Soon after, Roth was asked
to join forces with the Van Halen brothers, who had enlisted a new
bassist as well, Michael Anthony. The new quartet decided on a name
change by the mid-'70s as they played the Sunset Strip -- Van Halen
(reportedly Roth's idea). By 1977, the quartet was signed to Warner
Bros., and 1978 saw the release of their landmark self-titled debut,
one of rock's all-time great recordings. Mixing heavy metal riffs with
punk's fury, Van Halen were onto a whole new sound, which resulted in
the band taking the world by storm. The band issued a string of classic
mega-selling albums (1979's Van Halen II, 1980's Women and Children
First, 1981's Fair Warning, 1982's Diver Down, and two years later,
1984), while becoming a major arena-headlining concert draw in the
process.
Just as Van Halen had hit their peak and appeared they could do no
wrong, Roth issued a four-track solo EP in 1985, Crazy from the Heat,
with rumors swirling that the bandmembers were bickering behind the
scenes and that the singer was going to make a major motion picture.
Still, it was a shock to rock fans everywhere when Roth left Van Halen
later that year (Van Halen would soldier on with Sammy Hagar filling
Roth's spot) -- leading to a war of words in the press. When his plans
for the movie proved to be a bust, Roth immediately formed a top-notch
solo band, consisting of ex-Talas bassist Billy Sheehan (often called
the Eddie Van Halen of bass ), ex-Frank Zappa guitarist Steve Vai, and
ex-Maynard Ferguson drummer Gregg Bissonette. In 1986, Roth issued his
first full-length solo effort, Eat 'Em and Smile, which was another hit
and gave way to another sold-out tour.
Roth had also become a master of creating hilarious and highly original
music videos (featuring a wide assortment of wacky characters),
especially Van Halen's Hot for Teacher and Roth's solo clips
California Girls, Just a Gigolo, Yankee Rose, and Goin' Crazy.
But while Roth's new solo band seemed to be on the way to a very
promising future, the lineup began to splinter with each subsequent
release (1988's Skyscraper, 1991's A Little Ain't Enough), until Roth
was the only remaining member. With interest waning, Roth attempted to
branch out musically on his experimental 1994 release, Your Filthy
Little Mouth (produced by Nile Rodgers), but it was met with a cool
reception, as was his attempt to break into the Vegas circuit around
the same time.
By 1996, Van Halen had parted ways with Hagar, leading to an onslaught
of rumors that a Roth/Van Halen reunion was in the works. The rumor
appeared to become reality on September 4, 1996, when Van Halen and
Roth appeared together at the MTV Video Music Awards in New York to
present an award. Despite the fact that they had recorded several new
songs the previous summer (two of which would appear on their
forthcoming Best Of: Vol. 1 collection), the reunion was short-lived --
Eddie and Roth got into a near fistfight backstage on the night of the
awards show, as relations soured once again when it became known that
Van Halen tricked Roth into thinking that he was back in the band
(meanwhile, they had secretly hired ex-Extreme singer Gary Cherone a
few months prior).
Undeterred, Roth penned a tell-all biography, 1997's Crazy from the
Heat, and issued his best solo album in years, 1998's back-to-basics
DLR Band. When Cherone was dismissed from Van Halen in 1999 after only
a single album (the horrific Van Halen III), rumors began swirling once
again about a possible Roth/Van Halen reunion. With both camps keeping
things very hush-hush, Roth finally broke the silence in April of 2001,
issuing a statement on his website that he and his former Van Halen
bandmates had indeed regrouped the previous year in the recording
studio, but that he hadn't heard back from them in months. Barely a
week later, Eddie Van Halen went public with the fact that he was
diagnosed with cancer; in May of 2002 he reported on his website that
his cancer treatments had been successful and he had just gotten a 100
percent clean bill of health -- from head to toe.
Meanwhile, the good news from Eddie Van Halen did not apparently
coincide with a return of Roth to the Van Halen fold, as the singer's
Diamond Dave, a 14-track collection of mostly covers that echoed the
1982 Van Halen classic Diver Down, was released in 2003. In 2005, Roth
took over FM Shock Jock duties for the satellite radio-bound Howard
Stern, and the following year he gathered friends for the
tongue-in-cheek Strummin with the Devil: The Southern Side of Van
Halen. ~ Greg Prato, All Music Guide
Written by Greg Prato