
Van Halen
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is available for public concerts and events. Van Halen can be booked for
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meetings through this Van Halen booking page.
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up the performance or appearance fee for Van Halen, we act as YOUR agent in
securing Van Halen at the best possible price. We go over the rider for
Van Halen and work directly with Van Halen or the responsible agent for
Van Halen to secure the talent for your event. We become YOUR agent,
representing YOU, the buyer.
In fact, in most cases we can negotiate for
the acquisition of Van Halen for international dates and newer promoters
providing you meet professional requirements.
Van Halen Biography
With their 1978 eponymous debut, Van Halen simultaneously
rewrote the rules of rock guitar and hard rock in general. Guitarist
Eddie Van Halen redefined what electric guitar could do, developing a
blindingly fast technique with a variety of self-taught two-handed
tapping, hammer-ons, pull-offs, and effects that mimicked the sounds of
machines and animals. It was wildly inventive and over the top, equaled
only by vocalist David Lee Roth, who brought the role of a metal singer
to near-performance art standards. Roth wasn't blessed with great
technique, unlike Eddie, but he had a flair for showmanship that was
derived as much from lounge performers as Robert Plant. Together, they
made Van Halen into the most popular American rock & roll band of
the late '70s and early '80s, and in the process set the template for
hard rock and heavy metal for the '80s.
Throughout the '80s, it was impossible not to hear Van Halen's
instrumental technique on records that ranged from the heaviest metal
to soft pop. Furthermore, Roth's irony-drenched antics were copied by
singers who took everything literally. One of these was Sammy Hagar, an
arena rock veteran from the '70s who replaced Roth after the vocalist
had a falling out with Van Halen in 1985. Hagar stayed with the band
longer than Roth, helping the group top the charts through the late
'80s and early '90s. However, the group's sales began to slide in the
mid-'90s, just as tensions between Hagar and Eddie began to arise. In
one of the most disastrous publicity stunts in rock history, Hagar was
fired (or quit) and Roth was brought back on, seemingly as a permanent
member, but only for two songs on a greatest-hits album. He was
subsequently replaced by Gary Cherone, a former member of Extreme.
Through all the upheaval over lead vocalists, Eddie Van Halen and his
prodigious talent remained the core of Van Halen. The son of a Dutch
bandleader, Eddie and his family moved from the Netherlands to
Pasadena, CA, in 1967, when he was 12 years old and his older brother,
Alex, was 14. As their father supported the family by playing in
wedding bands, Eddie and Alex continued their classical piano training.
Soon, both boys were enraptured by rock & roll. Eddie learned how
to play drums and Alex took up the guitar, eventually switching
instruments. The brothers began a hard rock band called Mammoth and
began playing around Pasadena, eventually meeting David Lee Roth. At
the time, Roth, who had been raised in a wealthy Californian family,
was singing in Redball Jet. Impressed by the Van Halen brothers, he
joined forces with the group. Shortly afterward, bassist Michael
Anthony, who was singing with Snake, became a member of Mammoth. After
discovering that another band had the rights to the name Mammoth, the
group decided to call themselves Van Halen in 1974, rejecting the
proposed Rat Salade.
For the next three years, Van Halen played throughout Pasadena, Santa
Barbara, and Los Angeles, playing both clubs and hotel bars. The band's
repertoire covered everything from pop and rock to disco, but they
eventually worked in their own original material. Within a few years,
they had become the most popular local band in Los Angeles, and Eddie
became well known for his groundbreaking technique. In 1977, Kiss' Gene
Simmons financed a demo recording session for Van Halen after seeing
them at the Starwood Club. On the strength of Simmons' recommendation,
Mo Ostin and Ted Templeman signed Van Halen to Warner Bros., releasing
the band's debut the following year.
Van Halen became a hit due to strong word of mouth, constant touring,
and support from AOR radio. Within three months the album had gone
gold, and five months later it went platinum. It would eventually sell
over six million copies, thanks to the album rock staples You Really
Got Me, Jamie's Cryin', and Runnin' With the Devil. Van Halen II,
released in 1979, continued the band's success, as Dance the Night
Away became their first Top 20 single. Women and Children First (1980)
didn't have any charting singles, but was a success on the album
charts, reaching number six. The band supported the album with their
first headlining, international arena tour, and the group was quickly
on their way to being superstars. Released in 1981, Fair Warning wasn't
quite as popular as their previous records, yet it still peaked at
number six. Diver Down, released in 1982, was a huge hit, spawning a
number 12 cover of Roy Orbison's (Oh) Pretty Woman and reaching
number three.
While all of their previous albums were successful, Van Halen didn't
become superstars until 1984, when their album 1984 became an
across-the-board smash. Released on New Year's Day, 1984 rocketed to
number two on the strength of the number one single Jump. Like many
songs on the album, Jump was driven by Eddie's new synthesizer, and
while Roth was initially reluctant to use electronics, the expansion of
the group's sound was widely praised. Throughout 1984, Van Halen gained
steam, as I'll Wait and Panama became Top 15 singles and Hot for
Teacher became a radio and MTV staple.
Despite the band's breakthrough success, things were not well within
the band. During their 1984 tour, each member played separate solo sets
and were physically separated on the stage. Roth was unhappy with
Eddie's appearance on Michael Jackson's 1983 hit Beat It, and Eddie
grew tired of the comic antics of Roth. In 1985, Roth released a solo
EP, Crazy from the Heat, which spawned hit covers of California Girls
and Just a Gigolo/I Ain't Got Nobody. When Roth delayed the recording
of Van Halen's follow-up to 1984, he was fired from the band. Most
observers were taken by surprise when Sammy Hagar was named as Roth's
replacement. The former lead singer of Montrose, Hagar's solo career
had been sporadically successful, highlighted by such arena metal hits
as Three-Lock Box and I Can't Drive 55.
Though many critics suspected Hagar wouldn't be able to sustain Van
Halen's remarkable success, his first album with the band, 1986's 5150,
was a huge hit, reaching number one and spawning the hit singles Why
Can't This Be Love, Dreams, and Love Walks In. Released in 1988,
OU812 was just as successful, earning stronger reviews than its
predecessor and generating the hits When It's Love and Finish What
You Started. For Unlawful Carnal Knowledge, released in 1991, was
another number one hit, partially due to the hit MTV video for Right
Now. Van Halen followed the album with their first live record, the
double album Van Halen Live: Right Here, Right Now in 1993.
By the spring 1995 release of Balance, tensions between Eddie Van Halen
and Sammy Hagar had grown considerably. Eddie had recently undergone
well-publicized treatment for alcoholism, and Hagar was notorious for
his party-hearty ways, even writing a paean to Amsterdam's hash bars
with Amsterdam on Balance. Furthermore, the band had become subject
to criticism that it simply repeated a formula. While Balance was
successful, entering the charts at number one and selling two million
copies shortly after its release, it stalled quickly afterward. The
band wanted to release a greatest-hits collection, but Hagar balked at
the idea, escalating tensions even further. Following a skirmish in
1996 over the recording of a song for the Twister soundtrack, Eddie
decided to make a change by switching singers. Van Halen began
recording new material with Roth without informing Hagar, who went
ballistic upon learning of the group's reunion.
According to Hagar, Eddie fired him shortly afterward; Eddie claimed
Hagar quit. Roth proceeded to record two new songs for Van Halen's Best
Of, Vol. 1, and once the reunion became public, the rock media reacted
positively to the news; MTV began airing a welcome back commercial days
after the announcement. However, the reunion was not to be. Following
an appearance at the MTV Music Awards, Eddie Van Halen fired Roth from
the band, claiming that he was only on board to record two new songs.
Roth said that he was duped into recording the songs, believing that
the reunion was permanent. Former Extreme vocalist Gary Cherone was
announced as the band's new lead singer. Though the resulting Best Of,
Vol. 1 was a success, Eddie's reputation as a nice guy was tarnished
once the entire affair was over. Cherone's long-awaited debut with Van
Halen, entitled Van Halen III, was finally released in March of 1998.
Although the album debuted high on the charts, crashing in at number
three, it quickly slipped down the charts, since the reception to the
album from fans, critics, and radio was mixed.
After Van Halen III proved to be the worst-selling album of Van Halen's
long and illustrious career (the ensuing world tour was poorly attended
as well), Cherone was dismissed from Van Halen in 1999. Immediately,
rumors began to swirl once more of an impending David Lee Roth/Van
Halen reunion. Things were kept completely hush-hush in the Van Halen
camp until early 2001, when David Lee Roth went public on his website
with an update, confirming that he had recorded several new songs with
the band (tracks that Roth described as amazing, phenomenal, and
astonishing), but hadn't heard back from them since the previous
summer.
Only a few days after Roth's news, Eddie Van Halen admitted to the
public that he was battling cancer, but was told by his doctors that
chances were good for a complete recovery. In the summer of 2001, Eddie
told MTV News that the band's remaining members had penned a total of
three albums worth of new material and that they were still unsure of
who their next singer would be. Months later, fans were shocked to hear
that the band parted ways with Warner Bros., its label since 1979. The
bandmembers blamed the label for promoting younger bands, while also
admitting that they had not yet found Cherone's replacement and were no
longer considering Roth. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine & Greg Prato,
All Music Guide
Written by Stephen Thomas Erlewine