Interscope Records
All Access Review: A-
When it comes to anything and everything related to Van Halen, the truth is always subjective. The first time around, when David Lee
Roth exited stage left, what exactly happened between him and the rest of that
band that caused their very public and nasty divorce? Then there was the whole
Sammy Hagar debacle. Did he leave of his own volition or was he canned by Eddie
and Alex? On the heels of that messy split came the aborted 1996 reunion with
Roth and the MTV Music Awards fiasco that led Eddie to say something to the
effect of, if Roth ever addressed him in a certain way again, “ … he’d better
wear a cup.” If ever anyone was to attempt to write a rock and roll soap opera,
they might as well abandon the idea right now, because chances are, no writer
could, in his wildest dreams, concoct the kind of drama that has already
unfolded within Van Halen.
And so, here we are in 2012, and pigs now evidently can fly.
Roth is back in the Van Halen fold and a new album has arrived, the blessed
event preceded by the release of an unsatisfying first single, “Tattoo,” that
led to much head-scratching and quizzical expressions. Betrayed by a weak, lazy
chorus, Eddie’s “going through the motions” solo and a sort of forced attempt
to bring back that cheeky fun the boys exuded on smash hits like “Hot For
Teacher” and “Jump,” “Tattoo” received mixed reviews – to put it charitably –
and torpedoed expectations for A
Different Kind of Truth, Van Halen’s first album with Roth since 1984. The bar lowered well below where
it was set for Guns ‘N Roses’ Chinese
Democracy, it turns out Van Halen was sandbagging us all along. Supposedly
working off bits and scraps of material the band had left over from the good
old days Van Halen has transformed this pile of ephemera into a powerhouse album
engorged with Roth’s circus-barker vocals, Alex’s brawny, wrecking-ball
drumming and the kind of molten riffs and high-flying, supersonic solos that
made Eddie Van Halen a legend.
A Different Kind of
Truth washes out the bad taste of “Tattoo,” the opening track, almost
immediately with the rampaging stampede of “She’s The Woman.” As if circling
high above a freshly killed carcass, in buzzard-like fashion, Eddie whips up a
dazzling, intricate intro to the track that rushes headlong into a prison break
of heavy, unbridled riffs and tenderizing rhythms. What should have been the
initial single, “You and Your Blues,” is more darkly melodic, chugging
tantalizingly ahead before giving way to a deceptively simple, cascading chorus
that’s disarming, instantly memorable and becomes even more rewarding with
repeated listens. Clearly, Eddie is reinvigorated and out to prove that he’s
still the champ, as the dizzying flurry of knockout blows he delivers in the
thundering blitzkrieg that is “China Town” – the closest Van Halen has ever
come to sounding punk, although the raging, speed-addicted “Bullethead” that
crops up two songs later would be a close second – so exquisitely proves,
especially with the blindingly fast, Yngwie Malmsteen-like fretwork that turns
the ignition on this hard-working engine.
A truly great guitar record, with scorching leads and
contorted figures strategically placed throughout its burning landscape like
claymore mines and Eddie effortlessly executing the kind of hairpin twists and
turns that would cause other guitarists to crash and burn, A Different Kind of Truth gnashes its teeth and wails at a world
that had begun to see Van Halen as a joke. It’s no party album; actually, it’s
more of a thrill ride, a fast, frenzied rollercoaster that speeds through some
of the darker territory Van Halen once traversed in “Runnin’ With the Devil,”
“And the Cradle will Rock” and “Mean Streets” – “Honeybabysweetiedoll,” with
its mad-dog growl and exotic Middle Eastern overtones, and “As Is” matching,
chord for explosive chord, their surging power.
Uncharacteristically, though as slyly charming and as
entertaining as ever, Roth seems comfortable taking a backseat to Eddie on A Different Kind of Truth, except on
“Outta Space,” the philosophical “The Trouble with Never” and “Stay Frosty.”
Roth’s trademark swagger and that comedic charisma he has are in full effect on
the bluesy, gleefully entertaining “Stay Frosty,” which carries on the acoustic
tradition and vaudevillian soft shoe of “Ice Cream Man” and “Big Bad Bill (Is
Sweet William Now).” Propelled by the propulsive, pounding bass lines and
Eddie’s stop-start dynamics that drive the humorous “Outta Space” forward, Roth
lets it all hang out, singing as if he’s fighting for his career, dipping low
and then rising to wrestle with Eddie’s guitar for the spotlight. Every grunt,
yelp and excited utterance is emitted in the moment and without preconception,
and for the first time in a long while, Roth, though never a great singer,
doesn’t come off as self-serving or clownish.
- Peter Lindblad
VH Interview
(direct from the Van Halen website)