Beat
'Em & Smile by M. Colin Tappe
INTRO
It seems preposterous that I should have to make an introduction
to this piece, a disclaimer of lame, if you will, but
being as humanity is now, as it always has been, dominated by idiom,
these sorts of needless interjections are the rote. We, as a species,
and as individuals, tend to adapt habits, be they tangible or spiritual,
beneficial or destructive to the self, and unwittingly, without merit
or righteousness, act upon a desperate sort of loyalty to said paradigms
until the day we die. One of the more repugnant of these said spiritual
paradigms which affects far too large a percentage of the populace
as of late is the unchallenged and generally accepted truth
(as in: The Earth is flat) that VAN HALEN SUCKS.
Sucks is the operative word there. Its the key which
will open up a treasure chest of false hope and delusion. Not Van
Halen were poor songwriters, or Van Halens musicianship
leaves much to be desired, or Van Halens albums
havent dated well over the past quarter century, no, none
of these will you hear hurled from the husks of soulless non-believers,
fore any of these would be statements which could, and hence would
need to be backed up with specific examples or comparisons to other
various proposed musical/cultural antitheses. Instead, Van Halen
sucks, and its left at that: unquestioned, unopposed,
and undefended. How about uninformed? Unheard? Under a big pile of
bullshit?
I could go on and talk about a chemistry more volatile than nitroglycerine
OR the Velvet Underground, or perhaps who fits into what perennial
lineage descending from where, but see, Im not out to convert
nonbelievers today. For those who are strangers to the id, and are
chained like Prometheus to a superego of you own design, this isnt
for you. Go bird watching. This is for all those itsy bitsy little
dots out there that actually CARE, and can QUESTION, and come to LOGICAL
CONCLUSIONS about their rock and roll.
Being a pessimist in general (again: PARADIGMS), I dont actually
believe there are any of you out there, but still I write, and am
but a humble servant to you insignificant shadows of specters.
Oh yes, and for a society swamped in SUCKS and idle shrieks
of dissension, Im no stranger to idiom-to-idiom combat: If
you dont like Van Halen, YOURE WRONG!
EAT
EM AND SMILE
1986s Eat Em and Smile was David Lee Roths first
solo venture after the previous years kitsch-laden Crazy From
The Heat ep, ostensibly the proverbial straw that broke the
camels back in the Van Halen camp in regards to DLRs
departure from the group. Truth be told, though, the REAL reason Diamond
Dave ditched the Halens (let the subsequent discographies of each
respective artist [please, never the sales charts] serve as the only
proof you need in regards to WHO FUCKED WHO) goes back to Apollo and
Dionysus, the mind and the heart, the engineer and the artist. Artist?
Thats right, motherfuckers: D. L. aRtist!
Dave was an artist, the rest of Van Halen were engineers, its
as simple as that. Of course they were arguably some of the best engineers
of the musical variety since someone like Beethoven, or whoever the
fuck dead highbrow asshole youre supposed to bring up to give
thud rock legitimacy, but still, engineers nonetheless. Why do you
think Eddie was able to give up the drink so easily? He just turned
off the alcoholic program just as easy as hed play
Eruption note-for-note live. Dave, on the other hand,
like I said, is an artist. No programs, no toggles and no attention
span. You cant ask Dave to make another 1984 any easier than
you could ask Man Ray to pick a medium, Jackson Pollock to faithfully
replicate any of his pieces, or a child to make the same finger painting
twice. But, well, we all have mansions to pay upkeep on, fleets of
Rolls Royces to service and Mt. Everests to climb, and hence the oogenesis
of Eat Em and Smile: the artist playing engineer.
Or at least puppeteer. On Eat Em And Smile Roth assembled one
freaking SMOKING band, including Billy Sheehan as Michael Anthony,
Gregg Bissonette as Alex and none other than Steve Vai as Eddie Himself,
and, as one might have guessed, these cats, with assistance by long
time VH producer Ted Templeman, do a GREAT job at imitating Van Halen,
even better than Van Halen did at imitating Van Halen post-Roth.
Of course there are certain idiosyncrasies on Eat Em And Smile
which youd NEVER find on a Van Halen disc, such as the over
the top (a bass player friend of mine even says tasteless) bass styling
of future Mr.Big (hold vomit, please) figurehead Billy Sheehan, and
its QUITE unlikely that the two lounge numbers, Im
Easy and Thats Life would have passed with,
you know, OLD MAN EDDIE. Speaking of which, Steve Vai, while doing
an impeccable job at imitating Eddies style, is still undeniably
imitating, whereas Eddie never imitates, only channels, and hence
Vais work is a bit less exciting in comparison. Plus, you gotta
figure with a band of this nature, that is to say a backing band for
a singer/songwriter, the chemistry and history of the players that
made classic VH cuts like Unchained so ethereal ARENT
gonna be in effect, to say the least. Like I said, this is not 1984
pt.II (despite the, ugh, SYNTHESIZERS), but its also not 5150,
and is above all, a great rock album.
The opening cut, Yankee Rose is as close to perfection
as one could ask in song of this nature. The song opens with that
familiar and heavenly girl friendly guitar sound sculpted
by Ted Templeman and played by Vai, which interacts with Daves
relatively dry (relative to, again, the standard set on Unchained)
dialogue in which Dave does his best Jonathan Richman impression.
Following that urgent reminder that this is in fact The Diamond One
youre listening to, the hook, the melodies, the choruses all
fall right where they should, and all is well, just as DLR has designed,
and you may think to yourself now this is the kind of song I
want to wake me up in the morning, or perhaps serve as the soundtrack
for some sort of Venice Beach montage, the kind youd see in
the opening scene of a film with lots of neon clothing in it,
and of course youd be right, which is just what Dave wants you
to be.
The rest of the album is a much more solid affair than you might imagine.
For every saccharine lounge number theres a heavy rocker, for
every obnoxious synthesizer harmony theres a killer solo, and
for every other fault you may want to pin on the album, theres
Dave with enough charm to win over anyone who hath reckoning.
Of course the numbers of those who would reckon with Daves Technicolor
vision of the world and the way it should be were dwindling by 86.
A much darker vision, namely GNRs Appetite For Destruction
would soon win over the hard rock masses, and would shortly fall itself
to the melodrama and introspection of the pop music nadir known as
the early-90s. DLRs turn the world on with my smile and
maybe some dancing girls with long legs chutzpah would soon
be as arcane an art form as vaudeville, which is probably the medium
the Diamond One would prefer to be remembered as operating in anyways.
Thats Life indeed.