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DiverDowninKy
02-01-2012, 11:24 AM
First real review I've seen....Sounds like this guy digs it.

Review: Van Halen - 'A Different Kind of Truth'

The album fans have waited 30 years to hear has finally arrived, and the results are overwhelmingly positive.

By Johnny FirecloudFebruary 01, 20121

Van Halen’s first new album with David Lee Roth on the mic in nearly 30 years arrives February 7 on Interscope, and the results are disarmingly good. A Different Kind Of Truth is a true return of the ’80s cock-rock overlords, a screaming triumph for the feathered-hair dreamers who held on through a cinematically epic series of lineup changes, band implosions and shifting tides of musical fashion. That old familiar feeling has returned, the unique flare of excitement that comes from a muscle car rhythm section led by a six-string wizard and a singing sexual megalodon with an ego that made Kanye look like a kid flaunting his new Spider-Man underoos – and the pipes to back up the strut.

Yes, Van Halen is back, and we’re not faced with a group of veterans simply trying to make sounds that their old selves would respect; A Different Kind of Truth is almost entirely culled from unpolished, unfinished and unreleased work the band had written in their heyday. Guitarist Eddie Van Halen has said several times over the years that he has over half a dozen albums’ worth of unreleased material in his archives from the band’s career, and former singer Sammy Hagar told Rolling Stone not long ago, “I heard this record is old outtakes from the old days. I mean, stuff from before I even joined the band. Because from what I heard, they aren’t working with new material. Ed and Dave didn’t actually write new songs.”

It’s an arguable copout, but a genius insulation nonetheless – pulling from a song sketchbook more than three decades old provides guidepoints to safeguard against the worn pathways of aging acts molesting their own legacy. Thankfully, these songs do not sound like old men putting on the smelly old spandex and combing over the strays. Fresh is the operative word here, a supremely confident swing for the fences in an understandable progression from the obsessively romanticized pre-Hagar era.

The choice of "Tattoo" as the lead single may have more to do with its peacocking pop factor than anything else, because despite being the opener it’s the low point for an otherwise fantastic album. Immediately, "She’s The Woman" taps into the ebullient ’80s spirit, a strong connection to a nostalgia-free strut and sexy, slick riffage – complete with a classic VH solo. A gem from the archives, the track appeared on a 1976 demo the band cut with Gene Simmons on production.

“I wanna be your knight in shining pickup truck,” Roth juts over a mean little chugging guitar line, and it’s all there – the grunts, the little wailing asides, the random background “Whooo!” and “Yeayaa!” accents peppered around Eddie’s volleying squeals. The rev-up to the chorus is short and, like pulling into neutral before slamming into the next gear. It doesn’t really matter that Dave’s not singing “swamp meat salad” in "Tattoo" – the song just doesn’t connect with the energy found here, the knockout drive that pulled us in so long ago. Woman’s hot groove catches fire and spins out as Wolfgang (who holds his own plenty fine throughout) rises in the mix, punching along to the beat before Dad rips loose with a solo that races the frantic rhythm back into the final verse.

But "You And Your Blues" creeps up dangerously amid chopping guitar, Roth’s hushed finger-wagging giving way to an echo chorus, casting out the demons with a had-enough-of-you backhand. There’s a sick little changeup at the two-minute mark, a serpentine acceleration before another screaming solo. Truly, the six-string snobs will have their hands full here, as Eddie brings an airtight assault of fretwork that runs flush with the original glory days.

Van Halen’s legendary tapping channels Beethoven for just a flash to kick off a furiously sprinting "China Town," and the neckbreaker’s not alone in its frantic pace or celebratory energy; the fast-funk "Bullethead" blasts through with enough intensity to make the two-and-a-half minutes pass like a heartbeat, while Eddie’s skittering riff carries us through the labyrinthian "As Is" with a tenacious confidence – we’re fully in the red, the speedometer’s buried, machine gun heartbeat adding internal percussion while fishtailing down the freeway at impossible speeds. But a Thorogood blues-lick breakdown elbows its way in through a vicious dime-stopping halt, Roth dropping into a smooth-talking Satan-bass tone for just a moment… then we’re off again at a spastic gallop, punctuated by bursts of choral screams.

Known for their dramatic opening flare, the band open several tracks with decorative introductions, often led by experimental stringwork. The back-alley acoustic groove of "Stay Frosty" explodes into a bar-brawl swagger jam (with Diamond Dave seemingly possessed by the spirit of Dr. Seuss), and the medieval harkening of the onset of "Big River" sparks a curiosity on what would come of further exploration down that path. A somber plucked intro to "Blood and Fire" turns into a rollerskating-down-the-boardwalk jam right out of 1984, flashing million dollar crocodile grins at the Aqua-Net queens popping gum and swooning.

“Told ya I was coming back,” Roth deadpans in the breakdown, and you can almost see his told-you-so smirk as the beast breaks through the clouds and into a brief clearing. Then it’s back down into the fray, Van Halen losing his shit in what’s arguably the album’s most exhilarating solo.

Anything less would’ve been eviscerated by all but the blind devoted, but A Different Kind of Truth will be remembered as evidence that a band can endure every cliche in the book and return, with the right focus, obsessed dedication and mojo, to a sweet spot of rejuvenation – one that holds the hand of nostalgia but doesn’t go for the full embrace, leaning instead, wisely, toward evolution.

Welcome back, boys.

Preorder A Different Kind of Truth on iTunes.



CraveOnline Rating: 9 out of 10

Angel
02-01-2012, 11:30 AM
Saw this guy on Twitter. Before he sat down to listen to it he asked if he should be afraid, and mentioned that he had never been a fan. His mind was blown away, no doubt about it.

Matt White
02-01-2012, 11:31 AM
BRILLIANT


Man...Tuesday can't get here fast enough!!!

K-tuna
02-01-2012, 11:37 AM
Damn fine review. Great words here,...but i was gonna buy it on "STW" alone. :)

vandeleur
02-01-2012, 11:40 AM
Great review , and i think he got van halen

Jérôme Frenchise
02-01-2012, 12:08 PM
The album fans have waited 30 years to hear has finally arrived, and the results are overwhelmingly positive.

By Johnny FirecloudFebruary 01, 20121



That's 18,109 years...


A Different Kind of Truth is almost entirely culled from unpolished, unfinished and unreleased work

About a quarter of the album is, isn't it? "She's the woman", "Big troubles", "Bullethead"... at least it's what is said around here.

Anyway the review is fairly positive!

DLR Bridge
02-01-2012, 12:19 PM
Hopefully, this is a heavily circulated review. Very well written. How many other bands "fishtail down the freeway at impossible speeds"? Love it.

Seshmeister
02-01-2012, 12:31 PM
That's 18,109 years...



About a quarter of the album is, isn't it? "She's the woman", "Big troubles", "Bullethead"... at least it's what is said around here.



More like a half.

DLR Bridge
02-01-2012, 12:37 PM
I can't wait for someone like Henry Rollins to fully praise/endorse the manner in which this record was made. It'll happen. Shit, I fully expect Satch to give ADKOT a big thumbs up.

Va Beach VH Fan
02-01-2012, 12:44 PM
I just retweeted it to our 620-something followers....

Vinnie Velvet
02-01-2012, 12:50 PM
More like a half.

Yes, but even then some of the arrangements and especially the guitar solos are all new and different.

VAiN
02-01-2012, 12:52 PM
Bravo! A fantastic review from, what seems to be, a non-biased listener. Very exciting!!

daveswisdom1984
02-01-2012, 01:03 PM
Not a Fan - interesting-

DiverDowninKy
02-01-2012, 02:11 PM
This one is from the IdahoStatesman.....

Could Van Halen surprise everyone? More new tracks
Submitted by Michael Deeds on Wed, 02/01/2012 - 11:00am, updated on Wed, 02/01/2012 - 11:39am

Forget "Tattoo." It was a set-up. There are now several superior new Van Halen tracks to sample, including a full version of "The Trouble with Never," below, which definitely sounds like it could be the first single. I like the dark break in the middle for David Lee Roth. And Eddie Van Halen is still absolutely shredding. Good stuff.
The comeback album, "A Different Kind of Truth" — though probably not quite a classic — will exceed expectations when it hits the streets Tuesday. The excitement is building. As one YouTuber hyped, could it be the best rock album ever for a group of guys 50 and older?
After listening to "Never," check these out: a full version of "Blood and Fire," a taste of the steamrolling "Chinatown," part of the old-school "Big River," a sample of the album title-inspiring "Bullethead" and a chunk of "She's the Woman."

Eat that, Chickenfoot.
As a loather of Van Hagar, I'm already prepared to declare this the best Van Halen record since "1984."

Read more here: http://voices.idahostatesman.com/2012/02/01/mdeeds/more_new_van_halen#storylink=cpy

Combat Ready
02-01-2012, 02:36 PM
As a loather of Van Hagar, I'm already prepared to declare this the best Van Halen record since "1984."


Was there ever a doubt?

BruinJer
02-01-2012, 02:44 PM
I can't wait for someone like Henry Rollins to fully praise/endorse the manner in which this record was made. It'll happen. Shit, I fully expect Satch to give ADKOT a big thumbs up.

He has a show on KCRW (in LA) on Saturday nights.... I wonder if he'll work ADKT into the rotation.

vandeleur
02-01-2012, 02:45 PM
Was there ever a doubt?
This is is turning out better than most of us dared hope ... but reviews from the general media getting what we always knew is welcome indeed .

This album aint another nail in van hagars coffin .... this album is some fucker diging the coffin up and putting a flame thrower to it .........Toast master general indeed .

Combat Ready
02-01-2012, 02:50 PM
This album aint another nail in van hagars coffin .... this album is some fucker diging the coffin up and putting a flame thrower to it .........Toast master general indeed .

Well stated!!!:rockon:

Zing!
02-01-2012, 03:22 PM
Love it! Hard to believe the guy's not a fan. Sentences like this: "A somber plucked intro to "Blood and Fire" turns into a rollerskating-down-the-boardwalk jam right out of 1984, flashing million dollar crocodile grins at the Aqua-Net queens popping gum and swooning," seems like he either GETS =VH= or he GETS A Different Kind of Truth (or both).

Keep the glowing praise coming!

Jérôme Frenchise
02-01-2012, 04:33 PM
More like a half.

Half of it (as you say, and I'd rather trust you, Sesh) isn't "almost entirely", as the guy wrote. A very good and enthusiastic review, but too bad he trusted Spam as far as knowing how much classic stuff had been used...


former singer Sammy Hagar told Rolling Stone not long ago, “I heard this record is old outtakes from the old days. I mean, stuff from before I even joined the band. Because from what I heard, they aren’t working with new material. Ed and Dave didn’t actually write new songs.” :umm:

Angel
02-01-2012, 05:00 PM
Toronto Sun: EDITOR'S NOTE: We have an exclusive interview with David Lee Roth, as well as a review of their new album on Sunday!

guwapo_rocker
02-01-2012, 05:14 PM
Toronto Sun: EDITOR'S NOTE: We have an exclusive interview with David Lee Roth, as well as a review of their new album on Sunday!

Great!

Please remind me to check it out online on Sunday.