The
other night I watched – for the “umpteenth time”, Heavy Metal, the animated motion picture. Aside from a few misses, the soundtrack is
fantastic. In particular, I love the two Don Felder songs, one of which he
played last summer at Jones Beach Arena.
And it was from that soundtrack, the title track, that I learned about
Sammy Hagar.
Montrose. This was his start, the singer for guitarist
Ronnie Montrose (RIP). He’s on two
albums, Montrose and Paper Money.
Top songs are “Rock Candy” and “I’ve Got The Fire”, the latter which
Iron Maiden covered, and the former he still plays on solo tours.
Solo. Lots of albums by himself: Nine on a Ten
Scale, Sammy Hagar, Musical Chairs, Street Machine, Danger
Zone, Standing Hampton, Three Lock Box, VOA, I
Never Said Goodbye, Marching To Mars, Cosmic Universal Fashion,
Sammy Hagar & Friends, and Life Roast, plus 4 with the
Waboritas [his solo backing band] Red Voodoo, Ten 13, Not 4
Sale, and Livin’ It Up.
We liked VOA, particularly “Dick
in the Dirt” and “I Can’t Drive 55”. Street
Machine features “Highway Wonderland”, a tribute to the late 70s Trans Am
and its “6.6 liter”. Three Lock Box
and Standing Hampton were the only others we bothered to get.
I
never did get the only Hagar-Schon-Aaronson (the Dust bassist) -Shreve (HSAS)
album, Through The Fire, which is half live. Neal Schon went back to Journey, and Hagar
continued his solo career.
Van Hagar. Apparently Eddie Van Halen and Sammy Hagar
shared the same mechanic, which is how they claim Hagar joined Van Halen. By that time, I already knew who he was. He survived for four albums, 5150, OU812,
For Unlawful Carnal Knowledge, and Balance, before leaving. OU812 was one of the first albums I
bought on CD, and we saw that tour in summer 1988, followed by the For Unlawful
tour in October 1991, at which Alice in Chains (with Layne Staley) opened up.
I can’t say I prefer this to
Roth-era VH, but I do like it. My favorite
song is “Black & Blue”. It’s funny
that even Hagar now refers to this as “Van Hagar”, even though he knows most VH
fans don’t mean it as a compliment. You
can call it commercial, but only if you ignore how commercial all those David
Lee Roth albums were.
Chickenfoot. This was his “supergroup” with Joe Satriani
(guitar), Michael Anthony (bass), and Chad Smith (Will Ferrell’s doppleganger,
on drums). The name is a slang term –
which I’d never heard before – for the peace symbol. They have two albums, self-titled and III,
the latter being a joke on albums with numbered names. The material is not bad; I think it sounds
more heavy like AC/DC than the commercial crap you might otherwise expect.
The Circle. I suppose Chad Smith went back to the Red Hot
Chili Peppers, so Hagar got Drum Slut Supremo, Jason Bonham, to fill in. Old friend Michael Anthony – out of his main
job ever since Wolfgang Van Halen learned to play bass – is on bass, and some
guy I’ve never heard of, who looks like Tom Morello, Vic Johnson, is doing a
great EVH imitation. They have a live
album which is actually pretty good. Because
of Bonham, they do a few Zed Leppelin covers, but they also do some Van Hagar
and some solo material, like “Heavy Metal” and “I Can’t Drive 55”.
Red Rocker. Hagar obviously likes the color red, but
clearly has no leftist tendencies. He
also likes fast cars, which hardly distinguishes him from anyone else who likes
Ferraris and Trans Ams. As I mentioned
earlier on my blog about Van Halen, Hagar strikes me as a regular guy who would
join you for a beer and hang out, whereas David Lee Roth would probably screen
you with a David Spade “and you are…” handler and bask in his phony persona. Nowadays Hagar seems to prefer t-shirts than
those goofy jumpsuits he wore in the early 80s.
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