I listened to VH as much as any other band in my pre-new wave 1980s - I remember how fucking bummed I was listening to OU812 at a track meet (the only track meet I ever attended - should have called it quits on Van Hagar too, but I digress...). This tape was passed around for years as pre-Van Halen I demos, and while I don't actually know the source here (I suspect these recordings are later, but someone else knows and they're going to leave a comment and the burning mystery will be solved) I know that I love cranking these rough-ass bass heavy versions of early classics that I have spent a lifetime with. Roth's growl in the chorus of "House Of Pain," Anthony's swinging bass in "Woman In Love," the beginnings of the backing vocals that put a stamp on the band even more than Eddie's guitar, a gloriously raw version of "On Fire" and thirteen examples of what an American Hard Rock band is supposed to sound like. Genre defining is one thing....generation defining is something else.
1 comment:
These may be the Ed Templeton demos recorded in New York and arranged by Gene Simmons, who shopped the demo around. Nothing happened with the demos.
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