
1984
Van Halen
1984
1984 is a Rock album by Van Halen, originally released in 1984. On Gatefold: 309 pressings tracked, owned by 95 collectors.
Sound DNA
- Rock
- Hard Rock
- saturated
- swaggering
- hedonistic
About
With the sci-fi synth swell of <i>1984</i>’s opening instrumental track, Van Halen fans knew they were in for something different. Released in its namesake year, the band’s final album with singer David Lee Roth—for about three decades, anyway—was launched into the stratosphere by the deliriously catchy single “Jump.” Propelled by massive synths rather than massive guitars, the song was not only a distinct outlier for Van Halen, it was also the group’s first and only No. 1 single. It may have seemed bizarre for a band founded almost entirely on Eddie Van Halen’s next-level guitar wizardry, but the keyboard-boogie of “Jump” indicated where the members of Van Halen were in 1984 (and with <i>1984</i>): on top of the world. That means they could do anything they wanted—as evidenced by the band’s second single, “I’ll Wait,” which bumps even more synth. This time it’s darker, with a Survivor “Eye of the Tiger” feel and menacing drum fills, not to mention a vocal melody co-written with the Doobie Brothers’ Michael McDonald (apparently, the lyrics are addressed to a female model wearing men’s underwear in a magazine ad). Of course, fans worried that Eddie may have abandoned his trademark riffs and licks had nothing to fear. Guitar fireworks are everywhere on <i>1984</i>. The school-daze fantasy “Hot for Teacher” kicks off with Alex Van Halen’s 30-second drum solo before Eddie serves up one of his most dexterous performances. And that’s on top of his dizzying speed-harmonics on “Top Jimmy,” and his insane interplay between rhythm and lead on “House of Pain.” After a journalist accused Roth of writing only about women, partying, and fast cars, Roth realized he hadn’t actually written any songs about cars. That led to the birth of “Panama,” an acrobatic ripper inspired by a race car the singer had seen in Vegas. (In keeping with the theme, that’s Eddie’s Lamborghini revving in the background during the bridge.) Then there’s “Drop Dead Legs,” which tattoos a seductive power-groove onto the pumping thighs of strippers everywhere, while Roth rhymes “Betty Boop” with “loop-de-loop.” It might be one of Van Halen’s slowest songs, but it’s also one of their best. Meanwhile, Alex and bassist Michael Anthony lay down a Rush-worthy rhythm workout on “Girl Gone Bad”. Sadly, <i>1984</i> would be Van Halen’s last gasp with Roth, at least until 2012’s <i>A Different Kind of Truth</i>. But what a way to go out.
via Apple Music
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Tracklist
Side A
- A119841:07
- A2Jump4:04
- A3Panama3:31
- A4Top Jimmy2:59
- A5Drop Dead Legs4:13
Side B
- B1Hot For Teacher4:42
- B2I'll Wait4:41
- B3Girl Gone Bad4:43
- B4House Of Pain3:18
Credits
Performers
- Michael AnthonyBASS BACKING VOCALS BASS GUITAR
- Alex Van HalenDRUMS PERCUSSION BACKING VOCALS
- Eddie Van HalenGUITAR KEYBOARDS BACKING VOCALS
- David Lee RothVOCALS LEAD VOCALS
- Kevin DuganBASS
- Gregg EmersonDRUM
- Robin (Rudy) LeirenGUITAR
95 collectors on Gatefold own this · 309 pressings tracked on Gatefold
