Get Even More Visitors To Your Blog, Upgrade To A Business Listing >>

1984 – Van Halen (1984)

Peak position: #2

Singles:

  • “Jump” (No. 1)
  • “I’ll Wait” ( No. 13)
  • “Panama” (No. 13)
  • “Hot for Teacher” (No. 56)

When the year 1984 came, the world suddenly found itself in the future. The year George Orwell’s dystopian novel took place was finally upon us, and the music seemed futuristic as well; groups like A Flock of Seagulls and the Human League were using synthesizers in their music, and rock was taking a decidedly pop turn with the British Invasion hitting American shores.

The hard rock group Van Halen decided to embrace this future along with everyone else; after Diver Down, the band’s hard-hitting album of mostly cover tunes, was cooly received by critics, guitarist Eddie Van Halen decided it was time to turn to original material and give it a decidedly pop sound. He and his bandmates retreated to Eddie’s newly built home studio, 5150, and created what would become one of the year’s biggest albums.

The aptly-titled 1984 is a turning point for Van Halen; it’s the album that signaled a transition from classic hard rock to album-oriented rock and even pop music. Eddie’s signature guitar can’t be heard until a full two minutes into the album. The title track opens the album, and it’s all synthesizers. Synthesizers are also the driving force behind the band’s monster smash, “Jump,” which stayed at No. 1 for five weeks. And “I’ll Wait,” another single, features mostly synths.

But classic Van Halen fans weren’t disappointed. The driving sounds of “Panama” and “Hot for Teacher” are more than satisfying, as lead singer David Lee Roth’s sophomoric lyrics give them a casual, almost novelty sound. Eddie’s advanced guitar acrobatics are better than ever, and his brother Alex propels many tracks with frenetic drum beats.

What keeps 1984 from being a truly great album is the lack of musical ideas. Aside from the catchy keyboard riff of “Jump” and the choruses to “Panama” and “I’ll Wait,” the songs are two-dimensional, focusing only on Eddie’s guitar playing and Roth’s annoying midwestern accent.

1984 was a transition in other ways. It was the last album with the classic VH lineup, as Roth quit a year later, replaced by Sammy Hagar. The band’s next album, 5150, would continue the band down the rock/pop path and propel them to superstardom. In that way, the year 1984 was more of an artifact, as the band had many surprises up its sleeve on subsequent albums.

The post 1984 – Van Halen (1984) appeared first on Hooks and Harmony.



This post first appeared on Hooks And Harmony, please read the originial post: here

Share the post

1984 – Van Halen (1984)

×

Subscribe to Hooks And Harmony

Get updates delivered right to your inbox!

Thank you for your subscription

×