Warner Bros / Wea
1978
Van Halen
About This Album
Among revolutionary rock albums, Van Halen's debut often gets short shrift. Although it altered perceptions of what the guitar could do, it is not spoken of in the same reverential tones as Are You Experienced? and although it set the template for how rock & roll sounded for the next decade or more, it isn't seen as an epochal generational shift, like Led Zeppelin, The Ramones, The Rolling Stones, or Never Mind the Bollocks Here's the Sex Pistols, which was released just the year before. But make no mistake, Van Halen is as monumental, as seismic as those records, but part of the reason it's never given the same due is that there's no pretension, nothing self-conscious about it. In the best sense, it is an artless record, in the sense that it doesn't seem contrived, but it's also a great work of art because it's an effortless, guileless expression of what the band is all about, and what it would continue to be over the years. The band did get better, tighter, over the years -- peaking with their sleek masterpiece 1984, where there was no fat, nothing untidy -- but everything was in place here, from the robotic pulse of Michael Anthony and Alex Van Halen, to the gonzo shtick of David Lee Roth to the astonishing guitar of Eddie Van Halen.
Track List
(try tracks 1,3,5,6,7,8,9 and 10)
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
Similar Albums

Prisoners In Paradise
by Europe

Make Me Baby
by Mariner

The Frauds
by The Frauds

Blondes Prefer The Gentlemen
by The Gentlemen (Rock)

Blackout
by Scorpions