eMusic Review 0
Van Halen's fifth album isn't exactly a hefty artistic statement — nearly half of the 12 tracks are covers, while three others are instrumentals that don't even crack the two-minute mark. But there's certainly fun to be had, and hints of both the pop breakthrough that the band would achieve on its next album, 1984, and the theatrical turn that frontman David Lee Roth would embrace after splitting from the band. The best known track here is the band's thumping cover of Roy Orbison's "Oh, Pretty Woman," which was Van Halen's second pop-radio hit; it was initially recorded as a one-off, but its chart success precipitated the 12-day recording of the album. The pulled-together nature of the rest of the tracks is apparent from first listen, although sometimes that breeziness works in the listener's favor; the loose, chiming "Secrets" sounds like it was crafted out of the Los Angeles sunshine, and Roth's vaudevillian persona gets the spotlight on the 1920s ode to male domesticity "Big Bad Bill (Is Sweet William Now)." (That's not to say the song is all Dave; the Van Halens' father Jan contributed the clarinet solo.) And the album's closing number, a barbershop-quartet take on "Happy… read more »