Van Halen Rising: How a Southern California Backyard Party Band Saved Heavy Metal
Van Halen Rising: How a Southern California Backyard Party Band Saved Heavy Metal book cover

Van Halen Rising: How a Southern California Backyard Party Band Saved Heavy Metal

Paperback – October 1, 2015

Price
$19.35
Format
Paperback
Pages
400
Publisher
ECW Press
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1770412637
Dimensions
5.5 x 0.91 x 8.5 inches
Weight
1.21 pounds

Description

“This prehistory is usually glossed over in accounts of the band, but in Van Halen Rising , author Greg Renoff devotes an entire book to it. It’s the tale of hardworking kids with nothing in common learning to fuse pop and heavy metal into a new sound that completely changed the music world. It also vividly shows that the personality clashes that would later destroy the band were there from Day One.” ― Rolling Stone “In an excellent new book called Van Halen Rising , author Greg Renoff argues that, in the era of disco and punk, Van Halen’s arrival saved heavy metal. While that may be hyperbole, there’s little arguing that the backyard party band from Pasadena put Los Angeles back at the center of American rock & roll, where it’s largely stayed ever since.” ― LA Weekly “Renoff explores in depth Van Halen’s reluctant journey from back yard band to superstardom and, in particular, the role of David Lee Roth’s ambition and entrepreneurial skills.” ― Forbes“Renoff’s book is a thoroughly entertaining read that will appeal to every hard rock fan.” ― Publishers Weekly “It’s a rollicking roll through the life and times of a group that mowed through more groupies and drugs than could possibly be good for a young fella … a fascinating read.” ― Pasadena Star News Greg Renoff was born in the Bronx, New York, and grew up in New Jersey. Renoff earned his Ph.D. in American history from Brandeis University and is the author of The Big Tent: The Traveling Circus in Georgia, 1820-1930 and Van Halen Rising: How a Southern California Backyard Party Band Saved Heavy Metal. His writing has appeared in Medium.com/Cuepoint , Guitar World , LA Weekly and Vulture , and he and his work have been profiled in Salon , Maxim , and the Boston Herald .xa0He lives in Tulsa, Oklahoma, with his wife and two daughters. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Van Halen Rising How A Southern California Backyard Party Band Saved Heavy Metal By Greg Renoff ECW PRESS Copyright © 2015 Greg RenoffAll rights reserved.ISBN: 978-1-77041-263-7 CHAPTER 1 BEGINNINGS It's rare that something so loud comes to life in someplace so quiet, but that's exactly how it happened with America's greatest rock band. In the 1970s, Van Halen evolved into a musical force in Pasadena, a Los Angeles suburb of white picket fences, tree-lined streets, and good schools. David Lee Roth reminisced about those environs on the band's 2007 reunion tour. "The suburbs, I come from the suburbs," Roth told a packed house at the Staples Center in Los Angeles. "You know, where they tear out the trees and name streets after them. I live on Orange Grove — there's no orange grove there; it's just me ... we used to play the backyard parties there. I remember it like it was yesterday." But years before Van Halen ever disturbed the peace in Pasadena, the group's future members laid the foundation for a partnership that would make rock history. Soon after arriving in America in 1962, the Van Halen brothers resolved to become top-flight rock musicians. Likewise, David Lee Roth set his sights on becoming a rock singer — a rock star, as he'd put it — before he and his family even made it to the San Gabriel Valley in 1963. Van Halen didn't come to life until the early 1970s, but the band's true genesis dates back a decade prior. * * * Before the Van Halen family made music in California, they made it in Holland. Jan van Halen (Jan would begin capitalizing his surname's first letter after he arrived in America) was born in Holland on January 18, 1920, to Herman van Halen and Jannie Berg. When the Netherlands fell to the Nazis in 1940, a young Jan joined the Dutch resistance, only to become a prisoner of war. After his Nazi captors discovered that he had an aptitude with the saxophone and clarinet, they placed him in an orchestra that toured German-occupied Europe. When the conflict ended, he played in jazz acts, hit the road as part of a circus orchestra, and later performed on live radio shows in Holland. He then relocated to Indonesia, where he met and married Eugenia van Beers. "Our pop went over to Indonesia on a six-week radio contract, which turned into six years," Alex recalled. After the fall of the Dutch-backed Indonesian government, the couple moved to Amsterdam, where they welcomed two new additions to their family: Alexander Arthur van Halen, born on May 8, 1953, and Edward Lodwijk van Halen, born on January 26, 1955. The boys had their musical baptism almost at birth. In Holland, they started taking piano lessons when Edward was about five years old. They also traveled with their parents as their father toured with jazz and big band acts during the late 1950s. "We were taken all over the place," Alex explained to the Los Angeles Times. "If my dad was going somewhere, we'd all go to the gig and hang out. My mom couldn't afford a babysitter." Edward added, "Growing up in Holland when me and Alex were seven years old, we used to go across the border to Germany to clubs where he played. That was just normal to me ... staying up to two, three in the morning, hanging in the club." By 1960, Jan's career was on the ascent. His talents had earned him a spot in the elite Ton Wijkamp Quintet, which won honors at Holland's Loosdrecht Jazz Festival that year. Edward, reminiscing about his father's musical career in Europe, said, "My dad was one of the baddest clarinet players of his time. He was so hot — unbelievably." Despite Jan's success, the van Halen family began to conside Read more

Features & Highlights

  • The bestselling, vivid and energetic history of Van Halen’s legendary early years featuring 230 original interviews ― including with former Van Halen bassist Michael Anthony and power players like Pete Angelus, Marshall Berle, Donn Landee, Ted Templeman, and Neil Zlozower
  • “Fascinating (even for non-VH fans) … A book almost anthropological in its level of detail.” ― Vulture
  • “It’s the tale of hardworking kids with nothing in common learning to fuse pop and heavy metal into a new sound that completely changed the music world. It also vividly shows that the personality clashes that would later destroy the band were there from Day One.” ―
  • Rolling Stone
  • “A fascinating read.” ―
  • Pasadena Star News
  • “The book is fantastic.” ― Ted Templeman, Grammy-winning music producer for Van Halen and David Lee Roth
  • “If you’ve got it bad, got it bad, got it bad for Van Halen, get
  • Van Halen Rising
  • .” ― Martha Quinn, original MTV VJ, Sirius XM host
  • After years of playing gigs everywhere from suburban backyards to dive bars, Van Halen ― led by frontman extraordinaire David Lee Roth and guitar virtuoso Eddie Van Halen ― had the songs, the swagger, and the talent to turn the rock world on its ear. The quartet’s classic 1978 debut,
  • Van Halen
  • , sold more than a million copies within months of release and rocketed the band to the stratosphere of rock success. On tour, Van Halen’s high-energy show wowed audiences and prompted headlining acts like Black Sabbath to concede that they’d been blown off the stage. By the year’s end, Van Halen had established themselves as superstars and reinvigorated heavy metal in the process.
  • Combining exhaustive research and original interviews,
  • Van Halen Rising
  • reveals the untold story of how these rock legends made the unlikely journey from Pasadena, California, to the worldwide stage.

Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Reviews

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I've always loved their albums but have taken them for granted until ...

I just finished this book, having consumed it as soon as it arrived. (Well, as fast as I could considering I work full time and have three little kids and a wife, but you know what I mean). I am a Van Halen fan and gained a deeper respect and appreciation for the band after reading this book. I've always loved their albums but have taken them for granted until now. I was three years old in 1978, so pretty much every memory involving the band or hearing their name and their music came with the assumption they are undisputedly awesome. They defined hard rock for my entire life. Just the name "Van Halen" was synonymous with ass-kicking.

Now, having read this book, I realized what set them apart from so many awful clones: They worked their asses off for years before hitting it big, against the crazy tide of commercial music that hated what they represented. It seems like most bands since Van Halen want fame immediately and are unwilling to put in the work to build their name up. Having read this book it is absolutely NO WONDER they exploded within a year of their debut album hitting the stores. I absolutely loved the stories from the "big" bands at the time for whom Van Halen opened -- Black Sabbath, Journey, etc. -- regretting having to follow these young upstarts. Van Halen were starving by the time they landed a tour, and were primed and ready. The big bands at that time -- and no disrespect is implied here -- hadn't seen anything like them and were on automatic pilot, it seems. (Such a kick that Sabbath were supporting an album called "Never Say Die" when they were clearly dying a slow death night after night.)

Probably the biggest thing I came away with after reading Van Halen Rising was a deep respect for David Lee Roth. Look, you either love him or hate him. I've vacillated between one or the other in the years of being a VH fan. I now can say I love the guy. He's taken his licks since Day One when he took voice lessons in school. No one has ever praised VH for vocals the way one praises Led Zeppelin, Journey, etc. But without a doubt were it not for his style, incredible DRIVE, and an unfathomable amount of faith and hope (and those aren't just the names of a couple of strippers in Vegas) Van Halen as we know it would not exist. He changed their look and broadened their soundscape. He compensated for his vocals with incredible charisma. The man is smart and savvy, and I can tell he knew he was lucky when Ed and Al let him into the fold. They no doubt knew they were lucky to have a guy fight so hard to help them become a best-selling act.

The interviews are well-sourced. I loved hearing Ted Templeman's stories, including that he wanted to replace Roth with Sammy Hagar but relented when he heard Roth's lyrics. To this day that's one of the biggest differences between those two iterations of Van Halen. Good to hear from Michael Anthony -- who I felt sorry for when I saw the pics to the clothes he had to wear the first concert he played in -- and good to hear from Mark Stone, the guy he replaced.

I'm giving this 4, not 5 stars for aesthetic reasons only. This looks like a vanity press, self-published book. I know it is not endorsed by VH, I get it. But the ink on some of the pages were lighter than others and at times somewhat difficult to read. I would have loved for this to have been published by a better publisher, and certainly in hardcover. It was clearly written by a fan who took it upon himself to fill a void that many of us wanted filled, but the quality/presentation of the book FELT like it was written by a fan, if that means anything. I'm that specific kind of book nerd. So sue me. Of course most of the photos in here were not professionally done -- probably taken from a friend at the party, but as a rock bio fan I would have killed for a middle section of some color photos.

But I hope you hear from this review that the quality of the story itself is very satisfying and made me appreciate Van Halen more than ever. I read that the author is considering a sequel. I would LOVE to read about the rest of the Roth years in similar detail.
Thanks Greg Renoff for taking the time to write this book.
71 people found this helpful
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Renoff has taken a Van Halen-obsessed guy like me and made me feel like a total newb

Wow. Im having a tough time putting this down - but its not just the adhesive all over my hands. Renoff has taken a Van Halen-obsessed guy like me and made me feel like a total newb. So much detail, so many insane interviews that helped shine a bright new light on the early days of Van Halen's history.

Ok, enough review - back to the book!
17 people found this helpful
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I just saw them in concert this year and was glad that the book plus the tour made the summer ...

First and foremost, I am a lifelong Van Halen fan since 1978.
I have been following the band since I moved to L.A., and my youth was formed around the music scene there since 1978 to 1985.
The book provides me some refreshed memories of backyard parties and auditorium gatherings where bands played live. I wish I had seen the mighty Van Halen in its formative years but this book takes you back in time.
I have my memories of what bands I saw but now I can certainly see where all the luster and bluster for hard rock comes from. I just saw them in concert this year and was glad that the book plus the tour made the summer even more special for me, as a fan.

In researching the young Van Halen's youth, particularly bringing us in to their teens years, you can learn so much about who they are today.
Especially their relationship as brothers, as band mates to each other, and their relationship with one David Lee Roth.
I am glad Greg Renoff put this well written story of my favorite band together.
I am on my second re-read and much like Dave's Crazy from the Heat, I cannot put it down.
If you love music, and if you love success stories with great background I strongly recommend Van Halen Rising!
15 people found this helpful
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A book like this comes along once in a band's career (if they're lucky)

There have been a few books over the years about Van Halen. All trying to encompass their career (to the point at which the book was written.) Greg Renoff takes a different, and simply smarter, route by focusing on the birth of what we know today as Van Halen. There are numerous stories the members of the band have been repeating in interviews since day one. Ed and Al switching instruments. The crazy backyard parties the band played at. Gene Simmons "discovering" them and producing their first demo. Warners in-house producer Ted Templeman seeing the band on a rainy weekday night at the Starwood in front of a crowd of few. All amusing short anecdotes for the band to use when doing interviews. But for the real meat of all of those stories and many, many more look no further than Renoff's well-researched book. Dozens of witnesses to those early days share their take on things. It's very interesting to read the details of how Dave worked his way into the band. If all you've ever heard was Ed and Al were tired of renting his PA and decided it'd be cheaper to just get him in the band, well you're in for a lot more. In fact, Dave's importance to the sound of Van Halen and their success is maybe something that's been overlooked as of late, especially with the years of replacement singers. A book like this comes along once in a band's history. Even if you're a mild Van Halen fan at best you'll be fascinated by the tale of how these four guys from Pasadena (okay, Mike is from Arcadia) made their American Dream a reality.
13 people found this helpful
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Oh CRAP. I just finished the book. I was hoping that wouldn't happen.

As a music lover and miserable wannabe player I read a lot of this type of book. In fact I read Sammy's and Valerie's works quite a while ago. I don't know what to even say about this effort. I've never seen anything like it. It's SO well-researched, and written by not just a fan but someone that knows something about music.

I jumped on this because of the great reviews and never considered that it might not be a complete biography of the band. You click on this before all synapses are firing if you are some of us. I was in a world of book-reading where "it's too good to be true". Then we were done and it dawned on me that the title of the book indicated the scope. Bummer, but it is still one of the most fulfilling books about one of my music heroes that I have ever read and I am going to scour the landscape for another Renoff project.
11 people found this helpful
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You Know the "Play Hard" Part of the Story . . . Now Find out about the "Work Hard" Part

Greg Renoff's well-researched and eminently readable book on the early years of Van Halen confirms a suspicion I've had for a long time -- that a lot of hard work went into making the world's greatest party band. I've been a fan of the band for more than 30 years, and I've long had a sense that there was more to the guys in Van Halen than most people thought. I remember when I saw my first Van Halen show in 1982, David Lee Roth cracked a joke. "The other night I was hanging with this girl, and she got mad at me and told me, 'If you were my husband, I'd put poison in your drink.' So I told her, 'If you were my wife, I'd drink it!'" It was a great line, delivered with excellent timing, and the crowd roared its approval. Then, four or five years later I found that joke in the first volume of William Mansfield's biography of Winston Churchill. Do you think Ozzy Osborne and Vince Neil and Brian Young were reading Churchill biographies? Roth turns out to be more than just a mouth. He's a man whose mouth is fed (constantly) by a well-stocked mind. Renoff shows us that the charismatic frontman also had a powerful drive to succeed and a never-say-die attitude. There were times, apparently, when the other members of the band were demoralized about their inability to land a record deal and thinking about throwing in the towel. Roth wouldn't hear of it. He knew just how good the Van Halen brothers were -- that's why he honed in on them and stalked them till they let him join the band -- and he insisted that the band would eventually get its big break, if they just kept rehearsing and improving their skills and their showmanship. And it turned out he was right. Roth also had a vision for how the band's sound ought to evolve, from heavy and gloomy to "big" and celebratory and danceable. ("Hard rock cha-cha," Roth used to call the band's sound, "heavy metal samba!") As for Eddie and Alex Van Halen, Renoff reveals how many hours both spent learning their craft. Edward Van Halen in particular spent virtually every waking hour playing the guitar. He's a prodigy, to be sure, but, like other prodigies -- like Mozart, for instance -- he spent thousands of hours learning to play, imitating musicians he admired, and honing his skills. The myth of the "born genius" makes us forget the long hours of practice that are required to master any art. Renoff has done a great thing by recovering that part of the VH story. He reminds us that VH was both a "play hard" and a "work hard" band. If you think about it, there's a kind of irony in the Van Halen story. Countless adults condemned the band for setting poor examples for young people. And, no doubt in many ways they were not models of good behavior. And yet Renoff shows that, under the big hair and leather and ass-less chaps, there was a hell of a work ethic, and that it was the work ethic that allowed Van Halen to rise to the top. While people were offering Van Halen as proof of the decline of Western Civilization, the guys in the band were exhibiting such old-fashioned virtues as dedication, hard work, persistence, and striving to be the best in their field. I recommend this book to everyone who has ever savored the special, not easily duplicated combination of Eddie Van Halen's virtuoso guitar work and the exuberant and infectiously upbeat tone of Roth's voice.
11 people found this helpful
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Find out what you DON'T know about VH

Readable, couldn't put it down. Felt like I was one of the kids right there in the Pasadena backyards!. Having so much history in a page turner makes this a must read. Renoff shines a light on the masterful, intuitive marketing of David Lee Roth as a sexy, "play to the crowd, front man". Read how David Lee Roth "used" the police helicopter's flashlights as part of his show !!! Genius - to turn the police's "weapon" to his advantage.

David Lee Roth and the Van Halens refused Renoff's request to be interviewed - no problem. Combining Sherlock Homes and Columbo mindsets, Renoff just sets out on another path and solves the case: interview anybody and everybody who ever had any contact with the band. Be right there as Renoff talks with people close to the band and asks questions that nobody had thought to ask before!

More than that - there's an ethereal sense that Renoff has, maybe unknowingly, captured about VH - know what you want and never stop until either you die or you get success. That's Van Halen's story and, lucky for us rock fans, Greg had the same burning desire to write Van Halen Rising; he busted through adversity and was successful.....
9 people found this helpful
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I once had two copies of this book...

I sent one to my brother. Both of us, die hard Van Halen fans...even Van Hagar fans, a slight nod to Cherone (Fire in the Hole). If you want to know the back story this is it. Very in depth, the most in depth book on the pre-fame you will ever find. From the upbringing, the meeting Roth whom skipped class to strum a guitar under a tree to Mammoth to hustling the backyards, disco dives and other shabby joints in the ascension to greatness - its all here. However if you are a true Halen-a-holic, a member of the Roth Army or...heck maybe even a Wabbo...don't stop there. After checking this book out, find the Van Halen coffee table book "A Visual History". It is monstrous, bursting with color and provides that party atmosphere that will make you want to crack open a cold one, or drink some Jack Daniels ("the only people that put ice tea in Jack Daniels bottles is the clash!" - David Lee Roth). Relive the glory of Van Halen. After you have had your fill of that, check out Ted Templeman's book "A Platinum Producers Life in Music". As the man behind the classic Van Halen albums and what many consider the "sorta" last classic Van Halen album, Roth's Eat Em' and Smile, Ted has all the insight into his biggest accomplishment and the debauchery that came with it. From there it's time to enter the Twilight Zone, pick up ol' David Lee Roth's "Crazy from the Heat", a babbling array of disassociated topics with no sense of direction. I was one of the first to get this book when I was a teen, actually I was the only one to get this book...after reading it I was so confused about what he was talking about, I haven't read it sense. It's like a blind, deaf, schizophrenic jacked up on cocaine that is asked to explain how to make a sandwich with his hands for someone to transcribe onto 300 notebook pages. But it sits on my bookshelf to a testament to the mind of the man that ruled the lead singer position of the greatest American rock band ever. Then....oh yes...then...when you think that its gonna get better...nope, it will get worst. Being amused by a rambling pot smoking lead singer is one thing, being p&%#ed off is another. Pick up Sammy Hagar's "Red". Synopsis: Sammy Hagar is the nicest, most talented, smartest guy in the world...everybody else sucks, nobody is as talented, smart or nice as Sammy. Also Eddie is drug addict bum with bad teeth, Roth is a gay looking bald jerk, Alex can't play good anymore because he is sober and Van Halen were nothing without Sammy Hagar (Apparently he was as big as Van Halen when he was VOA...yeah sure) because...Sammy Hagar is the greatest musician of all time...also a mad adulterer, but its not his fault...because he is Sammy...poor Sammy...the greatest, smartest, nicest, most talented guy in the world. Still there's gems in there and some insight if you can get past the ego, me literally makes Roth look somewhat normal...seriously. After you have hit all these books, settle down with Running With the Devil...hands down the BEST book in Van Halen. And you have the whole picture. As a massive Van Halen fan, and especially a Eddie fan with his passing its worth exploring this entire collection. If you are like me you will also check out Valerie Bertinelli's book "Losing it". Like Sammy she dumps on Eddie and sometimes Roth. But her ego, like Sammy's is so blatant and contradictory page after page you end up having sympathy for this poor guy (she once wigged out of him for daring to eat a bag of peanuts she was in her multi hour labor). Still she has some good insight into the Early Van Halen, especially the Fair Warning-For Unlawful Days. Eddie, rest in peace buddy. God be with you. Van Halen Forever!
8 people found this helpful
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A mammoth work!

This was indeed a "mammoth" research work, to paraphrase Van Halen's previous name band..

Bear in mind the following: there are 350 pages covering the history of the band onyl until shortly after the released of the first album!! Talk about the amount of information here.

Yes, there is information available in other sources, but the writer is honest and makes it clear when he is using other sources (one of the most used is David Lee Roth's autobiography, CRAZY FROM THE HEAT). But there are a lot of interviews conceded directly for the book, and some of them by pivotal players in the band's history, like bass player Michael Anthony and producer Ted Templeman.

There are some pitfalls, though... I almost could not finish the chapter called "The Battle of Pasadena", so incredibly boring it was (oh dude, there were wild parties, yeah, the cops came, the police helicopters came, yeah dude, there were girls, there were booze, everybody having a good time, the cops came, riot happened... Van Halen backyard parties were wild, blah, blah, blah... Aaargh).

Also, the number of times there is a passage in the book where some witness says: "The show was amazing". "That night was fabulous", "The band kicked ass", "They were on fire", etc, etc, it borders on nauseating.

Of course, one would no reason AT ALL to read this book if one does not enjoy Van Halen music. Even for those who enjoy them, the book may be a little bit unnecessary...

But it is a good book per si and the writer deserves kudos for his efforts.
8 people found this helpful
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~ Reads as fast, intricate and exciting as Eddie's guitar riffs ~

Meticulously researched - written by a Scholar! I was in the classroom with Edward at Pasadena High and attended many a fabled party where the band played on. (as Mammoth) Though their music was not to my taste, (then); I am proud to have 'known them when'. Greg Renoff's work takes me back to those wild, fun days and even for people who weren't there, his book is a fascinating read. Also, for the book launch at Vroman's Pasadena (where else?) it was an honor to meet Greg and Ted Templeman as well. Thank you, Greg, for your hard work on this wonderful piece of rock history.
8 people found this helpful