Women And Children First (2015 Remaster) Van Halen

Album info

Album-Release:
1980

HRA-Release:
19.07.2015

Label: Warner Music Group

Genre: Rock

Subgenre: Hard Rock

Artist: Van Halen

Album including Album cover

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  • 1 And The Cradle Will Rock... 03:33
  • 2 Everybody Wants Some!! 05:07
  • 3 Fools 05:56
  • 4 Romeo Delight 04:20
  • 5 Tora! Tora! 00:56
  • 6 Loss Of Control 02:39
  • 7 Take Your Whiskey Home 03:10
  • 8 Could This Be Magic? 03:10
  • 9 In A Simple Rhyme 04:41
  • Total Runtime 33:32

Info for Women And Children First (2015 Remaster)

„Women And Children First“ reached #6 in April 1980 and shows a band progressing towards their eventual peak. 'And The Cradle Will Rock' is one of the album's two radio staples, along with 'Everybody Wants Some.' These two anthems set the stage for one hell of a rock & roll party album.

'Fools,' a relatively obscure VH tune, features thumping rhythm, the piercing background vocals of bassist Michael Anthony and some David Lee Roth scatting at the end. Roth declares 'I'm takin' whiskey to the party tonight and I'm lookin' for somebody to squeeze' in 'Romeo Delight.' Preferring sneaky licks and heavy riffs, Eddie Van Halen does fit some excellent acoustic work into 'Could This Be Magic' and 'In A Simple Rhyme.' „Women And Children First“ shows a hungry, talented rock band delivering the goods. Longtime producer Ted Templeman helps the band achieve their signature sound, producing a fantastic album.

„After two pure party albums, the inevitable had to happen: it was time for Van Halen to mature, or at least get a little serious. And so, Women and Children First, a record where the group started to get heavier, both sonically and, to a lesser extent, thematically, changing the feel of the band ever so slightly. Where the first two records were nothing but nonstop parties, there's a bit of a dark heart beating on this record, most evident on the breakneck metal of 'Romeo Delight,' but also the pair of opening party anthems, 'And the Cradle Will Rock' and 'Everybody Wants Some!!,' which don't fly quite as high as 'Dance the Night Away' or 'Runnin' with the Devil' because of the tense, roiling undercurrents in Eddie's riffs, especially the thudding, circular keyboard riff propelling 'And the Cradle Will Rock.' The very fact that a keyboard drives this song, not a guitar, is a signal of Eddie's burgeoning ambition (which would soon become inseparable from his desire for respectability), and there are already some conflicts between this somber musicality and David Lee Roth's irrepressible hunger for fun. Where that tension would eventually tear the band apart, here it just makes for compelling music, adding richness and depth to this half-hour blast of rock & roll. This is the first Van Halen album to consist entirely of original material and there's some significant growth here to the writing, evident in the winding, cynical neo-boogie 'Fools' and also in the manic 'Loss of Control,' which gallops by with the ferocity of hardcore punk. These, along with all previously mentioned songs, are the heaviest music Van Halen has made (or would ever make), but as the album rushes toward the end Diamond Dave pulls them toward his country-blues jive fixation with 'Take Your Whiskey Home' and the all-acoustic 'Could This Be Magic?' giving the album a dose of levity that is welcome if not necessarily needed. Then, before the album comes a close, the band unleashes its first stab at a power ballad with 'In a Simple Rhyme,' where the group's attempts at melodic grace are undercut by their compulsion to rock. This may not make for a full-fledged power ballad, but this tension between the two extremes -- by their increasing songcraft and their unhinged rock & roll -- makes for dynamic music, and captures all the contrasting glories of the album in one song.“ (Stephen Thomas Erlewine, AMG)

Eddie Van Halen, guitar, electric piano backing vocals
David Lee Roth, vocals, rhythm guitar
Alex Van Halen, drums
Michael Anthony, bass, backing vocals
Additional musicians:
Nicolette Larson, backing vocals on 'Could This Be Magic?'

Recorded December 1979 – February 1980
Engineered by Donn Landee, Gene Meros
Produced by Ted Templeman

Digitally remastered by Bernie Grundmann

Please Note: we do not offer the 192 kHz version of this album, because there is no audible difference to the 96 kHz version!

No biography found.

This album contains no booklet.

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