{"id":17698,"date":"2010-06-13T01:22:28","date_gmt":"2010-06-13T08:22:28","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/mehallo.com\/blog\/?p=17698"},"modified":"2012-02-08T14:51:53","modified_gmt":"2012-02-08T22:51:53","slug":"dlr","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/mehallo.com\/blog\/archives\/17698","title":{"rendered":"DLR"},"content":{"rendered":"
Misunderstood genius or fool? Or a little bit of both.<\/p>\n I\u2019ve actually been a fan of David Lee Roth<\/a> since high school. Just deal with it. <\/p>\n With a friend, we used to do DLR music video comic strip parodies in our high school newspaper. We called him David Lee Broth<\/em> and changed lyrics to be all about food. ‘Just a Buffalo’<\/em> instead of ‘Just a Gigolo.’<\/em><\/p>\n And you know, I do think Dave’s part genius \u2013 with a bit of the foolish side dancing around what works\/what’s public opinion\/where his next career move will be.<\/p>\n Pictured in this post are highlights from Dave\u2019s sketchbook, which can now be seen at his rather sparse website.<\/a> The art bounces thru a few genres, as is his thing. <\/p>\n as a tike<\/strong> I know this cause I read his autobiography.<\/a> Which starts out really cool, then sort of falls into some rambling thoughts. Rumor has it the tome was ghost authored by Henry Rollins, also a fan. But just a rumor.<\/p>\n ‘Young musicians are always coming up to me and asking how do you know when you’ve made it. When you can spell subpoena without thinking about it, that’s when you know you’ve made it.’ -quote from DLR<\/a><\/em><\/p>\n rockstar<\/strong> On the side, the guy climbs mountains, takes risks. Jumps over things.<\/p>\n them 1980s videos<\/strong> For his videos, he worked with director\/manager\/creative partner Pete Angelus.<\/a> And they went under the moniker The Fabulous Picasso Brothers. Which to Dave suggested, \u2018Fine art. And pizza delivery.\u2019<\/em> <\/p>\n They made some videos, a few below:<\/p>\n
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\nDave describes himself as a Jewish kid who grew up in El Lay. Where the smarts come in is as a child he\u2019d always been exposed to really cool stuff: car culture, jazz. His record collection is incredible, a mix of many and obscure genres. The dude is not a dull blade.<\/p>\n
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\nWhen fronting Van Halen \u2013 which was just another hair band with a nifty guitarist (Dave once noted that Van Halen was more based on Queen<\/a> than not) \u2013 he brought Vegas showmanship to the mix. Jazz songs in the middle of albums, references to all kinds of obscure stuff. Improv lyrics that either worked or didn\u2019t. The story goes he wrote the vocals for their 1984 album<\/a> while taking a taxi ride around Los Angeles. <\/p>\n
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\nAfter leaving Van Halen<\/a> – with his own band – he managed to snag Frank Zappa\u2019s incredible guitarist, Steve Vai.<\/a> It was a weird mashup that worked. For awhile.<\/p>\n