DAVID LEE ROTH – Eat ‘Em And Smile [Japan ‘Warner Hard Rock 1500’ Limited Series] *0dayrox Exclusive*

DAVID LEE ROTH - Eat 'Em And Smile [Japan 'Warner Hard Rock 1500' Limited Series] *0dayrox Exclusive* full
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After asking some collectors friends we finally got (thanks Eno), as requested, the rare, hard to find Limited Edition of DAVID LEE ROTH‘s ”Eat ‘Em And Smile” released as part of the ‘Warner Hard Rock 1500‘ Japanese reissue series from some years ago, named after the tag price of ¥1,500.
It’s pretty difficult to find such 30 minutes of ’80s hair metal perfection like on ”Eat ‘Em And Smile”, more than enough to show that Roth could indeed go toe-to-toe with his former VH partners. Time has revealed that the secret weapon wasn’t his three-headed monster of a band, but instead, a well-written and arranged set of songs.
Indeed, David Lee Roth’s full length debut ”Eat ‘Em and Smile” set a standard for the genre in the mid-Eighties.
Oddly enough, ”Eat ‘Em and Smile” never got a remastering treatment. But wait to hear this ‘Warner Hard Rock 1500’ Japan press: it sounds fabulous, million times better than any previous CD release.

After Roth was (depending on who’s talking and what day it is) fired from or quit Van Halen following the world tour for their massive hit album 1984, some people may have assumed that guitar pioneer Eddie Van Halen, his drummer-extraordinaire brother Alex and bassist Michael Anthony would leave the singer in the dust creatively, particularly after hiring talented and charismatic solo star Sammy Hagar to take his place.
The massive success of the new Van Halen’s 5150 album, released four months earlier, had to give even the unnaturally cocky Roth a moment of pause.
Or so you’d think.

Fact is, “Diamond” Dave had already assembled his own all-star rock band, featuring not just former Frank Zappa guitar whiz Steve Vai, but an equally dexterous and dynamic bass player, Billy Sheehan, as well as drum prodigy Gregg Bissonette.
Clearly, Roth had decided not to deliver another pop-history nostalgia trip along the lines of his 1985 Crazy From the Heat EP, which produced a pair of massive radio and MTV video hits with “California Girls” and “Just a Gigolo,” in addition to most likely accelerating his exit from Van Halen.

Instead of going the lounge-music route, or following the path laid out by the massive, keyboard-heavy hits from 1984 as his former mates did with hits like “Dreams” and “Why Can’t This Be Love,” Roth primarily stuck to swaggering, four-piece rock ‘n’ roll throughout ”Eat ‘Em and Smile”.

First single and lead track “Yankee Rose” finds Vai employing a trick even Eddie had never recorded before, literally talking with Roth via guitar as our hero dismisses the months of media gossip regarding the VH split (“Guess who’s back in circulation / Well, I don’t know what you may have heard … “) and focuses on admiring a woman walking down the street minding her own business.
Another glove is thrown in the direction of his former bandmates later on, when Sheehan’s thunderous bass is introduced as a truly equal partner during the song’s instrumental climax.

The spinning, dizzying, dual-fretboard gymnastics of “Shyboy,” a hard-charging cover of a song from Sheehan’s former band Talas, solidify the band’s rock bona fides before they take a quick dip into retro-Heat territory with “I’m Easy.” Gratefully, this group can’t help but approach the material with a more aggressive bite then the all-star session players featured on Roth’s previous solo effort.
Then arrives the surprise with perhaps the most sophisticated, tasteful song Roth has ever recorded; the jazzy, smoldering and humorous late night travel journal “Ladies Night in Buffalo?”. And there’s time for a fun, simple n’ catchy ”Goin’ Crazy!”.

The first four of the five tracks on side two of the LP / vinyl are so well linked, sequenced and spaced that they could be nearly be considered Roth’s own Abbey Road medley.
First up is a turbo-charged take on the soulful rock standard ‘Tobacco Road,’ featuring a particularly strong and impassioned lead vocal performance, particularly for a guy who’s at least partially famous for forgetting the words to his biggest hits in concert.
The already-upbeat pace doubles with the quick-witted “Elephant Gun,” then it’s onto the magnificent “Big Trouble,” which revs and slightly dirties up the jazzy strut of “Buffalo”.

The suite winds up with the strutting, make-no-bones-about-it stripper come-on “Bump and Grind,” and just like that, it’s time for the closer, a winking, yet somehow earnest take on the Frank Sinatra standard “That’s Life.” Surprisingly, even the Broadway-ist of horn sections can’t dilute the track’s mischievous rock energy.

Then, it’s over, barely 30 minutes all told. All killers, no fillers. You don’t need more to round up one of the best, catchy, effective, well written, arranged & produced piece of American hair metal. (contributors get lossless)
A MUST HAVE

Only at 0dayrox

 

WARNER MUSIC JAPAN / WPCR~4254

01 – Yankee Rose
02 – Shyboy
03 – I’m Easy
04 – Ladies’ Nite In Buffalo?
05 – Goin’ Crazy!
06 – Tobacco Road
07 – Elephant Gun
08 – Big Trouble
09 – Bump And Grind
10 – That’s Life

Vocals – David Lee Roth
Guitar – Steve Vai
Bass, Backing Vocals – Billy Sheehan
Drums, Backing Vocals – Gregg Bissonette
with:
Keyboards, Synths – Jesse Harms, Jeff Bova
Percussion – Sammy Figueroa
Strings – The Sidney Sharp Strings
Backing Vocals – The Waters Family

 

Out of print
www.cdjapan.co.jp/product/WPCR-14254

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2 Responses

  1. Anonymous says:

    Thank you so much for not only this release but everything you post, nothing but quality!

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