Friday, October 16, 2020

Recapturing my lost youth: Five underrated Van Halen songs

When Eddie Van Halen died, Electric Agora wrote that “EVH's death has brought back a recurring feeling I've been having since I entered middle age over a decade ago. The world I love is dying bit by bit.”  I’ve often had that sinking realization as well, not only after big events, such as the death of a parent, but also after far less personal events, such Van Halen’s passing.  I didn’t know Eddie Van Halen, of course, but his music is intertwined with my youth, with memories of better days.

The Electric Agora also saw a sliver lining in this reality of dying worlds.  When one’s world dies, “bit by bit,” there’s actually a consolation: when death comes for the individual, that person will be ready to go, ready to leave behind what little is left of his or her world.  That’s true and, at least for me, oddly comforting.  But in the meantime, having just passed a physical and dental exam with flying colors, I’m (most likely) not yet at death’s door.  I am therefore writing this post to enjoy an even better, though admittedly temporary, silver lining: I’m recapturing my lost youth by celebrating and sharing some of Van Halen’s most underrated songs.

Below are five such songs—one from each Van Halen (not Van Hagar) album, except for the band’s two mega hit records: the self-titled debut Van Halen and the band’s sixth album, 1984.  Those records achieved such success on every imaginable level that there are no overlooked gems, no hidden nuggets to unearth.  But their other five albums are goldmines of under-appreciated songs.  Here are my top five:

Friday, October 2, 2020

The next Republican VP candidate?

I don't pretend to know what's going to happen on November 3rd.  Although, I do expect and have braced for the worst-case scenario: A Harris-Biden administration.  Why?  Because if things go south for the GOP, you won't catch me sniveling and reaching for the bubbles and Play-Doh.  But regardless of what happens in 2020, the next Republican presidential candidate might want to take a long, hard look at Kim Klacik as a potential running mate.  She's loaded for bear -- or, in this case, for donkey -- with straight-talk and no political gibberish.  This woman is streets ahead.