Alex Van Halen Defends Snubbing Sammy Hagar

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Van Halen—a band that defined an era of rock and roll, from their raw beginnings to their massive arena shows. But when drummer Alex Van Halen sat down for an interview about his recently released book Brothers, fans couldn’t help but notice a glaring omission, Sammy Hagar.

In his interview with Bringing It Back To The Beatles, Alex explained why he made the ‘conscientious decision’ to stop his book in 1984, just before Sammy Hagar joined the band. According to Alex, the original Van Halen lineup—himself, Eddie, David Lee Roth, and Michael Anthony—was the band’s true driving force.

He said: “Because the original band was the band that was the driving force. That was the connection between the disparate parts of the musical world, if you will. And we were young. The first record going platinum — it’s incredible. That’s something you can really never expect to happen again. Later on, it was different — that’s for another book — but the excitement and the confusion and the groping in the dark, if you will, and all the mistakes that we made, and all the B.S. we had to endure, and then to recognize at the very end, maybe we had one more record in us, it was very… You can’t take it back, but those are the things that are in the back of your head. The old expression of, if you don’t go over the edge, then you can’t come back. You have to go too far to come back in. Does that make sense? Unfortunately, we’re human and we made some bad choices. The US Festival, for instance, was just a clusterf**k. Nobody knew what the hell was going on. All we said was, ‘You make sure you have enough power, and we’ll play.’ That’s it.”

When the interviewer noted that this attitude is “true rock and roll,” Alex concurred. “Bingo. That’s exactly right,” he said. “You just hit the nail on the head. After that, that’s why the book ends in 1984, because that was true rock and roll. After that, it became much more — I don’t know; I can’t explain it. But it’s not to say that it was not any good. We always did our best at whatever we were doing, but it wasn’t the same.”

He added earlier in the interview: “I think I picked up where Ed [legendary VAN HALEN guitarist and Alex’s brother Eddie Van Halen] left off in terms of saying… His example was that we were actually happier playing in clubs than we were when we hit the so-called big time, because in the clubs you weren’t quite sure what you were doing, you could, at the drop of a hat, change directions, you can play anything you want and there’s nobody that holds you accountable or they have expectations of any sort. You just go on and you play. And it’s intimate. You’re right there, two feet away. People are right there in front of your face. And that kind of goes away when you get to the place where you have five lines of security people. And we always kept it to a minimum, but nonetheless, that was the soup du jour.”