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David Lee Roth - Roth had been in "The Real Ball Jets" prior to getting an invitation to join Van Halen in the mid seventies. His entertaining stage presence helped Van Halen to become one of the seventies' most popular bands. He left the band in 1985 to embark on his solo career, his replacement being the equally competent Sammy Hagar. His first solo album was actually a mini album. For this "Skyscraper" album, he secured the services of some excellent and well known musicians, namely bassist Billy Sheehan, drummer Gregg Bissonette, keyboard player Brett Tuggle and none other than Steve Vai on guitars Oh well - when you got it, you got it, and Diamond Dave still has very few equals in his field.
The question is: "Which band did David Lee Roth before embarking on a solo career in 1970."
Answer: Van Halen
Prize: A copy of David Lee Roth - Skyscraper.
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Biography by Greg Prato
In the eyes of countless hard
rock fans, David Lee Roth is the
prototypical frontman. With a
flamboyant, larger than life
stage presence and a
party-hearty surfer dude persona
(not to mention his acrobatic
leaps, long mane of blond hair,
and skintight spandex outfits),
Roth was an integral part of Van
Halen's meteoric rise to global
dominance from 1978 through
1984. Born on October 10, 1955,
in Bloomington, IN, Roth was
introduced to music at an early
age, via his father's affinity
for Al Jolson, Ray Charles,
Frank Sinatra, and Louis Prima.
By the dawn of his teenage
years, his family had relocated
to California, and by the early
'70s, Roth had become a major
rock fan (Led Zeppelin, Black
Oak Arkansas, Grand Funk, ZZ
Top, Alice Cooper, etc.). Roth
was soon singing in local bands,
including the Red Ball Jets, who
would play shows along with
another up-and-coming rock band
from Pasadena, CA — Mammoth.
The members of Mammoth,
including brothers Eddie and
Alex Van Halen on guitar and
drums, respectively, would often
borrow Roth's PA system for
their gigs, and a friendship was
struck up. Soon after, Roth was
asked to join forces with the
Van Halen brothers, who had
enlisted a new bassist as well,
Michael Anthony. The new quartet
decided on a name change by the
mid-'70s as they played the
Sunset Strip — Van Halen
(reportedly Roth's idea). By
1977, the quartet was signed to
Warner Bros., and 1978 saw the
release of their landmark
self-titled debut, one of rock's
all-time great recordings.
Mixing heavy metal riffs with
punk's fury, Van Halen were onto
a whole new sound, which
resulted in the band taking the
world by storm. The band issued
a string of classic mega-selling
albums (1979's Van Halen II,
1980's Women and Children First,
1981's Fair Warning, 1982's
Diver Down, and two years later,
1984), while becoming a major
arena-headlining concert draw in
the process.
Just as Van Halen had hit their
peak and appeared they could do
no wrong, Roth issued a
four-track solo EP in 1985,
Crazy from the Heat, with rumors
swirling that the bandmembers
were bickering behind the scenes
and that the singer was going to
make a major motion picture.
Still, it was a shock to rock
fans everywhere when Roth left
Van Halen later that year (Van
Halen would soldier on with
Sammy Hagar filling Roth's spot)
— leading to a war of words in
the press. When his plans for
the movie proved to be a bust,
Roth immediately formed a
top-notch solo band, consisting
of ex-Talas bassist Billy
Sheehan (often called "the Eddie
Van Halen of bass"), ex-Frank
Zappa guitarist Steve Vai, and
ex-Maynard Ferguson drummer
Gregg Bissonette. In 1986, Roth
issued his first full-length
solo effort, Eat 'Em and Smile,
which was another hit and gave
way to another sold-out tour.
Roth had also become a master of
creating hilarious and highly
original music videos (featuring
a wide assortment of wacky
characters), especially Van
Halen's "Hot for Teacher" and
Roth's solo clips "California
Girls," "Just a Gigolo," "Yankee
Rose," and "Goin' Crazy." But
while Roth's new solo band
seemed to be on the way to a
very promising future, the
lineup began to splinter with
each subsequent release (1988's
Skyscraper, 1991's A Little
Ain't Enough), until Roth was
the only remaining member. With
interest waning, Roth attempted
to branch out musically on his
experimental 1994 release, Your
Filthy Little Mouth (produced by
Nile Rodgers), but it was met
with a cool reception, as was
his attempt to break into the
Vegas circuit around the same
time.
By 1996, Van Halen had parted
ways with Hagar, leading to an
onslaught of rumors that a
Roth/Van Halen reunion was in
the works. The rumor appeared to
become reality on September 4,
1996, when Van Halen and Roth
appeared together at the MTV
Video Music Awards in New York
to present an award. Despite the
fact that they had recorded
several new songs the previous
summer (two of which would
appear on their forthcoming Best
Of: Vol. 1 collection), the
reunion was short-lived — Eddie
and Roth got into a near
fistfight backstage on the night
of the awards show, as relations
soured once again when it became
known that Van Halen tricked
Roth into thinking that he was
back in the band (meanwhile,
they had secretly hired
ex-Extreme singer Gary Cherone a
few months prior).
Undeterred, Roth penned a
tell-all biography, 1997's Crazy
from the Heat, and issued his
best solo album in years, 1998's
back-to-basics DLR Band. When
Cherone was dismissed from Van
Halen in 1999 after only a
single album (the horrific Van
Halen III), rumors began
swirling once again about a
possible Roth/Van Halen reunion.
With both camps keeping things
very hush-hush, Roth finally
broke the silence in April of
2001, issuing a statement on his
website that he and his former
Van Halen bandmates had indeed
regrouped the previous year in
the recording studio, but that
he hadn't heard back from them
in months. Barely a week later,
Eddie Van Halen went public with
the fact that he was diagnosed
with cancer; in May of 2002 he
reported on his website that his
cancer treatments had been
successful and he had "just
gotten a 100 percent clean bill
of health — from head to toe."
Meanwhile, the good news from
Eddie Van Halen did not
apparently coincide with a
return of Roth to the Van Halen
fold, as the singer's Diamond
Dave, a 14-track collection of
mostly covers that echoed the
1982 Van Halen classic Diver
Down, was released in 2003. In
2005, Roth took over FM "Shock
Jock" duties for the satellite
radio-bound Howard Stern, and
the following year he gathered
friends for the tongue-in-cheek
Strummin with the Devil: The
Southern Side of Van Halen.


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Alcatrazz

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