Van Halen – Diver Down (Numbered Hybrid SACD)
$50.00
Van Halen Gets Loose on Diver Down: Varied Effort Includes “(Oh) Pretty Woman,” “Dancing in the Street,” and “Where Have All the Good Times Gone!”
Experience the 1982 Album in Definitive Sound: Mobile Fidelity’s Numbered-Edition Hybrid SACD Plays with Extraordinary Clarity, Immediacy, and Punch
Van Halen’s winning track record with cover songs can be traced back to its 1978 diamond-platinum debut. The ambitious approach, which showed off the band’s diversity, creativity, flair, and fun, takes precedence like never before on Diver Down. Featuring five covers, many of which became radio staples, the album sprung from the band’s desire to remain relevant while taking a breather after four massively successful records and their respective tours. More than four million copies later, suffice it to say Diver Down achieved its goal.
Sourced from the original analog tapes and housed in mini-LP-style gatefold packaging, Mobile Fidelity’s numbered-edition hybrid SACD presents the 1982 album in definitive sound. The traits you associate with hallmark Van Halen — dynamic energy, distinctive tonalities, vivid detail, sensory-invigorating immediacy, rhythmic attack, midrange punch — emerge with involving presence. Recorded with producer Ted Templeman in just 12 days in California, Diver Down can here be experienced with unparalleled transparency and balance. Even if you listen at low levels, the advancements in separation, imaging, soundstaging, and fullness will grant you a fresh perspective on a record that began under the auspices of a one-off single.
Indeed, the group’s punishing live schedule — coupled with making four LPs in four years — prompted Van Halen to seek some refuge from the road and studio. The break didn’t last long. Vocalist David Lee Roth thought the band could placate the record label’s desire for new music by interpreting Martha & the Vandellas’ “Dancing in the Street” and issuing it as a seven-inch single. Guitarist Eddie Van Halen, intent on not simply replicating another artist’s song but transforming it, suggested Roy Orbison’s “(Oh) Pretty Woman” when he couldn’t get an immediate handle on a riff for the Motown tune. Case closed? Not so fast.
When the joyous romp through the Orbison classic crashed the Billboard charts and climbed into the Top 15, Warner Bros. brass told Van Halen it needed a full-length effort to take advantage of demand. And so the loose, diverse feel of Diver Down took shape, with the band exploring a wide palette of influences and entertaining widescreen desires on what stands as its most carefree set of its career.
Diver Down may be best known for the three electrifying covers that still ring out on FM airwaves today, yet what makes the record much more than a quickly thrown-together collection of odds ‘n’ ends is the vast assortment of styles represented — and the group’s all-in performances. Not to mention some of the subtle messaging. To wit: The band’s hot-wired take on the Kinks’ “Where Have All the Good Times Gone!” doubles as a jab to the pretenders crowding the music scenes, and a call for the kind of authenticity and skill Van Halen brought to every note it played. Equally pointed, the barbershop-quartet send-up of Roy Rogers’ “Happy Trails” functions as a quasi-parody and the quartet’s winking way of having a laugh with those who can’t take a good joke.
Bookended in between those tracks exists a hodgepodge of fun, exuberant material. Consider the three standout interludes. Written by Roth on a synthesizer and anchored by Eddie Van Halen twirling the tremolo bar on his guitar and rubbing a can of Schlitz against its strings amid substantial feedback, the menacing “Intruder” conjures the vibe of Van Halen’s preceding Fair Warning. On the opposite end of the spectrum, the visionary “Little Guitars (Intro)” sees Eddie Van Halen wielding a nylon-string guitar and replicating a classically informed flamenco technique by quickly tremolo-picking the high strings with his right hand and taking his left hand to orchestrate hammer-ons and pull-offs on the guitar neck.
Always a step ahead, the pioneering instrumentalist devised “Cathedral” long in advance of the Diver Down sessions. He tailored it for the record by fingering notes on the fretboard with his left hand and using his right hand to simultaneously roll the volume knob on and off. Doing the latter eventually caused the knob to freeze at the end of the second take, yet the intended effect — a piece that resembled the sound of a church organ — was successfully captured.
Having peaked at No. 3 and spent more than a year on the charts, Diver Down also includes atomic-punk fury (“Hang ‘Em High”), gentle tranquility (“Secrets”), and a stripped-down jaunt through the old jazz ditty “Big Bad Bill (Is Sweet William Now)” complete with a guest contribution from the Van Halens’ father, Jan, on clarinet. With the album title and artwork aptly hinted that something was happening underneath the plain visibility of the surface — while simultaneously serving as a sexual double entendre — Diver Down remains the band’s most overlooked and surprise-filled platter. One that the original marketing campaign saliently noted finds the band’s “temperature up.” Happy trails, indeed.
- Where Have All the Good Times Gone!
- Hang ‘Em High
- Cathedral
- Secrets
- Intruder
- (Oh) Pretty Woman
- Dancing in the Street
- Little Guitars (Intro)
- Little Guitars
- Big Bad Bill (Is Sweet William Now)
- The Full Bug
- Happy Trails
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