Van Halen frontman David Lee Roth has posted a holiday greetings message for fans.
“Happy Holidays!” writes Roth, pictured getting ready to pop the cork on some champagne in one of the rooms of his Pasadena, California mansion.
Van Halen wrapped up their “A Different Kind Of Truth” tour in July.
The band’s latest album debuted at No. 2 on the Billboard 200 with opening week sales of 187,000. “A Different Kind Of Truth” was denied a No. 1 entry when Adele’s smash “21” record enjoyed a massive sales bump due to the 2012 Grammy Awards, where she swept her 6 categories and doubled her sales from a week earlier to retain top spot.
A few months ago, Roth revealed that Van Halen are in the early stages of working on a new album.
"I was up at Edward (Van Halen)'s house, maybe three days ago - just before I came here to the city - and we're starting to put music together,” Roth told Ozzy’s Boneyard host Jim Florentine on SiriusXM. “Not to give away exactly what the package will be, it's gonna be about 18 months, I think.”
“We start way, way, way in advance, 'cause we are eminently art-centric, which is a really fancy way of saying we really do generate all the artwork, the graphics, etc.,” he continued. “We don't hire out and have somebody design a bunch of album covers for us and then choose.... we start from scratch ourselves. Same thing with the merchandise - if you buy a t-shirt, that was designed, literally, in my living room. On and on... stage design, lighting rig, putting the show together - it takes about a year and a half, 18 months, because any idea that you have is 85 phone calls. Anybody can go, 'I got an idea, it's a stage that's shaped like, uh, like a square on top of a circle'. Great, my question never was, 'were you able to dream up a stage design', my question is, 'are you prepared to do the 87 phone calls that are about to follow now, to make sure it came out the way we decided'. And then there's another 80 phone calls that are gonna follow that because we have to figure out how to take the thing apart and put it in the trucks and buses. And, and, and. So if you really want to generate the ideas from scratch and bring them all the way to the finish, you're gonna have to learn a few other languages, and you're gonna have to speak those over a lot of extra phone calls. And that's usually the break point for most artists.”
Roth also explained that the band are active while away from the road and the media spotlight.
"Oh, yeah, we're writing,” he says. “I write lyrics routinely. It's a perishable skill. And the band plays together routinely, at least three times a week. They’re up at Ed’s place, routinely.”
See also:
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AUDIO: Rare Eddie Van Halen solo track surfaces