The bingeing epithet from the now eleven-year-old Van Halen song
"Cabo Wabo" remains Sammy Hagar's mantra. He and
his Waboritas band opened with the hedonistic anthem during every
show of his just completed Hard Rock CafT promotional tour and, on
this night, during his stop at the Chicago restaurant, even closed
with an a cappella version of it. He owns a Cabo Wabo restaurant in
Cabo San Lucas, Mexico, and recently began marketing a Cabo Wabo
tequila, which, by no coincidence, will be poured at Hard Rock
Cafes around the world.
Somehow, between taste-tasting tequila and ground-kissing in Cabo
Wabo, Hagar managed to record a tequila-inspired album, Red
Voodoo, his second since he was fired (or quit, depending on
who you believe) from Van Halen. Though Hagar's
initial return to the solo circuit, 1997's Marching to
Mars, has sold an underwhelming 330,000 copies to date, the
perennially multi-platinum Van Halen's last album, Van Halen
3, ate one too. That record sold only 150,000 better, no
thanks to the anticipated, then squelched reunion with original
vocalist David Lee Roth, the unpopular addition of
former Extreme frontman Gary Cherone and, most
importantly, because it wasn't very good. "We both bombed
relatively," Hagar admits. "I mean, shit."
Red Voodoo is a certainly a party
album.
It's a party album of my whole career. Usually, every album I got a
party song -- or maybe two party songs. This is like there are two
songs that aren't party songs. Red Voodoo's a lifestyle, it's a
line, it's a zone. When you're out there, and you're at Cabo Wabo,
at Hard Rock here tonight, and you're going, "I gotta get up for
work in the morning. I gotta get up at seven, but it's
twelve-thirty and I'm having too much fun. So you say, "I'm gonna
have a couple more shots and stay just one more hour and I'm going
home," right? That's the "Red Voodoo" song. You're in trouble if
you go any farther. And most people do ... but I don't. And it's my
whole philosophy, it's the way I live. That's where all the fun is.
That's when everything starts to say, "all right, I'm rocking now,
man."
The alcohol tolerance you've built up must be
insane.
I don't drink a lot. I do maybe two or three shots of tequila in a
party situation. If I have five shots, I'm plastered, and I'm a
little bit outta the Voodoo zone.
On the song "Mas Tequila," you co-opted the beginning of
[Gary Glitter's] "Rock & Roll Part 2."
I gave half the songwriting credit [and] Gary Glitter didn't write
half the song. He's in the jail, that sonuvabitch. But [his
lawyers] really were tough about it. They wanted one hundred
percent. Ya know, I wrote the song. I knew what I was doing, just
like the rap guys do.
So, long story short, I sent him the version, I said, "Here it is,
what do you guys want? I'm straight up telling you it's completely
inspired by Gary Glitter's thing." And they come back and say, "We
want one hundred percent of the songwriting [royalties] and if you
put it out without giving us that we'll sue you." So my lawyer
wrote a letter back saying, "sue me."
I had a musicologist analyze it, [in case] it ever went to court.
He said I'd have to give him ten percent. So I thought I'll give
him like twenty percent, I'm a generous guy, ya know. They came
back with a hundred [and] I'm going "I'll give you nothing, you
motherfuckers!" So, then they come back with seventy-five and I
said "sue me" again, and I didn't wanna hold the album out and
finally I just said [to my lawyer], "I betcha if you offer them
fifty percent they'll take it." It's not about the money, it's
about the party.
On the last record, "Little White Lies" took a shot at Van
Halen. Is there anything on this record like that?
The only song that I still got a little dig on was the song "Lay
Your Hand on Me." It's pretty much about the [Van Halen] manager
[Ray Daniels].
When we spoke before you told me it was the end of Van
Halen when he took over.
Certainly was. Anyone could see it. He took one of the biggest
bands in the world -- probably the most stable band...we made it
through grunge, disco, punk, you name it, everything that came,
skated right through. Here comes Ray Danniels. Take it down, man.
Just like Paul Bunyan.
It's fine. I'm really much happier now. But at the time it was a
disaster. But now looking at it, there's a great reason why it
happened. Now Sammy does anything he wants, whenever he wants. I
could have never had the time to develop this tequila, I would have
never been able to make a record like I made. "Mas Tequila," if I'd
have presented that to these guys, it would have been the biggest
fucking mismatch. "Save it for your solo record." "Ok, I'll save it
for my solo record, the one I'll never get to do in this band."
You've heard the last Van Halen. Would you have sung on any
of these songs?
No. I think maybe I could have done something on a couple ... I'm
not that familiar to tell you which ones because I've honestly
listened to it once.
Were you tempted at all to see the current Van Halen
incarnation live?
Oh, fuck no. I saw that [pay-per-view] thing from Australia. It was
so God awful. I was so embarrassed. I couldn't stand it.
Why's that?
It was just not what people want from Van Halen, obviously. The
poor guy's singing Roth tunes, Sammy tunes, and it just doesn't
sound right. Some of them sound flat fucking stupid. The band
looked stupid. I was just wondering if we looked that stupid
sometimes.
I'm serious, I'd have much preferred Roth to come back and I'm not
a David Lee Roth fan. But the fans would have gotten happy again at
least.
You think one day you'll meet David Lee Roth?
I'd love to meet the guy, man. I got fucking no problem with him.
I'll meet him anywhere, anytime and anything he wants to do. Wanna
meet me in some fucking alley and fight, wanna meet me in some bar
and drink, wanna meet on the beach and go surfing, go for a run, or
whatever, I'm okay with it.
BLAIR R. FISCHER(March 24, 1999)
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