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> <channel><title>VHTrading  &#187;  Topic: David Lee Roth Is Letting His Art (Mostly) Do the Talking</title> <atom:link href="http://www.vhtrading.com/topic/david-lee-roth-is-letting-his-art-mostly-do-the-talking/feed" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" /><link>http://www.vhtrading.com/topic/david-lee-roth-is-letting-his-art-mostly-do-the-talking/feed</link> <description></description> <pubDate></pubDate> <generator>http://bbpress.org/?v=2.0</generator> <language>en</language> <item> <guid>http://www.vhtrading.com/topic/david-lee-roth-is-letting-his-art-mostly-do-the-talking/#post-62128</guid><title><![CDATA[David Lee Roth Is Letting His Art (Mostly) Do the Talking]]></title><link>http://www.vhtrading.com/topic/david-lee-roth-is-letting-his-art-mostly-do-the-talking/#post-62128</link> <pubDate>Mon, 13 Jul 2020 16:36:48 +0000</pubDate> <dc:creator>ron</dc:creator> <description> <![CDATA[<div
id='q-62128'><p><a
href="http://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/13/arts/music/david-lee-roth-art.html" rel="nofollow">http://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/13/arts/music/david-lee-roth-art.html</a></p><p>David Lee Roth Is Letting His Art (Mostly) Do the Talking</p><p>Since the Covid-19 pandemic forced him off the road, the singer has been making comics at his Los Angeles home, and calling it performance therapy.</p><p><a
href="http://static01.nyt.com/images/2020/07/14/arts/14dlr5/14dlr5-jumbo.jpg" rel="nofollow">http://static01.nyt.com/images/2020/07/14/arts/14dlr5/14dlr5-jumbo.jpg</a><br
/> The Van Halen frontman and solo musician David Lee Roth has devoted himself to making art while quarantined and off the road.Credit&#8230;Jessica Lehrman for The New York Times</p><p>By Richard Bienstock<br
/> July 13, 2020, 10:44 a.m. ET</p><p>Typically, David Lee Roth spends his days, or at least his nights, &#8220;in tactical spandex, moving at 134 beats per minute,&#8221; he said. But now the 65-year-old Van Halen singer is just like the rest of us: stuck at home and obsessing about pandemics.</p><p>However, the past few months in quarantine have led Roth to an old pursuit, with new focus. Since April, he has filled his days creating Covid-themed drawings &#8212; he calls them comics &#8212; and then sharing the finished works, one each week, on his social media channels. The art, like Roth&#8217;s music and disposition, is vibrant, whimsical and somewhat unconventional. In moments, it is confrontational. Several drawings feature his own face. Many are filled with images of frogs.</p><p>What sparked this surge of artistic expression?</p><p>&#8220;Well, I lost my job!&#8221; Roth cracked over the phone from his home in Los Angeles on an afternoon in late June. As recently as March, Roth was on tour as a solo act, supporting Kiss in arenas across the United States. Earlier in that run, Roth, who has also worked as an E.M.T. in New York, had battled an unspecified illness. &#8220;I&#8217;m not so unconvinced I didn&#8217;t have the corona,&#8221; he said. &#8220;Man, they gave me enough prednisone to put boots on the moon! We left a trail of groupies, rubble and incandescent reviews. But I don&#8217;t want to go back through it.&#8221;</p><p>Even by rock frontman standards, Roth&#8217;s ability to command full attention from his audience is renowned, whether he&#8217;s launching himself off drum risers for midair splits or schooling fans on how Van Halen is &#8220;the rock &#8216;n&#8217; roll band who sold Ricky Ricardo rumba to the heavy metal nation.&#8221; But now his art is doing the talking. &#8220;Social commentary is what I do,&#8221; he said. &#8220;It&#8217;s what I&#8217;ve always done.&#8221;</p><p><a
href="http://static01.nyt.com/images/2020/07/14/arts/14dlr6/merlin_174390996_a2f44373-2054-4994-bb47-69a032155875-superJumbo.jpg" rel="nofollow">http://static01.nyt.com/images/2020/07/14/arts/14dlr6/merlin_174390996_a2f44373-2054-4994-bb47-69a032155875-superJumbo.jpg</a><br
/> Roth said that his artwork is social commentary and the pieces don&#8217;t have titles.Credit&#8230;Jessica Lehrman for The New York Times</p><p>In his recent artwork, that social commentary has elicited a strong response. In one piece, he declares a name change. &#8220;Diamond Dave following Lady Antebellum&#8217;s (now &#8216;Lady A&#8217;) example, will be dropping the &#8216;Lee,&#8217;&#8221; he wrote below a drawing of, naturally, a frog. &#8220;From now on he wants us all to call him &#8216;David L. Roth&#8217; or simply &#8216;El Roth.&#8217;&#8221; To many, it diminished the steps white artists are taking to correct racism.</p><p>&#8220;Humor &#8212; not jokes &#8212; humor, the best stuff, isn&#8217;t funny at all,&#8221; Roth said, defending his work. &#8220;My version is the truth dipped in sugar. And maybe it&#8217;s a little sugar and spice. But the good stuff compels discussions.&#8221;</p><p>Art, he continued, &#8220;has been a constant in my life. My hand has always been in wardrobe, background sets, stage sets, album covers, video direction. This is part of it. And there&#8217;s craft involved, so there&#8217;s a little bit more heft to some of the statements.&#8221;</p><p>Roth laughed. &#8220;This is the adult table; as a fellow artist, I sense you understand that.&#8221;</p><p>Another laugh.</p><p>&#8220;Next question!&#8221; These are edited excerpts from the conversation.</p><p>Q: Why frogs?</p><p>A: I saw a story about Mark Twain &#8212; it was not his biography, it was a fictional piece with actors. And at the end of it ol&#8217; Sam passes on, but he doesn&#8217;t go to heaven. He&#8217;s in the backyard where he grew up in Hannibal, Mo. And a little girl walks up and he goes, &#8220;Who are you?&#8221; She says, &#8220;I&#8217;m Becky Thatcher, and I&#8217;ve got some friends who are waiting to meet you.&#8221; And all the characters that he created come on up to greet him. So, I started my guest list. And probably the only one of that retinue that I could even spell, much less draw, was the frog from Calaveras County [from the short story "The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County"].</p><p>Q: Many of your drawings include a reference to the &#8220;Soggy Bottom.&#8221; I took this, at least in this context, to be a play on the phrase &#8220;draining the swamp.&#8221;</p><p>A: If I explain it, it&#8217;s a bumper sticker. If I let you explain it, it&#8217;s art. But you&#8217;re very close to exactly accurate.</p><p><a
href="http://static01.nyt.com/images/2020/07/14/arts/14dlr2/merlin_174407238_c73d3231-14d9-4206-92c2-63332b4fe4dc-superJumbo.jpg" rel="nofollow">http://static01.nyt.com/images/2020/07/14/arts/14dlr2/merlin_174407238_c73d3231-14d9-4206-92c2-63332b4fe4dc-superJumbo.jpg</a><br
/> Credit&#8230;David Lee Roth</p><p>Q: Can you describe your artistic process?</p><p>A: My approach is the best of both worlds: vintage and hyper-atomic digital. Sort of like watching &#8220;Dragnet&#8221; on your iPad. You know, I moved to Japan for two-plus years to study Sumi-e and calligraphy, and four nights a week I trained and then I did homework. Jesus, I&#8217;ve spent thousands of hours learning to operate a horsehair brush with a block of ink that I grind myself. Hasn&#8217;t changed its recipe in 700 years.</p><p>So everything in the comics is hand-drawn &#8212; all the typeface, all the colors, the line work, the lighting. And once I&#8217;m done, I work with Colin Smith, the Led Zeppelin of Adobe Photoshop. Together we scan everything, and then I&#8217;m able to move into areas that otherwise weren&#8217;t graphically available without decades of effort.</p><p><a
href="http://static01.nyt.com/images/2020/07/14/arts/14dlr4/merlin_174407241_92b49106-bd0b-4ebb-8911-812184fd5b49-superJumbo.jpg" rel="nofollow">http://static01.nyt.com/images/2020/07/14/arts/14dlr4/merlin_174407241_92b49106-bd0b-4ebb-8911-812184fd5b49-superJumbo.jpg</a><br
/> Credit&#8230;David Lee Roth</p><p>Q: How does using digital manipulation transform the original work?</p><p>A: Many of these colors can&#8217;t be found outside the cyberverse. It&#8217;s a world unto itself. Serves a well purpose, because almost all of our fine arts and graphic consumption these days is interactive with a screen, whether it&#8217;s on your PC or your wristwatch. We&#8217;re actually back to Maxwell Smart and his shoe phone. &#8220;Somebody is on my Nike!&#8221;</p><p>Q: What appeals to you about using brush and ink as a means of artistic expression?</p><p>A: Hold on. This isn&#8217;t expressing myself. This is performance therapy. I&#8217;m venting. I&#8217;m angry. And I am not asking for forgiveness. And this is how I do it.</p><p>Q: People don&#8217;t usually think of David Lee Roth as angry.</p><p>A: That&#8217;s because I have transcended it. It is that secret magic when you take something that is essentially sad and find humor, eloquence and sometimes illumination in it.</p><p>Q: What is your view of this country&#8217;s response to the Covid-19 pandemic?</p><p>A: I sure wish our country had taken a Marine Corps approach to Covid. Instead of [creating] a divide, good or bad, right or reasonable, wrong or otherwise.</p><p>Q: One of your pieces features the phrase &#8220;No politics during happy hour,&#8221; which feels to me like it could be an encapsulation of the Van Halen ethos.</p><p>A: Well, visually and graphically, the frogs underneath that caption are fighting &#8212; identical to what happened in my brief and colorful tenure with the Van Halens. [Laughs] But when you see Technicolor frogs doing it, it&#8217;s a bit more digestible. But what I&#8217;m reflecting on in that comic is the unstated. That which we don&#8217;t talk about. What does happen when we drink at happy hour and talk politics? What does it mean when we say, &#8220;Alcohol sales skyrocket again&#8221;? It&#8217;s all a bit of a diversion.</p><p><a
href="http://static01.nyt.com/images/2020/07/14/arts/14dlr1/merlin_174407247_0a784ffd-6b09-4e01-b720-caaa9213e9cf-superJumbo.jpg" rel="nofollow">http://static01.nyt.com/images/2020/07/14/arts/14dlr1/merlin_174407247_0a784ffd-6b09-4e01-b720-caaa9213e9cf-superJumbo.jpg</a><br
/> Credit&#8230;David Lee Roth</p><p>Q: Can you say more about the piece that seems to be a response to Lady Antebellum&#8217;s name change?</p><p>A: It had connotations of personal politic. I sought to have a little fun at the expense of others, whose vision I will respect. And in lieu of the inevitable false-footed copycats I pretended to be one. But the supposed name change really drew some ire in terms of some folks posting from an arch right-wing stance: &#8220;Another left-winger takes a fall.&#8221; Hey, I&#8217;m a combat hippie &#8212; peace, love and enough guys and gears to defend the [expletive] out of it. You need one to support the other.</p><p><a
href="http://static01.nyt.com/images/2020/07/14/arts/14dlr3/merlin_174407250_7f4a0e8d-5489-49f3-a11b-d3d0801651f0-superJumbo.jpg" rel="nofollow">http://static01.nyt.com/images/2020/07/14/arts/14dlr3/merlin_174407250_7f4a0e8d-5489-49f3-a11b-d3d0801651f0-superJumbo.jpg</a><br
/> Credit&#8230;David Lee Roth</p><p>Q: Would it be correct to identify David Lee Roth as left-leaning?</p><p>A: I love civil rights. Equal rights. Women&#8217;s rights. Kids&#8217; rights. The rights of the rights. OK? The entire list. But conversely, I&#8217;m prepared to shave my head, join the Marines and go defend those rights. That in itself isn&#8217;t really a left-wing statement. Or it didn&#8217;t used to be when I was growing up. But I grew up in a really great time and a really great space during integrational busing in the &#8217;60s. I went to schools that were 90 percent Black and Spanish, and I was in the color guard with a crew cut. Every morning at seven we&#8217;d march to put up the flag. And then at night we&#8217;d go to Kenny Brower&#8217;s brother&#8217;s house, smoke pot and listen to that new Doors record. Combat hippie!</p><p>Q: You were on tour when the lockdown began. As a lifelong performer, was it difficult being forced to leave the road so hastily?</p><p>A: Every Jiu-Jitsu magazine has a 28-year-old who&#8217;s going to tell you about the two years that got taken away by his elbow. Every kickboxing magazine has a 32-year-old instructor who goes, &#8220;Well, I lost those three years to my left knee.&#8221; So I&#8217;ve just been isolating away. Because I myself am high risk.</p><p>Q: Why do you consider yourself high risk?</p><p>A: The road will deteriorate you from the beginning or it will keep you alive forever. When we go out, we wear ourselves to a nubbin. I just had a lower back surgery. It was a spinal fusion where they take a chip from somebody else. I&#8217;m actually taller now. Do I seem taller? I mean, over the phone?</p><p><a
href="http://static01.nyt.com/images/2020/07/14/arts/14dlr7/merlin_174391176_4715804e-eb31-406f-b61e-c613800d24db-superJumbo.jpg" rel="nofollow">http://static01.nyt.com/images/2020/07/14/arts/14dlr7/merlin_174391176_4715804e-eb31-406f-b61e-c613800d24db-superJumbo.jpg</a><br
/> &#8220;The road will deteriorate you from the beginning or it will keep you alive forever,&#8221; Roth said.Credit&#8230;Jessica Lehrman for The New York Times</p><p>Q: You last toured with Van Halen in 2015. Do you think it&#8217;ll ever happen again?</p><p>A: I don&#8217;t know that Eddie [Van Halen] is ever really going to rally for the rigors of the road again. [The guitarist first announced he had cancer in 2001, and it has recurred since.] I don&#8217;t even want to say I&#8217;ve waited &#8212; I&#8217;ve supported for five years. Because what I do is physical as well as musical and spiritual &#8212; you can&#8217;t take five years off from the ring. But I did. And I do not regret a second of it. He&#8217;s a band mate. We had a colleague down. And he&#8217;s down now for enough time that I don&#8217;t know that he&#8217;s going to be coming back out on the road. You want to hear the classics? You&#8217;re talking to him.</p><p>Q: For how long will we continue to see new artwork from David Lee Roth?</p><p>A: Like the tattoo artist said, &#8217;til I don&#8217;t have any friends left! Until my Instagram&#8217;s empty! I can do this endlessly. I hadn&#8217;t considered this as something other than after dinner at the campfire. But lo and behold, people have taken a real fascination.</p><p>Q: Given that fascination, will these drawings eventually be offered for sale?</p><p>A: In terms of what I really do for a living, as soon as the B-list &#8212; that&#8217;s Beyoncé, Bono and Bruce [Springsteen] &#8212; say it&#8217;s OK, I&#8217;ll be back singing and dancing and selling you T-shirts. But in the interim, I am drawing and painting every night. And the fact that there&#8217;s an audience for it is quite a tickle. So of course I&#8217;ll make it available. You bet. I just didn&#8217;t see it coming. [Laughs] But like my sister says, I seem to miss the big stuff.</p><hr
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class="bbpress-quotes">&nbsp;&nbsp;<span
id="quote-reply-62128" style="display: none;">ron</span><a
class="bbpress_quotes_link" href="javascript:void(null)" title="Click here or select text to quote comment" onmousedown="quote('62128', document.getElementById('quote-reply-62128').innerHTML, 'bbp_reply_content','q-62128');try { addComment.moveForm('q-62128', '62128', 'bbp-reply-form', '62128'); } catch(e) {}; return false;">Quote</a></div></div> ]]> </description> </item> <item> <guid>http://www.vhtrading.com/topic/david-lee-roth-is-letting-his-art-mostly-do-the-talking/#post-62132</guid><title><![CDATA[Reply To: David Lee Roth Is Letting His Art (Mostly) Do the Talking]]></title><link>http://www.vhtrading.com/topic/david-lee-roth-is-letting-his-art-mostly-do-the-talking/#post-62132</link> <pubDate>Mon, 13 Jul 2020 22:13:23 +0000</pubDate> <dc:creator>unchainedheart</dc:creator> <description> <![CDATA[<div
id='q-62132'><p>thanks Ron,this is a good interview + the daily catastrophe in x-large is a bonus<br
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id="quote-reply-62132" style="display: none;">unchainedheart</span><a
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