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Everybody Wants Some: The Van Halen Saga

Everybody Wants Some: The Van Halen Saga

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Author: Ian Christe
Publisher: Wiley
Category: Book

List Price: $14.95
Buy New: $8.38
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New (32) Used (12) from $7.25

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 37 reviews
Sales Rank: 71210

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 336
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8
Dimensions (in): 8.4 x 5.4 x 1

ISBN: 0470373563
Dewey Decimal Number: 782.421660922
EAN: 9780470373569
ASIN: 0470373563

Publication Date: August 18, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Brand new Book, ALL days Low Price !

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - Everybody Wants Some: The Van Halen Saga

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
"Good band, even better book . . . Essential reading."
Record Collector

One of 2007's Most Intriguing Books
LA Weekly

"Highly recommended for Van Halen completists."
—Chuck Klosterman, Esquire

"Respect is due to author Ian Christe. His book is perfectly pitched, capturing both the flamboyant excitement and inherent absurdity of the rampant ego collective known as Van Halen."
—Geoff Barton, Classic Rock

"Written in jubilant, elastic prose, Ian Christe's Everybody Wants Some is a sort of Day-Glo fairy tale . . . savvy, sympathetic, expert, funny ha-ha."
The Boston Phoenix

"[Christe's] not fooling around. And his prose is always playful."
Los Angeles Times

"A new biography of the band that made metal marketable doesn't disappoint the fans."
The American Prospect

"Christe chronicles the sweeping scope of the Van Halen saga."
Chicago Sun-Times

If you’ve ever wondered how two Dutch boys trained in classical music grew up to form America’s greatest hard rock band, find the naked truth in Everybody Wants Some: The Van Halen Saga. Learn all the juicy details, from the secret of Eddie Van Halen’s guitar mastery to the truth about groupies, midgets, and contract riders and the details of Van Halen’s explosive entree to California’s hard rock scene. Read about all the strife between Eddie and the singers and find out how Eddie’s drinking affected the band and his personal relationships.


Customer Reviews:   Read 32 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Red Hell   December 27, 2008
Now she's all over my dreams, no way OUT, we're making children and I wake up glowing. Fine enough, the day gets going, routine and rocking, but I can't ever seem to turn up the Sammy loud enough to drown out thinking of her. What, she's louder than Sammy Hagar? MERCY! Then I get the empties again. OK, off to dinner even though I'm not hungry, I do it because I've got a long, alone night ahead of me and I need to see her, just for a MINUTE, all the way across the room, a little glimpse to get me through. Oh no, now I'm sorry, there she is, working yet another guy. He's even already got a girl. While her other guy sits there, opiated. This is EVIL! What's wrong with these people, don't they know how precious love is, they consume each other like cigarettes. Why is this narrative happening to me? Where's the nearest train, either I wanna get on it or throw myself in front of it. What a LONG night tonight's gonna be.


5 out of 5 stars I want some too!   December 20, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

This is quite a interesting read. It doesn't go into deep detail on any one member of the band, and there isn't any really "unknown" facts revealed. However, the story is told in a way that gives new perspective on the whole David Lee Roth/Van Halen split. At first I blamed Roth, then Eddie, now I see it was just different personalities that likely never should have been together in the first place. That made it work for as long as then could and then went their separate ways. I now realize nothing could have stopped it.


1 out of 5 stars Worst excuse for a biography ever   August 25, 2008
 8 out of 9 found this review helpful

Worst excuse for a biography ever. I've literally read blogs on random myspace pages with more depth, passion, guts and style. Where is the scandal? Where are the gripping tales? Where is the band? Aside from being a powerful force of nature Van Halen was also one of the rowdiest and hardest living acts in rock history. Led by guitarist wunderkind Eddie Van Halen they kicked tail and took names both onstage and off. Though you'd never know it reading this sorry thing. The blame rests solely on the shoulders of its creator who fails miserably to even break the surface. True biographies such as Heroin Diaries and the recent Slash bio to name but a few have certainly raised my expectations as a reader. I've grown accustomed to books written by authors in collaboration with their subject. Hence providing fans with a deeply personal read told in the first person by the artist in their own voice. Books like Heroin Diaries are brutally honest, gripping reads that are near impossible to put down. In this instance we get some clown who has nothing to do with Van Halen painfully dragging us through nothing more than a lackluster tired never ending rehash of everything that classifies as common knowledge to even the most average of fans. Plagiarizing old music magazines and previously released Van Halen books does not a bio make. Somebody please call me when the band or at least Eddie finally releases a proper bio.


1 out of 5 stars Amateur Nite   August 6, 2008
 11 out of 12 found this review helpful

How many more lackadaisical $$$ grabs from pseudo authors must we be made to endure before the group wakes up and gives us the real uncut story in their own words? Every last word here is old hat to us. The only people who would find this remotely informative or revealing would be those who know nothing about the group. Which renders this virtually useless when you consider a person who knows nothing about the group would not be inclined to purchase this to begin with. Its almost as if the author sat there and went 'Hey the group is back and touring so I'm going to quickly slap together a book using all past books and release it just in time for their big tour'. Thus the wretched stench of "cash grab" emanating from cover to cover.

Numerous times throughout the course of the read I had to put this down and walk away due to my level of frustration and indignation. Seems the author believes the Van Halen fanbase is comprised entirely of unknowledgeable dimwitted newbies and he is schooling all of us.
FYI Captain Obvious we don't need to be told the brothers came over from Europe.. or that they banned brown m&m's backstage.. or that David Lee quit the band.. or that Edward and Val had marital issues.. or that Edward battled cancer. Who the heck doesn't already know this stuff?

What we as fans so direly want and need to know is how these people FELT during all of these endeavors. Like how did Edward react when he first learned he had cancer? Where was he when he got the news? How did his wife and child react? His brother? What did the doctors say? What toll did the chemo take physically and emotionally? How did the band react when David Lee quit? How did David Lee feel? How did management and label heads feel? How did other musicians feel about the shocking split? How did Sammy feel when he joined them? How did he feel when he left them a decade later? How did Gary Cherone feel about being recruited? How has Edward dealt with his infamous lifelong battle with alcohol?

These questions and more don't come close to being answered because apparently Captain Obvious couldn't be bothered to acquire a single first-hand account/interview from anyone.

They committed the cardinal sin: NO NEW COMMENTARY. This book is entirely devoid of interviews. They didn't interview the group, their wives or girlfriends, kids, roadies, other musicians, label heads, producers, engineers, guitar techs, groupies.. NOBODY. All we get is CO endlessly rambling on in their own words about the group's career with the occasional "Eddie told Guitar Player magazine this and that" or "David Lee said this to Creem back in 1982" thrown in. You can NOT be serious? Needless to say by page ten I was bored to tears and ticked off.

What in the world would possess a person to write a book and call it 'DEFINITIVE' without making even the slightest effort to speak with anyone in or relative to this group? Some nerve.

For Pete's Sake even the fan who wrote VanHalen101 interviewed hordes of musicians and managed to have Brian May write that book's intro. Inexcusable best describes this latest offering by Ian Christe. You get the sense this seasoned author, journalist and radio show host wanted nothing more than to make a quick buck off the group's recent well publicized reunion tour whilst desperately seeking to weasel his way into the ranks of legitimate biographers such as Stephen Davis, Anthony Bozza and other noteworthy authors who've penned classic bios.
Instead Christe dropped the ball and ended up looking like a major tool.

Had someone advised Christe to dedicate more time to actual research and conducting interviews rather than spending what appears to be every waking second calling in favors from all his music journalist pals in exchange for glowing reviews he and his publisher could quote and paste on here so they could fleece the fans for more $$$ maybe just maybe this book might've amounted to something halfway interesting rather than this pedestrian turd in the proverbial punch bowl. Any one of us could've written this. Don't bite. Don't bother. Don't be a sucker. Skip it and grab one of any number of other superior books such as The Encyclopedia, the brand spanking new Zlozower Van Halen: A Visual History photo book or the aforementioned cult fave VanHalen101.



3 out of 5 stars Decent Overview   June 20, 2008
 3 out of 5 found this review helpful

Like the masses, this book offers a decent overview of Van Halen especially those who are not too familiar with the band. It was a light and enjoyable read.

However, there were several spelling and grammatical errors. Many quotes seem second hand and incomplete. One still is not completely sure if David Lee Roth was fired or quit. To me it seems like a mutual disolvement. In general there are a lack of details.

The band members seem like your typical rock n rollers who are all about sex, drugs, and rock n roll. David Lee Roth showed me something by volunteering as a EMT specialist as well as being an adventurous soul. Eddie Van Halen certainly is a talented musician but seems like a terminal alcoholic. What has he learned from this experiences? The band members seem to constantly be quarreling with each other.

A few interesting anecdotes kept my attention. However, a more first hand account with more exclusive details would have made this book more appealing.


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