Balance (Van Halen album)

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Balance
Balance cover
Studio album by Van Halen
Released January 24, 1995
Recorded 1994
Genre Hard rock
Length 53:07
Label Warner Bros.
Producer Bruce Fairbairn
Professional reviews
Van Halen chronology
Live: Right Here, Right Now
(1993)
Balance
(1995)
Van Halen Best of, Volume I
(1996)

Balance is the tenth studio album by the American hard rock band Van Halen. It was released in 1995 and, to date, is the final Van Halen album featuring lead singer Sammy Hagar.

"Don't Tell Me (What Love Can Do)" was originally, "What Love Can Do." The song was written about the power of universal love. Somewhere along the way, the band decided they didn't want to hear about the healing power of love, and the song took on a new direction.[citation needed]

The song "Can't Stop Lovin' You" pays homage to Ray Charles, who had his own hit song entitled "I Can't Stop Loving You". The Van Halen song references this with the lyric: "Hey, Ray, what you said is true, I can't stop lovin' you".

The Japanese Import also includes the bonus track "Crossing Over", which was the B-side to "Can't Stop Lovin' You".

During the Balance tour show in Pensacola, Florida 1995, Sammy Hagar stated that "Take Me Back (Deja Vu)" was "a true story". The song itself features a then almost 20 year old riff Eddie had previously used on a song entitled "No More Waiting" which the band played on occasion in the pre-Van Halen I era. [1].

The instrumental "Strung Out" was actually recorded in 1983, prior to the recording of 1984 . The actual recording is Eddie "playing" the strings of a Grand Piano with various objects including ping pong balls, D-cell batteries, knives and forks [2].

Eddie had rented a house 10 years prior that belonged to, Marvin Hamlish. There was a piano in the house that Eddie destroyed while recording himself using the aforementioned objects on the piano's strings. The piece actually comes from 6 hours of recorded noise. Eddie was forced to pay around $15,000 for the damage and Balance producer, Bruce Fairbairn said that a recording that expensive shouldn't go to waste.[citation needed]

The third instrumental, "Baluchitherium", was named after a large extinct land mammal by Eddie's then-wife, Valerie Bertinelli. The song originally had lyrics; the vocal melody which Sammy Hagar developed was then developed for guitar. [3]

The album's cover art was provided by Glen Wexler, which was based on a concept that Alex Van Halen described to him. [4]

Contents

[edit] Track listing

All songs by Anthony, Hagar, Van Halen and Van Halen.

  1. "The Seventh Seal" – 5:18
  2. "Can't Stop Lovin' You" – 4:07
  3. "Don't Tell Me (What Love Can Do)" – 5:56
  4. "Amsterdam" – 4:45
  5. "Big Fat Money" – 3:57
  6. "Strung Out" (instrumental) – 1:29
  7. "Not Enough" – 5:13
  8. "Aftershock" – 5:29
  9. "Doin' Time" (instrumental) – 1:41
  10. "Baluchitherium" (instrumental) – 4:05
  11. "Take Me Back (Deja Vu)" – 4:43
  12. "Feelin'" – 6:36
  13. "Crossing Over" (Japanese bonus track) – 4:49

[edit] Personnel

[edit] Band

[edit] Additional personnel

  • The Monks of Gyuro Tantric University – chants on "The Seventh Seal"

[edit] Production

  • Bruce Fairbairn – production
  • Erwin Musper, Mike Plotnikoff – engineering
  • Michael Fraser – mixing
  • George Marino – mastering
  • Jeri Heiden – art direction
  • Randee Saint Nicholas, Glen Wexler (front cover) – photography

[edit] Charts

[edit] Album

Year Chart Position
1995 The Billboard 200 1

[edit] Singles

Year Single Chart Position
1995 "Amsterdam" Mainstream Rock Tracks 9
1995 "Can't Stop Lovin' You" Mainstream Rock Tracks 2
1995 "Can't Stop Lovin' You" The Billboard Hot 100 30
1995 "Can't Stop Lovin' You" Top 40 Mainstream 11
1995 "Don't Tell Me (What Love Can Do)" Mainstream Rock Tracks 1
1995 "Not Enough" Mainstream Rock Tracks 27
1995 "Not Enough" The Billboard Hot 100 97
1995 "Not Enough" Top 40 Mainstream 39
1995 "The Seventh Seal" Mainstream Rock Tracks 36

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Unreleased Music
  2. ^ Van Halen Frequently Asked Questions - FAQ's Page
  3. ^ Van Halen Frequently Asked Questions - FAQ's Page
  4. ^ Glen Wexler article
Preceded by
The Hits by Garth Brooks
Billboard 200 number-one album
February 11 - February 17, 1995
Succeeded by
Greatest Hits by Bruce Springsteen