Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Women and Children First

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Released
  
March 26, 1980

Label
  
Warner Bros.

Artist
  
Van Halen

Producer
  
Ted Templeman

Length
  
33:13

Women and Children First (1980)
  
Fair Warning (1981)

Release date
  
26 March 1980

Studio
  
Sunset Sound, Los Angeles

Women and Children First httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaeneebVan

Recorded
  
December 1979 – February 1980

Genres
  
Hard rock, Heavy metal, Glam metal

Similar
  
Fair Warning, Van Halen II, Diver Down, For Unlawful Carnal K, OU812

Women and Children First is the third studio album by American hard rock band Van Halen, released on March 26, 1980 on Warner Bros. Records. Produced by Ted Templeman, it was the first to feature compositions written solely by the band, and is described by critic Stephen Thomas Erlewine as "[the] record where the group started to get heavier, both sonically and, to a lesser extent, thematically."

Contents

Van halen women and children first and the cradle will rock


Background and recording

The opening track, "And the Cradle Will Rock...", begins with what sounds like a guitar, but is, in fact, a phase shifter-effected Wurlitzer electric piano played through Van Halen's 1960s model 100-watt Marshall Plexi amplifier.

The album is somewhat different from their first two albums in the way that it features more studio overdubs, and less emphasis on backing vocals. "Could This Be Magic?", conversely, contains the only female backing vocal ever recorded for a Van Halen song; Nicolette Larson sings during some of the choruses. The rain sound in the background is not an effect. It was raining outside, and they decided to record the sound in stereo using two Neumann KM84 microphones, and added it to the track.

The first single from the album is the keyboard driven "And the Cradle Will Rock..." Although the single was not a success like previous singles "Dance the Night Away" or the cover of "You Really Got Me", the album itself was well received and further entrenched the band as a popular concert draw. The song "Everybody Wants Some!!" was also a concert staple through the 1984 tour, and continued to be played by David Lee Roth after he left Van Halen.

The album contains a track at the end of "In a Simple Rhyme", a brief instrumental piece entitled "Growth", which begins at 4:19. While "Growth" faded out on the original vinyl LP and cassette, it was finally given a cold ending at full volume on the compact disc. At the time the band was toying with the idea of starting what would become their next album Fair Warning with a continuation of "Growth", but this did not occur. "Growth" was a staple of the band's live shows with Roth and often used as the start of their encores. Several outtakes from these sessions exist, including an unreleased instrumental titled often referred to as "Act Like It Hurts", which was the title Eddie Van Halen originally wanted for "Tora! Tora!" "Act Like It Hurts" also provided a riff for "House of Pain", released on 1984.

The album version included a poster of a photograph by Helmut Newton featuring Roth chained to a fence.

"Everybody Wants Some!!" was featured in the 1985 comedy Better Off Dead, during a sequence featuring a singing, guitar-playing claymation hamburger. A nod is given to Eddie in the animation, as the hamburger's guitar sports the Frankenstrat design made famous by him. "Everybody Wants Some!!" is also featured in the 2009 film Zombieland.

In the band's licensed game, Guitar Hero: Van Halen, four of the nine tracks of this album are available for play: "And the Cradle Will Rock...," "Everybody Wants Some!!," "Romeo Delight," and "Loss of Control."

Critical reception

Reviews for Women and Children First were generally favorable. David Fricke for Rolling Stone highlights the songs, "Romeo Delight", "Everybody Wants Some!!", and "Loss of Control", calling them "works of high-volume art". Fricke praises the band, calling them "exceptionally good players". Both Fricke and Robert Christgau compare Eddie's guitar work to Jimi Hendrix. Christgau gives the album a B rating, stating, "[Eddie] earns the Hendrix comparisons, and he's no clone--he's faster, colder, more structural." In a retrospective review for AllMusic, Stephen Thomas Erlewine rated the album 4.5 stars out of 5. Erlewine calls the album, "mature, or at least get a little serious", noting "there's a bit of a dark heart beating on this record".

Kerrang! magazine listed the album at #30 among the "100 Greatest Heavy Metal Albums of All Time".

Track listing

All songs by Edward Van Halen, Alex Van Halen, Michael Anthony and David Lee Roth.

Personnel

  • David Lee Roth – lead vocals
  • Eddie Van Halen – guitar, electric piano, backing vocals
  • Alex Van Halen – drums
  • Michael Anthony – bass guitar, backing vocals
  • Additional musicians
  • Nicolette Larson - backing vocals on "Could This Be Magic?"
  • Production
  • Ted Templeman – producer
  • Donn Landee – engineer
  • Gene Meros – engineer
  • Chris Bellman – remastering
  • Jo Motta – project coordinator
  • Pete Angelus – creative consultant
  • Richard Seireeni – art direction
  • Helmut Newton – poster photo
  • Norman Seeff – cover photo
  • Album

    Billboard (North America)

    Singles

    Billboard (North America)

    Songs

    1And the Cradle Will Rock3:33
    2Everybody Wants Some!!5:09
    3Fools5:57

    References

    Women and Children First Wikipedia