Sometime after his acrimonious departure from
Van Halen,
Sammy Hagar decided that it would be best if he turned himself into a
hard rock version of
Jimmy Buffett. Since he already had his Cabo Wabo Cantina in San Lucas, plus his Cabo Wabo tequila, he was already halfway there -- he was celebrating the beach as much as he was playing music -- but with his 2006 album
Livin' It Up! he finally makes the musical transition to full-time beachfront rockin'. Not that this is the manic, balls-out
hard rock that made his reputation -- taking a cue from
Jimmy,
Sammy turns the intensity down a couple of notches (after all, you don't want things to be too rough and rowdy on a beach), adds some acoustic guitars, and even some
country-rock flair, most notably in his ingenious reworking of
Toby Keith's
"I Love This Bar." The fact that
Sammy is covering a
country song about a bar gives a good indication of where he's coming from on
Livin' It Up!: he's aiming for the aging rock & rollers who have started listening to
country, but still love classic
rock (he covers
Dylan's
"Rainy Day Women #12 & 35" and rewrites
the Staple Singers'
"I'll Take You There" as
"Let Me Take You There") and spend most of their time fantasizing about
"Living on a Coastline" or
"Sailin" to
"Mexico" or taking
"One Sip" as they drive
"Halfway to Mexico," knowing that they'll do this all
"Someday." It's silly and obvious -- and it also feels like an advertisement for Cabo Wabo enterprises -- which would be irritating if the album weren't so much fun. The thing is,
Sammy Hagar really believes in
Livin' It Up! in this fashion, so nothing feels forced or contrived here, and the greater musical variety not only makes this record more interesting than his last several records, it also makes it more fun to listen to repeatedly. Plus, having the hints of
country,
blues, and
soul scattered among the
rock & roll sounds appropriate for a veteran rocker, which
Sammy certainly is. But as
Livin' It Up! proves, not even veterans need to settle down -- an introspective record would sound wrong coming from
Hagar, and this nonstop beach party simply sounds right. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine