Red: My Uncensored Life in Rock

Red: My Uncensored Life in Rock

Red: My Uncensored Life in Rock

Red: My Uncensored Life in Rock

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Overview



Loud rock, fast cars, and Cabo.

This is the life of Sammy Hagar.





For almost forty years, Sammy Hagar has been a fixture in rock music. From breaking into the industry with the band Montrose to his multiplatinum solo career to his ride as the front man of Van Halen, Sammy's powerful and unforgettable voice has set the tone for some of the greatest rock anthems ever written—songs like "I Can't Drive 55," "Right Now," and "Why Can't This Be Love."




In Red, Sammy tells the outrageous story of his tear through rock 'n' roll, detailing the backstage antics and nonstop touring that have made his voice instantly recognizable. Beginning with his musical coming-of-age in the blue-collar towns of California, Sammy traces his rough and determined rise to fame, working harder than anyone else out there and writing songs about the things he loved—fast cars, loud parties, and lots of good times.




But solo success was just the start, a prelude to his raucous and notorious decade as the front man for Van Halen, one of the biggest-selling rock groups in history. Filled with behind-the-scenes stories from his time with the band, Red offers the Van Halen story as Sammy saw it, holding nothing back about the worldwide stadium tours, the tensions with Eddie, the messy parties, the divided friendships, and, of course, his controversial and widely disputed exit from the band.




After Van Halen, Sammy changed directions again, throwing himself headfirst into the tequila business and creating Cabo Wabo, one of the most successful tequila brands in the world. And all the while he continued to rock, touring the country with his bands the Waboritas and Chickenfoot, and eventually reuniting with Van Halen for a tour that became both a box-office smash and a personal catastrophe.




From the decadence of being one of the world's biggest rock stars to the unfiltered story of being forced out of Van Halen, Sammy's account spares no one, least of all himself. His is a tale of a true rock 'n' roller—someone who's spent decades bringing the party with him wherever he goes but always headin' back to Cabo for mas tequila.



Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780062042361
Publisher: HarperCollins
Publication date: 03/19/2024
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 322
Sales rank: 1,008,010
File size: 11 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

About The Author

Sammy Hagar was a founding member of the rock band Montrose before becoming a hugely successful solo artist. In 1985, he joined Van Halen, which led to a string of consecutive number one albums and hit singles that stretched over ten years. After the Van Halen brothers unceremoniously fired him, he went on to establish himself as a solo artist all over again, while also founding Cabo Wabo tequila. He splits his time between California, Hawaii, and Mexico.

Read an Excerpt

Red

My Uncensored Life in Rock
By Sammy Hagar

HarperCollins

Copyright © 2011 Sammy Hagar
All right reserved.

ISBN: 978-0-06-200928-9


Chapter One

When I was growing up, Fontana, California, was all
orange groves, grape vineyards, and chicken ranches. I
could eat oranges, grapefruits, and tangerines all fucking day if I
wanted. I had to walk through an orange grove just to go to my
next-door neighbor's house. There really was no neighborhood.
It was long before tract homes. At the corner of each of the long
country blocks, there were these big, ten-foot-tall cement tanks
with open roofs on them, called water weirs, which fed water
to the houses from clean, clear Lytle Creek in the foothills. The
water weirs had a float on them, and when the water got too low,
the float would kick on and they'd fill back up like a toilet. Each
one had a ladder going up so guys could ser vice them, and kids
would drown in them all the time. We always heard a rumor that
some kid got polio from one of them. But it was our drinking
water and it was ice-cold. In the summer, we used to jump in and
swim. Not swim, but dunk down, get cooled off, and climb out.
I don't want to say we'd piss in them, but we did.
My dad moved to Fontana because he heard the steel mill was
hiring. When I was born in Monterey County Hospital in Salinas,
California, Dad and Mom had been picking lettuce in the
fields and living in a camp where everyone else was Mexican. The
Kaiser Steel Mill—the first steel mill west of the Mississippi—
pretty much made Fontana. Growing up, every kid in Fontana
was just trying to get through high school to get a job at Kaiser
Steel. We thought it paid great. Originally, you didn't even need
a high school diploma, but, as Kaiser Steel built up, and other
plants opened up, making pipes or big beams, you needed a high
school diploma. Unless, of course, they got a big order and needed
the people. Then they'd hire anybody, and lay you off when they
got the job done. But everybody was happy to go there and make
whatever they were paying.
It was a brutal job though, working at a steel mill in a 160-
degree heat, pieces of hot metal flying out at you. My dad worked
in the open hearth, the hottest, hardest work in the plant, where
they pour the ingots into big troughs and make steel. Molten
fucking steel. He came home with his clothes drenched from sweat,
and he used to take salt tablets every day before he went to work.
He had probably the lowest job on the totem pole, and they moved
his schedule almost every week. He would go from swing shift to
graveyard shift to day shift. Sometimes he'd come home at mid-
night and go to work again at six in the morning. He got burned
real bad one time—the side of his face was completely taken off.
Just from the heat. It wasn't steel hitting him. It was that he got
too close or there was a flare-up or something and it just fucking
ripped the skin off his face.
My dad's parents had been migrant farm workers who came
out from Kentucky on a covered wagon. They'd picked cotton all
the way through Texas, and my dad was born in Texas. Two kids
were—that's how long they were in Texas. They had thirteen kids.
He had a younger sister, but he was the youngest boy. My dad was
handsome and athletic, but he was a bad little fucker. He would beat
the shit out of his big brothers. My uncle told me my dad chased his
big brother, my uncle Charlie, up a tree. My dad sat there, smoking
a cigarette, waiting for him to come down to beat his butt. Charlie
slept in the tree rather than take an ass-kicking from my dad.
My mom, Gladys, was born in Los Angeles. Her dad came over
from Italy when he was eleven years old and never learned to speak,
read, or write English. He and my grandma—she was Italian, too—
never owned a house. They lived in a trailer and were always on the
move. He was a chef and he went where the work was. He cooked in
Yosemite and went up to Klamath when the salmon were running.
He would hunt and fish and work only when he had to. During the
winter season, he would cook in Palm Springs, make these huge
buffets at the lodge where President Eisenhower stayed. But when
the season was over, he'd pack up, take all his money, steal every-
thing he could out of the restaurant, and take off in the middle of
the night. The guy was a complete thief—a real crook, my grandpa,
and a prick, too. Once in a while he was nice. I'm named after the
fucker, Sam Roy. They raised my mom and her sister that way. She
grew up in a tent and didn't finish seventh grade.
Mom and Dad got married when she was fifteen. Mom always
said all the girls liked him in high school. My dad had dreams. He
wanted to be a big-shot kind of guy. He liked hanging around big
shots. Bob Hope used to let him caddy on weekends, when he was
growing up in Palm Springs. She was sixteen years old when she had
my oldest sister, Bobbi. Practically the day she had the baby, as soon
as she came home from the hospital, she got pregnant again with
my other sister. My sisters Velma and Bobbi are nine months apart.
My father could beat up anybody. I was so proud of that, growing
He was such a bad-ass. When he was younger, Bobby Hagar
fought bantamweight. He won his first eight fights by knockouts.
He was a little guy, five foot eight, same size as me, but that son
of a bitch could hit—he could have been something. But he got
drafted during World War II, shortly after he'd gotten my mother
pregnant again with my brother, Robert. My father shipped out as
a paratrooper. He'd never even been in an airplane and suddenly
he's jumping out of them. On his first jump, over a battlefield in
France, his parachute went way off course. He tangled in trees and
smashed his face into a tree trunk. He had a Tommy gun and, as he
was coming down, he was scared, so he sprayed the ground with
bullets. He banged into the tree and broke his jaw. He cut himself
down. He dug a hole, and stayed in a foxhole for a few days. His
jaw was killing him. He was disoriented, obviously all banged up
from hitting this tree, but he had his gun. Nearby was a German
soldier, also separated from his unit, and they played a fox-and-
mouse game until my dad killed him in a shootout. I think it really
screwed up his head. Killing someone one-on-one isn't like shooting
people you don't know. My dad lived with this guy for a couple of
days, sneaking around, not sleeping at night, really not wanting to
mess with each other, but every now and then, taking a potshot.
When he returned to his company, he was crazy. He was freaked
out that he shot the guy. Plus he was a bad-ass anyway. He emptied
his magazine in the ground in front of his commanding officer.

Told him to dance. That earned him a dishonorable discharge,
to say the least, and by the time he came back to California, he
was a complete alcoholic and madman. The war had really fucked
him up. My mom said when he got home from the war, he used to
jump up from bed in the middle of the night and shout, "Where's
my Tommy gun? Where's my Tommy gun?"
I was born a few years later, on October 13, 1947, and by that
point we were bone fucking poor. But even as I got older, I never
knew just how bad off we were. My mom was a great cook and
she could make do with things, so we always ate good. I went
around hungry a lot because I never had any money. If I wanted to
eat, I had to go home and either wait for Mom or cook something
myself. I was cooking for myself when I was eight years old. I saw
what my mom did. I could boil spaghetti and take canned tomatoes-
or fresh tomatoes out of our garden. I could make tomato
sauce. It didn't seem poor to me. My mom was clean as a pin.
Our house was spotless. Our clothes were always laundered. She
ironed them, stayed up until four in the morning doing ironing for
other people and then ironed our clothes.
My mom always had a chicken coop and we always kept chickens.
Whenever we moved (which was a lot), we took the chickens.
We never owned a house, and we were always leaving my dad be-
cause he was a terrible alcoholic who beat up my mom. When my
dad would come home drunk, we'd sneak out of the house in the
middle of the night and go sleep in the orange groves. Mom hid
blankets wrapped in plastic bags, a flashlight, and little stashes of
water and food out in back, ready for the times we had to jump
out of the window in the middle of the night.
It was always on payday. He got paid on Thursdays, and when
he wouldn't come home directly after work, Mom would begin
making plans. He'd come home drunk, start yelling and screaming.
He never beat us kids, but he'd thump my mom around.
Everybody in the family hated my dad, but they were all scared of
him. My sister Velma hit him over the head with a baseball bat
one time, because he had my mom on the ground. She came up
behind him—she was about twelve years old—and bashed him in
the head and bloodied up the place bad. My mom got up and we
ran. We got out of there.
So we'd leave my dad, and once he was left alone, he would
lose the house. He'd stay there, wouldn't go to work, and wouldn't
pay the rent, until he'd get kicked out of the house by the cops.
He usually got thrown in jail. That was the standard end result of
his binge. Sometimes he'd get in the car and get thrown in jail for
drunk driving. We'd have to go find a new house every time and
move, or my mom would borrow a trailer that her father owned.
But somehow we'd always end up with my dad again.
Right before I was born, my mom had a miscarriage. She didn't
want to get pregnant. She hated my dad by then. She knew he was
crazy and didn't want another kid. She just wanted to raise the
kids she already had and get the hell out of the marriage. She had
known that for a long time. She had a miscarriage and immediately
got pregnant again. She was bumming. She didn't like to tell
me that, but later on in life she pretty much told me. "You're lucky
to be alive, boy," she said. "If I'd have had that other baby, if it
wouldn't have been a miscarriage, I never would have had you." I
loved my dad, but he was crazy.
For some reason, my dad was tough on my older brother,
Robert. Dad would call him "flea-brain" and my brother would
start crying, which only caused Dad to make more fun of him.
"Wahhhhh," he would say. "You sound like a damn siren, you
little shit."
He hated my sisters, too. When they turned into teenagers and
started seeing boys, that was when the whole thing blew out. He
got so drunk he beat up one of my sister's boyfriends. That was the
end of the deal for him and my mom.
I was his favorite. I was the king. I was "muscle-brain." He called
me Champ, like I was the next champion of the world. He would
introduce me to his buddies. "Hey, here's Champ," he would say.
"He's got a left hand on him." He was going to make a boxer out
of me. Every day, I'd come home from school, and if my dad was
there, he'd make me train. He'd make himself a BLT—he was a big
BLT man—and sit there in his work clothes, ready to go to work.
"Put on the gloves," he'd say. It wouldn't matter if I'd brought
a friend home; my dad would say, "Put on the boxing gloves with
your buddy here." He'd make my brother get on his knees to box
me. He made me box every day. He'd put on the gloves with me,
and teach me. He would take me to gyms and make me hit the
heavy bags. "Step into it and twist your body," he would tell me.
My dad was left-handed, so he could pop you totally unexpected,
like southpaws can. Even if you know how to fight a little
bit, lefties come backward at you. Plus, he was a hard puncher.
Some boxers have that gift. There are just guys who can punch.
There is something to the magic of timing, how you put your
weight, and all these things. Being a southpaw and knowing how
to punch, he just knocked people out. He was a one-punch wonder.
Because my dad hit so hard, I learned how not to get hit. By the
time I was eight years old, I was getting really fast. I would stand
on the outside and move in. He'd try to hit me once in a while and
I'd weave. He loved that. He used to really brag it up about me.
My brother was bigger than me. He could hit harder. I didn't want
to get hit by him, either, so I just kept becoming faster. In and out,
in and out. I had a great left jab for a little kid. I used to beat up
my neighbors, my buddies. I'd give them bloody noses and my dad
would give me a quarter.

(Continues...)



Excerpted from Red by Sammy Hagar Copyright © 2011 by Sammy Hagar. Excerpted by permission of HarperCollins. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Foreword Michael Anthony IX

1 Hard Luck Son of a Bitch 1

2 Mobile Home Blues 17

3 Going to San Francisco 29

4 Montrose 45

5 The Red Rocker 61

6 Can't Drive Fifty-five 75

7 5150 95

8 Monsters of Rock 119

9 Right Here, Right Now 145

10 Cabo Wabo 153

11 Father's Day 163

12 Mas Tequila 181

13 Enter Irving 195

14 Samurai Hair 205

15 Going Home 219

16 Who Wants to Be a Billionaire? 231

Afterword 239

Note From The Coauthor 249

Acknowledgments 251

What People are Saying About This

Ted Nugent

“Nobody had to explain the American dream to Sammy. He knew in his gut that there was a better life available to him if he refused to accept the status quo. It’s all here in Sammy’s new book.”

Emeril Lagasse

“Over the many years I’ve known Sammy, his Red Rocker passion in music has always inspired me. But it’s also his love of cooking great food and sharing a good bottle of wine that has been at the core of our friendship for so long.

Jimmie Johnson

“Sam’s the man. Tequila, fast cars, rock ‘n’ roll—my kind of guy.”

Toby Keith

“Sammy has maintained his all-star success no matter where his Red Rocker career has taken him. He still can’t drive fifty-five, but hey, he’s the one driving the Mustang. So site back and ride.”

Michael Anthony

“Sammy’s no bullsh*tter. If Sammy says it happened, it did. There’s nobody else anywhere like him.”

Kenny Chesney

“I’ll admit it: I’ve been a Sammy Hagar wannabe since I heard his voice on a Montrose album...I’m proud to call him a rock star hero, a friend, and a brother in the sun. Rock on, Red Rocker!”

Whoopi Goldberg

“There are not a lot of people I would drop whatever I’m doing to go and see, but Sammy Hagar is one of thouse people...The man rocks his ass off, and vicariously through him so do I. My man—Sammy Hagar.”

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