#493 - Van Halen - DID THEY INVENT THE 1980s? episode artwork

EPISODE · May 23, 2026 · 19 MIN

#493 - Van Halen - DID THEY INVENT THE 1980s?

from Audiomover - Moving the Past into the Awesome! · host AudioMover

Robert John Hadfield dives into one of the albums that helped define the transition from the 1970s into the hard rock explosion of the 1980s — Women and Children First by Van Halen. Using an incredible vintage issue of Circus Magazine from late 1980, Robert explores the idea that Van Halen may have truly been “the first ’80s band,” while reflecting on the energy, attitude, and larger-than-life charisma that made the group feel so different from everything that came before them. Along the way, Robert shares personal memories of discovering the album as a kid, flipping through records at K-Mart, hearing “And the Cradle Will Rock...” for the very first time, and experiencing that unmistakable feeling of what “real rock and roll” looked and sounded like. The episode also explores David Lee Roth’s showmanship, Eddie Van Halen’s groundbreaking keyboard experiment with the Wurlitzer electric piano, the band’s strategy of selling out venues to create legendary concert atmospheres, and how Van Halen helped reshape arena rock culture heading into the MTV era. The episode wraps up with a fun unboxing segment featuring several classic Cheap Trick records Robert recently picked up for future deep-dive episodes — including Dream Police, the band’s debut album, and Next Position Please. Timestamps 0:00 – Van Halen and the birth of the ’80s 0:25 – Trivia challenge begins 1:35 – Vintage Circus Magazine feature 2:18 – The massive rock albums of 1980 2:45 – “Van Halen was the first ’80s band?” 3:18 – Wild road stories and Iron Butterfly jokes 4:07 – David Lee Roth and Van Halen mania 4:40 – Robert’s K-Mart memory buying the album 5:41 – First hearing “And the Cradle Will Rock...” 6:11 – David Lee Roth on the Van Halen audience 7:14 – Van Halen’s arena domination explained 8:17 – Why sold-out concerts mattered 8:37 – What “papering a concert” means 9:19 – Life on the road with Van Halen 10:15 – From clubs to rock superstardom 10:41 – David Lee Roth as the ultimate frontman 11:50 – “Big rock” vs heavy metal 12:12 – The origin of “Everybody Wants Some!!” 14:17 – Trivia answers revealed 15:02 – Eddie’s secret keyboard weapon 16:11 – Ted Templeman on Van Halen imperfections 16:25 – Mystery record package opening 17:43 – Cheap Trick albums revealed 18:24 – Remembering Next Position Please 19:03 – Viewer discussion and final thoughts

Robert John Hadfield dives into one of the albums that helped define the transition from the 1970s into the hard rock explosion of the 1980s — Women and Children First by Van Halen. Using an incredible vintage issue of Circus Magazine from late 1980, Robert explores the idea that Van Halen may have truly been “the first ’80s band,” while reflecting on the energy, attitude, and larger-than-life charisma that made the group feel so different from everything that came before them. Along the way, Robert shares personal memories of discovering the album as a kid, flipping through records at K-Mart, hearing “And the Cradle Will Rock...” for the very first time, and experiencing that unmistakable feeling of what “real rock and roll” looked and sounded like. The episode also explores David Lee Roth’s showmanship, Eddie Van Halen’s groundbreaking keyboard experiment with the Wurlitzer electric piano, the band’s strategy of selling out venues to create legendary concert atmospheres, and how Van Halen helped reshape arena rock culture heading into the MTV era. The episode wraps up with a fun unboxing segment featuring several classic Cheap Trick records Robert recently picked up for future deep-dive episodes — including Dream Police, the band’s debut album, and Next Position Please. Timestamps 0:00 – Van Halen and the birth of the ’80s 0:25 – Trivia challenge begins 1:35 – Vintage Circus Magazine feature 2:18 – The massive rock albums of 1980 2:45 – “Van Halen was the first ’80s band?” 3:18 – Wild road stories and Iron Butterfly jokes 4:07 – David Lee Roth and Van Halen mania 4:40 – Robert’s K-Mart memory buying the album 5:41 – First hearing “And the Cradle Will Rock...” 6:11 – David Lee Roth on the Van Halen audience 7:14 – Van Halen’s arena domination explained 8:17 – Why sold-out concerts mattered 8:37 – What “papering a concert” means 9:19 – Life on the road with Van Halen 10:15 – From clubs to rock superstardom 10:41 – David Lee Roth as the ultimate frontman 11:50 – “Big rock” vs heavy metal 12:12 – The origin of “Everybody Wants Some!!” 14:17 – Trivia answers revealed 15:02 – Eddie’s secret keyboard weapon 16:11 – Ted Templeman on Van Halen imperfections 16:25 – Mystery record package opening 17:43 – Cheap Trick albums revealed 18:24 – Remembering Next Position Please 19:03 – Viewer discussion and final thoughts

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#493 - Van Halen - DID THEY INVENT THE 1980s?

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This episode was published on May 23, 2026.

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Robert John Hadfield dives into one of the albums that helped define the transition from the 1970s into the hard rock explosion of the 1980s — Women and Children First by Van Halen. Using an incredible vintage issue of Circus Magazine from late...

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