Van Halen 5150 album cover

Van Halen

5150

The seventh Van Halen studio album and first without (Diamond) David Lee Roth, 5150 marks its territory as the beginning of the Sammy Hagar era of Van Halen. Previously known for its party god rock sound, 5150 displays a shift toward love songs and ballads, with the lyrics chart reading a bit more on the chick-friendly side.
Released: 1986-03-24
Label: Warner Bros.
Producer: Mick Jones, Donn Landee
Length: 43:16
Genres: Hair Metal

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Were they getting older? Sure. Were they getting softer? Sure. Were they losing their touch? No. The Van Hagar era is a very Fizz response to the Pantsian Diamond Dave era.

The argument would a whole other ballgame if Van Halen had brought Patty Smyth (Scandal) into the band instead of Sammy Hagar.

Also, very rare for all members of a hair metal band to receive credit for writing the album. 5150 shipped 5 singles: Best of Both Worlds, Dreams, Love Walks In, Summer Nights, and Why Can’t This Be Love.

5150 continues a string of interesting Van Halen album covers.

Riffing on Greek Mythology, the album cover features a bodybuilder hoisting Planet Van Halen, as depicted by the Van Halen symbol, in the image of Atlas, only with a Flavor Flav-esque “5150” chain. Dan Chapman’s illustration is stand up, you know, despite the kneeling.