Eddie and Fender unveil new Frankenstein replica

PRESS RELEASE
Eddie Van Halen and Fender, Together at Last
Friday January 19, 9:01 am ET
Fender Custom Shop to Create 300 Limited-Edition Replicas of Iconic Eddie Van Halen “Frankenstein(TM)” Guitar
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Hold on to your whammy bars: In one of the most anticipated events in electric guitar history, Eddie Van Halen and the master builders of the Fender Custom Shop in Corona, Calif., have teamed up to introduce EVH® brand guitars, amps and musical products, beginning with a painstaking recreation of one of the most recognized guitars in the world: the red-black-and-white striped “Frankenstein(TM)” guitar played by Eddie throughout his remarkable career.
Strikingly accurate down to the very last detail–and incorporating an astounding aging process to duplicate the effects of the explosive years Eddie Van Halen spent on the original–the Eddie Van Halen Frankenstein(TM) replica guitar will be limited to only 300 instruments. No effort has been spared to mirror every last scratch, ding and cigarette burn; Fender designers even scoured the land for 1971 quarters (that’s the right year), just like the original he at one time stuck under the original tremolo bridge. While Eddie no longer uses the quarter for that purpose, it’s still one of the guitar’s most recognizable appointments, and still adorns Ed’s baby, as well as each and every Frankenstein(TM) replica guitar.
It was an effort well worth undertaking, for a legendary man and instrument well worth celebrating.
The History
Seldom in the history of guitar playing can monumental change be attributed to a single guitarist; a musician whose contributions amount to nothing short of a re-imagining of the instrument’s possibilities, and whose playing abilities and innovations are so utterly dazzling as to be considered truly revolutionary. Such is the case with Edward Van Halen.
Eddie Van Halen exploded onto the music scene in the late ’70s and, seemingly overnight, rewrote the book on rock guitar as few had done before. How did he play like that? How did he get those sounds? And what was that weird guitar he was playing? This was something new; a wild, ambitiously swaggering rock band from Los Angeles that boasted a skinny, smiling 20-something kid who was so utterly musically ferocious that you were left with no choice.
On Feb. 10, 1978, when Van Halen’s debut album was released, nobody had ever seen or heard anything like Eddie Van Halen. Nobody had ever seen or heard the strange guitar he worked his magic with. With this striking black-and-white striped guitar, he dazzlingly swooped, dived and blazed his innovative way through one of the most original and most famous debut albums in history. No overdubs. No huge pedal boards. No fancy and expensive custom gear.
A lucky few knew what was coming because they’d seen Van Halen in the band’s early days, with Eddie routinely reducing Sunset Strip nightclubs to smoldering piles of rubble. Some established guitar heroes laughed at his duct-taped-home-made stage setup, but they weren’t laughing when the show was over and Eddie had left audience’s jaws somewhere around their ankles.
But Eddie was no mere acrobat; whatever he did with his guitar was always for the song. “Jamie’s Cryin’.” “You Really Got Me.” “Dance the Night Away.” “Beautiful Girls.” “Cradle Will Rock.” “(Oh) Pretty Woman.” “Jump.” “Hot For Teacher.” “Panama.” “Eruption.” “Why Can’t This Be Love?” “When It’s Love.” “Finish What Ya Started.” “Right Now.” The list goes on and on.
A New Kind of Guitar
The guitar pictured on Van Halen’s debut record looked familiar, but it was different. What was it? Where did he buy it? He didn’t. Twenty-two-year-old Eddie Van Halen, you see, had the mind of not only a great musician, but also of an inventor–a constant tinkerer who was always messing with his gear; always trying this and that–sometimes destroying this and that–and always after something different.
No off-the-shelf guitar had the features Eddie really needed to let his playing take off, and he knew it. He’d tried a few staples in his formative years, but eventually found them all lacking in one way or another. So he took matters into his own capable hands.
The guitar that appears on the cover of Van Halen was Eddie’s first “super guitar.” He bought a factory-second guitar body for $50 and a neck for $80, made in 1975. This new guitar body came pre-routed for three single-coil pickups, so Van Halen took up a chisel and soldering iron to install a fat-sounding humbucking pickup from an older semi-hollow body guitar, rotating it slightly to accommodate the wider string spacing of the original Fender bridge.
In an unintentional stroke of genius born out of necessity, Eddie conceived of the idea of dipping the humbucking pickup into an empty Yuban coffee can full of molten paraffin wax to reduce feedback once the wax cooled and solidified, a technique now known as “potting” a pickup. He also adjusted the vibrato bridge plate to lie flat against the body, preventing upward bends while increasing tuning stability. Also to his preference, the unfinished neck was wider and flatter; Eddie also replaced the original frets with larger fret wire.
It was this guitar body that first received the distinctive and soon-to-be-iconic striped paint job; Van Halen sprayed it with black and white Schwinn® acrylic lacquer bicycle paint. He cut out and mounted his own homemade black pickguard, covering the neck and middle pickup routings, and installed a single master volume knob (although the knob itself, famously, was a “Tone” knob), brass nut and an original Fender tremolo tailpiece.
Although it didn’t take long to build, and although the whole shebang cost him less than $150, this was the guitar that would change the world. It became Van Halen’s main instrument for the first several albums and tours, and he soon striped it one last time and added a top coat of red; with the addition of orange and red truck reflectors, Eddie was now complete in creating one of the most iconic guitars in rock ‘n’ roll history.
During Van Halen’s second world tour, he replaced the original tremolo with an odd device–a prototype locking tremolo system built by Seattle designer Floyd Rose. To fill the gap between the top surface of the guitar body and the bottom side of the tremolo plate, Eddie’s modest-but-efficient solution was to permanently mount a quarter under the unit’s top-back side. A succession of replacement necks all maintained the use of Schaller® tuners after Van Halen broke the original neck.
Fans loved the guitar and what he did with it. They even gave it a nickname–”Frankenstein(TM).” But to Eddie, it was simply “My baby.”
Sharing the Legacy
Like all true innovators, Eddie Van Halen has continuously evolved. His playing is as amazing now as ever, but his devotion to artistry, musicianship and songcraft has grown and matured all along the way. Now, at this point in his magical career, Eddie has decided to share his legacy of innovation with guitarists everywhere.
Although Eddie has before developed various guitar models with various makers, there has never been a faithful, first-rate recreation of the iconic Frankenstein(TM) instrument so revered by his fans and so dear to him personally. And there was only one company who could do it right. Fender.
The company that has brought the rock world signature models from its greatest guitarists now introduces a painstakingly accurate rendition of what is widely regarded as the world’s most recognizable electric guitar: the EVH® Frankenstein(TM) replica. This red, black and white ash-body guitar has a bolt-on maple neck and has been aged to precisely match the original, complete with every scratch, ding and cigarette burn.
The maple fingerboard has a 12″ to 16″ compound radius, with 21 Dunlop® 6100 jumbo frets. The guitar features a Seymour Duncan® Custom Shop EVH® humbucking pickup, with a single master volume knob (that says “Tone”) mounted on a single-ply partial black pickguard, identical to the original. Other features include Schaller® tuners, aged chrome hardware, and a limited edition, fully “relic-ed” EVH® road case. Leaving no stone unturned, the guitar is complete with a non-functional three-way switch and single-coil pickup that occupy two of the three pickup routs.
The EVH® Frankenstein(TM) replica guitar is a phenomenally crafted piece of rock history–of guitar history, period–and it could only come from Eddie Van Halen and the talented resources of Fender®. This guitar simply must be seen, heard and felt to be believed. Much like the first time you saw, heard and felt the incredible musical power of Eddie Van Halen.
Now Eddie Van Halen’s “baby” can be yours.
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January 25th, 2007 at 4:53 pm
I was 16 and in High School when Eddie and Van Halen burst onto the Rock scene, and my buddies and I were just like you said, our jaws were dropped to our ankles. From their 1st tour to present day, I have NEVER missed a Van Halen tour. In fact, we would skip school and drive to a Van Halen show anywhere with in 5 or 6 hundred miles. On every tour. I still have all my ticket stubs to prove it. We followed Van Halen on tour like deadheads followed The Greatful Dead. We knew the hotels they would stay at and we would hang out there. That’s how we met and kinda got to know a guy named Ed Anderson. He was like their road manager or something, and it didn’t take long after him seeing us hanging out in the lobbys of the hotels everywhere, he knew who we were and he would give us backstage passes, which I also still have, along with pictures of us with Eddie and Alex and all the guys. I even have a picture where I was standing beside Valarie, and I didn’t realize the picture had been taken until later when the film was developed. To date, I have been to over 100 Van Halen shows, maybe more, I’d have to count all my ticket stubs. I have been lucky enough to have met, gotten autographs, talked with, taken pictures with, Eddie and all the other guys in Van Halen. I’m now 44, and a Real Estate Broker, and when Van Halen hits the road, so do I, although it’s rare these days, their last tour in 2004, only had like 80 shows and went from June to Nov. I have a few tattos, but I have a rule with myself about tattos. I only get a tatto when/and/or/if, it’s something that’s played a major role in my life. So I have the same VH logo tatto on my arm just like Eddie’s, except for 1 thing. Out of respect for the man that I and alot of people consider the greatest guitarist ever, I put mine on my left arm. Eddie’s is on his right arm. To me, if your gonna have that paticular tatto, you should put it on the other arm, because there’s only ONE Eddie Van Halen. But that’s just me. Even though I really can’t play guitar all that well, I would Love to have one of the Fender Frankenstein reproductions. Also, I would love to be at the ceremony in NY, in March, when Eddie and all the guys in Van Halen are inducted into the Rock-N-Roll Hall of Fame. What more can I say, I am the #1 Van Halen fan in the world. And what more could be said about Eddie and Fender, they are the best guitarist and guitar combined, hands down. I may not get to own one of the 300 reproductions of the Frankenstein, but my hat is off to you Fender, as a company. GREAT JOB, and Thanks!
January 29th, 2007 at 12:28 am
It was 1980 or so, and I had just moved to Nebraska from Cali. Had no friends, just my Kiss albums. I took my sisters boyfriends VH cassette and was playing my ghetto blaster around some guys in our apartment complex, wasn’t too sure about the titles of the songs,(runnin’ with the devil)? Out came the Kiss and in went the VH, WTF!! is that, I said to myself, this is incredible,and from that day forward Ive always wanted to play the guitar like Eddie , still do at 40.Me and a buddy, from that day,still talk about that day I turned him on to VH. That was over 25 years ago! I have always been a fan of the twisted sounds of Eddie’s guitar playing and unique looks of his gear. The Frankenstein will be a great piece longtime coming, CONGRATS EVH and Fender!
February 4th, 2007 at 2:55 am
Yesterday, today and tommorrow! It’s all connected! Greatness is timeless! Timeless is what Van Halen is! The rock and roll hall of fame is a musical place that stops time. There’s no time like the present! The centre of yesterday and tommorrow! The Frankenstein Guitar is a symbol of rock and roll greatness.
Congratulations Eddie and the rest of the band past, present and future.
May 28th, 2008 at 3:53 pm
I grew up in Arkansas and was growing up listening to country music for lack of real access to anything else. An older friend that had moved away came back to visit when I was 11 or 12. I had the local country station on my bedroom stereo. My friend said something like, “What in the world are you listening to?” and popped in the Van Halen 1 cassette tape and played me “Eruption” going into “You Really got me”. The hair stood up on the back of my neck and I immediately knew that I wanted to be a rock and roll guitar player. I taught myself to play guitar and like my 1st guitar hero, Eddie, I tried to make sure that I was an original. I never even learned a Van Halen song for that very reason/and so I wouldn’t copy him. I’ve been a musician ever since and probably will be for life. I’m 35 years old and music, guitar, or writing songs is still just about the only thing I can think about.