VAN HALEN NEWS DESK

10 Things You Gotta Do To Play Like Eddie Van Halen

From GuitarPlayer.com:

Photo by Robert Yager

By Jude Gold.

MANY GUITARISTS WHO WERE ACTIVE IN the late ’70s remember exactly where they were standing when they first heard Van Halen. Like film footage of an erupting volcano, the band’s eponymous 1978 debut captured in real time a stunningly explosive and organic spectacle—four hard-rocking, hard-partying adrenaline junkies whose sound was so powerful and unified, it fueled one of the most spectacular ascents in rock and roll history. After becoming kings of the suburban L.A. backyard keg party scene, Van Halen rose to playing clubs on the Sunset Strip to selling over 3,000 tickets at the Pasadena Civic Auditorium— without an album or management— to getting signed by Warner Bros. to selling over 50 million albums in the U.S. alone. And at every turn, the band’s sound launched from an astounding re-imagining of the guitar’s role in hard rock courtesy of Dutch-born musical wunderkind Edward Lodewijk Van Halen.

When Journey’s Neal Schon slapped a copy of Van Halen on a turntable in 1978, he found himself, for the first time ever, “stumped” while trying to figure out what another guitar player was doing. Later that year, Van Halen—featuring singer David Lee Roth, bassist Michael Anthony, drummer Alex Van Halen, and, of course, Alex’s younger brother Eddie—would open for Journey on a U.S. tour. “It was like getting your ass kicked every night by the best sword-swinging sushi chef in the land,” Schon recalled humbly of having EVH on the bill. “Ronnie Montrose was supporting, and he hated being in the middle slot. I would tell him, ‘Man, I’m glad you have to follow that and not me!’”

Joe Perry openly confesses that he, too, “felt the heat” when the hotshot from Pasadena hit the touring scene. “He was single- handedly moving guitar to a whole new level,” reflected the Aerosmith kingpin decades later. “We were the preeminent stadium headliners, and here were these young upstarts, ready to fill our shoes. What was amazing about Eddie’s playing was that it was full of stuff I’d heard before, yet it all sounded so new. For instance, that tape echo sound [at the end of “Eruption”] was such an old trick that I never would have done it. But Eddie was from the next generation, and everything was new to him. And he was playing to a whole new batch of kids that didn’t grow up with that stuff, so it was very smart for him to use tricks like that on top of his naturally brilliant playing. Suddenly there was this whole West Coast guitarslinger movement that he started.”

That movement started with a kid in his basement bucking nearly every guitar trend imaginable by building his own hybrid guitars, pushing blues rock to molten temperatures and supersonic speeds, evolving revolutionary rock guitar techniques, and forging the most exhilarating and inspirational electric guitar sound this side of Hendrix. That kid was and is Edward Van Halen. But, before we let you in on the secrets of his cleverest tricks and most influential licks, first you gotta …

1. D.I.Y.!

The irony shouldn’t be lost on anyone that, at $25K retail each, the recent run of EVH Frankenstein Replica guitars commanded what would seem to people in most tax brackets absurdly tall stacks of cash for clones of a mutt instrument built from scraps. That mutt, of course, is the beloved beater guitar Van Halen has referred to using such humble terms as “my red-striped garbage Strat” and the “piece of sh*t.” Nonetheless, the pricey Replicas sold, because they play, feel, and sound exactly like the greasy candy cane on which Van Halen wrote and recorded his most influential riffs. From the cigarette burns to the 1971 quarter once used as a bridge stop to exacting electrical specs, each Replica contains much of the mojo of its forebear. But whether you build your own Frankenstrat or use one of Van Halen’s Ernie Ball Music Man, Peavey, Charvel, or EVH signature models, take inspiration from his daring doit- yourself life mission.

“I hate store-bought, offthe rack guitars. They don’t do what I want them to do, which is kick ass and scream,” Van Halen told GP in 1978. He admitted he had ruined a vintage Les Paul, an ES-335, and other guitars in his quest to build the ultimate rock weapon. Crudely routing a Strat-shaped ash body from Charvel to accommodate a dual-coil pickup, Van Halen added an unfinished birdseye maple neck, hardware from a ’58 Strat, and a hard-mounted Gibson P.A.F. humbucker that was custom wound, potted in wax (to mute coil squeal at high volumes), and angled so the outermost pole pieces lined up with the outside strings. Armed with Schwinn bicycle lacquer, EVH spray-painted the body black, striped it with tape, painted it white, and removed the tape. Voilà—hard rock’s most famous guitar was born for about $150 in Carter-era cash. (The red coat came later.) Because it looked so damn cool; coupled the girthful tone of a Les Paul with the expressiveness, vibrato system, and raw snarl of a Stratocaster; and was featured on Van Halen, imitations of the guitar became so ubiquitous that EVH at one point had a lawsuit pending against the very company that built his guitar’s body.

2. JUST CRANK ’EM ALL CLOCKWISE

For years, there was more than a little mystery surrounding EVH’s stunning tone. Some of the confusion was due in part to the guitarist being less than completely forthcoming about his rig, mostly because his bandmates—ever protective of their golden goose—urged him not to completely reveal his signal path. While he initially threw imitators off his trail with hints of secret amp mods and boosted transformer voltages, subsequent interviews revealed that the famous Marshall head that powered the classic David Lee Roth-era Van Halen albums was entirely stock—though typically biased hot enough to melt its Sylvania EL34 power tubes at least once a week. The one tonetweaker practice EVH engaged in regularly was lowering his amp’s transformer voltage to about 90 volts via a Variac. Today, EVH gets his sizzle from his signature 6L6-powered EVH 5150 III heads. During much of Van Halen’s Sammy Hagar-fronted era, EVH used his screamin’ line of Peavey 5150s, which he developed with amp guru James Brown. But if you’re obsessed with attaining the classic Van Halen “brown sound,” plug into Dunlop/ MXR EVH Flanger and EVH Phase 90 stompboxes (“The Phase 90 doesn’t really phase [that strongly], it just kind of gives you a treble boost, which helps solos cut through,” says Ed) and then into a tape delay set for one tasty 100- to 150-millisecond repeat. Last but not least, you’ll of course need a voltage-starved (thanks, Variac!), late- ’60s 100-watt Marshall Super Lead. Crank every knob all the way up while driving a 4×12 cabinet close miked with two Shure SM57s—one angled off-axis for extra bottom. (Tip: For a touch of the 2009 Van Halen sound, add a Dunlop EVH Wah Wah pedal.) Want the dive bomb effect at the end of “Eruption”? Consider customizing a vintage Univox EC 80 tape delay, as Van Halen did, with a motor that cycles slowly enough to drop a looped note a full octave in pitch. Lastly, for the classic Van Halen visual, mount the Univox in the hull of a World War II-era practice bomb, as spied in this feature’s opening photo.

3. CRASH THE CAR

Being that EVH likes to use the vibrato bar to “break things up” in his solos, let’s make sure you’re at peace with bar dips and dives both subtle and extreme. Van Halen has said that his playing is “like a race car racing down the road and then crashing every now and then.” The famous “crashes” were often created using the ’58 Strat vibrato system he had installed on his Frankenstein guitar. “The bar is actually like another instrument,” says EVH. “You can’t just jerk the thing and expect it to stay in tune. If you bring the bar down, the G and the B string go sharp when you release it. You gotta stretch those strings back with a quick little jerk.” Of course, when Floyd Rose’s revolutionary locking tremolo system became available, EVH became as great an endorsee for that product as Michael Jordan would be for Nike hightops. Often, though, when it came time to record, Van Halen preferred the slightly fuller sound of his ’58 Fender hardware.

4. CHEAT

Whether it’s generating elephant noises by scraping the pick up the string until the string clangs against the pickup’s pole piece (“Intruder”), producing menacing swoosh noises by grinding on the trem springs with a flanger engaged (“And the Cradle Will Rock…”), generating flutey sixteenth- note patterns by playing eighth-note volume-knob swells while using a dottedeighth delay setting (“Cathedral,” transcribed in the January ’06 GP), stringing together standard harmonics to generate kaleidoscopic melodic ascents (Examples 1a and 1b, à la “Somebody Get Me a Doctor” and “I’m the One,” respectively), or cranking a Wurlitzer through a Marshall (“Cradle”), EVH has always displayed an uncanny knack for finding simple ways of generating complex and Mammoth sounds. (Yep—a pun for you, Van Halen historians.) “The best thing I do is cheat,” said Van Halen in reference to his faux-Carlos Montoya classical playing on “Little Guitars (Intro).” Instead of learning to play flamenco, he got a polytimbral, Montoya-like sound by tremolo picking the high strings while hammering a bass line on the low strings. “If there’s something that I want to do, I won’t give up until I can figure out some way to make it sound similar to what I really can’t do.” (Don’t worry, Ed, we understand what you meant by that!)

5. ROCK IT LIKE YOU TALK IT

No riff projects Van Halen’s supremely cocky “I’m gonna fu*k your girlfriend” swagger (yes, Roth often halted the band mid-song to deliver this taunt) more effectively than the merciless “Unchained” intro [Ex. 2]. (Note: Though all the examples in this feature are notated at standard pitch, Van Halen typically tunes all strings down one-half or even three-quarters of a step.) Composed on piano and full of bright major and sus4 harmonies reminiscent of Keith Richards’ mini-chords on “Brown Sugar,” the tone and phrasing of “Unchained” radiates arrogance backed by conspicuous lethality— especially during the foreboding drubbing of the open, detuned sixth string (which is dropped an extra whole-step for this song). Like the rumble of advancing tanks, the lick’s cruel timbres signal the meek that no, they in fact won’t be inheriting the Earth after all. (Tip: Kick on an MXR EVH Flanger between chords to get those trademark Van Halen swooshes.)

Of course, the roguish Van Halen attack also has elements of sophistication and humor, and in no way requires that you or your singer rock assless chaps à la the band’s lion-maned, kickboxing frontman. At its best, it delivers its ass kickings in clever ways, and always with a smile. To achieve VH’s snarky mojo while playing “Unchained,” channel the witty side of DLR by thinking of the time he said of Van Halen haters in the press, “Rock music critics like Elvis Costello because rock music critics look like Elvis Costello.”

6. HOT-ROD THE BLUES

The biggest mistake many glammed-out ’80s Van Halen wannabes made (besides not seeing hurricane Nirvana coming to destroy them in ’91) was to underestimate the influence the blues had on EVH. “I know every fu*kin’ solo Clapton ever played, note for note,” Van Halen was wont to say. Never one to practice scales, the closest thing EVH does to a scale run is blaze through Ex. 3a, the sort of three-notes-per-string ascent you may spy on “I’m the One” and “Jump.” Nor did Van Halen ever practice arpeggios, though the single-string Eadd9 arp he takes to skies with on his brain-freezing “Ice Cream Man” break (à la Ex. 3b) makes for a nice harmonic etude. (Tip: Loop it, then play the move one time each on the second, third, and fourth strings.)

The miraculous thing is that when you slow down the turbo shuffle riff that opens “I’m the One,” you discover it’s just a basic 12/8 blues theme, like Ex. 3c, but played at utterly relativistic speeds. Warping the space/time continuum, EVH lived more in the three-plus-minutes it took to track this light-speed guitar tour de force than most rock guitarists live in their entire careers. Slow down classic Van Halen solos, and you discover that many of them, despite their wildly inventive sound, reside in the world’s go-to blues box (presented in the key of E in Ex. 3d). The sparks really fly when Van Halen bends the 7 on the second string a whopping major third or more, as in Ex. 3e (à la the “Atomic Punk” solo). To get this patented EVH string wringing down, be sure to also wrangle Ex. 3f—which, up a fourth in the key of A (at the seventeenth position) is a phrase inspired the extreme second string torture on the solo to “You Really Got Me.” The perfect-fourth bend on beat four of the third bar will again test the tensile strength of your B string. (Note: For better tone and zero string sag during bends, Van Halen’s bridge is not floating, but pulled solidly against the body via three taught trem springs. His .009-.040-gauge strings surrender tension only when the bar is pressed.)

7. TAP INTO THE DIVINE

Watching Jimmy Page play his famous “Heartbreaker” triplet pull-offs to the open third string at a Zeppelin concert around ’71, Van Halen realized he could do similar triplet moves all over the neck if he simply put both hands on the fretboard. Thus, “tapping,” his most famous and widely imitated technique, was born, though other players were likely experimenting with similar approaches at the same time. These included Harvey Mandel, Brian May, Billy Gibbons, and Steve Hackett, who tracked the first known incarnations of tapped triplets on Genesis’ 1971 album Nursery Cryme. At its wildest (think “Jump,” “Hot for Teacher,” and Michael Jackson’s “Beat It”), EVH tapping agilely hops from string to string. However, the best way to learn it is by stealing simple single-string shapes from the baroque tap cadenza that closes “Eruption.” Or, even better, grok the tapping gateway lick in Ex. 4. You gotta get this down, because it’s the type of move Van Halen uses on both “You Really Got Me” and “I’m the One.” Dig: As the fretting hand descends chromatically from the fifth to the second positions, all the notes combine to effect a classic Delta-style turnaround harmony. (Again, the blues.)

8. OWN THE OVERTONES

With his intros to “Women In Love,” “Spanish Fly,” and “Girl Gone Bad”—the shimmering textures that inspired Ex. 5a—Van Halen also got the world to fall in love with tapped octave harmonics. These chimey partials are achieved by bouncing a picking-hand fingertip against the string right over the fret residing one octave (12 frets) above the note held by the fretting hand (or nut, if it’s an open string). In his live cadenzas, Van Halen regularly taps deeper into the overtone series using moves like Ex. 5b. Here, as fretted notes remain stationary, the tapping finger sounds prismatic third and fifth harmonics by striking other harmonic nodes besides the octave node. And, if you’d like to play the most evolved tappedharmonic lick the world has ever known, plant your fretting hand at the fifth position, and watch your back. It’s time to take a walk down “Mean Street” [Ex. 5c], off VH’s tenebrous, if underrated, masterpiece, Fair Warning.

9. NAIL THAT “ONE” MOVE

Ah, the Internet—rich with wondrous nuggets of knowledge, to be sure, but also rife with computer viruses, identity theft schemes, and, most pernicious of all, bad tablature. One seemingly inscrutable bit of Van Halen code that baffles many a lick hacker is Ex. 6. Employed most dramatically on the opening of his second “I’m the One” solo, but also tagged briefly on “Somebody Get Me a Doctor,” this looped, five-note endorphin rush is simple to play once you understand the quintuplet’s ingenious combination of picked notes, slurred notes, and open strings. (Note: EVH doesn’t necessarily loop the grouping in the strict quintuplets presented here, but keeps the phrasing loose and hemiolic.) Dial it in. You’re gonna need this move when you’re finally ready to …

10. ERUPT!

It’s funny that Eddie Van Halen has had to defend the presence of instrumentals on his albums over the years. If producer Ted Templeman had not insisted the guitarist include his 1978 backstage warm-up routine on the band’s debut, the world would be without the hard rock guitar cadenza against which all others are measured: “Eruption.” If you can fire off even a few of the fretboard pyrotechnics he uses in this white-hot guitar fireworks display, you’ll surely elicit some oohs and ahs. Showing the opening seconds of “Eruption,” Ex. 7a has almost no bar lines and no time signature, as those things would only be confusing. Now, remember Ex. 6? Dig its reappearance two frets down, in the fifth position (in the repeating bar) of Ex. 7a. Own this move, as well as Ex. 7b—the near-identical sonic fusillade that occurs one string group down at about the 0:08 mark—and you’ve nailed the trickiest parts of the first “Eruption” movement. Next, land Ex. 7c, and you’ve reeled in the trickiest part of the final movement. The lesson from these three excerpts is simple: Cheating by using open strings in sly ways can yield spectacularly fast, fun phrases.

“I don’t know where the ideas come from,” says Van Halen. “People ask me, ‘What were you thinking when you came up with this or that?’ I wasn’t thinking anything. Not to get too deep on you, but I’m just some sort of vehicle; a connection to something. Any creative artist who thinks they’re responsible [for what they create] can kiss my ass, because they’re not.”

Hey, Where are the Music Examples? Sometimes the music examples that run in Guitar Player magazine are licensed only for print, and cannot be distributed online. You can head on down to your local music shop or magazine stand to pick up the copy of GuitarPlayer containing the lesson you’re after, or better yet, subscribe to Guitar Player magazine, and never be without the music examples for the best guitar lessons on the planet.

  • lucky

    Awesome. I think people over think Eddie’s guitar playing. He has one of the most unique sounds because he did his own thing and made due with what he had. I think those relic guitars he sold recently are real swell and all, but realizing he slapped that together with parts he had available makes it all kind of silly.

  • DiamondDean

    Trully a great piece about the greatest guitar player of our time .

    Hes a genius and kept rock n roll guitar alive , not to mention the most copied guitarist of all time , a true LEGEND!!!!!

    2010 , cld they name the next album that n have a VH on the front of it????? who knows

  • Kimberly

    Total disagreemnt lucky lol…nothing Eddie did was “silly”…but ANYWAYS!

    Eddie is a legend, fabulous, and a true inspiration. Love the guy!! Changed my life with his skills. VH FOREVER! =)

  • J5150C

    The guy forgot one thing, unless I missed it. Have any of you ever heard EVH play on a guitar that is not his and through an amp that is not his either? Well, that’s where the secret to his playing/tone really lies. He always has the “Brown Sound”. It’s all in the fingers. The dude simply plays hard and attacks agressively. I can play Spanish fly (live version), but believe me, it took me about 4 years to discover that the only way to make it sound like his live version (LWAN) is to simply – for lack of a better word – play HARD! Phrase it aggressively but musically. That accounts for 75% of the “Brown Sound”. Try it, it works! Did for me.

  • SCAR

    EVH fucking rules – end of story!!!!!! Fuck off haters!!!!

  • Bridge

    I would much rather play like Bridge. Identity, identity, identity. He’s him. We’re us. Now where’s the new cd? (had ta get that in there)

  • SnoopDen

    Hey, Ed’s new wife and publicist, please throw us something new on twitter or whatever as to how Ed’s doin’. Is he still healthy?, has he fallin’ off the wagon?. C’mon, the fans deserve a little info once and a while.

  • Karl

    And talking of “my red-striped garbage Strat” when I had a spare moment not filled with real work I had a little 3D fun with the ol’ Frankenstrat. Go here to see how close I got…

    http://www.fantasyislandimaging.com/Portfilio/Misc_7.html

    :-)

  • BIG AL OZ

    Wow! Thats the first time I’ve heard Joe Perry speak highly of EVH! EVH has been beaten from pillar to post by the traditionalist and peers alike. When EVH arrived and the huge success that followed him, it was common practise to NOT mention EVH’s work but rather mention Hendrix as an influence by fellow guitarists. I’ve been a fan of EVH since day one and will till the day he no longer erupts this earth. KING EVH!!! enuff said!!

  • Mike V.

    As I remember John ‘Cougar’ Mellenkamp was quoted as hating Van Halen’s first record. I am paraphrasing here, but I think he was quoted on one of his either interviews or subsequent records as saying, ‘stop all that macho crap and learn to play guitar’. Just wonder why all those old 60-something bluesmasters hate the excitement of things new and unexplored in music.

  • zeman

    Joe Perry is an overated prick. There was an early story where he snubbed EVH back stage. Bottom line he was jealous.
    The echo plex trick was old??? Whatever Joe…you got your ass handed to you every night and you were pissed about it…just admit it.

  • Matt G

    In response to Mike V, it is known that John Mellencamp has a “difficult” personality. People who have toured with him have complained that he is all business on tour, no fun, and an ego the size of Texas. When Eddie came onto the scene in 1978, he and the boys were perceived as a threat to Mr. Mellencamp and his ego. Other bands felt this threat also, but acknowledged the genius of EVH.

  • Jim

    First

  • EJ

    Then Mellencamp a few years ago asked Eddie to play acoustic guitar on tour with him. Funny, these statements like that come from jealousy. So if John said he hated the first VH record, he must have been quite jealous.

  • VH3

    Thats right JOE PERRY, he had you feeling like a dinosaur at the peak of your career, and that is why you dissed him when he approached you to shake hands back in the early 80′s. That is why if you were not in Aerosmith you wouldn’t be shit. Eddie did produce a shit load of gun slingers in the 80′s,90′s and today. If JOE PERRY produced a bunch of gun slingers they would might as well be rhythm guitarist because your leads are WEAK.

  • Bort

    I’d have to say Chickenfoots last song on the CD was “Future in the Past”, must be a reference to all the VH news out there. Too bad, cuz I’m sure Eddie still has some good stuff left. Hopefully it’s not released posthumously.

  • http://www.gemproductionsinc.com kapp

    To this day no one does it for me like ED. Vai is so enamored with his own playing he has lost heart and soul. Joe is great! But still lacks that pure fire and magic that EVH has. I am tired of all the Hendrix nonsense. I have heard all the albums. This guy was ED’s goofy stoned uncle.
    He wrote some great songs. But…could he stand next to ED. Really?? Is it just cool to say Hendrix because thats what everyone says? It is almost like not cool to give Steven Speilberg his due because he is so well loved by the public.
    One song by VH crushes the head shredders of today. I can’t say enough about his playing. It is pure feeling and fire. I am waiting for the day when my teenager walks in with a new guitar player on the scene. It won’t be about technical ability or flashiness….lets see if this person can freaking rock with as much power as the mighty ED.Sorry All you intelligent, alternative, to cool city folk….Edward still kicks your ass. Shove it Rolling Stone Magazine with your depressing rock votes and lothsome music. You have no heart therfore you cannot truly rock….

  • Scottso

    Bort said: “…I’m sure Eddie still has some good stuff left. Hopefully it’s not released posthumously.”

    My sentiments exactly.

  • dude

    @Bort and Scottso – sadly, well said. I do sometimes wonder if Ed’s health is an issue again. Let’s hope not!

    @Karl – very cool 3D renditions!

  • DMoney

    Why would anyone want to play like Eddie Van Halen? What would have happened if Eddie, when he was younger, wanted to play like Jimmy Page? We’d have no Eddie… This story is stupid. I wish the people who write these type of stories would go out and look for the next best thing as opposed to writing stories about how to emulate someone else.

  • http://www.drumthumper.net Joe

    Eddie is the reason why I gave up guitar and took up drums.

  • EJ

    Just imagine the pressure that a guy like Eddie must be under all of the time. Steve Lukather said it best- “it can’t be easy being a guy like him.” He is expected to be brilliant all of the time. So many people would want a piece of you and you don’t know if they are real or not. He writes a great album, then everyone expects another one. He is expected to play great every night. It would be a lonely world I bet as brilliant as he is. He gets ripped for not doing this or that, or not having a record out lately, but just put yourself in his position and realize how tough that would be, even if you are a genius. I am not condoning substance abuse, but you can kind of understand why it happens with all of the pressure. It comes off as “partying” or “having fun”, but it is probably more related to other things such as stress. Everybody is being pretty nice to Eddie on these posts, but consider all of this when one decides to rip him for not doing this or that.
    I also bet they are writing some new music which is why we are not hearing anything from them lately….

  • dwilson

    Joe Perry….backhanded compliment. I love Joe’s playing but he is a hack next to Ed. To insinuate that Ed’s stuff was old and trite and that his youth and energy just sold it???? And that “he wouldv’e never used those old tricks” That’s a joke. He backed it up by saying Ed was brilliant…but the backhand stab was pretty clear. Truth is you can walk into just about any music store on any Saturday……….and somebody will knock your socks off w/ a cool lick sooner or later. Great guitarists like Joe are all over the place…influential icons like Eddie are rare.

  • RickieVanWhalen

    Joe Perry – sorry but you are just so lame.

    Who the hell was John Couger in 1978 and why are we bothering to use his name in the same sentence with the King.

    The unwillingness of any of the most popular guitar players to bow down before EVH is based on pure jealousy. At least Neal Schron is willing to admit it.

    Clapton is also quite envious of EVH stealing his throne – IMO. Bye the way, he said EVH’s playing “is not blues”. I suppose you can be deaf and successful all at the same time Eric. He writes a great song but I sat in the second row with him and Beck at MSG two weeks ago. He is not technically proficient at all. Beck on the other hand is brilliant.

    That’t my rant of day. Nice post VHND.

  • Brian D

    Best Rock Guitarist ever, bar none. I’ve seen VH 9 times and have never been disappointed. My first VH concert was June 1980. What a show. I was hooked, man. Joe Perry can kiss my ass. Never liked Aerosmith anyway. EVH is KING!

  • ringostore

    Ah Joe Perry plays with marshmallow fingers.

    Great post VHND.

    The only other guitar player right now that plays with heart and tries to create a unique sound is Eric Johnson. Except he shouldn’t sing. I would like to see EVH and him do a duet album together.

    What does “Just Crank em all Clockwise” mean? Did VH turn his strings in the opposite direction when he tuned up? Thus pulling the strings into the head instead of out?

  • Ryan

    Joe Perry is a great guitarist, and everybody here is being one-sided. Joe is Joe and Eddie is Eddie. And I thought he was giving Eddie credit with the whole tape echo thing by saying he (meaning Joe) would have never thought of it. I always thought Aerosmith opened a lot of doors for Van Halen. Eddie always comes across as being too paranoid, claiming that all these people snubbed him off. I think that whole thing (Joe snubbing him off) was taken out of context. Joe was probably hammered or something. lol, Anyways, you don’t have to like Joe, but don’t disrespect him. He is an awesome guitarist, and he can make a girl’s panties come undone with one lick. He is a great slide guitarist, songwriter, rhythm guitarist; he is very versatile.

    -Ryan

  • BIG AL OZ

    @ ringostore, “just crank em all clockwise” means the volume! EVH is known to turn the volume up full throttle! Check out his interview on youtube discussing his new 5150 III amp, he explains in detail how he developed his sound.

    @ kapp, couldn’t agree with you more about King EVH!! The man is a genius, he is so far ahead of the rest that in century’s to come people will still be talking about him. Aside from his guitar wizardry, brilliant songwriting, awesome stage presence and music vision, EVH’s has the most important thing most guitarist lack, HEART & SOUL!!! The man has a heart of gold that breaths fire when he plugs that guitar into an amp!! It’s never enough saying how great this man is, instead just crank it up and listen, enuff said!!

  • dude

    The Frankenstrat is awesome because it was Ed’s baby. I just can’t see buying a copy of that for any reason or any price. As a matter of fact, I’m not really into “custom artist models” at all. Buy or make your own guitar and do your own thing. OK, the Les Paul is to some extent a “custom artist model” but it’s pretty much a brand itself. I love Gibsons but those “faded” ones they put out are pretty weak. I see Fender does that now too. If I buy this “beat up” Tele will I be Bruce? Lame.

    Anyway, it’s late in the day, I’m still at work and I’m hungry. Just ranting at this point!

  • little big toe

    The opening statement of this article says it perfectly. I am fortunate to be old enough to concur. I can remember the word out on the street…”have you heard this guy outta L.A., holy s#%t. This changes everything.” Would love to have heard what the “high profile” players initial reactions were…eh, Perry not so much- he sounds like my neighbor’s kid.

  • little big toe

    …and my neighbors kid has never heard of Joe Perry.

  • Dooley

    I’m with Ryan. No need to slam Joe Perry for anything. The tape echo comment toward Ed was complimentary if you read it right. And to go back to the early 80′s over an alleged snub backstage is lame. That was a long time ago, doesn’t matter anymore. I’m proud to be both a VH and Aerosmith fan.
    And I’m glad they’re back together with Steve Tyler and hope it goes well. There’s a 23 second video on their website updating their fans on their upcoming tour to Europe June-July 2010. They do public relations better than VH at this point.

  • Adrian

    This is an excellent article with many completely nailed most of the theories and ideas I have received from listening to Edward all these years awesome!

  • arthur_bishop1972

    Kurt Cobain was once asked what he liked to listen to. After some thought, he said: “The Pixies, The Melvins, anything but Van Halen.”

  • Canes_fan5150

    Building my own guitar….. any suggestions on a classic vh sounding humbucker?

  • DiamondDean

    yeah joe perry rocks , we shdnt bag him , hes got a great band n has done some great songs

    Eddie is brilliant n shd never be questioned about his guitAar playing

    There both great in their own right

  • John

    I remember in an interview Eddie was asked about Joe Perry’s playing and he said something like it sounds like he has a broken hand!

  • http://aol.com the truth

    Aerosmith has sold 150 million records.
    Van Halen has sold 80 million records.
    ‘Nuff said!!!

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_best-selling_music_artists

  • PasadenaKid

    Lotta people hated Eddie back in the late 70′s…..Joe Perry, Mellencamp, Ted Nugent, Eric Clapton among others…..all jealous pricks who couldn’t hold a candle to the blazing young gunslinger from Southern CA who was setting the new gold standard. Can’t believe Gene Simmons almost got him to join KISS….that would’ve been one of the biggest blunders in music history.

    I still remember hearing “Running With the Devil” at age 9 for the first time……fucking chills up and down my spine. No one has come close since. All hail the King of Ten Fingers and Six Strings!

  • Mark

    Cool article.

  • jp

    To BIG AL OZ Theres a million and one of those stories about ED being snubbed and ignored by the guitar heros of the day.They feared eddie like the black plague,cause they knew they couldnt compete.Its jealousy that goes on to this day with players and the critics alike, so they kling on to forty years dead Hendricks who they feel is alot less threatening.In one interview Eric Clapton (refering to Hendricks)said that to this day noboby has taken the guitar any further.Either Clapton is living in a bubble or hes still pissed off that King Ed layed waste his generation of players.

  • lucky

    Kimberly, I meant the $25k relic guitars were silly, considering his original was a homemade job.

    What set Ed apart was his originality, not just in his playing, but his guitars as well.

  • ringostore

    Perry is hiding his hypocrisy. I think he spewed vitriol behind the scenes back then in 70′s toward VH. Even Journey’s guitar boy was probably not fair either. They were very envious.

    I saw Vai play with DLR back in the late 80′s and during Via’s solo section he played a part of Eruption and “made faces” as if this was really easy to play. I thought yah ok Via, why don’t you create a powerful Eruption piece that everyone remembers? Now Vai is nicey talky talk about VH today, but back then he never said a word. All jealousy.

  • scott

    First of all, we don’t really need more people trying to play like Eddie do we? There IS only one! Unless we want to repeat the 80′s where everyone becomes a wanna be clone, which fortunately I don’t think will happen. Influence is good, though. I saw Roth 3 times with Vai, and those shows kicked ass over the 5150 tour, as far as entertaining and amazing playing. I LOVE VH, but Roth and company tore it up!!As far Vai being jealous or making fun of Ed…that’s just stupid and you are a jack ass. Vai is cool, and great also, and doesn’t need to feel jealous of ANYONE. Are you kidding me? Lol! He was having fun, and doing his thing. Why don’t you go tell Ed he needs to practice again?!

  • scott

    And like what you like, who gives a shit about who sells more records? You start sounding like some kind of business guy when you try to make that an argument for who’s better…and it’s an art form, not a competition. Soooo stupid!!!

  • scott

    And by the way, Ed and Mellancamp are buds, you morons!

  • gadal595

    Yeah, I like some of these great guitarists but I’m always surprised they don’t mention Ed very often. Joe Satriani is f:*#@$ great but he never says anything about his main influence. Billy Gibbons? Yeah right, Joe…
    Even Eddie said he liked Joe’s (and Vai’s) playing.
    Most of the greats respect Eddie, they just don’t admit it.

    To Kapp: Hendrix had it all. Very innovative for his time, GREAT song writer, good lyrics and HUGE charisma to top it off. You have to remember that Hendrix never passed 28 and wrote all these songs in a 5 years career. That would be like judging Eddie from VH1 to Diver Down basically. Try to learn his songs on guitar, they’re as hard as Ed’s.

    To John: that was Jimmy Page (2 years old kid with a broken hand…)
    To Canes fan5150: one good humbucker I use on my Frankenstrats for VH tone is Seymour Duncan Custom (SH5) and custom custom (SH11).Very close actually.
    Duncan EVH if you have the money. Not worth it IMOO.
    I have 3 VH exact copies for sale, 1 VH1 (blk/wte) for $1290, 2 red for 2290. Just like the $25.000 Fender replica.
    The most important thing to have the Brown sound is the amp, no matter what PU you use… And dig in the strings like Eddie.

  • arthur_bishop1972

    Fuck Aerosmith. They sold out big time. Their last good album was ‘Draw the Line’. And Joe Perry couldn’t get near EVH with a GPS system.

    I recall reading that the first (maybe only, I don’t know) time Ted Nugent played on the same bill as VH (in 1980 I think), he heard EVH warming up and came over to take a look. After listening in amazement for a few minutes, he asked Eddie what kind of effects set-up he had. Eddie looked at him point blank and said (I’m paraphrasing here) “No effects, man. I plug this guitar into that amp and start playing.”

  • http://www.cabowabo.com No Mas Tony

    “Jealousy is the tribute mediocrity pays to genius.”
    • Fulton J. Sheen

    @ The Truth –- so you’re comparing Van Halen to Aerosmith; a commercial media-whore that does fucking remixes with the Beastie Boys… Yeah, I suppose they would sell more albums considering they released like 23 of them. Shit, I’m sure Dodge sells more caravans then BMW sells M-5’s… so in your logic, does that mean a dodge is better than a BMW?… Aerosmith is a circus act; not a real rock band. IMHO

    Van Halen has released 11 studio albums [apparently only 6 according to Van Halen’s ‘official’ website. WTF, Ed?] and ONE live album… yet and have had the *MOST* number-one hits on the Billboard Mainstream Rock chart. During the 1980s they also had more Billboard Hot 100 hits than any other hard rock or heavy metal band. [PERIOD]. So all the Aerosmith fanboys can put that in your crackpipe and smoke it. And while you’re at it. Stay the FUCK OFF VAN HALEN’S WEBSITE. Go watch Steven Tyler’s boney, skeletal-lookin-ass dance around the stage like a douche. (That of course is aimed only at the tards trying to compare Joe Perry to the greatness of King Eddie. Not the average fan –- no disrespect my brethren.)

    EDWARD VAN HALEN’s two-handed tap method has changed the way guitars are played forever. No man, not Clapton, Hendrix, Paige, Perry (and especially Vai or Satriani) can claim that. It’s just the facts.

    This article is probably redundant in that we have enough guitarists out there trying to sound like Eddie. But hey, it’s written by Guitar Player; so what would you expect.

    And how fucking funny is it that Ed can give a head nod to other guitarists, and most of what he gets back is resent-tainted compliments. But Jimmy Paige knew the deal. “For my money, Eddie Van Halen was the first significant new kid on the block. Very dazzling.” He was quoted as saying in the early 80’s. Well that ‘new kid’ wears the crown now.

  • RickieVanWhalen

    I am relieved that all of you feel like I do; EVH gets snubbed by everybody because they are just jealous.

    Steve Vai – copy cat jealous technocrat
    Joe Satch – see above
    Clapton – totally jealous that EVH made him obsolete

    EVH is the Father of Shred Guitar. The lord said thy shall honor the father. These other players are going to hell.