VAN HALEN NEWS DESK

Rolling Stone’s New “100 Greatest Guitarists” List: Eddie Van Halen

There’s nothing like a good list to spark a little debate and controversy among rock fans. Last week, Rolling Stone unveiled their newest 100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time list. How did they decide the list? They “assembled a panel of top guitarists and other experts to rank their favorites and explain what separates the legends from everyone else.” (Featuring Keith Richards on Chuck Berry, Carlos Santana on Jerry Garcia, Tom Petty on George Harrison and more).

guitarists coverRolling Stone’s “100 Greatest Guitarists” List:

1. Jimi Hendrix
2. Eric Clapton
3. Jimmy Page
4. Keith Richards
5. Jeff Beck
6. B.B. King
7. Chuck Berry
8. Eddie Van Halen
9. Duane Allman
10. Pete Townshend

The other 90 are here.

While it’s nice to see them place Eddie in the top 10, we think he should be in the top 4. We ask, if Rolling Stone honestly doesn’t think Eddie Van Halen belongs in the top 4, why does Eddie Van Halen adorn one of the four different collector’s covers for their issue, along with Clapton, Hendrix, and Page? They must trust that the general public sees him as being in the top 4…

Mike McCready of Pearl Jam on Eddie Van Halen:

eddie van halenWhen I was 11, I was at my guitar teacher’s place, and he put on “Eruption.” It sounded like it came from another planet. I was just learning basic chords, stuff like AC/DC and Deep Purple; “Eruption” really didn’t make sense to me, but it was glorious, like hearing Mozart for the first time.

Eddie is a master of riffs: “Unchained,” “Take Your Whiskey Home,” the beginning of “Ain’t Talking ‘Bout Love.” He gets sounds that aren’t necessarily guitar sounds – a lot of harmonics, textures that happen just because of how he picks. There’s a part in “Unchained” where it sounds like there’s another instrument in the riff.

A lot of it is in his hands: the way he holds his pick between his thumb and middle finger, which opens things up for his finger-tapping. (When I found out he played that way, I tried it myself, but it was too weird.) But underneath that, Eddie has soul. It’s like Hendrix – you can play the things he’s written, but there’s an X factor that you can’t get.

Eddie still has it. I saw Van Halen on their reunion tour two years ago, and the second he came out, I felt that same thing I did when I was a kid. When you see a master, you know it.

Key Tracks: “Eruption,” “Ain’t Talking ‘Bout Love,” “Hot for Teacher”

Eddie Van Halen on Eric Clapton:

claptonEric Clapton is basically the only guitar player who influenced me – even though I don’t sound like him. There was a basic simplicity to his playing, his style, his vibe and his sound. He took a Gibson guitar and plugged it into a Marshall, and that was it. The basics. The blues. His solos were melodic and memorable – and that’s what guitar solos should be, part of the song. I could hum them to you.

What I really liked was Cream’s live recordings, because you could hear the three guys playing. If you listen to “I’m So Glad,” on Goodbye, you really hear the three guys go – and Jack Bruce and Ginger Baker were a couple of jazz guys, pushing Clapton forward. I once read that Clapton said, “I didn’t know what the hell I was doing.” He was just trying to keep up with the other two guys!

After Cream, he changed. When he started doing “I Shot the Sheriff” and this and that, and when he hooked up with Delaney and Bonnie, his whole style changed. Or at least his sound. He focused more on singing than playing. I respect him for everything he’s done and is still doing – but what inspired me, what made me pick up a guitar, was his early stuff. I could play some of those solos now – they’re permanently imprinted in my brain. That blues-based sound is still the core of modern rock guitar.

Key Tracks: “Bell Bottom Blues,” “Crossroads,” “White Room”

The”100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time” special issue features four collector’s covers – Eddie Van Halen, Clapton, Hendrix and is on newsstands now.
  • Lucic

    EDV #1
    Adnoydall # 2 LOL EVH is God

  • Jordan

    RS lost all of it’s cred with me when they put EVH @ #82 years ago. I unsubscribed from their magazine following that. Realized they really had no idea.

    That being said, although I love McCready, he better rewatch his VH video collection. Eddie very rarely plays with his middle finger and thumb. It’s usually in between his index and thumb like the rest of us – which bothers me even more. Because I’m still trying to prove that he’s not human.

    I love the Stones. Love them. But Keith doesn’t belong there.

  • http://www.scottrobertsweb.com Scott Roberts

    For all those complaining about EVH’s placement, remember that this is Rolling Stone Magazine. They’ve been out of touch for the past 20+ years. If you don’t remember, the LAST Top 100 Guitarists list they had a several years back placed Eddie Van Halen at #70. Yes, that is not a typo, at the SEVENTIETH spot! I refused to use the pages of Rolling Stone even as toilet paper from then on.

  • Bluesbro

    John M. says:
    November 29th, 2011 at 8:53 am
    @Bluesbro: That nation waits thing sounds vaguely familiar. In case you are new to this world Van Halen has nothing to prove to anyone, theyve already proven themselves.
    Im so glad they haven’t churned out mediocre music like their former lead singer has done.
    35 hrs. and counting, are you paying attention

    Yes, I’m paying attention. They no-showed like I expected.

  • watergrass

    RS mag. are fucked up and dont have any clue….we VH fans refuse to read it.
    Hope RS file chapter 11 soon.

    EVH = greatest guitar player in the universe

  • MasVH

    Keith Richards, Chuck Berry & BB King ahead of EVH? LOL! Somebody pass me some of what RS is smoking–their list reeks of pooh!!

    1. Jimmy Page
    2. Eddie Van Halen
    3. Jimi Hendrix
    4. Stevie Ray Vaughan
    5. David Gilmour
    6. Neal Schon
    7. Jeff Beck
    8. Satriani
    9. Randy Rhoads
    10.Warren Dimartini

  • Lord Sausage

    Look i love EVh but a few people on here are a bit blinkered. He should be higher than 8. But he shouldn’t be higher than Page. Page should be 1 then pos EVH. EVH a is a better player technically, but Jimmy contributed more a texturally did more with a guitar.

  • http://vhnd Rig

    78=VH=84 says:
    November 28th, 2011 at 11:28 pm
    @ Rig. you said what?!! “Ed wouldnt know what to do if he sat with Keith for a while , showing him blues licks he cant figure out. And vice versa with Ed showing him some crazy fingertapping that Keith would have no idea what to do with.” WTF?!!! Keith only knows maybe a best half a dozen blues licks, he only repeats the same notes in every song. As for the Rolling Stones the real guitarist that knew how to solo was Mick Taylor. No wonder Keef got rid of him, the guy was playing things that outshine Keef! Do people people hear know that Keef stoled the main riff of ‘Start Me Up’ from Mick Taylor? There’s some news that refuses to surface.

    But so say Keith will teach Eddie something Eddie doesn’t know already is just plain ridicules. Maybe its Ed’s way of saying, ‘You know those same old blues licks have been done to death, he’s another way they can be played”. That my friend is called an innovator. Eddie played things that got people & musicians thinking “how in the hell did he do that?!!” And he kept doing it album after album and I just can’t wait what the new VH album King Eddie has in store for us!!!
    LOL, LOL Trust me, keith would teach Ed something he wouldnt know. Its a shame some of you dont really know the Blues….I love Ed, i really do. He is fucking amazing….but he doesnt really know where it all came from.

  • http://vhnd Rig

    And Keith would say….dude….every can in the world is fingertapping like that,,, its been done to death,, come up with something new

  • http://vhnd Rig

    Start me up?? really , your basis on this argument is Start me up? Wow. What a shame.

  • Michael

    This new list wasn’t made by Rolling Stone directly… they got a bunch of musicians and people who work in the music industry to vote on it. I personally believe this to be a really good list (much better than the one they put out earlier) because if anyone knows who is the best guitarist it’s the people who work in the industry itself.

  • Michael

    Oh, and the people who are knocking Chuck Berry: if it wasn’t for him, rock music would be based on horn sections and saxophones. He was the original rock guitarist, and basically the inventor of the rock guitar solo. His influence alone put him in the spot he deserves.