In a new interview with Australian Musician, Joe Satriani said he’s having a special amp built to replicate Eddie Van Halen’s sound for the upcoming Best Of All Worlds tour.
“What I learned from ‘The Howard Stern Show’, besides it’s still important to rehearse and you can’t do gigs without rehearsals… But what, what it confirmed was a couple of things I was thinking about, which was that Eddie had specific gear — he really did,” Satriani said. “He didn’t play with the gear I used or Steve Vai or Slash or Tom Morello or any of his contemporaries. He actually had a very specific setup. And you ask yourself, ‘Well, why?’ Well, it’s because, besides he was a genius, as we know, he knew that in order for him to play those parts, he had to have his gear tweaked a certain way; otherwise it wouldn’t work. So, like when you go to play the beginning of ‘Mean Street’, if your setup is not allowing those harmonics to jump out, it’s gonna sound like you’re not hitting them. You’ve gotta get the setup right.
“If you refer to the first… Let’s say, if you go to ‘Live Without A Net’ or any of those things, even the early period, ‘5150’ period, from [David Lee] Roth to the early [Sammy] Hagar period where he’s still using Marshalls, when he goes to do things like that, it’s a success. Every time he goes to hit a harmonic, boom, there it is. And it’s low noise, big round fidelity, still sounds organic. You fast forward to live at the Tokyo Dome [2015’s ‘Tokyo Dome Live in Concert’], it’s a totally different thing. He’s playing an entirely different amp. When he goes to do those things, he’s getting an overt amount of harmonic information, but he’s also getting a ton of noise and none of the body that was part of the earlier sound.
“Now I learned that because of those two [EVH] amps right there. I got those back when Alex [Van Halen] and Dave called and asked me to do the Eddie tribute tour, and I thought, ‘Well, I’ve gotta figure this out.’ So the first thing I did was I got a couple of those and I thought, ‘Well, this is great. You get all the harmonics, but, man, this is really small sounding. This is like for modern…’ If I was 20 years old and I was playing modern rock, those would be the best amps ever. But I’m not, and I still wanna hear sort of the body of the guitar and I wanna hear a more dynamic mix. So I started to think, ‘Well, what’s my favorite Van Halen section?’ And I did find that period in ’86. I talked to Sam quite a bit about it and he said, yeah, that first 5150, he was still using Marshalls. In Sammy’s view, his favorite sound that Eddie ever made. It wasn’t small and then stereoized. So I reached out to Dylana Scott at 3rd Power amplifiers, and she is building me what we believe is going to be the amp that does it…”
Satriani continued: “This goes back to what I said earlier about how the gear is so important for the performer. I know that when we step out on stage and whether I’m playing ‘Ain’t Talkin’ ‘Bout Love’ or ‘5150’, I’m gonna need to feel and hear that sound to convince myself to keep going. And if it’s not working, then I’m just gonna say, ‘Well, let me just have my solo rig.’ But my solo rig is designed — it probably has a little too much gain, and is designed to make the high strings really fat sounding, because I play all the melodies. I play very little rhythm guitar all night long. It’s just solo melody, solo melody. And I can’t play the Hagar set like that. It’s just the wrong sound. Chickenfoot, it kind of worked. But for the for the Van Halen stuff to really pop, and then we’re doing Montrose, we’re doing Sammy Hagar solo stuff, we’re doing my stuff, we’re doing Chickenfoot. It’s a really fun setlist. Great setlist. But I know, in my heart, that I wanna hear that sound in my head, that mythical Eddie Van Halen sound that we all sort of hear in our mind, and I wanna be able to feel it. And so I’ve been getting these clips from Dylana every week, and the stuff that she’s building is really amazing.”
The Best Of All Worlds featuring Sammy Hagar, Michael Anthony, Joe Satriani, and Jason Bonham begins on July 13th in West Palm Beach, Florida.