I said it before and I’ll say it again. Eddie deserves a statue. In my hometown Nijmegen, where Alex and Eddie lived until they moved to the US, we have street names named after the greatest rock bands and important artists. Surely there must be a nice place for a statue somewhere! Around the corner of the house where the Van Halen family lived there’s a square with an ugly statue of two bull horns. Surely nobody will have a problem to replace that thing for a beautiful real life statue of my guitar hero. If anyone deserves it it’s Eddie! ❤
@@kerzytibok3211 : EXACTLY!!! Half of Nijmegen is named after Nina Simone. She’s great, but she only just lived here for a year. In a hotel room. And for the greatest part of that year she wasn’t even there. I’m perfectly fine with that. But if that’s how you treat someone like Nina Simone, then surely our Eddie deserves more than what he has now: absolutely nothing! It’s a shame!
I think there should be a statue of EVH anywhere that he has stepped foot! We all have our opinions of who is the greatest guitarist ever. Not sure why we have to label who’s #1,#2..and so on but maybe it helps people rest better at night I guess. I’ll just say EVH is very high up on my top 5. I sleep very well
I bought the first VH album while I was stationed in Korea in the US Army way back in the day. I'm 68 now. It was a bootleg copy the Koreans had made. I took it back to the barracks not knowing what I had since I had never heard of the band. We cracked open some beers and started to listen and were blown away. Music was never the same after that.
Keith, why not a "Basses of......." series? You could do Geddy Lee, Phil Lesh, Bill Wyman, John Entwistle, even Michael Anthony........ Just a suggestion. AWESOME channel, please keep up the great work, it's much appreciated!
On that note.. Geddy Lee has a new show Streaming. It’s called (“Are Bass Players Human Too?!””) or something like that.. 🎉🎉He hangs out with other Bass players.
Anyone who grew up in the ‘70’s knew who Eddie Van Halen was. He was a true innovator like Les Paul and others before him. He built guitars out of necessity because his family was poor and he wanted certain features that builders were not doing at the time. He, like Hendrix before him, changed everything. And he did it all with a smile on his face and took us all along with him. The first time I heard “Eruption” I thought, “What the hell was that?” One thing that I think is overlooked a lot is Eddie’s rhythm playing. You hear people imitating him and you can hear that they don’t quite have it. Anybody can shred if you practice enough and just work on speed but not everybody can play with the swing and groove he did. Listen to “Drop Dead Legs” on the 1984 album and tell me that doesn’t get the hairs on your arm to stand up. I literally did cry the day he died. I listened to Van Halen so much in high school and college and knew the words to every song and knew the guitar parts on all of the albums. He is so missed. He was the G.O.A.T. for me.
@@kurtbader9711 absolutely! Top Jimmy was another favorite. I listened to the album 1984 about a gazillion times in high school. Eddie was so great…….now that I think of it 1984 took a lot of heat from some hardcore fans but I think it is one of their best. After I heard Panama for the first time it was game over for me in the guitar hero category. Ed was his own category.
You said it! It's called 'Riffage', and Steve Clark,, Malcolm Young, Joe Walsh, Jimmy Page, they all had it. But Eddie put 'swing' into it. And that's no surprise, since his dad, Jan, played that clarinet in, you guessed it, 'Swing Bands'. And Eddie & Alex grew up hearing 'Swing' all the time. The 'seeds' were planted at a very young age! Copping Eddies 'Swing Riffs' came pretty easy to me, very naturally, because, just like the VH brothers, my younger brother & I grew up hearing our dad play 'Texas SWING' C&W music, professionally, on 10-string Pedal Steel through the 1970s and 1980s. So, that 'swing'-element was 'engrained' in my heart and soul forever. And when I first heard "I'm The One" off VH1, I related to it immediately and after I got my first real guitar, a 1986 Peavey Impact 1 guitar for Christmas 1986, it was NO TIME before I too, was playing Eddie's 'Swing Riff' that runs throughout that song. I took to it quickly. But the more 'complicated' soloing techniques, like the 2nd solo break Ed starts off with in that song, I didn't take to it so easily, but the fast picking I 'did' take to somewhat easily, was a bit 'rough' at first, then built strength in my arm and began 'staccato-picking' like Ed recorded on the records.
To my mind, Edward Van Halen was the single most influential guitar player of all time. He represents a complete paradigm shift in how the instrument was played. Outclassing everything before or since in the world of guitar. Gone way too soon, we aren't likely to ever see another like him. Rest in Peace, Edward Van Halen for you, surely, have earned it. Thank you for the inspiration and thank you Keith for the video.
First saw VH at the Golden West Ballroon in Downey, CA. My bass player at the time just kept saying, “you gotta see this guy,” so we went and whoa. Eddie appeared with platform tennis shoes and a beat up 335 that was painted beige…like, painted with a roller. Looked like shite but sounded amazing…so good, so precise, SO much personality, no whammy stuff (yet). Amazing.
Eddie always had that smile, I saw VH on the 1983 tour, and Eddie smiled through that whole concert, I never meet him, but I bet he was a blast to be around.
Thank you, Keith, for this. I was in 8th grade, I had rode my bike to school, and I had a little money in my pocket. I had been playing about 2 years at that point, and I wanted to buy an album that ROCKED. My buddy had a brother that was a senior in high school, and my buddy described this new album... I pedaled over to the dime store, found the album, brought it home, put it on the turntable in my room, and my guitar trajectory changed forever. RIP, King Edward. Again, thanks for all you do Keith.
Thanks Keith! It brings back a lot of memories. I was living in L.A. at the time Van Halen exploded on the scene. I was sitting in the back of a Camaro with brand new "Mindblower" speakers when I listened to VH1 for the first time. It was February 1978 and it turned out to be a very cloudy day.
I remember being 12 years old and just getting my birthday money. I went down to the local record shop and bought 4 albums. 1984 was one of them, nothing was ever the same after that.
Whenever I listen or read about the biographies of these guitar legends, I’m always curious about the formative stages of their guitar journeys. The stories are always something like “He got his first guitar for his 14th birthday, formed a band with his school buddies, and started playing gigs in town….” You NEVER hear about them learning and struggling with the instrument. It probably doesn’t exist anywhere, but wouldn’t it be cool… just once… to see a legend learning their first chords and their first songs? I just can’t picture a young Eddy fumbling through a barre chord, but I’d love to see a home movie of it!
@@TheWackyWorkbench Exactly. There are SO many talented people out there. But are there really more than there used to be, or has the creation of social media just made us AWARE that they’re out there? Both, I think.
I had the pleasure of seeing EVH play three times in my life. I recall seeing the 1984 album cover at school that for some reason a kid brought to school. ( I guess I would have as well if I had one then) My first concert I ever went to was 5150 in Omaha Nebraska and back then was open admission so was able to get right up front. WOW as a teenager was blown away. Later in life got the chance to see him two more times and really could appreciate what I was seeing. in person it is amazing to watch him play so effortlessly. The smile he had on his face playing with his son on Bass on the last concert I saw was amazing. He wil be missed. Thanks for the great video.
Keith i remember EVH's 1st album like it was yesterday. My best friend from middle school had just bought the VH1 tape. 8 track tapes were a thing in '78. "He said you gotta hear this". Eruption comes on. My jaw hit the floor. And we listened to the entire album on tape. This was our first year of high school. I will never forget this because he loaned me the portable tape player and it ate the brand new tape at my house. Frantically i opened it up and put everything back right. Never worked on those things before. Sweating bullets the whole time hoping it would work and sound right. I did tell my best friend what happened, but he was cool with it. This was our favorite group for ever. Thanks for the memories Keith.
Longtime watcher, new subscriber here. I love the way you do your story lead-ins, like you looking at brother Brian after those first few chords on 'Runnin With the Devil" and him saying, "I told you so." Some things you just need to hear, no explanation will do. My experience was the same; "never heard THIS before." Thank you for your contribution to the music world. Your storytelling talent has grown over the years.
I totally remember the first time I herd Van Halen it was 1978, I was a freshman in High school in San Diego going to the local JC Friday night football game and my buddy was playing Runnin With The Devil at the tailgate party in the parking lot…Mind Blown🙀
your intro monologue mirrored my first experience with that first album and made me smile and very reflective about MY guitar journey …. thank you Kieth. … Thank you Eddie
The Rude guitar is one of my favorites because it’s so funky - extra thick body, modified Danelectro neck. Great paint job too as it does an homage to the original black and white.
Very nice video. When Van Halen came out nobody could figure out what the hell he was doing on his guitar. Some people said it wasn’t a guitar lol. His guitar sound his style of playing changed history. Much like Hendrix.
I remember hearing Eruption for the first time. I was about 14. A couple of us kids were at the playground right next to my house one afternoon and I remember another older kid from high school pulled up in a pick up and said you have got to hear this guy on guitar. It had to be early summer of 78. I was a huge KISS fan but like Yngwie said, hearing Eruption was like a nuclear bomb going off!! To this day, I'm still totally captivated by Eddie's mastery and equipment. I think every one of us can now look back and see what a special guitarist he was.
Hey Keith!! I got pulled away from things for a bit so finally getting to this! I'm so excited..thanks bro 🤘so happy to see Pete Thorn on the intro..there's nobody better imo at Eddie's playing than Pete
When you discuss the Kramer 5150 guitar you showed photos of the Hot For Teacher guitar (named because it’s used in the video for that song) which was recently sold at auction and was not one of his main guitars. His main 5150 guitar from 1984-1991 is a different guitar that was never sold at auction and now belongs to his son Wolfgang since EVH passed away.
Ed had tons of them 5150’s from Kramer , research vids of 5150from back in that timeframe and you can see a shitload of prepainted bodies on the floor..
@@toddprater14That’s not correct. There was only the 5150 and the 1984. When Kramer ceased production all those bodies that were painted (likely by George Felise) were shipped to 5150 and are likely still there
@@_Fair_Warning thats what I said … I seen a video of 5150 studio awhile ago… there were a bunch of 5150 guitar bodies on floor..Ed had to have at least more than one while touring from 84-91… most guitarists have backups… Ed definitely only had one Frankie though from 77-79, then bumblebee and a circle guitar and the Rasta one in the early 80’s. The shark.. also and some weird shaped ones
@@toddprater14 from the 1984 to F.U.C.K., he used the 5150 pacer prototype and the 1984 Baretta was a backup to the 5150. He had the “Neptune”, “Hot for teacher”, Kramer Ad guitar, “Ripley”(a 5150 with a rosewood board) and a shit ton of other 5150 look a likes he had when he was endorsed by Kramer. There’s literally hundreds of painted bodies he probably had in his 8 years with Kramer.
my favorite is the yellow kramer double neck. he used it for the guitar solo on his birthday night in jackson, ms in 1984. he did cathedral and everything on it. having said that, you can't beat the original frankie. another cool one, the white "circles" guitar was used a lot on the fair warning tour. it later became the rasta. and the "little guitar" deserves a mention as well. good job Keith
One guitar Eddie had was a custom made Ripley stereo guitar (he might have used it on a song called "Top Jimmy ") anyway, thanks for the video, all his guitars were great but only because he made them that way; he was the best and truly missed by all us die-hard Van Halen fans.
I was at my friends house it was after school when his older cousin came over with his guitar, peavey amp (which only had the faceplate with the speaker and the seperate head with the controls, he leaned the speaker against the wall and spanned the head between 2 kitchen chairs) and an album. He said you guys have to hear this. He fired up the record player and you didn’t hear a sound from anyone for at least 10 min. This was August 78’ I had just turned 12 the first time I heard the VH1 album. Fast forward October 27, 2020 I was at work in NW Kansas, I had been on for 28 hours straight, got a nap drove into town for a shower. I turned the radio on and that was when I learned of his death. I am not ashamed to say I shed a tear on that long dusty drive. It was as if a book had been closed on a part of my life. Ahh, I go on too long, thanks for the review of his guitars and their sequence. It was great!
Great video! I played Kramers and Jacksons in the 80s... while I never played exactly like Eddie they just fit. Oddly enough after ignoring them for years I picked up a Wolfgang and it just fits, super easy to play and I just feel at home with it. Now I have multiple ones from different ears, still need an EBMM, and play them most of the time. Ed truly changed everything for many of us, not just how we play but what we try at times and in many ways what we play as well. To me the Wolfgang is the perfect blend of a my LPs and my Strats, much more so than my C24.
Great video man! Love how EVH was such a tinkerer!Would have loved to seen the story behind the black and white “circles” guitar too from around the Fair Warning days.
My absolute favorite guitar is the black and yellow stripped guitar,my friend and I, my friend Brent Woods, who has played w ith numerous musicians, we just daydreamed of having that guitar,it just looked so cool! After trying to build a few ,I finally could afford to buy an Artist series EVH mod e l,and I have every other DLR era guitar ,and a black Wolfgang. I had a custom Shark guitar made that is probably the best sounding guitar that I have ever heard! My friend Brent and I were both students of Randy Rhoads, so we were both very lucky! I have a large collection of guitars, all the EVH and RR guitars,plus KISS, and just about every thing else you could think of. I hàvè amazing White Anniversary series Marshall JCM 800 modded heads and run them with 5150 or Randall stacks ,wet dry wet, have run that set up since 1987. Good video! I can still remember the first time I heard Van Halen 1. Also I ran into Eddie with my Mom at a Tom Jones show and Eddie loved my mom ,she is half Dutch with a little Cherokee, he called her mom ,and she was always on the list when Van Halen played LA ,I was always the plus one! My Mom,passed away in June of 2020 and Eddie in Oct. ,that year sucked! But ,I still love Eddie and I actually listen to some Van Hagar now ,it's like a different world!
Thanks for bringing back great memories of the best time to have been alive. Like it or not Van Halen changed life for many and created an entire new era of music. For many of us to this day, it is a lifestyle.
Can you imagine someone today tinkering with a '68 LP, parting out a '58 strat, taking a saw and paint to an original 70's Ibanez copy or ripping the neck humbucker out of a '59 burst?!?!?!? 😂🤣😆
@five watt world, as others have pointed out the Kramer in the photo was not the 5150, it was the “Hot For Teacher” guitar built by Paul Unkert in 1982. The 5150 came after and there was much speculation as to who built it. Recently Paul Reed Smith claimed he finished it while he was an intern @ Kramer. This period of the 80’s @ Kramer changed guitars forever
Tgabk you so very much for putting in the work to remake thjs video, it was the first video I watched from your channel and I was devestated when it got taken down.
Great video. Back in the day, I wrote for The Inside magazine and interviewed Ed a few times. Once, after a soundcheck in about 1993, I asked him if he ever brought the Bumblebee on tour anymore. He told me that it was too heavy and he didn’t like playing it live. He said that Wayne Charvel built and painted that guitar for him in an effort to ultimately get Ed’s endorsement, which never happened. So, that guitar wasn’t actually one that Ed built. He did, however, modify it through the second tour in 1979. After that tour, Ed said he “just hung it in the wall” before putting it in the guitar storage room above his home studio (5150).
Great video. I was only 7 when VH1 was released, and so a bit too young to be aware of it. The first cassette I ever bought was 1984, which of course opened the door to "what other albums do they have?" Then that rising horn, then the bass, then the guitar...
I remember my trio Skyhook was booked in the old hotel in downtown Normal Illinois, doing a week before Mother's in Chicago. Before we left Michigan I had bought a really, really beat Fender Jaguar as a second backup. In Normal was a shop called Ax in Hand where the shop owner told me he could put a Mustang bridge on it and make it play in tune really well. On the shop stereo was then new band Van Halen, the tune was 'Running with the Devil.' When I heard Van Halen I said to myself, ' gonna finish the dates we've got booked and get some other job,,' That's where I was, Keith. Thanks for your work.
Another great short history! I love Eddie and it was great to learn what a guitar tinkerer he was! He had a very distinct sound. BTW, I think a bass SH is a great idea. 😊
I’m a local country picker in El Dorado County CA, but Eddie Van Halen was one of my biggest early inspirations! Him, Kurt Cobain and Slash were the three people that made me pick up a guitar when I was in Jr High!
My Van Halen introduction happened in almost exactly the same way, same kind of room, same time of day, with my cousins, who said "check this out". Eruption is the standout, but "Running with the Devil" is the track that did it for me. A great memory. great viddie as always
that's a good subject to do great idea I'd like to find my Fernandez V I paid 4 hundred for it and found one for 16 hundred my brother was (is) or was a meth head idiot I have a new Gibson les paul standard with a cool flamed top and he doesn't have my address so I'm safe and it's not far away from me my wife and kids know better or 😮 lol
I too remember the first time I heard van halen 1. I had set my guitar down again for another frustration break, this one being over a year. I picked it back up afterwards.
I was blessed to see VH at the Paradise Rock Club in Boston in 78 right in front of him at the front of the stage. As a young guitarist he destroyed me.
I remember in Circus or Creem back in the early 80's. Eddie detailing how he soaked his pickups in wax to limit feedback and that he soldered all his string ball ends and end windings. He used the Variac to lower the voltage in his amps to get the brown sound. As in brown out wall power. The brown sound is not brown in color, it describes the AC line conditions. He put the car horns in the box that we hear at the beginning of Running with the devil. He put the Echoplex in the bomb casing that we hear at the end of Eruption. They used to stand that bomb onstage. He modded his 4x12 cabs with different speakers and investigated removing the Tolex and grilles to improve sound. Eddie was a MAJOR do it yourself product improver and optimizer. That is why his sound was so damn harmonically rich and squeezy sounding. Like a big fat caricature of the Marshall sound. The best Marshall sound ever. Ever.
5:21 if I remember correctly, it was David Lee Roth’s idea to use the brothers’ last name as the band name, an idea that Eddie originally thought was “dumb”.
Kinda coming full circle that the pre-VH band name "Mammoth" would resurface decades later for Eddie's son's band, though I'm sure it coincidentally was Wolf's personal idea first rather than as a nod to his father's old band name.
@@frankrichards3089100% it was Roth’s idea. He thought it was a cool sounding name and said that should be the band’s name, and, coming from an ego like Roth’s,…lol…that is a great compliment to the Van Halen family!
You forgot his custon "snake" guitar he was playing back in the garage days, the white Les Paul, the yellow Kramer double neck from 1983, and the vintage Korina Gibson Flying V. Eddie had so many awesome guitars!!!!
Van Halen was my very first concert back in 2012 when I was 13 and Eddie has always been one of my favourite guitarists and biggest influences alongside guys like George Harrison (my first major influence) and David Gilmour (after Eddie), he had such a unique style of playing and musicianship that definitely makes him one of the GOATs and I still remember how devastated I was to hear about his passing but great vid as usual. I know these may seem a bit different because of their genres but I’d love to see a video on the guitars of Daron Malakian, James Hetfield/Kirk Hammett, John Frusciante, Billy Gibbons, Billie Joe Armstrong or Dan Auerbach
Thanks for the info and the acclaim to the Greatest Guitarist of my generation. True story, best concert I didn't see. In 1980 VH came to my hometown for the 1st time that night a local radio station played only VH songs the entire night I was 14 yrs old. This was the the 1st time I had ever heard VH and it changed my life forever. From that moment I never missed a VH concert that came. Saw the original, my favorite, 3 times and Van Hagar once, meh. Miss you EVH.
Great video! The first time I became aware of Van Halen was in 1984 when I was a kid, because of the JUMP video on MTV. I believe I received the “single” on record for Christmas. By the time I got to high school, I started to get into the back catalog and that’s when I started getting CDs. I’d say Van Halen is my favorite band, and Eddie is my favorite guitar player of all time. I currently own a Peavey Wolfgang and have a Frankenstrat replica and 5150 replica. I assembled and painted both myself. I think the 5150 is still my favorite Eddie guitar.
I've had those defining music moments and Van Halen's first album was one. I was 8, I was at my neighbours after school...his dad come home, pulled the plastic off the album, put on side 1...time lost all meaning...it was set in stone, from that moment on I was a VH fan.
Michael Hedges is kind of the EVH of acoustic guitar. Aerial Boundaries album. Frequently sounds like two tracks but he plays both parts at the same time on one neck through a Martin D-40 or so, with a couple pickups inside.
Amazing episode! You have done such an amazing job honing your craft with words that during your first description of hearing Eddie, it brought me right these as if I was sitting in the same room as you experiencing it for the first time with you! Thank you!
I saw VH back in 84 live at the Montreal Forum. I was 8 row orchestra but on Michael Anthony's side. Best Show I ever seen. They even have it on RUclips :)
Great to see a fresh Five Watt short story, well researched as always and presented as they are. I am a bit hung up on the old Heathkit amplifier / receiver that you spoke of that you first played VH on, I would like to think that it still survives but I fear it's not likely. Your story also reminds me of how fresh and rare new music was, it was on vinyl pretty much exclusively (other than low-fi AM radio for the most part) and it was so exciting to get your hands on a fresh or more likely loaned copy of some new music. I remember listening to Boston for the first time and staring at the album art while caught up in all that whizzy electricness of their sound. Keep it up Keith, always enjoy your efforts.
@@fivewattworld I know they make the F650 as an 'adventure bike' but they may build others. I'm sure it's been done. My experience with Rotax has been mostly snowmobiles. Love their rotary valve engines, the torque curve is a sexy beast.
There's a guitar that you missed that was inspired by The Shark and that is The Star Guitar. The body was made by Wayne Charvel (not shure what type of wood) matched with a Danelectro (I believe '59) neck. About the Destroyer. Pete Thorn said for the Premier Guitar video that his 76 is maded by Japanese Ash wood called Sen. For the 5150 guitar, I think I read it somеwhere (not shure where) that is a poplar body. Also about the maple necks, that he often used unfinished birdseye maple necks (not shure of how many pieces) Anyway, good video. Thanks Keith.
Thank you for making this video. While I am a fan of Eddjie, I have to admit to not having had as high a regard. In recent weeks, I’ve had an awakening. Your video has helped me to appreciate his music. Your video was inspiring.
Sweet Heathkit reference! I grew up with Heathkit electronics everywhere in the house. My dad was an electrical engineer, so it was a no-brainer. I’m a EE too, so it’s no surprise that I build my own guitar amplifiers.
Well written and presented, with some new facts. That’s hard to do with so many docs about EVH. I was never shy about buying low end guitars and experimenting, thanks to being given “permission” by the likes of Eddie and others such as Brian May.
I was in kindergarten when Van Halen I came out and had a friend who had a high school aged brother who was a drummer and totally into Alex - his bedroom had a drum riser and was a literal shrine to Van Halen. For the next few years I absorbed all of those songs in my young head as we played in the house with the brother's stereo blasting as he practiced all of the songs from the first album up to 1984 (released in '83). It made winters and bad weather not such a bad thing.
Nice work Keith,. Probably the Unchained guitar is the only iconic one you missed, even though I think it had a fairly short life on the Fair Warning tour. It'd be great to see a follow up on his large collection of odd-ball guitars, like the SG he cut the lower horn off to play slide on Dirty Movies, his carved dragon guitar, the black and yellow double neck he played "Secrets" on live, the "Megazone" guitar, the mini Les Paul from "Little Guitars"
Eddie is the reason I bought my Kramer Baretta in 1985. I saw that Bozo ad of him holding it, and I had to have it. I still have it, and I will never sell it.
I'm looking forward to this, and I know hie bitsa guitars were the most played, but I have a soft spot for Steinbergers, so I'm looking forward to the GL2T. Love your work Keith.
great story brother! i guess im a "member" officially of the "5 watt" club...i recently traded for a all tube crate v5....5 watts of tube greatness! replaced the stock 10in speaker with a jensen MOD model(10in)...8ohms as the OG speaker was...sounds xtra good now!
Also, the boogie bodies guitar was not routed for a humbucker in the bridge - Ed did that himself with a chisel, hence why it looks so uneven. He also angled the pickup so that the end pole pieces would each be under an E string as the spacing between a Fender and a Gibson were not the same. Other guitars not mentioned: Kramer Ripley used on Top Jimmy which had pan controls for each string; double neck 12/6 string for Secrets; and of course how can anyone forget the 3/4 scale Les Paul used for Little Guitars?
I remember my dad gave me that album for Christmas when it was new the first Van Halen and one day I was working out and I put it on to listen to it and two hours later of straight curls. I went to bed and slept for 15 hours woke up with a sore arms in the world.
I have a frankenstein copy strat, it plays great, but it's more like a cherished work of art. Its old and beat up, but still looks amazing. One of my favorite guitars in my collection.
Eddie is certainly idolized for his insane/inovative lead playing. But I have always been more draw his rhythm guitar playing and fills - so imaginitive.
My favourite guitar is Eddie's "Unchained" (or Circles) guitar that he famously used in the Oakland '81 show! I love the "See ya later!" text graphic on the back - I thought it was very Eddie :)
I said it before and I’ll say it again. Eddie deserves a statue. In my hometown Nijmegen, where Alex and Eddie lived until they moved to the US, we have street names named after the greatest rock bands and important artists. Surely there must be a nice place for a statue somewhere!
Around the corner of the house where the Van Halen family lived there’s a square with an ugly statue of two bull horns. Surely nobody will have a problem to replace that thing for a beautiful real life statue of my guitar hero. If anyone deserves it it’s Eddie! ❤
I think it's criminal that Nijmegen doesn't have a statue of Eddie in the town square --- that is insulting to their greatest hometown hero!
@@kerzytibok3211 : EXACTLY!!!
Half of Nijmegen is named after Nina Simone. She’s great, but she only just lived here for a year. In a hotel room. And for the greatest part of that year she wasn’t even there. I’m perfectly fine with that. But if that’s how you treat someone like Nina Simone, then surely our Eddie deserves more than what he has now: absolutely nothing! It’s a shame!
I agree... And don't call me Shirley.
@@SaintKines : 😂
“Joey, do you like movies with gladiators?”
I think there should be a statue of EVH anywhere that he has stepped foot! We all have our opinions of who is the greatest guitarist ever. Not sure why we have to label who’s #1,#2..and so on but maybe it helps people rest better at night I guess. I’ll just say EVH is very high up on my top 5. I sleep very well
I bought the first VH album while I was stationed in Korea in the US Army way back in the day. I'm 68 now. It was a bootleg copy the Koreans had made. I took it back to the barracks not knowing what I had since I had never heard of the band. We cracked open some beers and started to listen and were blown away. Music was never the same after that.
Thank you for your service Sir!
I totally agree, my Fellow Veteran Brother! Music was NEVER the same!
Never!
VH great. this side of paradise guitars steve stevens ric ocasek changed guitar for me
Keith, why not a "Basses of......." series? You could do Geddy Lee, Phil Lesh, Bill Wyman, John Entwistle, even Michael Anthony........ Just a suggestion. AWESOME channel, please keep up the great work, it's much appreciated!
Show us bass players some love
Bass stuff just doesn’t get the views unfortunately.
Even Jaco, that'd be really sweet
On that note.. Geddy Lee has a new show Streaming. It’s called (“Are Bass Players Human Too?!””) or something like that.. 🎉🎉He hangs out with other Bass players.
I'd be a fan of that idea. Also, a Guitars of Frank Zappa would be cool, though it might be too much work for the amount of views it may garner.
God bless Eddie. And God bless you for doing this. I’m in tears. I miss him SO terribly.
Anyone who grew up in the ‘70’s knew who Eddie Van Halen was. He was a true innovator like Les Paul and others before him. He built guitars out of necessity because his family was poor and he wanted certain features that builders were not doing at the time. He, like Hendrix before him, changed everything. And he did it all with a smile on his face and took us all along with him. The first time I heard “Eruption” I thought, “What the hell was that?” One thing that I think is overlooked a lot is Eddie’s rhythm playing. You hear people imitating him and you can hear that they don’t quite have it. Anybody can shred if you practice enough and just work on speed but not everybody can play with the swing and groove he did. Listen to “Drop Dead Legs” on the 1984 album and tell me that doesn’t get the hairs on your arm to stand up. I literally did cry the day he died. I listened to Van Halen so much in high school and college and knew the words to every song and knew the guitar parts on all of the albums. He is so missed. He was the G.O.A.T. for me.
He's the King for a reason!!! Rest easy Eddie, you're definetly missed but not forgotten. 🤴🎸🤘🔥
couldn't agree more !!!
Top Jimmy too.
@@kurtbader9711 absolutely! Top Jimmy was another favorite. I listened to the album 1984 about a gazillion times in high school. Eddie was so great…….now that I think of it 1984 took a lot of heat from some hardcore fans but I think it is one of their best. After I heard Panama for the first time it was game over for me in the guitar hero category. Ed was his own category.
You said it! It's called 'Riffage', and Steve Clark,, Malcolm Young, Joe Walsh, Jimmy Page, they all had it. But Eddie put 'swing' into it. And that's no surprise, since his dad, Jan, played that clarinet in, you guessed it, 'Swing Bands'. And Eddie & Alex grew up hearing 'Swing' all the time. The 'seeds' were planted at a very young age! Copping Eddies 'Swing Riffs' came pretty easy to me, very naturally, because, just like the VH brothers, my younger brother & I grew up hearing our dad play 'Texas SWING' C&W music, professionally, on 10-string Pedal Steel through the 1970s and 1980s. So, that 'swing'-element was 'engrained' in my heart and soul forever. And when I first heard "I'm The One" off VH1, I related to it immediately and after I got my first real guitar, a 1986 Peavey Impact 1 guitar for Christmas 1986, it was NO TIME before I too, was playing Eddie's 'Swing Riff' that runs throughout that song. I took to it quickly. But the more 'complicated' soloing techniques, like the 2nd solo break Ed starts off with in that song, I didn't take to it so easily, but the fast picking I 'did' take to somewhat easily, was a bit 'rough' at first, then built strength in my arm and began 'staccato-picking' like Ed recorded on the records.
To my mind, Edward Van Halen was the single most influential guitar player of all time. He represents a complete paradigm shift in how the instrument was played. Outclassing everything before or since in the world of guitar. Gone way too soon, we aren't likely to ever see another like him. Rest in Peace, Edward Van Halen for you, surely, have earned it. Thank you for the inspiration and thank you Keith for the video.
First saw VH at the Golden West Ballroon in Downey, CA. My bass player at the time just kept saying, “you gotta see this guy,” so we went and whoa. Eddie appeared with platform tennis shoes and a beat up 335 that was painted beige…like, painted with a roller. Looked like shite but sounded amazing…so good, so precise, SO much personality, no whammy stuff (yet). Amazing.
Eddie always had that smile, I saw VH on the 1983 tour, and Eddie smiled through that whole concert, I never meet him, but I bet he was a blast to be around.
Thank you, Keith, for this. I was in 8th grade, I had rode my bike to school, and I had a little money in my pocket. I had been playing about 2 years at that point, and I wanted to buy an album that ROCKED. My buddy had a brother that was a senior in high school, and my buddy described this new album... I pedaled over to the dime store, found the album, brought it home, put it on the turntable in my room, and my guitar trajectory changed forever. RIP, King Edward. Again, thanks for all you do Keith.
Exactly what happened to me with the album Jimi Hendrix Smash Hits! I played it over and over and couldn’t believe what I was hearing.
Thanks Keith! It brings back a lot of memories. I was living in L.A. at the time Van Halen exploded on the scene. I was sitting in the back of a Camaro with brand new "Mindblower" speakers when I listened to VH1 for the first time. It was February 1978 and it turned out to be a very cloudy day.
I remember being 12 years old and just getting my birthday money. I went down to the local record shop and bought 4 albums. 1984 was one of them, nothing was ever the same after that.
You must be around my age. 1984 was the first album I ever bought. I was born in 1972
Whenever I listen or read about the biographies of these guitar legends, I’m always curious about the formative stages of their guitar journeys. The stories are always something like “He got his first guitar for his 14th birthday, formed a band with his school buddies, and started playing gigs in town….” You NEVER hear about them learning and struggling with the instrument. It probably doesn’t exist anywhere, but wouldn’t it be cool… just once… to see a legend learning their first chords and their first songs? I just can’t picture a young Eddy fumbling through a barre chord, but I’d love to see a home movie of it!
I mean, with the internet, for all we know the next Elvis could be doing bedroom guitar stuff right bow
@@TheWackyWorkbench Exactly. There are SO many talented people out there. But are there really more than there used to be, or has the creation of social media just made us AWARE that they’re out there? Both, I think.
I had the pleasure of seeing EVH play three times in my life. I recall seeing the 1984 album cover at school that for some reason a kid brought to school. ( I guess I would have as well if I had one then) My first concert I ever went to was 5150 in Omaha Nebraska and back then was open admission so was able to get right up front. WOW as a teenager was blown away. Later in life got the chance to see him two more times and really could appreciate what I was seeing. in person it is amazing to watch him play so effortlessly. The smile he had on his face playing with his son on Bass on the last concert I saw was amazing. He wil be missed. Thanks for the great video.
Keith i remember EVH's 1st album like it was yesterday. My best friend from middle school had just bought the VH1 tape. 8 track tapes were a thing in '78. "He said you gotta hear this". Eruption comes on. My jaw hit the floor. And we listened to the entire album on tape. This was our first year of high school. I will never forget this because he loaned me the portable tape player and it ate the brand new tape at my house. Frantically i opened it up and put everything back right. Never worked on those things before. Sweating bullets the whole time hoping it would work and sound right. I did tell my best friend what happened, but he was cool with it. This was our favorite group for ever. Thanks for the memories Keith.
I remember where I was when I heard Van Halen. It was blaring from a car stereo. Definitely a mind-blowing experience. I was 14 years old 🤪
King Edward…thank you for all you’ve given us…rest in peace Sir…
Longtime watcher, new subscriber here. I love the way you do your story lead-ins, like you looking at brother Brian after those first few chords on 'Runnin With the Devil" and him saying, "I told you so." Some things you just need to hear, no explanation will do. My experience was the same; "never heard THIS before." Thank you for your contribution to the music world. Your storytelling talent has grown over the years.
Thanks man!
I totally remember the first time I herd Van Halen it was 1978, I was a freshman in High school in San Diego going to the local JC Friday night football game and my buddy was playing Runnin With The Devil at the tailgate party in the parking lot…Mind Blown🙀
Thank you Keith. That was great. I love this series. Another great job!
your intro monologue mirrored my first experience with that first album and made me smile and very reflective about MY guitar journey …. thank you Kieth. … Thank you Eddie
Oh yes!! Fantastic video (as always...) your attention to detail is what makes your videos so good.
He set the fretboard on fire…that made my eyes well up. Great work as usual.
The Rude guitar is one of my favorites because it’s so funky - extra thick body, modified Danelectro neck. Great paint job too as it does an homage to the original black and white.
Very nice video. When Van Halen came out nobody could figure out what the hell he was doing on his guitar. Some people said it wasn’t a guitar lol. His guitar sound his style of playing changed history. Much like Hendrix.
I remember hearing Eruption for the first time. I was about 14. A couple of us kids were at the playground right next to my house one afternoon and I remember another older kid from high school pulled up in a pick up and said you have got to hear this guy on guitar. It had to be early summer of 78. I was a huge KISS fan but like Yngwie said, hearing Eruption was like a nuclear bomb going off!! To this day, I'm still totally captivated by Eddie's mastery and equipment. I think every one of us can now look back and see what a special guitarist he was.
Hey Keith!! I got pulled away from things for a bit so finally getting to this! I'm so excited..thanks bro 🤘so happy to see Pete Thorn on the intro..there's nobody better imo at Eddie's playing than Pete
When you discuss the Kramer 5150 guitar you showed photos of the Hot For Teacher guitar (named because it’s used in the video for that song) which was recently sold at auction and was not one of his main guitars. His main 5150 guitar from 1984-1991 is a different guitar that was never sold at auction and now belongs to his son Wolfgang since EVH passed away.
Thanks for pointing that out. I was going to comment about this as well. Beat me to it : )
Ed had tons of them 5150’s from Kramer , research vids of 5150from back in that timeframe and you can see a shitload of prepainted bodies on the floor..
@@toddprater14That’s not correct. There was only the 5150 and the 1984. When Kramer ceased production all those bodies that were painted (likely by George Felise) were shipped to 5150 and are likely still there
@@_Fair_Warning thats what I said … I seen a video of 5150 studio awhile ago… there were a bunch of 5150 guitar bodies on floor..Ed had to have at least more than one while touring from 84-91… most guitarists have backups… Ed definitely only had one Frankie though from 77-79, then bumblebee and a circle guitar and the Rasta one in the early 80’s. The shark.. also and some weird shaped ones
@@toddprater14 from the 1984 to F.U.C.K., he used the 5150 pacer prototype and the 1984 Baretta was a backup to the 5150. He had the “Neptune”, “Hot for teacher”, Kramer Ad guitar, “Ripley”(a 5150 with a rosewood board) and a shit ton of other 5150 look a likes he had when he was endorsed by Kramer. There’s literally hundreds of painted bodies he probably had in his 8 years with Kramer.
my favorite is the yellow kramer double neck. he used it for the guitar solo on his birthday night in jackson, ms in 1984. he did cathedral and everything on it. having said that, you can't beat the original frankie. another cool one, the white "circles" guitar was used a lot on the fair warning tour. it later became the rasta. and the "little guitar" deserves a mention as well. good job Keith
One guitar Eddie had was a custom made Ripley stereo guitar (he might have used it on a song called "Top Jimmy ") anyway, thanks for the video, all his guitars were great but only because he made them that way; he was the best and truly missed by all us die-hard Van Halen fans.
Good call. I still have a copy of Guitar for the Practicing Musician magazine from 1985 with Eddie and the Ripley on the cover.
Knew I was gonna dig this video, but slapped a like as soon as I saw Pete wailing away.
Great video!
I was at my friends house it was after school when his older cousin came over with his guitar, peavey amp (which only had the faceplate with the speaker and the seperate head with the controls, he leaned the speaker against the wall and spanned the head between 2 kitchen chairs) and an album. He said you guys have to hear this. He fired up the record player and you didn’t hear a sound from anyone for at least 10 min. This was August 78’ I had just turned 12 the first time I heard the VH1 album. Fast forward October 27, 2020 I was at work in NW Kansas, I had been on for 28 hours straight, got a nap drove into town for a shower. I turned the radio on and that was when I learned of his death. I am not ashamed to say I shed a tear on that long dusty drive. It was as if a book had been closed on a part of my life. Ahh, I go on too long, thanks for the review of his guitars and their sequence. It was great!
Great video! I played Kramers and Jacksons in the 80s... while I never played exactly like Eddie they just fit. Oddly enough after ignoring them for years I picked up a Wolfgang and it just fits, super easy to play and I just feel at home with it. Now I have multiple ones from different ears, still need an EBMM, and play them most of the time. Ed truly changed everything for many of us, not just how we play but what we try at times and in many ways what we play as well. To me the Wolfgang is the perfect blend of a my LPs and my Strats, much more so than my C24.
Great video man! Love how EVH was such a tinkerer!Would have loved to seen the story behind the black and white “circles” guitar too from around the Fair Warning days.
Oh man I missed this video, thank you Keith for bringing back the video of my top 3 favorite guitarists
❤That was great Keith. Awesome having Pete on here for intro and outro too.
My absolute favorite guitar is the black and yellow stripped guitar,my friend and I, my friend Brent Woods, who has played w ith numerous musicians, we just daydreamed of having that guitar,it just looked so cool! After trying to build a few ,I finally could afford to buy an Artist series EVH mod e l,and I have every other DLR era guitar ,and a black Wolfgang. I had a custom Shark guitar made that is probably the best sounding guitar that I have ever heard! My friend Brent and I were both students of Randy Rhoads, so we were both very lucky! I have a large collection of guitars, all the EVH and RR guitars,plus KISS, and just about every thing else you could think of. I hàvè amazing White Anniversary series Marshall JCM 800 modded heads and run them with 5150 or Randall stacks ,wet dry wet, have run that set up since 1987. Good video! I can still remember the first time I heard Van Halen 1. Also I ran into Eddie with my Mom at a Tom Jones show and Eddie loved my mom ,she is half Dutch with a little Cherokee, he called her mom ,and she was always on the list when Van Halen played LA ,I was always the plus one! My Mom,passed away in June of 2020 and Eddie in Oct. ,that year sucked! But ,I still love Eddie and I actually listen to some Van Hagar now ,it's like a different world!
Made my day, Keith, you’re the man!
Thanks for bringing back great memories of the best time to have been alive. Like it or not Van Halen changed life for many and created an entire new era of music. For many of us to this day, it is a lifestyle.
So glad this video is finally back
Actually i had to build it over.
@@fivewattworld oh wow, I commend your ability to that
Can you imagine someone today tinkering with a '68 LP, parting out a '58 strat, taking a saw and paint to an original 70's Ibanez copy or ripping the neck humbucker out of a '59 burst?!?!?!? 😂🤣😆
Brilliant as always Keith
He was the best. Taught a generation. Thx brother, my fingers on the fretboard will always remember you.
@five watt world, as others have pointed out the Kramer in the photo was not the 5150, it was the “Hot For Teacher” guitar built by Paul Unkert in 1982. The 5150 came after and there was much speculation as to who built it. Recently Paul Reed Smith claimed he finished it while he was an intern @ Kramer. This period of the 80’s @ Kramer changed guitars forever
Tgabk you so very much for putting in the work to remake thjs video, it was the first video I watched from your channel and I was devestated when it got taken down.
Your introduction to the content is my absolute favorite. I am amazed at your storytelling about your discovery. Very real.
Thanks
Great video. Back in the day, I wrote for The Inside magazine and interviewed Ed a few times. Once, after a soundcheck in about 1993, I asked him if he ever brought the Bumblebee on tour anymore. He told me that it was too heavy and he didn’t like playing it live. He said that Wayne Charvel built and painted that guitar for him in an effort to ultimately get Ed’s endorsement, which never happened. So, that guitar wasn’t actually one that Ed built. He did, however, modify it through the second tour in 1979. After that tour, Ed said he “just hung it in the wall” before putting it in the guitar storage room above his home studio (5150).
Great video. I was only 7 when VH1 was released, and so a bit too young to be aware of it. The first cassette I ever bought was 1984, which of course opened the door to "what other albums do they have?" Then that rising horn, then the bass, then the guitar...
I remember my trio Skyhook was booked in the old hotel in downtown Normal Illinois, doing a week before Mother's in Chicago. Before we left Michigan I had bought a really, really beat Fender Jaguar as a second backup. In Normal was a shop called Ax in Hand where the shop owner told me he could put a Mustang bridge on it and make it play in tune really well. On the shop stereo was then new band Van Halen, the tune was 'Running with the Devil.' When I heard Van Halen I said to myself, ' gonna finish the dates we've got booked and get some other job,,' That's where I was, Keith. Thanks for your work.
Another great short history! I love Eddie and it was great to learn what a guitar tinkerer he was! He had a very distinct sound.
BTW, I think a bass SH is a great idea. 😊
I’m a local country picker in El Dorado County CA, but Eddie Van Halen was one of my biggest early inspirations! Him, Kurt Cobain and Slash were the three people that made me pick up a guitar when I was in Jr High!
My Van Halen introduction happened in almost exactly the same way, same kind of room, same time of day, with my cousins, who said "check this out". Eruption is the standout, but "Running with the Devil" is the track that did it for me. A great memory. great viddie as always
Famous stolen Guitars should be next.
Randy Bachman, Brian seltzer
that's a good subject to do great idea I'd like to find my Fernandez V I paid 4 hundred for it and found one for 16 hundred my brother was (is) or was a meth head idiot I have a new Gibson les paul standard with a cool flamed top and he doesn't have my address so I'm safe and it's not far away from me my wife and kids know better or 😮 lol
Love this! Took me way back, feels great being there, thank you. ❤
I too remember the first time I heard van halen 1. I had set my guitar down again for another frustration break, this one being over a year. I picked it back up afterwards.
I was blessed to see VH at the Paradise Rock Club in Boston in 78 right in front of him at the front of the stage. As a young guitarist he destroyed me.
Oh my God, I just started the video I’m 18 seconds in I’m getting a drink, gonna get in my recliner, this is going to be awesome 🎉
The story behind all the mods Eddie did is insane. I had no idea how much he continuously modded his guitars.
I remember in Circus or Creem back in the early 80's. Eddie detailing how he soaked his pickups in wax to limit feedback and that he soldered all his string ball ends and end windings. He used the Variac to lower the voltage in his amps to get the brown sound. As in brown out wall power. The brown sound is not brown in color, it describes the AC line conditions. He put the car horns in the box that we hear at the beginning of Running with the devil. He put the Echoplex in the bomb casing that we hear at the end of Eruption. They used to stand that bomb onstage. He modded his 4x12 cabs with different speakers and investigated removing the Tolex and grilles to improve sound. Eddie was a MAJOR do it yourself product improver and optimizer. That is why his sound was so damn harmonically rich and squeezy sounding. Like a big fat caricature of the Marshall sound. The best Marshall sound ever. Ever.
Yeah dude we know!@@hyperluminalreality1
Just fantastic! EVH did change things forever. He deserves that honor. I was always partial to the bumblebee!
another job well done, keith!!! cheers brother!!!
5:21 if I remember correctly, it was David Lee Roth’s idea to use the brothers’ last name as the band name, an idea that Eddie originally thought was “dumb”.
Kinda coming full circle that the pre-VH band name "Mammoth" would resurface decades later for Eddie's son's band, though I'm sure it coincidentally was Wolf's personal idea first rather than as a nod to his father's old band name.
Yes Roth suggested Van Halen as the name.
@@frankrichards3089100% it was Roth’s idea. He thought it was a cool sounding name and said that should be the band’s name, and, coming from an ego like Roth’s,…lol…that is a great compliment to the Van Halen family!
Remarkable research. I can't imagine how you pieced all this together.
You forgot his custon "snake" guitar he was playing back in the garage days, the white Les Paul, the yellow Kramer double neck from 1983, and the vintage Korina Gibson Flying V. Eddie had so many awesome guitars!!!!
the snake guitar was made 2-3 years into their popular career… not “garage days”
Oh shit, the nerds are coming out of the woodwork 😂
Van Halen was my very first concert back in 2012 when I was 13 and Eddie has always been one of my favourite guitarists and biggest influences alongside guys like George Harrison (my first major influence) and David Gilmour (after Eddie), he had such a unique style of playing and musicianship that definitely makes him one of the GOATs and I still remember how devastated I was to hear about his passing but great vid as usual. I know these may seem a bit different because of their genres but I’d love to see a video on the guitars of Daron Malakian, James Hetfield/Kirk Hammett, John Frusciante, Billy Gibbons, Billie Joe Armstrong or Dan Auerbach
So many gifts in such a short time from you, Keith! Thank you and wishing you a Merry Christmas! ✌️😌🎸🎄
Merry Christmas to me! Thanks for doing this one, Keith!
Thanks for the info and the acclaim to the Greatest Guitarist of my generation. True story, best concert I didn't see. In 1980 VH came to my hometown for the 1st time that night a local radio station played only VH songs the entire night I was 14 yrs old. This was the the 1st time I had ever heard VH and it changed my life forever. From that moment I never missed a VH concert that came. Saw the original, my favorite, 3 times and Van Hagar once, meh. Miss you EVH.
Great video, my favorite. Eddie can never be replaced.
Great video! The first time I became aware of Van Halen was in 1984 when I was a kid, because of the JUMP video on MTV. I believe I received the “single” on record for Christmas. By the time I got to high school, I started to get into the back catalog and that’s when I started getting CDs. I’d say Van Halen is my favorite band, and Eddie is my favorite guitar player of all time. I currently own a Peavey Wolfgang and have a Frankenstrat replica and 5150 replica. I assembled and painted both myself. I think the 5150 is still my favorite Eddie guitar.
I agree, the 5150 Kramer is just cool to sit and look at, definitely the best looking guitar ever!!
I've had those defining music moments and Van Halen's first album was one. I was 8, I was at my neighbours after school...his dad come home, pulled the plastic off the album, put on side 1...time lost all meaning...it was set in stone, from that moment on I was a VH fan.
Michael Hedges is kind of the EVH of acoustic guitar. Aerial Boundaries album. Frequently sounds like two tracks but he plays both parts at the same time on one neck through a Martin D-40 or so, with a couple pickups inside.
Dude... that intro music is NICE!!! 💯
Amazing episode! You have done such an amazing job honing your craft with words that during your first description of hearing Eddie, it brought me right these as if I was sitting in the same room as you experiencing it for the first time with you! Thank you!
Great video as always Keith! I would love to see a Guitars of Randy Rhoads video.
Gr8 job Keith! I remember at 1 time both Eddie & Randy Rhoads were playing an original DEAN flying Vee live on da strip.
Fantastic yet again, Keith. Bless you for doing these histories.
I saw VH back in 84 live at the Montreal Forum. I was 8 row orchestra but on Michael Anthony's side.
Best Show I ever seen. They even have it on RUclips :)
thank you so much for making this video!!! i was wondering when you would get along to making a guitars of Evh video, well worth the wait
Keith, thank you very much. This is an awesome series you have going.
The king of modding guitars, this should be fun!
Great to see a fresh Five Watt short story, well researched as always and presented as they are. I am a bit hung up on the old Heathkit amplifier / receiver that you spoke of that you first played VH on, I would like to think that it still survives but I fear it's not likely.
Your story also reminds me of how fresh and rare new music was, it was on vinyl pretty much exclusively (other than low-fi AM radio for the most part) and it was so exciting to get your hands on a fresh or more likely loaned copy of some new music. I remember listening to Boston for the first time and staring at the album art while caught up in all that whizzy electricness of their sound.
Keep it up Keith, always enjoy your efforts.
See your “rotax twin” distracted me. I always wanted to built a rotax single track day bike.
@@fivewattworld I know they make the F650 as an 'adventure bike' but they may build others. I'm sure it's been done. My experience with Rotax has been mostly snowmobiles. Love their rotary valve engines, the torque curve is a sexy beast.
Thanks, Keith. My best friends house, a Pioneer component stereo with ridiculously tall speakers, and that album. Yep, never been the same. Peace
There's a guitar that you missed that was inspired by The Shark and that is The Star Guitar. The body was made by Wayne Charvel (not shure what type of wood) matched with a Danelectro (I believe '59) neck.
About the Destroyer. Pete Thorn said for the Premier Guitar video that his 76 is maded by Japanese Ash wood called Sen.
For the 5150 guitar, I think I read it somеwhere (not shure where) that is a poplar body.
Also about the maple necks, that he often used unfinished birdseye maple necks (not shure of how many pieces)
Anyway, good video. Thanks Keith.
Thank you for making this video. While I am a fan of Eddjie, I have to admit to not having had as high a regard. In recent weeks, I’ve had an awakening. Your video has helped me to appreciate his music. Your video was inspiring.
Sweet Heathkit reference! I grew up with Heathkit electronics everywhere in the house. My dad was an electrical engineer, so it was a no-brainer. I’m a EE too, so it’s no surprise that I build my own guitar amplifiers.
Well written and presented, with some new facts. That’s hard to do with so many docs about EVH. I was never shy about buying low end guitars and experimenting, thanks to being given “permission” by the likes of Eddie and others such as Brian May.
I was in kindergarten when Van Halen I came out and had a friend who had a high school aged brother who was a drummer and totally into Alex - his bedroom had a drum riser and was a literal shrine to Van Halen. For the next few years I absorbed all of those songs in my young head as we played in the house with the brother's stereo blasting as he practiced all of the songs from the first album up to 1984 (released in '83). It made winters and bad weather not such a bad thing.
Nice work Keith,. Probably the Unchained guitar is the only iconic one you missed, even though I think it had a fairly short life on the Fair Warning tour. It'd be great to see a follow up on his large collection of odd-ball guitars, like the SG he cut the lower horn off to play slide on Dirty Movies, his carved dragon guitar, the black and yellow double neck he played "Secrets" on live, the "Megazone" guitar, the mini Les Paul from "Little Guitars"
My favorite is the Kramer 5150, I build for my self, years ago, an exact replica of it, with the original specs
Eddie is the reason I bought my Kramer Baretta in 1985. I saw that Bozo ad of him holding it, and I had to have it. I still have it, and I will never sell it.
Another excellent video Keith. Over the years I have toyed with the idea of building my own Frankenstein copy just for fun.
I'm looking forward to this, and I know hie bitsa guitars were the most played, but I have a soft spot for Steinbergers, so I'm looking forward to the GL2T.
Love your work Keith.
Me too so it’s in there.
great story brother!
i guess im a "member" officially of the "5 watt" club...i recently traded for a all tube crate v5....5 watts of tube greatness!
replaced the stock 10in speaker with a jensen MOD model(10in)...8ohms as the OG speaker was...sounds xtra good now!
Also, the boogie bodies guitar was not routed for a humbucker in the bridge - Ed did that himself with a chisel, hence why it looks so uneven. He also angled the pickup so that the end pole pieces would each be under an E string as the spacing between a Fender and a Gibson were not the same.
Other guitars not mentioned: Kramer Ripley used on Top Jimmy which had pan controls for each string; double neck 12/6 string for Secrets; and of course how can anyone forget the 3/4 scale Les Paul used for Little Guitars?
I remember my dad gave me that album for Christmas when it was new the first Van Halen and one day I was working out and I put it on to listen to it and two hours later of straight curls. I went to bed and slept for 15 hours woke up with a sore arms in the world.
Another Gem !! Keep it up Keith !!
I have a frankenstein copy strat, it plays great, but it's more like a cherished work of art. Its old and beat up, but still looks amazing. One of my favorite guitars in my collection.
That was an excellent video Keith.
Eddie is certainly idolized for his insane/inovative lead playing. But I have always been more draw his rhythm guitar playing and fills - so imaginitive.
Absolutely. I still love listening to his rhythm playing. It's fantastic.
My favourite guitar is Eddie's "Unchained" (or Circles) guitar that he famously used in the Oakland '81 show! I love the "See ya later!" text graphic on the back - I thought it was very Eddie :)
amazing detail, great job as always!