Massive Van Halen fan and the biggest lesson I learned from Eddie was "If it sounds good, it is good", doesn't matter if its about music genres or guitars.
YES! And that right there is what made him special. Flatting the B string, his composition and sense of swing and classical music, mixed into the rock genre, all of it. He doesn't get enough credit as a musical innovator as he should.
He kinda hated labels and boxes. Music is music. Good is good. The dude could enjoy jazz, country, metal or classical. He was kinda genre blind. I also learned this lesson from him. If it sounds good it is good. Period
I was underage, playing pinball in a bar, when my friend put Running With The Devil on the jukebox.... This was around 1979 - I was 12. I was like "WTF am I hearing?!"
I borrowed the first Van Halen record around 1981 from a neighbor and had the same story as everyone else. WTF IS THIS?!?! Total mind blower. The tone, the attack, the clarity, and the tapping made the guitar sound like a different instrument, and from that point on, basically every one who picked up a guitar tried to sound like him in one way or the other.
I was born in 1963, and have been a Van Halen fan since they first came out in 78. Basically because of Edward Van Halen. The greatest guitarist of all time.
'65 here and man, I remember the first time when my brother dropped the needle on that record from "this new band you gotta hear" on a super high end stereo. There is no substitute.
@@johnhill762 I communicated a few years back with a rock guitarist from the 80's that saw both Rhoads and EVH before they made it big and he said Eddie was the better guitarist and he saw them both up close in the clubs.
I stopped talking about Eddie Van Halen years ago because people my age already know how good he was and the people younger than me wouldn’t believe it. Rest In Power, Edward; you were the best that rock and roll ever had to offer.
Idk, I raised my kids on Ozzy, Van Halen, etc, and they still appreciate it. I always had guitars in the house and Eddie was and always will be the man. My youngest took me see them when they brought Roth back into the band, which was really cool, even though Roth was pathetic, lol. She's also in a band (lead singer) and every time they do an Ozzy or VH song, she dedicates it to her dad.😊 I get a round of applause from the people at the show, lol. My oldest daughter asked me to take her to meet Zakk Wylde when she was like 13. He was doing a CD signing at a little record shop near by. That was really cool. Got to hang out with Zakk, watch him play for well over an hour. He just sat down with an acoustic and went off. He was friggin phenomenal. There were maybe fifteen people there, middle of the day. Then, my wife and I got to go to his show that night. And if my daughter hadn't asked me I would've never even know he was in town. I guess my point is, never stop talking about guys like Eddie, because some young people do listen.
And their concerts were so fun! Before the sterile, high tech environment so many shows are today. I liked when there were liquor bottles, beer cans and ashtrays were on top of the amps and they were still a new band and full of fire.
Eddie Van Halen is reason why I started playing guitar and later making music. Hands down, the most influential guitarist to come along since Les Paul, Jimi Hendrix, Clapton, and Jimmy Page. Welcome to the EVH family! Loved the interview with Rob.
Shit, I was a third generation drummer and Eddie made me betray the family and pick up a Fat Strat (hss).... I like drums. I really do. I still get behind a kit once in a while and have a BLAST. I really like drums. But I $^$@*$# LOVE guitar... and being forced, compelled to pick one up and learn to play? That's Eddie's fault. Me, you, and a few million others... The man made a bit of dent in the guitar works didn't he? Eddie and Jimi. Jimi and Eddie. No one inspired more or changed guitar more than those two. My dad is why I am a musician. Eddie is why I am a guitarist.
Hearing "Eruption" got me hooked on guitar. I didn't even own one yet, so I used to "jam" with my mom's fly swatter. Once I got a real guitar, there was no turning back. That was 20+ years ago. Guitars have come and went over the years, but every time I see my wife grab a fly swatter it triggers those memories.
I told my uncle, who taught me "I want to play like Michael Jackson's guitar player on Beat it!!" I had no idea who eddie was😅 Cut to one year later, I owned every album.
Jimmy is Jimmy. Eddie is Eddie. Randy is Randy. Dime is Dime Joe is Joe. Steve is Steve. What all of the great guitarists have is showing us how to take it further.
This vid took me back a bit. I was taking guitar lessons the summer of 1982 in a suburb outside Detroit. The guitar store was literally called Rock City. It was a factory for Eddie Van Halen's AND Randy Rhoads clones. I remember the thing to do was take your Fender strat, replace the neck with a Charvel neck. Bore out the area under the bridge pickup and put in a Seymour Duncan humbucker. Then ad the Floyd Rose. The rest of the pickups were taken out completely along with the tone nobs and with just one volume nob. THAT was the ultimate Heavy Metal machine. It was rather expensive back then for a 16 yr old so I never did it. A few years later they started making "Metal" guitars that had all the goodies on it already. Me and my best friend were the only Black kids in our neighborhood who liked Van Halen back then. Great episode Mike, brought back a lot of fond memories. 👍🏽🎸🤘🏾
Yeah man!! He basically, for better or for worse, spawned Hair Metal with his amazing guitar technique and all those players trying to sound like him.....and even the few that got close still did not have his boogie swing. Van Halen was the model of a rock and roll band at its best in the 80's hands down. Before 1978 when VH1 came out, all the rockers had one model or another of Gibson guitars and Strats until Eddie created the super strat. Then they ALL had a strat shape with a humbucker and a Floyd Rose.
@@beachcomber4141 People somehow lump him in with the uber-technical players, sweep-picking 32nd notes at 200bpm in 17/13 time or whatever, but the man was a rocker, first and foremost. His lead was great, but his riffs? Unchained, 5150, Panama, Ain't Talkin' Bout Love - that's where the meat is.
Van Halen was known for two handed tapping, but what really made him great was his rhythm playing. Check out Ben Eller’s video on the impossible to play Van Halen riff, which dives into his crazy fast swing rhythms.
1981ish here. I was 11 and it was the meanest guitar I have ever heard. And to this day it gives me chills to listen to some of those songs on VH1 as the guitar is just so badass. Kids now a days need to remember that there was NOTHING that sounded like that in guitar playing before that record besides the lucky ones who saw them live in the 70's. Similar to Hendrix. To understand how impactful and revolutionary Jimi's playing was, you have to put it in perspective that NOTHING sounded like that before Hendrix.
Right on!! For me probably when diver down came out some time in jr high. I’m amazed that people are still ‘discovering’ Van Halen. That ship sailed d decades ago man.
@@beachcomber4141 Oddly enough, Ollie Halsall -- who's not well known -- sounded a bit like Eddie back in 1972! Check out Patto's "Loud Green Song": ruclips.net/video/AOxTeb3-_yA/видео.html
I first heard Eddie when I was 11 in 1978. I knew the only way I was going to be able to play even remotely close to his abilities was to practice every day for hours. What I loved most about his playing was how excited he sounded while playing. Though I’m not much for copying him, I did manage to capture some of that excitement I felt as a kid in my playing.
You know when you rock out playing air guitar? Eddie did that...except he has an actual guitar in his hands. There are a lot of really good, fast, intricate guitarist out there, yeah, but none of them looked as casual as Eddie. Dude was a natural.
I to heard Eddie for the first time the same year ,I was 24yrs and the song was Jamie's crying.Went out a purchased the album and went to thair Concert in 1979.It was LOUD and we were two rows back! RIP Eddy
Massive Van Halen fan. My dad turned my on to them he saw them in 1982 and 1984 and then he took me to see them in 2007 when the reunited with DLR and Wolf joined them. It’s so awesome how his whole life he was searching for the tone, built his own guitars, tore apart and rebuilt his own equipment, all for the sake to find his sound. And there really was no sound like Eddie Van Halen before Eddie Van Halen.
I heard VH for the first time live in '78. I had not yet heard of VH and my buddy and I took a bus to a smaller general admission type venue (hotbox) to see Black Sabbath and the opening act VH comes out and damn. Blew the roof off the place. Got the album next day and never missed any future VH tours. Good times.
I'm 62, going strong as a gigging guitarist. I'll NEVER forget that cold Feb 1978 night doing homework (rare for me LOL), listening to DC101 FM. I started playing guitar 2 yrs earlier. DJ says; "here's a new band from L.A. called Van Halen. This is gonna BLOW your mind"; then the long siren from "Running with the devil" comes on then the song🤯A week later I heard Eruption and went completely😱LOL. Life was NEVER the same after that. No guitarist was ever the same. Eddie blew us out of the universe and then some.
Made my own frankenstrat when I was 17. Chopped up my own strat copy and fitted two new pickups including a Schaller neck pickup and an Ibanez bridge pickup humbucker. Sounded great. Later on in life I gave it to the singer in my band. Luv and Peace.
Eddie played with a very percussive right hand, like he never lost the drummer part of his musical upbringing. I think that's where the swing and groove came from that is so hard to copy. Lots of players can hit the notes at speed ( not me) but can't get the free and easy swing he played with, it's like he was surfing over the bass and drums.
Perfectly said. He carried two things over to the guitar, his drumming grove and his classical piano licks (patterns). Hence why some of the solos need ridiculous hand stretches, because they are mostly fitting for keyboard which is turned differently, plus you have 10 fingers, instead of 4, to stretch a melodic pattern.
Eddie was just a one of a kind. Often imitated, but never duplicated. 'Live Without A Net' is peak Eddie for me. While I tend to prefer the David Lee Roth era albums, he was really firing on all cylinders for that performance.
YES I love that you guys talked about how much influence Dimebag took from Eddie, his playing was something else and I’m glad it’s still inspiring people today
My cousin graduated in 79. My uncle had strung together speakers along his fence all the way around his pool for her party. I was 12 and sitting in a pool chair side eyeing much older girls when he put on Van Halen I. I was absolutely mesmerized. I have never been the same and thank God for Ed. His music changed my life and I’ve played guitar since 1981 solely because of him. I appreciate many great players but for me there is only one king.
I'm old, I started playing in the early 80s. There was a time in the early 90s that all I owned was super-strats with floyds (including a couple I built ... you build a guitar with a floyd and still love the floyd you're a cultist ... I guess I'm a cultist and even though most of my guitars these days are hardtails, I still find myself reaching for that phantom bar once in a while). As for when I heard Eddy the first time, I was an obnoxious 10 year old Kiss Army member and a friend early in '79 said "you gotta here this!" and I never bought another Kiss album again.
Floyd Rose are great once you understand them; they're even better once you get them in tune, and never change your string gauge again. one tip that made it much easier for me is to block the FR at level before you change your strings. Enjoy!
I do some simple guitar tech, and I have blocked several Floyd Rose bridges for a few local musicians, adding wedges from the back to lock them in place. Basically turning them into hard tails. Tremolo in general are over rated, you’ve got to be really good to need one, even then only certain genres use it. For those who don’t use it, it’s a major headache to string and keep in tune for no reason. Blocking the tail block adds some sustain as well. I’ve also blocked one side so it snaps back in tune more dependably, but it’s dives only, no pulling up on it. So far, no one has asked me to undo it.
@@alphagt62 no point in having a FR if you're going to block it IMO. I have hardtail guitars for that; I have several guitars with floating trems, mostly Floyd Rose; and others with traditional trems (e.g., Strat, Jag) I only block my trem when changing strings, it keeps it in place and it's faster to tune the new strings without the baseplate moving; once everything is in tune and at tension, I remove the block, and retune before locking the nut. quick and easy string changes for any trem system, especially floating trems like FR. my point was once you get it done the first time, and don't change your string brand/gauge, it's easier; blocking the trem during string changes makes it even easier. Cheers!
Agree, my PRS has a floyd with locking tuners too. A pain in the ass to set up, but once is done it has never gotten out of tune no matter what i do. Its amazing, FR add so much versatility
Really, really good interview and video! For me as a "Tone Chaser" I remember Guitar Mag would publish a "Rig Rundown in the back of the mag. That when I learned about Eddies Variac. Cranking the tube amp but lower the cabinet volume made the biggest difference to my rig and my tone. I remember back in '01 or '02 practicing like a kid again. You brought that all back! Thank you!
Thanks for the Video! 🙌 I’am probably one of if not your oldest viewers. I remember when Van Halen 1 dropped. The guitar world was blown away, in ways that we don’t experience today because of the advancement of technology that sadly we don’t get to experience anymore. Anyway to answer your question. Yes… Eddie, launched a million plus guitar players. He is to be loved and appreciated for his innovative approach to guitar. He’s one of the biggest influences to all modern guitar over the last almost 50 years I know of. Dig into VH 1 and prepare yourself to be blown away by never before heard tones at this time in history.
What I love the most is how Eddie never stopped tweaking and trying to expand what the guitar can bring. Huge VH fan and great video, thanks for posting.
I think everybody who owns a floyd would say the same thing. ONCE you get it set, it's a dream of fun to play. All the other stuff related to Floyd's are a pain but it makes up for it with how much stuff you can do on a guitar with one.
Vai isn’t like Eddie at all. In fact, most players in the 80s didn’t really sound like Eddie, even though everyone was influenced by him. Imo, everyone was copying Randy Rhoads in the 80s. The big blond hair, the leather outfits, and the obsession with metal solos that were very technical. Everyone liked EVH, but everyone was really trying to copy Randy (when “hair metal” really took off). But Vai and Malmsteen were guys doing their own thing completely.
There’s obvious intricacy, and then there are deep intricate players. Vai is a bit more the obvious, Van Halen is a bit more blues, deeper sense of harmony, and deeper sense of rhythm. It’s why no one sounds or grooves like Van Halen. Because it’s intricate and sophisticated. It’s why their songs are iconic, and again, sounding like nothing else.
Every serious player needs their "EVH" experience. He means different things to different people. But he means something to everyone that hears him. The more you listen, the more you get it. Like Hendrix, Eddie's music will live forever!
Awesome subject today. As a teen growing up on hair metal I stumbled on to Eddie by way of catching the world release of the “Panama” video on headbangers ball. It wouldn’t be until my 40’s that I really dived into his playing and tone. I sat in a bar having a conversation with Dimebag and he convinced me that I was missing out. For me when it comes to Ed it was all about the swing in his playing.
Eddie Van Halen was a guitar genius, effortlessly blending technical mastery with soulful creativity. His innovative style and electrifying solos redefined rock music, leaving a lasting legacy that continues to inspire generations of musicians.
@@southboundguitar how come? Because of the tremolo? Or because it's just not what you thought it was. Personally I've never liked the feel of an RG. The tone is great though.
Played a 550 for years in bars (mid 80s thu 2000. Played hair band stuff. My Floyd Rose always stayed in tune. And I did alot of dive bombing. Set up takes a little extra work.
@@tommartling2473 yep I have a Jackson Soloist that came with a Floyd Rose Special and I upgraded it with steel parts and a brass sustain block. The pain of setting it up is worth the awesome tuning stability and range!
Very informative and joyful. I’m of the ‘70s ‘80s era. Everyone on the planet loved Eddie VH. I read a book as a teen about Jimi and Eddie. My life was fulfilled lol. At just under 55 I bought a drum kit a few months ago. So it took many many years to do something, anything. And I’m ultra beginner lol. But the Metallica Slayer scene came in very fast and blindsided the Scorpions,VH era. And before my time but nonetheless vital and pure perfection was Zeppelin. And mix all that in with GAP band, Bootsy, EWF. I mean music has the potential to shape or at least feed our lives with everything we need to know. Rush too. Didn’t want to forget Neil. Great video man. Rock on !
You must first realize that with the Fender Stratocaster It all goes through SURF MUSIC - specifically in SoCal !! Well apart from the tele's sound in country western, _surf_ is what made "The Fender Strat Sound" most distinct and discernible _in it's first decade, pre-Hendrix_ Eddie's stylistic lineage and GEAR gets going primarily with one man's insanely glorious quest: *Dick Dale* blasting his Strat through the 100+ Watt Showman amp(s). Then later we got Hendrix -> Clapton, Beck and Blackmore, with techniques picked up from Holdsworth, Mahavishnu/McLaughlin, Steve Hackett and Vittorio Camardese.
p.s. to get into Surf played on Strats, Dale is a good start along with The Chantays ,The Ventures(who also played Mosrite and other Fenders), The Shadows, and many more.
I really enjoy your channel! I have played guitar off and on since I was a kid and have recently gotten more serious. EVH is why I started play as well. As a kid in the 80's he was like superman. Great episode!
I discovered Vanhalen from MTV at age 11. Then I started to buy every album, cassette until I had them all. I just saw the Sammy Hagar tribute and Joe Satriani really did a fine job of playing hits from one of the greatest guitarist, musicians in history . We miss you Edward
He used an MXR phase 90, an MXR Flanger, and an Echoplex tape delay. The famous slap back sound that Eddie gets comes from the Echoplex. MXR even makes an Eddie Van Halen model Phase 90 now. In fact, it impossible to get his sound on some songs without these pedals. I even once saw a video where he was using a wah pedal. I don't know where you heard he didn't use pedals, but he did.
Watching Eddie doing almost a 15 minute solo on "Live without a net" was almost a religious moment for me and yes it made me want to play guitar immediately. My Dad even had a strat copy that he decorated to look like Eddies Frankenstrat 😂 I was gutted when he got rid of it as I also class that as my first guitar.
Eddie was obsessed with Alvin Lee from 10 Years After in his early days. It was the speed of Alvin Lee’s playing, particularly on “Going Home” that attracted his attention. He was also a huge Black Sabbath fan too and covered tons of their songs. He didn’t even really get into the whole tapping thing until not long before they recorded the first Van Halen album
saw VH play in vancouver, bc, canada, way back in 1978 [or was it '79?]. great show, great music, great artistry. before i bought my first stereo, the chap at the music store played Eruption as a demo - he knew how to make a sale.
I saw Van Halen in Atlanta when Gary Cherone was singing for them. I wore the shirt the next day to school and got sent do the principal's office. All it said was Who the F#$K is Eddie Van Halen!? on the back and him giving the bird on the front. One of my proudest moments in high school.
Hi Mike, I've only been a Van Halen fan for about a year, after 24 years I became interested in guitar again and when I was learning new songs I discovered Van Halen. I have always been a fan of Elvis, BB King, Led Zeppelin but never 80's rock until I discovered Van Halen and the genius of Ed. Of EVH's guitars I especially love the Striped 5150 model. From the moment I saw Ed VH I like a lot the combination of the ergonomic and whammy bar of the Strat design with the "warmth" of a bridge Humbucker pickup. Thank you for the video.
'79-ish - my 1st grade classmate had a brother in high school who played drums and worshipped Alex. I got to hear all of that stuff as it happened - it made an impression on my young ears
Great vid Mike! Eddie was such a huge influence on my playing! Of course, many others as well. But, hearing Van Halen The first time completely blew my mind! And only recently have I really started to delve more into his playing and tone, considering my band is doing more Van Halen songs. And I do yes play eruption at my gigs and I do my best to try and sound and play like him that I can, in his honor. Hearing the two of you play got me choked up. I have to admit, sounded so good! 😎🎸🤘
Some of the Roth album era songs have Edward playing a Les Paul because he loved the beefier sound . He took a Les Paul pickup and put it in a strat style guitar for comfort and what he called the "wiggle stick" or a whammy bar a tremolo . He eventually got what he wanted : a Les Paul sound in a stratocaster guitar .
Origanally the frankenstrat was built from seconds of boogie bodies. Great video man. R.i.p. King Edward. The comment thst how eddie didnt know how to sound like anyone but him is sooo true.... A lesson i always took to heart. Just play and take inspiration from others but sound like yoyrself. Great video
I’m old and a fan of early VH and almost nothing since DLR left. Those guys re-made Roy Orbison songs and The Kinks . . . so many. Their Fair Warning album was so awesome.
Thanks for the video. Huge Van Halen fan, one of my top five reasons why I play guitar. I have two EVH guitars- EVH Wolfgang Special in black( total workhorse) and my EVH striped series w/ crop circles. Another fantastic guitar. Love the neck on it, so smooth. I'm not a huge floyd rode guy either but man they are awesome. The dtuna is quite convenient for drop D metal. Again great video.
I am backwards in chronology. I was a third generation drummer. And a HUGE EVH fan. Eddie is why I started playing guitar. I am not a Strat player that discovered Eddie. I am a Van Halen fan that discovered Strats and modded a Fat Strat to extremes that would make Eddie smile warmly.... Texas Specials with a Duncan custom 'bucker... basically a 4 conductor EVH '78... 3x500k dpdt push pulls for always on neck (7 way switching). Tone for neck and middle. 500k resistor for 250k load. Tone 2 is tone for bridge and... series parallel switch for the RWRP Texas Specials with neck and middle... or a tone bypass in other positions. Vol is a coil cut. I think Eddie would approve....
There is a rhythmic swing to Eddie's playing that made him unique - I think that is what a lot of people who try to copy him miss - what a great rhythm player he was. A lot of it came from the fact that he played drums before guitar - I find that guitarists that also played drums have a tighter swing to their technique (SRV is another.) As great as his solos were, listening to his rhythm parts is even more educational and mind blowing.
I was at summer camp, and one of the counsellors lead us to the super echoy bathroom..thats where he blasted Eruption on a boom box for my first ever listen. The rest is history
I wish I'd held on to my Frankie but ..just didn't play it enough. Eddie, along with Stevie , Jimi and Slash are my Mt. Rushmore of greats. Great video and I love Rob too. Enjoying the channel sir.
Huge VH fan. My very favorite guitarist of all time (Yngwie and SRV number 2 and 3, respectively, and the biggest influence on my playing, aesthetics, and tone). Legend.
The jamming and Mike busting out his best butt rock riffs (No shame, I love them too :D) on a EVH Strat really sells how different Eddie was as a rhythm player, and I think some people forget that amidst the blazing fire of his solos.
First off I’m not a musician. But I am an avid listener to music, especially 70’sand 80’s rock music. The first time I heard Can Halen’s music immediately it grabbed my attention. Even as a child just by hearing it I knew that this what all guitarist are measured. The style,the vocals and not really the words as much as the tone of the voices in Roth and Ed and Mike. But then there’s that guitar tone! It reaches inside you and makes you a part of the music. You asked how to achieve this tone? It’s impossible. You can buy the exact same setup the edddie had and it’s going to sound like you! It was in his soul,created from his mind through his fingers. Flowing out like rays of sunshine. He was one of a kind, not to say he’s the best cause I don’t know how to rank guitarist or any musician really. I think his sound and style is my favorite. But I like a lot of other guitarist to. As far as his influence goes, I can’t hear anything before his time in his music. They say Clapton, I don’t hear anything he ever did resembling Eddie. Page,naw he was very raw,generic, just played the guitar like it was and made the best with it. He was good and creative but nothing really over the top. IMO! Hendrix,maybe I hear a little bit there but their style was very similar. But I don’t think Eddie was influenced by him. Black Sabbath maybe a hint of influence. But really who the hell played the guitar like Eddie before 1978? No body. Who did in the 80’s? Everybody! Nuff said!
The Floyd is easy to maintain once you master it. Adam at FU-Tone has a great video on how to "properly" set up a guitar with a Floyd. The big downside is that you can really do unison bends, double-stop bends, etc. The tension drags the other strings flat out of tune when you bend. If you accept it, then it's a killer tool. A hard tail is great too. Different tools for different uses.
Man, I love a Floyd Rose! I bought a PRS SE Custom 24 floyd in charcoal burst. I will never look back. I built a Franinstrat replica and I made sure to get a floyd for it.
Mike I’m a EVH fan since 78 when I was introduced to the first Album. I have a EVH Wolfgang special and a EVH LBXii with a 12” cabinet. I’m able to play that on about 9 in volume and in my 20’ x 16’ basement you can’t really be in the same space as it’s freaking loud!! I’ll have to decibel meter it next time. Anyway why I’m talking about loud and cranked up amps is how Ed said he learned to get all the extra special noises quieted and turned into music. Squeals, dives and all the extra bits come alive when you crank the amp. People that have shook his hands said his handshake was like granite. So his playing was fast and loose and improvised as he didn’t learn guitar traditionally. Granite hands with control allowed him to bring out all those sounds out of the guitar without many effects. So when he did use effects he made sure to make it count. Hammer on swells to make Cathedral. Embrace the craziness that is EVH style, wild with a lot of swing and rhythm. Just the right notes at the right time.
I’m 52. In 1988 I started learning guitar, ,y teacher was a Māori blues man. I asked him to teach me a Van Halen riff about 6 weeks in. He stopped, put his guitar down, and looked at me and said, Son, there’s Eddie, and then there’s everyone else. He was right then, and he’s right now.
I have 3 EVH guitars. Love them all. The Floyd can be a pain, but nowhere near the pain that a floating trem is. I had one of the original Ibanez RG550’s. Love the guitar but that trem was a pain.
I got the Bumble Bee and love it with one exception. The D Tuna works, but having the Floyd set for EVH's downward use only setup instead of floating, it's pointed too far in towards the body and super hard to grip to pull out and pretty much useless.
@@cataclysmicconverter that can be remedied. Install a trem stop. That will raise the back of the trem off the body, but still in dive only. That’s what I had done to my Wolfgang, as I had the same issue. Now the Dtuna is easily accessible to move.
Eddy was an amazing player but he was also the all in one package. He could play amazing guitar that everyone liked and he wrote great songs to back it up.
I have an old Kramer with an original Floyd Rose and I'd leave it home from college, and I'd pick it up out of the case months later and it would still be in PERFECT tune. Embrace the learning curve, it will become your best friend. Also, superstrats are cool and all but check out what Mick Mars was playing in the late 80s with Motley Crue. SuperTELES are where its at.
Yeah I’m a Van Halen fan. Both versions of the band made great music. Eddie’s playing is otherworldly but also his songwriting is great. I built a frankenstrat from a cheap strat kit and it came out pretty good.
I may be the only person in the comments that is not an EVH fan. I can appreciate that he was the first commercially successful guitarist to use a lot of techniques like two handed tapping but I could never get into his sound or the band’s music. Great video as always though, Mike!
Found you on the SG video (loved it), knew I had to come back seeing that Frankenstrat in your hands. In a similar - not so similar world to Eddie, he really inspired a bunch of Strat players to mod their own and achieve whatever they can. Look at Billy Joe Armstrong's "Blue" Strat which had a Seymour Duncan JB-4 (I believe) in the bridge. Look at Tom Delonge's Strat (or any of his other guitars.) It's a hard tail, a Seymour Duncan Invader in the bridge wired up to a single volume knob with a treble bleed circuit. I've made my own from a Squire (before they did the signature reissue) and it's honestly my favorite guitar I have. You crank it, it lets you know that it's game time. You wind it back, it cleans up decently enough. $180 worth of guitar and pickup, and I wouldn't trade it for anything. Would love to see your thoughts on the Tom Delonge signature (as I call it, the Delongecaster). Great stuff though, love the history lessons and just the outright enthusiasm in your videos. You've earned the Sub, keep it up and keep playing!
I love the frankenstrat the best it has the best tone to me out of all the other guitars. It has the early Van Halen sound that I love. I saw a Van Halen cover band and they used a newer style EVH guitar and the Frankenstrat. The frankenstrat nailed it every time.
Let the dive bombs BEGIN!! Thanks for having me dude.
I enjoyed your video. Long time VH fan.
Nice crossover!
Nice to see you all becoming a RUclips guitar tribe of sorts.
Great feature man
So glad to see you here! BOOP!
Massive Van Halen fan and the biggest lesson I learned from Eddie was "If it sounds good, it is good", doesn't matter if its about music genres or guitars.
YES! And that right there is what made him special. Flatting the B string, his composition and sense of swing and classical music, mixed into the rock genre, all of it. He doesn't get enough credit as a musical innovator as he should.
Sometimes, though, when it sounds good, it’s just not well-written. I prefer music that is well-composed as opposed to “sounds good”.
@@johnhill762 I think VH music is well composed ..and sounds good.
He kinda hated labels and boxes. Music is music. Good is good.
The dude could enjoy jazz, country, metal or classical. He was kinda genre blind.
I also learned this lesson from him. If it sounds good it is good. Period
I was underage, playing pinball in a bar, when my friend put Running With The Devil on the jukebox....
This was around 1979 - I was 12.
I was like "WTF am I hearing?!"
That's really burnt. 1979. That's when I started playing.
I borrowed the first Van Halen record around 1981 from a neighbor and had the same story as everyone else. WTF IS THIS?!?! Total mind blower. The tone, the attack, the clarity, and the tapping made the guitar sound like a different instrument, and from that point on, basically every one who picked up a guitar tried to sound like him in one way or the other.
@@aldito7586 I started 3 years later 👍
EVH definitely motivated me to play rock guitar.
12?!
I was born in 1963, and have been a Van Halen fan since they first came out in 78. Basically because of Edward Van Halen. The greatest guitarist of all time.
'65 here and man, I remember the first time when my brother dropped the needle on that record from "this new band you gotta hear" on a super high end stereo. There is no substitute.
'64 Dude! My 14 year old brain was not ready for when the needle hit that album on that turntable! Keep rockin' Bud!
Nope.. Polyphia..
EVH is nowhere close to greatest. SRV, Hendrix, Rhoads. So many other great guitarists.
@@johnhill762 I communicated a few years back with a rock guitarist from the 80's that saw both Rhoads and EVH before they made it big and he said Eddie was the better guitarist and he saw them both up close in the clubs.
I stopped talking about Eddie Van Halen years ago because people my age already know how good he was and the people younger than me wouldn’t believe it. Rest In Power, Edward; you were the best that rock and roll ever had to offer.
Well said
Idk, I raised my kids on Ozzy, Van Halen, etc, and they still appreciate it. I always had guitars in the house and Eddie was and always will be the man. My youngest took me see them when they brought Roth back into the band, which was really cool, even though Roth was pathetic, lol. She's also in a band (lead singer) and every time they do an Ozzy or VH song, she dedicates it to her dad.😊 I get a round of applause from the people at the show, lol.
My oldest daughter asked me to take her to meet Zakk Wylde when she was like 13. He was doing a CD signing at a little record shop near by. That was really cool. Got to hang out with Zakk, watch him play for well over an hour. He just sat down with an acoustic and went off. He was friggin phenomenal. There were maybe fifteen people there, middle of the day. Then, my wife and I got to go to his show that night. And if my daughter hadn't asked me I would've never even know he was in town. I guess my point is, never stop talking about guys like Eddie, because some young people do listen.
Hell yeah I'm a Van Halen fan. How can you not like them? Their music is so full of joy and enthusiasm.
100% correct! EVH's playing oozes emotion, as it's filled with joy and enthusiasm. What a voice!
And their concerts were so fun! Before the sterile, high tech environment so many shows are today. I liked when there were liquor bottles, beer cans and ashtrays were on top of the amps and they were still a new band and full of fire.
You nailed it!! Joy and enthusiasm!!
Eddie Van Halen is reason why I started playing guitar and later making music. Hands down, the most influential guitarist to come along since Les Paul, Jimi Hendrix, Clapton, and Jimmy Page. Welcome to the EVH family! Loved the interview with Rob.
Yep, same here. I built a super strat in 85 and began the Ed tone chasing journey. Haven’t stopped.
Shit, I was a third generation drummer and Eddie made me betray the family and pick up a Fat Strat (hss)....
I like drums. I really do. I still get behind a kit once in a while and have a BLAST. I really like drums.
But I $^$@*$# LOVE guitar... and being forced, compelled to pick one up and learn to play? That's Eddie's fault.
Me, you, and a few million others...
The man made a bit of dent in the guitar works didn't he?
Eddie and Jimi. Jimi and Eddie. No one inspired more or changed guitar more than those two.
My dad is why I am a musician. Eddie is why I am a guitarist.
Hearing "Eruption" got me hooked on guitar. I didn't even own one yet, so I used to "jam" with my mom's fly swatter. Once I got a real guitar, there was no turning back. That was 20+ years ago. Guitars have come and went over the years, but every time I see my wife grab a fly swatter it triggers those memories.
Those vintage fly swatters were sweet
@@coppulor6500 Then they went electric
I told my uncle, who taught me "I want to play like Michael Jackson's guitar player on Beat it!!" I had no idea who eddie was😅
Cut to one year later, I owned every album.
“Ambient worship player” with a tele, confirmed 🙋🏻♂️
Hahahaha I’m guilty as well
I “third” this!
I’m hopping in on that too!!
Cant go wrong with a nice Tele!
Joe Duplantier. Tele player…kinda.
Jimmy is Jimmy. Eddie is Eddie. Randy is Randy. Dime is Dime Joe is Joe. Steve is Steve. What all of the great guitarists have is showing us how to take it further.
I love Robert Baker! I've been watching him for probably 7 years.
This vid took me back a bit. I was taking guitar lessons the summer of 1982 in a suburb outside Detroit. The guitar store was literally called Rock City. It was a factory for Eddie Van Halen's AND Randy Rhoads clones. I remember the thing to do was take your Fender strat, replace the neck with a Charvel neck. Bore out the area under the bridge pickup and put in a Seymour Duncan humbucker. Then ad the Floyd Rose. The rest of the pickups were taken out completely along with the tone nobs and with just one volume nob. THAT was the ultimate Heavy Metal machine. It was rather expensive back then for a 16 yr old so I never did it. A few years later they started making "Metal" guitars that had all the goodies on it already. Me and my best friend were the only Black kids in our neighborhood who liked Van Halen back then. Great episode Mike, brought back a lot of fond memories. 👍🏽🎸🤘🏾
I got to see them live in 1980. Dude was on a whole different level as a player! He was the GOAT for my generation!
Yeah man!! He basically, for better or for worse, spawned Hair Metal with his amazing guitar technique and all those players trying to sound like him.....and even the few that got close still did not have his boogie swing. Van Halen was the model of a rock and roll band at its best in the 80's hands down. Before 1978 when VH1 came out, all the rockers had one model or another of Gibson guitars and Strats until Eddie created the super strat. Then they ALL had a strat shape with a humbucker and a Floyd Rose.
@@beachcomber4141 People somehow lump him in with the uber-technical players, sweep-picking 32nd notes at 200bpm in 17/13 time or whatever, but the man was a rocker, first and foremost. His lead was great, but his riffs? Unchained, 5150, Panama, Ain't Talkin' Bout Love - that's where the meat is.
Van Halen was known for two handed tapping, but what really made him great was his rhythm playing. Check out Ben Eller’s video on the impossible to play Van Halen riff, which dives into his crazy fast swing rhythms.
One of the most Eddie like solids from dimebag is probably “well meet again” off the 1988 power metal album
the gambit impression was pure GOLD
“WOOIMBOUTTAMAKEANAMEFOMYSELFHERE” 😂 0:37
Lots of radio play in the summer of 1979: Dance The Night Away. I didn't start playing guitar and discover Van Halen I until 1980.
1981ish here. I was 11 and it was the meanest guitar I have ever heard. And to this day it gives me chills to listen to some of those songs on VH1 as the guitar is just so badass. Kids now a days need to remember that there was NOTHING that sounded like that in guitar playing before that record besides the lucky ones who saw them live in the 70's. Similar to Hendrix. To understand how impactful and revolutionary Jimi's playing was, you have to put it in perspective that NOTHING sounded like that before Hendrix.
Right on!! For me probably when diver down came out some time in jr high. I’m amazed that people are still ‘discovering’ Van Halen. That ship sailed d decades ago man.
@@beachcomber4141 Oddly enough, Ollie Halsall -- who's not well known -- sounded a bit like Eddie back in 1972! Check out Patto's "Loud Green Song": ruclips.net/video/AOxTeb3-_yA/видео.html
4th grade. Someone brought in Mean Streets. I remember listening to the vinyl record, during lunch.
Music changed.
I first heard Eddie when I was 11 in 1978. I knew the only way I was going to be able to play even remotely close to his abilities was to practice every day for hours. What I loved most about his playing was how excited he sounded while playing. Though I’m not much for copying him, I did manage to capture some of that excitement I felt as a kid in my playing.
You know when you rock out playing air guitar? Eddie did that...except he has an actual guitar in his hands. There are a lot of really good, fast, intricate guitarist out there, yeah, but none of them looked as casual as Eddie. Dude was a natural.
I to heard Eddie for the first time the same year ,I was 24yrs and the song was Jamie's crying.Went out a purchased the album and went to thair Concert in 1979.It was LOUD and we were two rows back! RIP Eddy
Massive Van Halen fan. My dad turned my on to them he saw them in 1982 and 1984 and then he took me to see them in 2007 when the reunited with DLR and Wolf joined them. It’s so awesome how his whole life he was searching for the tone, built his own guitars, tore apart and rebuilt his own equipment, all for the sake to find his sound. And there really was no sound like Eddie Van Halen before Eddie Van Halen.
I heard VH for the first time live in '78. I had not yet heard of VH and my buddy and I took a bus to a smaller general admission type venue (hotbox) to see Black Sabbath and the opening act VH comes out and damn. Blew the roof off the place. Got the album next day and never missed any future VH tours. Good times.
I'm 62, going strong as a gigging guitarist. I'll NEVER forget that cold Feb 1978 night doing homework (rare for me LOL), listening to DC101 FM. I started playing guitar 2 yrs earlier. DJ says; "here's a new band from L.A. called Van Halen. This is gonna BLOW your mind"; then the long siren from "Running with the devil" comes on then the song🤯A week later I heard Eruption and went completely😱LOL. Life was NEVER the same after that. No guitarist was ever the same. Eddie blew us out of the universe and then some.
Made my own frankenstrat when I was 17. Chopped up my own strat copy and fitted two new pickups including a Schaller neck pickup and an Ibanez bridge pickup humbucker.
Sounded great.
Later on in life I gave it to the singer in my band.
Luv and Peace.
Eddie played with a very percussive right hand, like he never lost the drummer part of his musical upbringing.
I think that's where the swing and groove came from that is so hard to copy.
Lots of players can hit the notes at speed ( not me) but can't get the free and easy swing he played with, it's like he was surfing over the bass and drums.
Perfectly said. He carried two things over to the guitar, his drumming grove and his classical piano licks (patterns). Hence why some of the solos need ridiculous hand stretches, because they are mostly fitting for keyboard which is turned differently, plus you have 10 fingers, instead of 4, to stretch a melodic pattern.
@@gpapa31 I totally agree!
Eddie was just a one of a kind. Often imitated, but never duplicated. 'Live Without A Net' is peak Eddie for me. While I tend to prefer the David Lee Roth era albums, he was really firing on all cylinders for that performance.
YES I love that you guys talked about how much influence Dimebag took from Eddie, his playing was something else and I’m glad it’s still inspiring people today
Glad to see you discovering more great players, Mike. Ed and Hendrix were the 2 big game changers as far as electric guitar goes.
Everyone mentions the tapping and dive bombs but neglects the fact that Eddie was an exceptional rhythm player.
My cousin graduated in 79. My uncle had strung together speakers along his fence all the way around his pool for her party. I was 12 and sitting in a pool chair side eyeing much older girls when he put on Van Halen I. I was absolutely mesmerized. I have never been the same and thank God for Ed. His music changed my life and I’ve played guitar since 1981 solely because of him. I appreciate many great players but for me there is only one king.
I'm old, I started playing in the early 80s. There was a time in the early 90s that all I owned was super-strats with floyds (including a couple I built ... you build a guitar with a floyd and still love the floyd you're a cultist ... I guess I'm a cultist and even though most of my guitars these days are hardtails, I still find myself reaching for that phantom bar once in a while).
As for when I heard Eddy the first time, I was an obnoxious 10 year old Kiss Army member and a friend early in '79 said "you gotta here this!" and I never bought another Kiss album again.
I just own double locking guitars since 2002. :)
Floyd Rose are great once you understand them; they're even better once you get them in tune, and never change your string gauge again.
one tip that made it much easier for me is to block the FR at level before you change your strings.
Enjoy!
I discovered a AA battery fits pretty good under the FR when I restring all the strings at once
I do some simple guitar tech, and I have blocked several Floyd Rose bridges for a few local musicians, adding wedges from the back to lock them in place. Basically turning them into hard tails. Tremolo in general are over rated, you’ve got to be really good to need one, even then only certain genres use it. For those who don’t use it, it’s a major headache to string and keep in tune for no reason. Blocking the tail block adds some sustain as well. I’ve also blocked one side so it snaps back in tune more dependably, but it’s dives only, no pulling up on it. So far, no one has asked me to undo it.
@@alphagt62 no point in having a FR if you're going to block it IMO. I have hardtail guitars for that; I have several guitars with floating trems, mostly Floyd Rose; and others with traditional trems (e.g., Strat, Jag)
I only block my trem when changing strings, it keeps it in place and it's faster to tune the new strings without the baseplate moving; once everything is in tune and at tension, I remove the block, and retune before locking the nut. quick and easy string changes for any trem system, especially floating trems like FR.
my point was once you get it done the first time, and don't change your string brand/gauge, it's easier; blocking the trem during string changes makes it even easier.
Cheers!
@@alphagt62 shut up, and play
Agree, my PRS has a floyd with locking tuners too. A pain in the ass to set up, but once is done it has never gotten out of tune no matter what i do. Its amazing, FR add so much versatility
I love Floyd Rose tremolos. Yes you got to set them up and that can be a pain but once they are dailed in they are great. Enjoy the guitar.
Really, really good interview and video!
For me as a "Tone Chaser" I remember Guitar Mag would publish a "Rig Rundown in the back of the mag. That when I learned about Eddies Variac. Cranking the tube amp but lower the cabinet volume made the biggest difference to my rig and my tone. I remember back in '01 or '02 practicing like a kid again.
You brought that all back! Thank you!
Thanks for the Video! 🙌 I’am probably one of if not your oldest viewers. I remember when Van Halen 1 dropped. The guitar world was blown away, in ways that we don’t experience today because of the advancement of technology that sadly we don’t get to experience anymore. Anyway to answer your question. Yes… Eddie, launched a million plus guitar players. He is to be loved and appreciated for his innovative approach to guitar. He’s one of the biggest influences to all modern guitar over the last almost 50 years I know of. Dig into VH 1 and prepare yourself to be blown away by never before heard tones at this time in history.
What I love the most is how Eddie never stopped tweaking and trying to expand what the guitar can bring.
Huge VH fan and great video, thanks for posting.
@MikeCole, you are awesome at hosting these videos! Just saw this today, and I'm an instant fan! Rock on!
I think everybody who owns a floyd would say the same thing. ONCE you get it set, it's a dream of fun to play. All the other stuff related to Floyd's are a pain but it makes up for it with how much stuff you can do on a guitar with one.
Actually, Steve Vai would take offense that he was trying to copy Eddie. Vai was very adamant that his playing was more intricate. 😊
Vai isn’t like Eddie at all. In fact, most players in the 80s didn’t really sound like Eddie, even though everyone was influenced by him. Imo, everyone was copying Randy Rhoads in the 80s. The big blond hair, the leather outfits, and the obsession with metal solos that were very technical.
Everyone liked EVH, but everyone was really trying to copy Randy (when “hair metal” really took off). But Vai and Malmsteen were guys doing their own thing completely.
There’s obvious intricacy, and then there are deep intricate players. Vai is a bit more the obvious, Van Halen is a bit more blues, deeper sense of harmony, and deeper sense of rhythm. It’s why no one sounds or grooves like Van Halen. Because it’s intricate and sophisticated. It’s why their songs are iconic, and again, sounding like nothing else.
@@oreally8605 I have heard Vai say, many times, the he was influenced by EVH
Every serious player needs their "EVH" experience. He means different things to different people. But he means something to everyone that hears him. The more you listen, the more you get it. Like Hendrix, Eddie's music will live forever!
Awesome subject today. As a teen growing up on hair metal I stumbled on to Eddie by way of catching the world release of the “Panama” video on headbangers ball. It wouldn’t be until my 40’s that I really dived into his playing and tone. I sat in a bar having a conversation with Dimebag and he convinced me that I was missing out. For me when it comes to Ed it was all about the swing in his playing.
Eddie Van Halen was a guitar genius, effortlessly blending technical mastery with soulful creativity. His innovative style and electrifying solos redefined rock music, leaving a lasting legacy that continues to inspire generations of musicians.
Eddies rhythm playing is also stellar! He really got the groove going!
Finally! Think it’s time to look more into superstrats like the Jackson Soloist, Kramer Baretta, Ibanez RG550, or Charvel So-Cal?
My RG550 just sits in its case. It was the one I wanted to buy the most, but is the one I play the absolute least. 🙁
@@southboundguitar oof 😥.
@@southboundguitar how come? Because of the tremolo? Or because it's just not what you thought it was. Personally I've never liked the feel of an RG. The tone is great though.
Played a 550 for years in bars (mid 80s thu 2000. Played hair band stuff. My Floyd Rose always stayed in tune. And I did alot of dive bombing.
Set up takes a little extra work.
@@tommartling2473 yep I have a Jackson Soloist that came with a Floyd Rose Special and I upgraded it with steel parts and a brass sustain block. The pain of setting it up is worth the awesome tuning stability and range!
Very informative and joyful. I’m of the ‘70s ‘80s era. Everyone on the planet loved Eddie VH. I read a book as a teen about Jimi and Eddie. My life was fulfilled lol.
At just under 55 I bought a drum kit a few months ago. So it took many many years to do something, anything. And I’m ultra beginner lol.
But the Metallica Slayer scene came in very fast and blindsided the Scorpions,VH era.
And before my time but nonetheless vital and pure perfection was Zeppelin.
And mix all that in with GAP band, Bootsy, EWF. I mean music has the potential to shape or at least feed our lives with everything we need to know.
Rush too. Didn’t want to forget Neil.
Great video man. Rock on !
Hey Mike. Your videos are always a nice surprise. I’ve don’t the worship music and just rock and jazz bands like you. Keep doing these. Please.
You must first realize that with the Fender Stratocaster It all goes through SURF MUSIC - specifically in SoCal !!
Well apart from the tele's sound in country western, _surf_ is what made "The Fender Strat Sound" most distinct and discernible _in it's first decade, pre-Hendrix_
Eddie's stylistic lineage and GEAR gets going primarily with one man's insanely glorious quest: *Dick Dale* blasting his Strat through the 100+ Watt Showman amp(s).
Then later we got Hendrix -> Clapton, Beck and Blackmore, with techniques picked up from Holdsworth, Mahavishnu/McLaughlin, Steve Hackett and Vittorio Camardese.
p.s. to get into Surf played on Strats, Dale is a good start along with The Chantays ,The Ventures(who also played Mosrite and other Fenders), The Shadows, and many more.
Dick Dale is badASS
I really enjoy your channel! I have played guitar off and on since I was a kid and have recently gotten more serious. EVH is why I started play as well. As a kid in the 80's he was like superman. Great episode!
The collaboration I didn't know we needed. Awesome, guys!
Welcome to the wonderful world of Eddie Van Halen. A virtuoso performer, and amazing song writer. I really enjoy your content. Keep it up.
I discovered Vanhalen from MTV at age 11. Then I started to buy every album, cassette until I had them all. I just saw the Sammy Hagar tribute and Joe Satriani really did a fine job of playing hits from one of the greatest guitarist, musicians in history . We miss you Edward
Rob Baker knows his Van Halen?! I never noticed! 😱😂😉
Eddie said he didn't use pedals...he said you need a good guitar, a good amp, a cord and to know your instrument.
He used an MXR phase 90, an MXR Flanger, and an Echoplex tape delay. The famous slap back sound that Eddie gets comes from the Echoplex. MXR even makes an Eddie Van Halen model Phase 90 now. In fact, it impossible to get his sound on some songs without these pedals. I even once saw a video where he was using a wah pedal. I don't know where you heard he didn't use pedals, but he did.
Cathedral?
Literally watched him say that yesterday in an interview.
@@jenniferditty2904 not pedal but he used roland sde-3000 rack delays (two for stereo) for example. Not on the first album.
@@bence42 VH1 is still my favorite even though technically it is not the best one.
Watching Eddie doing almost a 15 minute solo on "Live without a net" was almost a religious moment for me and yes it made me want to play guitar immediately. My Dad even had a strat copy that he decorated to look like Eddies Frankenstrat 😂 I was gutted when he got rid of it as I also class that as my first guitar.
Eddie was obsessed with Alvin Lee from 10 Years After in his early days. It was the speed of Alvin Lee’s playing, particularly on “Going Home” that attracted his attention. He was also a huge Black Sabbath fan too and covered tons of their songs. He didn’t even really get into the whole tapping thing until not long before they recorded the first Van Halen album
saw VH play in vancouver, bc, canada, way back in 1978 [or was it '79?]. great show, great music, great artistry. before i bought my first stereo, the chap at the music store played Eruption as a demo - he knew how to make a sale.
I saw Van Halen in Atlanta when Gary Cherone was singing for them. I wore the shirt the next day to school and got sent do the principal's office. All it said was Who the F#$K is Eddie Van Halen!? on the back and him giving the bird on the front. One of my proudest moments in high school.
Hi Mike, I've only been a Van Halen fan for about a year, after 24 years I became interested in guitar again and when I was learning new songs I discovered Van Halen. I have always been a fan of Elvis, BB King, Led Zeppelin but never 80's rock until I discovered Van Halen and the genius of Ed.
Of EVH's guitars I especially love the Striped 5150 model. From the moment I saw Ed VH I like a lot the combination of the ergonomic and whammy bar of the Strat design with the "warmth" of a bridge Humbucker pickup. Thank you for the video.
'79-ish - my 1st grade classmate had a brother in high school who played drums and worshipped Alex. I got to hear all of that stuff as it happened - it made an impression on my young ears
Great vid Mike! Eddie was such a huge influence on my playing! Of course, many others as well. But, hearing Van Halen The first time completely blew my mind! And only recently have I really started to delve more into his playing and tone, considering my band is doing more Van Halen songs. And I do yes play eruption at my gigs and I do my best to try and sound and play like him that I can, in his honor. Hearing the two of you play got me choked up. I have to admit, sounded so good! 😎🎸🤘
Some of the Roth album era songs have Edward playing a Les Paul because he loved the beefier sound . He took a Les Paul pickup and put it in a strat style guitar for comfort and what he called the "wiggle stick" or a whammy bar a tremolo . He eventually got what he wanted : a Les Paul sound in a stratocaster guitar .
Origanally the frankenstrat was built from seconds of boogie bodies. Great video man. R.i.p. King Edward. The comment thst how eddie didnt know how to sound like anyone but him is sooo true.... A lesson i always took to heart. Just play and take inspiration from others but sound like yoyrself. Great video
Late period Eddie used all kinds of peddles. I remember seeing them on some concert footage with DLR.
I’m old and a fan of early VH and almost nothing since DLR left. Those guys re-made Roy Orbison songs and The Kinks . . . so many. Their Fair Warning album was so awesome.
Thanks for the video. Huge Van Halen fan, one of my top five reasons why I play guitar. I have two EVH guitars- EVH Wolfgang Special in black( total workhorse) and my EVH striped series w/ crop circles. Another fantastic guitar. Love the neck on it, so smooth. I'm not a huge floyd rode guy either but man they are awesome. The dtuna is quite convenient for drop D metal.
Again great video.
EVH Cameron Cooper nails him really well. So clean.
I am backwards in chronology. I was a third generation drummer. And a HUGE EVH fan. Eddie is why I started playing guitar. I am not a Strat player that discovered Eddie. I am a Van Halen fan that discovered Strats and modded a Fat Strat to extremes that would make Eddie smile warmly....
Texas Specials with a Duncan custom 'bucker... basically a 4 conductor EVH '78... 3x500k dpdt push pulls for always on neck (7 way switching). Tone for neck and middle. 500k resistor for 250k load.
Tone 2 is tone for bridge and... series parallel switch for the RWRP Texas Specials with neck and middle... or a tone bypass in other positions.
Vol is a coil cut.
I think Eddie would approve....
There is a rhythmic swing to Eddie's playing that made him unique - I think that is what a lot of people who try to copy him miss - what a great rhythm player he was. A lot of it came from the fact that he played drums before guitar - I find that guitarists that also played drums have a tighter swing to their technique (SRV is another.)
As great as his solos were, listening to his rhythm parts is even more educational and mind blowing.
very cool video, Mike. Great topic and very knowledgeable guest.
From a long time channel follower and huge Van Halen fan..this video was a cool surprise! ❤
I was at summer camp, and one of the counsellors lead us to the super echoy bathroom..thats where he blasted Eruption on a boom box for my first ever listen. The rest is history
I wish I'd held on to my Frankie but ..just didn't play it enough. Eddie, along with Stevie , Jimi and Slash are my Mt. Rushmore of greats. Great video and I love Rob too. Enjoying the channel sir.
I love Rob. Cool to see you guys are friends.
Huge VH fan.
My very favorite guitarist of all time (Yngwie and SRV number 2 and 3, respectively, and the biggest influence on my playing, aesthetics, and tone).
Legend.
The jamming and Mike busting out his best butt rock riffs (No shame, I love them too :D) on a EVH Strat really sells how different Eddie was as a rhythm player, and I think some people forget that amidst the blazing fire of his solos.
Got my eye on one of those EVH sa-126 guitars. Really seems to tick all the boxes for me. Great video,bruh!❤
I absolutely love this!! I have been taking lessons from Robert Baker for 4 years!!!!! Recommend him to anyone!
First off I’m not a musician. But I am an avid listener to music, especially 70’sand 80’s rock music. The first time I heard Can Halen’s music immediately it grabbed my attention. Even as a child just by hearing it I knew that this what all guitarist are measured. The style,the vocals and not really the words as much as the tone of the voices in Roth and Ed and Mike. But then there’s that guitar tone! It reaches inside you and makes you a part of the music. You asked how to achieve this tone? It’s impossible. You can buy the exact same setup the edddie had and it’s going to sound like you! It was in his soul,created from his mind through his fingers. Flowing out like rays of sunshine. He was one of a kind, not to say he’s the best cause I don’t know how to rank guitarist or any musician really. I think his sound and style is my favorite. But I like a lot of other guitarist to. As far as his influence goes, I can’t hear anything before his time in his music. They say Clapton, I don’t hear anything he ever did resembling Eddie. Page,naw he was very raw,generic, just played the guitar like it was and made the best with it. He was good and creative but nothing really over the top. IMO! Hendrix,maybe I hear a little bit there but their style was very similar. But I don’t think Eddie was influenced by him. Black Sabbath maybe a hint of influence. But really who the hell played the guitar like Eddie before 1978? No body. Who did in the 80’s? Everybody! Nuff said!
The Floyd is easy to maintain once you master it. Adam at FU-Tone has a great video on how to "properly" set up a guitar with a Floyd. The big downside is that you can really do unison bends, double-stop bends, etc. The tension drags the other strings flat out of tune when you bend. If you accept it, then it's a killer tool. A hard tail is great too. Different tools for different uses.
Definitely a huge Van Halen fan
Never bought an EVH, just bought a Kramer Assault plus and I love it
Eddie played Kramer for a while
Van Halen guitar tone still one of my favorites of all time
Rob is such a badass player!!!
Man, I love a Floyd Rose! I bought a PRS SE Custom 24 floyd in charcoal burst. I will never look back. I built a Franinstrat replica and I made sure to get a floyd for it.
Mike I’m a EVH fan since 78 when I was introduced to the first Album. I have a EVH Wolfgang special and a EVH LBXii with a 12” cabinet. I’m able to play that on about 9 in volume and in my 20’ x 16’ basement you can’t really be in the same space as it’s freaking loud!! I’ll have to decibel meter it next time. Anyway why I’m talking about loud and cranked up amps is how Ed said he learned to get all the extra special noises quieted and turned into music. Squeals, dives and all the extra bits come alive when you crank the amp. People that have shook his hands said his handshake was like granite. So his playing was fast and loose and improvised as he didn’t learn guitar traditionally. Granite hands with control allowed him to bring out all those sounds out of the guitar without many effects. So when he did use effects he made sure to make it count. Hammer on swells to make Cathedral. Embrace the craziness that is EVH style, wild with a lot of swing and rhythm. Just the right notes at the right time.
When Strat players discover Mike Landau.
Great video.
Not a massive VH fan, but there was no doubt that EVH was a monster player and a legend.
I’m 52. In 1988 I started learning guitar, ,y teacher was a Māori blues man. I asked him to teach me a Van Halen riff about 6 weeks in. He stopped, put his guitar down, and looked at me and said, Son, there’s Eddie, and then there’s everyone else.
He was right then, and he’s right now.
I have 3 EVH guitars. Love them all. The Floyd can be a pain, but nowhere near the pain that a floating trem is. I had one of the original Ibanez RG550’s. Love the guitar but that trem was a pain.
I got the Bumble Bee and love it with one exception. The D Tuna works, but having the Floyd set for EVH's downward use only setup instead of floating, it's pointed too far in towards the body and super hard to grip to pull out and pretty much useless.
@@cataclysmicconverter that can be remedied. Install a trem stop. That will raise the back of the trem off the body, but still in dive only. That’s what I had done to my Wolfgang, as I had the same issue. Now the Dtuna is easily accessible to move.
good job fellas! Eddie Van Halen for me is just a great fella.. a good human .. I think that is the trick .. all the best from Scotland!
Eddy was an amazing player but he was also the all in one package. He could play amazing guitar that everyone liked and he wrote great songs to back it up.
Hot for Teacher released in 1983 is a Sampled copy of Billy Cobham 1983 Quandrant 4 ..note for note beat for beat .
He used a tape delay in front of the amp, the echoplex preamp contributed to his tone quite a bit. But Eddie’s tone was in his fingers.
I saw the Women and Children First and Fair Warning tours... my ears are still ringing.
I absolutely love Floyds, I had one early on and got over the 'fight' and I fully understand it
Everyone seems to forget Billy Gibbons he definitely played a roll in eddies sound
I have an old Kramer with an original Floyd Rose and I'd leave it home from college, and I'd pick it up out of the case months later and it would still be in PERFECT tune. Embrace the learning curve, it will become your best friend. Also, superstrats are cool and all but check out what Mick Mars was playing in the late 80s with Motley Crue. SuperTELES are where its at.
"Thats Eddie Van Halen Boy" Hell Yeah!!!!! Rob is a bad ass guitarist!!!!
Yeah I’m a Van Halen fan. Both versions of the band made great music. Eddie’s playing is otherworldly but also his songwriting is great. I built a frankenstrat from a cheap strat kit and it came out pretty good.
I may be the only person in the comments that is not an EVH fan. I can appreciate that he was the first commercially successful guitarist to use a lot of techniques like two handed tapping but I could never get into his sound or the band’s music. Great video as always though, Mike!
10:23 sounds good guys 🤘✊, I love EVH and I’ve been playing his music since I was 15 and I’m 16 now. That frankstrat is so cool, so iconic.
Found you on the SG video (loved it), knew I had to come back seeing that Frankenstrat in your hands.
In a similar - not so similar world to Eddie, he really inspired a bunch of Strat players to mod their own and achieve whatever they can. Look at Billy Joe Armstrong's "Blue" Strat which had a Seymour Duncan JB-4 (I believe) in the bridge. Look at Tom Delonge's Strat (or any of his other guitars.) It's a hard tail, a Seymour Duncan Invader in the bridge wired up to a single volume knob with a treble bleed circuit. I've made my own from a Squire (before they did the signature reissue) and it's honestly my favorite guitar I have. You crank it, it lets you know that it's game time. You wind it back, it cleans up decently enough. $180 worth of guitar and pickup, and I wouldn't trade it for anything.
Would love to see your thoughts on the Tom Delonge signature (as I call it, the Delongecaster).
Great stuff though, love the history lessons and just the outright enthusiasm in your videos. You've earned the Sub, keep it up and keep playing!
I love the frankenstrat the best it has the best tone to me out of all the other guitars. It has the early Van Halen sound that I love. I saw a Van Halen cover band and they used a newer style EVH guitar and the Frankenstrat. The frankenstrat nailed it every time.