Posted on 10/08/2020 8:02:58 AM PDT by Kaslin
Most people spend their entire lives trying to achieve some measure of immortality. It only took Edward Lodewijk van Halen one minute and 42 seconds.
Eddie Van Halen, guitarist and American original, is dead at age 65 and theres no possible coda for a musical legacy this big. Most people spend their entire lives trying to achieve some measure of immortality. It only took Edward Lodewijk van Halen one minute and 42 seconds.
Thats the length of Eruption, the short guitar solo piece that is the second track on Van Halens eponymous 1978 debut. It starts off with some fast pull-off licks punctuated by some pinch harmonics, and then some whammy bar dive bombs that sound like his guitar amp is about to explode. Thats probably because the amp was, in fact, being thoroughly abused. To get his famously heavy and overdriven brown sound, EVH pulled two of the four glass vacuum tubes out of his Marshall amplifier and used a device called a variac to starve the amplifier of voltage.
After introducing all this glorious noise, the virtuoso did something truly revolutionary he broke into super-fast neoclassical arpeggiation. The classical influence was no accident. At one point in Eruption, Van Halen, whose Dutch father was a classically trained multi-instrumentalist, quotes a phrase from “Etude No. 2” by Rodolphe Kreutzer in the guitar-friendly key of E flat. The Van Halens immigrated to California when Eddie was seven, arriving with “with approximately $50 and a piano,” according to Eddie.
This section of the song stunned listeners, and baffled guitar players who couldnt figure out how he played the section so cleanly and so fast. There were wild rumors about what he was doing did he amplify a dulcimer or a Kyoto? surely something that fast couldnt be played on guitar.
But it could, and Eddie Van Halen had done it. Instead of plucking or strumming the strings below the fretboard of the guitar, he took his right hand and began tapping notes on the fretboard, while still using his fretting hand to hammer on and pull off notes. Tapping, as its now called, is now ubiquitous in the guitar world, but at early gigs, Eddie Van Halen was notorious for turning his back to the audience so other guitarists couldnt steal his signature technique.
This odd little album interstitial, both in its crushing, previously unheard guitar tone and innovative technique, is probably the most significant instrumental in the history of rock, and theres a strong case to be made its the most influential piece of rock music of the last 42 years, period. This achievement is all the more remarkable when you consider Eruption is not even a song per se. Its impact is purely a matter of impressionistic sonics and forceful virtuosity.
As ’70s rock bands go, Van Halen werent exactly innovative songwriters in a decade where prog rock and the anthemic complexity of Led Zeppelin were ascendant. If Eruption gets any radio airplay at all, its because it bled into the bands affable cover of The Kinks You Really Got Me, which, even buoyed with Eddies riffage, isnt exactly the sound of a band reinventing the wheel.
Of course, Van Halen had other noteworthy hits from their first record Running With the Devil, Janies Cryin and Aint Talkin Bout Love, the latter which begins with an A minor to G to F riff run through a phaser that was also essential for defining Eddie Van Halens sound.
But it was Eruption that single-handedly invented guitar-shredding a foundational element of the hair metal that dominated the airwaves in the decade to come. Similarly, EVHs heavy tone and the fluid contrast between palm-muted riffing and soloing in higher registers would also have a profound influence on the underground metal bands of the ’80s such as Metallica and Slayer, to say nothing of the sound of the grunge bands more than a decade later.
The grunge influence was somewhat ironic, as grunge was presented as a musical emetic for all the artistic excesses of the hair metal that came in Van Halens wake. You could decry the soulless guitar wankery that Van Halen inspired, but after a decade of Van Halen permanently on the charts, there was simply no way to play rock and roll guitar without internalizing aspects of Eddie Van Halens playing.
EVH had a simply stellar, and somewhat loose sense of rhythm indeed, one of Van Halen the bands chief virtues is that they are the rare hard rockers that swung that prevented his most show-offy parts from sounding flat and unmusical. The same cannot be said of a great many mechanical guitar shredders who drafted behind him.
Even today its a running joke on Guitar Player magazines excellent No Guitar Is Safe podcast that its impossible to interview any notable guitar player who works in any genre, be it jazz fusion or neo-soul, for more than an hour without Eddie Van Halens name coming up. Of course, even those who have zero interest in the technical aspects of guitar playing are aware of EVHs cross-cultural influence in one significant way — the unmistakably EVH solo on Michael Jacksons Beat It.
The story goes that Eddie Van Halen, who was never really a session player, didnt want to solo against the section of the song that had been cued up for him. He wanted to solo against the chord changes in the verse, so he ended up rearranging the song in the studio without Quincy Jones and Michael Jackson knowing he was messing with the track. After he was done, the song had to be stitched back together with quite a bit of clever engineering, which was not easy in the days everything was recorded to magnetic tape. But the solo EVH came up with was so memorable and well-phrased, no one disputes its a highlight of Thriller, the second-bestselling record of all time.
Theres a lot more that could be said about Van Halen the bands impact, as their goofy, sex-obsessed image was definitely a polarizing part of their image. The lyrics and video for Hot For Teacher were actually debated in congressional hearings about the need for labeling explicit rock lyrics.
On the other hand, the fact that Eruption was an aberration and Eddie Van Halen otherwise worked to showcase his chops in very tuneful pop music settings is the reason Van Halen has sold more than 75 million records, instead of merely a being an influential virtuoso. (A word must also be said for the Sammy Davis Jr.-meets-Jeff Spicolli charisma of David Lee Roth, and the rock-solid musicianship of bassist Michael Anthony Eddies brother Alex on the drums.)
Van Halen may have played loud and heavy, but they felt light-hearted and fun. As an email acquaintance put it, There’s a time and a place for Black Sabbath, but at a party, do you really want to bum out the ladies cranking Hand of Doom? No way man! Fire up Diver Down and let’s rage!
To Eddies credit, he was also not content to rest on his guitar laurels the bands biggest selling album, 1984, came after he was frustrated that Roth and Ted Templeman, the producer of the bands first five records, were discouraging his desire to experiment with keyboards. He started producing and writing in his own studio, and the results included Jump, which has one of the most memorable synth hooks in the decade keyboards were ubiquitous.
Unfortunately, the tensions over the 1984 record couldnt be resolved and Roth left the band, giving way to the era many Van Halen fans derisively refer to as Van Hagar. While it was certainly a change for the band, Sammy Hagar is an able frontman and the slickly produced ear candy that followed is not without its charms and saw the band branching out. Songs like Finish What You Started and Right Now were welcome diversions from the bands hard rock formula, not that Van Halen ever stopped rocking. (Older readers might recall “Right Now” was the soundtrack for the ad campaign for the briefly ubiquitous but ultimately disastrous launch of Crystal Pepsi.)
Unfortunately, the ego that drove Eddie Van Halen to success and ego was certainly a problem for other members of Van Halen as well kept getting in the way. The 1995 record Balance was the last to feature Sammy Hagar, and then there was an ill-fated dalliance with Extreme vocalist Gary Cherone that lasted one album. In 2000, Eddie kicked Michael Anthony out of the band so his son Wolfgang could take over bass duties in Van Halen, angering many longtime fans, to say nothing of the fact that Anthonys great high harmonies were a crucial part of the bands sound.
Also worth mentioning is that starting in the ’90s, while the band was beginning to founder a bit, Eddie Van Halen turned a lot of attention to the design of his signature guitars, amplifiers, and other guitar gear. While his self-painted guitars from his early career, especially the red white and black striped patterned Frankenstrat, are holy relics of the guitar world, in the 1990s a more mature Eddie Van Halen started rethinking his approach to his instrument.
The result was the refined-but-aggressive Wolfgang guitar design, which is now iconic in a world where most guitar players are averse to playing any guitar design that doesnt date back to the 1950s. And the ongoing iterations of his ’90s-era 5150 amplifiers, which had an even more distortion-saturated sound, are still beloved by heavy metal players. The EVH guitar brand is now what Air Jordan is to athletic wear.
The oughts saw two reunion tours one each with Hagar and Roth. While these tours were transparently mercenary, and say what you want about Van Halens inability to keep a consistent lineup, the band always triumphed live, in no small part because Eddie Van Halen was a force of nature. If youve ever played live, you know it’s not easy for one guitarist to fill up the sonic space in a four-piece band.
The story goes that when EVH saw Led Zeppelin live in the ’70s, he was profoundly disappointed that his guitar idol Jimmy Page couldnt quite carry off the bands ambitious recordings live. Eddie was such a force of nature that no one who ever saw Van Halen live walked away thinking he couldnt pull it off.
By 2012, Eddie seemed to have some kind of genuine artistic and personal reconciliation with Roth, resulting in the bands last proper album, A Different Kind of Truth. Its an underrated gem; Roths harmonies on the first single, Tattoo, along with Eddies driving riff on Shes The Woman, would have been right at home in the bands early catalog. By then, the pop music world was over hard rock, but go ahead and watch the crowd lose their mind during their kick-ass performance of Panama at the 2015 Grammys. Even late in their career, appreciation for Van Halen remained undimmed and universal.
As for Eddie Van Halens personal life, there were the rock star ups and downs. Despite enduring various substance abuse-related issues that tested their marriage, he was married to actress Valerie Bertinelli for 26 years, divorcing her in 2006. Van Halen went to rehab in 2007 and got sober, and his relationship with Bertinelli remained very amicable.
She was in attendance when he remarried to publicist Janie Liszewski in 2009, and reportedly among the friends and family at his bedside when he died of oral cancer. An inveterate smoker for much of his life, he was first diagnosed with oral cancer in 2000 and after being successfully treated, the disease reared up again in 2014. He had reportedly been fighting throat cancer for the last six years when he died on October 6.
Whatever personal and professional demons Eddie Van Halen faced in life, family was always very important to him. His exceptionally close bonds with his son and brother meant everything. In 2017, Eddie Van Halen was interviewed by the Smithsonian as part of a series on What it means to be an American. He was asked by a member of the crowd, Of all the deceased musicians out there that are no longer around, could you pick one to play with, who would that be?
The weight of his own mortality was no doubt hanging in his mind in ways that the audience couldnt have known. Wow, he said, taking a beat. Id like to jam with my father again.
Maybe now hell get the chance. Rest in peace, Eddie.
4L8r
I hear the same noises when I’m getting a tooth drilled.
...the solo EVH came up with was so memorable and well-phrased...
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Thats what separates him from other shredders and virtuosos—he had great taste. Some players just have an instinct for playing lines that grab you. He had it in spades, plus an innovative technical approach that let him express it in a way that was really exciting. He also was one of those guys who could almost “speak” through his instrument; that is, there was no technique barrier between what he wanted to play and his ability to play it. Two other guys that come to mind who had that are Jimi Hendrix and Jeff Beck. Also Danny Gatton but nobody but guitar junkies have heard of him.
Unfortunate it bothers you to the degree that you felt compelled to make a stupid smart az comment.
The next time you feel that compulsion, BIOYA.
LOL. Please learn how to re-size photos when posting. You’ll be doing everyone a favor, keyboard warrior.
Problem is, I have Ritchie on record doing what EVH did later.
Like I said, I thought a couple of their Roth originals on their final album were pretty good.
But absolutely NOTHING wrong with a cover if you make it your own.
Adam Lambert’s “Ring of Fire” was every bit as good and in many ways better than Cash’s-—but it’s a totally different song.
Same thing with Van Halen’s “You Really Got Me”.
And we have Ritchie saying that’s not so. Of course there’s degrees of doing something. There’s doing something once in a while pretty well, and there’s something regularly and very well. Adrian Belew related a story yesterday. While he was touring with Zappa he’d started experimenting with tapping (which didn’t really have a name yet), walking around LA with a friend of his who was also playing with the technique they wandered into the Whiskey. Turns out Van Halen was there, and they’re watching Eddie tapping, and Adrian turns to his friend and says “hey he’s doing our thing” “yup” “and he’s better than us” “I noticed”.
He was an innovator and he pushed the technique of rock and roll guitar playing in new directions of speed, technique and technical manipulation. Most of the great guitar players out there have been talking about that the last 2 days. Heck they’ve been talking about it the last 2 decades. They liked him as a professional and person. They learned from him. Those are the facts. That is reality.
And yet, wasn’t the guy in Autograph generally considered to be the “father” of “tapping?” That’s what wiki said at one time.
All music rests on someone else’s shoulders. Black musicians claim all the stuff in the 60s-—they had been doing it all for years in the clubs. Who knows?
I like EVH. I wouldn’t put him in my top five guitarists, which would be Beck, Hendrix, Blackmore, Clapton, and Page, all for different reasons.
My brother was one. VH was in its heyday when he was in high school, and he just had to get a guitar and a little amp and try to play like Eddie. He never quite got there despite many attempts (heard by me down the hall).
This was a great read about someone I never appreciated.
Thank you.
Eddie could compose his solos, and improvised like a jazz musician. It wasn’t about the technicals, it was the flow of the notes and sounds, that were in his head, that he could make come out of the instrument.
You've missed out on a lot.
Eddie was exceptional at both, though his biggest strength was the artistry he brought that nobody else could duplicate. That's what made him special. For example fingertapping was just a throwaway gimmick rarely used before Eddie embraced it and through his musical creativity transformed it into something everyone used in almost every song for a decade.
Was never a huge VH fan — David Lee Roth kind of turned me off — but liked a number of their songs. When they re-did “You Really Got Me,” it was an ingenious choice. Almost like they were saying, “the original version took rock in a new direction, with power chords, distortion, etc. We’re going to use the same song to take rock in another new direction.”
As far as Eddie hammering the strings, he certainly popularized it, but he didn’t invent it. I remember reading an interview with Brian May, who did it on a Queen album a year before VH’s debut and said he got the idea from a guitarist at a club in Texas, who said he copied it from Billy Gibbons of ZZ Top. But it probably predates Billy Gibbons as well.
Eddie was raised on classical music. His father was a classical musician and Eddie was trained in classical piano before deciding he'd rather rock. But he still loved the classics and he named his son Wolfgang after Mozart.
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