Yes. No one has ever duplicated his tone. Many have tried. Also his playing. Many copy it but none of them have been able to play with the same fluidity and feel. He really was a one of a kind.
@@ChrisThornburn-i3eWhen Van Halen first came out, it was like when Hendrix did … a totally new game! You had to have been playing back then to understand how different of a player he was. Tappers are everywhere now but back then it was something completely different.
EVH's has been largely forgotten for decades now. He's more of a musician's guitarist. Gifted at playing the instrument but the music itself hasn't aged particularly well.
@@ChrisThornburn-i3ePretty sure his Eruption Live solo is getting more views at a higher rate now then ever. The younger generation is learning about this now.
Eddie was just a mad scientist/artist/sonically gifted human being who chose to express himself through music. He heard things differently than everyone else. There will never be anyone like him again, and frankly, I’m glad for that. If there were several of him, then his abilities would not be as unique and wonderful.
If anyone had the definition of the Guitar Hero, it would surely be EVH. Innovative on technique and style, fantastic and heavy riffs, and an iconic image. Guitar literally would not be the same without him!
He's so much of a guitar hero, they even made a Guitar Hero: Van Halen spinoff in the GH franchise, which was the biggest no brainer ever. Great game too!
With each passing year I'm more thankful for that window of (rock and roll) time when I first heard a Van Halen song. It was different to the point of being profound. Not unlike he first time I heard progressive rock.
It's been 53 years since Hendrix died, 41 years since Rhoads died, and 33 years since SRV died. They might not be with us, but their musicianship will always live on.
I don't think Rick talks about SRV (god i miss him) much? I'm still really new to the channel tho... you can never talk about him too much in my mind. lol
I heard first Van Halen LP in 78 and it was like reinvention of heavy rock like a injection of adrenalin. But I did think some of the playing was like Hendrix which Eddie doesn't claim to be as influenced by. The way he plays solos is a bit like a jazz instrument. Though Hendrix music is more varied than Van Halen. Eruption was like something out of this world!
Immortal words Rock 'n' roll ain't noise pollution Rock 'n' roll ain't gonna die Rock 'n' roll ain't noise pollution Rock 'n' roll, it will survive (yes, it will)
These people are from another planet, came here for a while to show us things on the guitar we thought were impossible. Then left us early, wondering:”What the hell was that?” But inspired, and trying to figure out other inventive ways to make this incredible instrument sound. God bless ‘em all.❤
It's a tragedy how the tapping became the main focus of attention on Eddie's playing. His technique across the board was utterly impeccable, and he was doing things on guitar on the debut album that seemed like nothing short of a whole new style (and playing level) out of thin air. It's like he fell to Earth from outer space.
I always like to point out cathedral, a song which requires precise manipulation of the volume knob (sometimes even to the breaking point) and it sounds like an alien spaceship. Or even intruder, which pairs well with the music video. But when I listen to it unaided, I can envision a breaking and entering senario with the breaking glass, screaming family, sirens going off etc. Eddie was a hidden master at painting a picture with music.
Disagree about tapping being a major focus.... maybe for non musicians, and it wasn't a big deal when EVH was touring from first 4+ albums. EVH was multi dimensional in every aspect of playing guitar/song writing/taking it apart to make it better/and just being the showman. You cannot pigeon hole EVH to one thing or two things or even three things. EVH was a gift from GoD to all of us. To say anything less is treasonous and just wrong in every way.
I think it was the never before heard sounds, the master of the fill, the slipped in the notch two notes, the double stops, the rhythm bits that were difficult a f. The "how'd he do it" spots ( long before videos and now just taken apart clinicians for 40 years breaking it down on TH-cam ) It was a taste and style immediately it's own, a sound all his own, and an effortless live mastery that captivated and stunned anyone in attendance...and as Rick said..."uncopyable" Kinda funny to watch folks struggling to copy cat after countless years and hours of study...give it up, one and only original model of EVH, rip legend.
There was so much joy and happiness in his playing. EVH played guitar like someone who loved being alive. Some guys can shred but can't write. Some guys can write but can't shred. Eddie could do it all.
Your brother's comments on the 'whole package' are so spot on.. people tend to get focused on the solos, tapping, etc.. but there was SO much more that he was a master of.
Just discovered "Ripley" from the wild Life soundtrack..sort of remember the movie but not the score. What a beautiful piece, not for blistering solo or massive crunch, just great music, and immediately thought of that piece after reading your comment.
I've often heard that many guitarists admire Eddie for his phenomenal rhythm playing --- his leads and solos got all the attention but his rhythm ability in songs like "Beautiful Girls" really stands out to me!
I love this Rick. I think the reason we are still talking about Eddie is because we love and miss him. In addition to this for our age group just takes us back to a nostalgic place. Man every time a Van Halen tune comes on the radio I just smile. Reminds me of driving in the 80's or 90's to go catch a Van Halen show somewhere. The music was loud, the audience was locked into the band, girls were dancing and guys were drinking. The whole time you got this kid Eddie on stage grinning. What a monster. Miss EVH
Eddie is the GOAT for me. There was something about him, the feel, the tone, the joy... it all came through in his playing. Loved hearing him play and it was a honor to watch him live.
Got to see Ed play quite a few times...my fav was when a buddy and I scored tix for the 5 th row right in front of Eddie on the reunion tour. I yelled out to Ed in between songs and he looked at me... gave me the cool Eddie grin and a thumbs up...I suddenly knew how someone felt seeing The Beatles lol
Absolutely. My first concert was Black Sabbath with VH. Smaller general admission venue. My buddy and I managed to get around 30'. The entire show Including Sabbath was incredible. Then had to go see VH on their headlining tours and always Eddie killed it.
Edward had the one thing that all others lacked, and that is he had the whole package: ✔️ Incredible rhythm ✔️ Incredible soloing ✔️ Incredible songwriting ✔️ Intuition to create his own sound
Might have been the case early on, and that's not to take anything away from EVH as a guitar player or musician, but it's like you're ignoring that Van Halen put out arguably more crap than good albums in their career.
Take away the songwriting part and you are spot on. In fact EVH was quite the messy songwriter. It was always through the filter of the other band members (especially Michael Anthony and later Sammy Hagar) that the riffs turned into great songs. There is one record in which Eddy almost fully took the reins and that turned out to be Van Halen III.
I’m a drummer, and I could listen to you talk about EVH all day. He was such an amazing musician, and he brought out the best in the other musicians he played with.
Chris, I AGREE with you as well 100% on your comment!.........I saw VH (live) a few times as a teenager 1983-1986, and, STILL enjoy their music ANYTIME I hear it!!!!!......It's great NOW, to hear (isolated/studio/raw, etc.) tracks giving all the tools at our access/availability in todays world.........Good luck with all your drumming/music. Todd Walker
If you're reading this now and you're a guitar player, this is why you really need to see the movie "Amadeus." Watching it now, it reminds me a little of EVH. All the metal guitarists who were on the scene when EVH came out on the first VH album are a little like Salieri in that movie.
His early classical piano knowledge truly helped with his future blending of distortion and harmonics on his axe sound. He himself said that he was "A Tone Chaser". But was like an exuberant young kid with a ferocious appetite for tone in a musical candy store. Coincides with biblical teachings, "Unless you change and become like little children, you will never enter The Kingdom of Tone Heaven". It was a great time for music for many, and a great time growing up in America. Especially the 1980's. It was A Great Music Renaissance of Great Sound, Great Bands, and Great Music.
EVH had such a natural phrasing in everything he played. Every note flows into the next in a pattern that is naturally expected. His solo's, his riffing, is exactly the direction where my mind expects it to flow. Eddie was a shredder, but it felt effortless. All the shredder's that followed shredded for the sake of shredding, but rarely did it feel like it added to the music or had to be there.
I'm not really a fan of EVH, but lots of his stuff fit the music his band played. Sure he was more musical then a lot of tech death and mathcore which I hardly listen to. Heck, I even like the keyboard solo in Jump more then the guitar solo. As for playing with "feel" a solo that comes to my mind when thinking of that is "The Best of Times" last solo from John Petrucci. If you want another modern shredder that is very musical then check out Plini who is one of my favorite modern guitar players.
@@fredwerza3478 Laughing at another guitarist style seems silly and childish. "Mature" guitarist might like one or both players equally, but its a matter of personal taste. I'm blown away that you start "laughing" when you hear some guitarist play. It seems strange to me. I'm also curious, how old are you?
Well said man. I can play some VH. You know who I sound like? Me. Ed cannot be copied. He had swing and swagger in his feel and attack. His hands were so strong , he had to have his guitars tuned 14cents off. If you or I picked up Ed`s guitars, we would be totally out of tune.
What I find amazing about EVH is that his guitar playing had a different approach on every album from VH1 to 1984. I can't come up with anyone having the same natural flow in both rhythm and solo.
Edward came along and had the ear to search for his sound, the technique to make new sounds, and a drive to get a guitar and amp that delivered what he wanted to deliver. He didn’t just want a weird body shape for the sake of the newness of it, he wanted the sounds and capabilities he needed to get his sound. He wanted amps and gear that lived up to his expectations and specifications. He wrote brilliant melodies, and supported those melodies with rhythm and riffs that made great songs. He didn’t just play, he transformed the musical landscape by transmitting his sound in his head out to all of us. Some say he was the biggest thing since Hendrix. I would go back farther. With his search for sound, techniques, guitar and gear to support his search, I put him closer to Les Paul than Jimi.
So glad you mentioned Unchained. It is my favorite hard rock song of all time. I saw them on the 1984 tour (3rd show, Lakeland, Fl), and when they opened with it, it was pure power.
I teach a guitar class at a local community college. I told the students last night that, at least in my world, when Van Halen comes on (like at a ball park or on the radio), time stops: it's Eddie. Still the king. For me it was always tone and rhythm that kept bringing me back. Drop Dead Legs? Forget about it!!
Hilarious to look at tablature for "Drop Dead Legs". It is 100% his swing, swagger, and tone that brings it to life. So perfectly, uniquely his. Nobody covers Van Halen, because it would sound kinda ridiculous.
Eddie: Had the craziest hooks, lightning taps, harmonics all over the keyboard, two-handed insanity, stellar speed, killer dive bombs, perfect rhythm, and could sing harmony vocals, too. Not bad on piano, either. Total package.
Without forgetting how excellent Alex was, that they were in full intuitive sync, the synchopations between them made it magical. With some other drummer the outcome would have been very different. I definitely think their family jazz background was a key element.
People are looking back on him and like they've done with the Beatles, are gaining a new appreciation for how good and unique he was. His rhythm pocket playing, song writing, live performances, improvisation in mid-song, guitar tone and tech developments. Just a one of a kind that comes along every so often.
The groove, the feel, the swing, the aggression, and most importantly the confidence in his abilities. Fearless playing. Nobody had ever attacked the guitar with such precision like that before. And it's been said that he had a light touch! Incredible. Will we ever see another player come along again and change the way we look at everything guitar related? Probably not to that extent. I hope so, but Ed was an anomaly. The chosen one. The legend will live on forever.
Exactly. The groove, and swing, that he brought into his riffs and even lead work was just SO damn interesting and unlike any of his peers and future peers... except maybe for Randy Rhoads
Hearing those isolated guitar tracks is amazing. I still get the same feelings as I did in the 80s. It's not just music. It sounds like a living creature, all knowing, feeding on pure energy. A universal language. Everyone is invited 😀👍😎🤘
Eddie had an incredible ear, was trained on piano and had impeccable rhythm!!! He was amazingly creative and really never fully satisfied, always chasing tone and perfection!
What you are really illustrating is the hard work and discipline that Eddie applied to his craft. He took great care in both creating a fantastic tone and being able to produce chops like no one else. The opposite of younger guys today showing how fast they can play with little or no finesse.
Eddie was the most unique soul on the rock guitar. No one could ever swing like him while sounding so awesome. He is forever my favorite guitarist and always will be. Eddie changed my world with my first listen to Eruption and I'll never forget it.
I love this about Eddie..he was complete…master songwriter, arranger, just the fact that you pick out his dropping just a few cents off perfect tuning so the cords are perfectly pleasing to the ear while pommelling you at the same time… long live, Edward Van Halen! Thanks Rick keep it going. And your bro to.
The thing about those early records was that - as perfect as Eddie's playing was -- the tracks sounded like the song was going to fly apart at any second. The production made them sound wild and dangerous. They had this raw energy you can't get with click tracks and everything polished up. Ted Templeman knew what he was doing...capturing the "live" sound of the band.
You are correct!! Just try to pick up a guitar and play "I'm the one." The swing beat opening riff in that song is so hard to play that I have never seen anybody else do it correctly. His use of effects in his rhythm playing make it sound so good too. Examples: Aint talkin" bout love, and unchained. He was great at rythm!!!
LMAO. You used "EVH" and "Criminally overlooked" in the same sentence. Aside from Jimi Hendrix, there has never been a more celebrated guitarist than Eddie. Just because people were infatuated with his soloing and tapping technique, it doesn't mean his rhythm guitar playing was overlooked. Next you'll be saying "Wish You Were Here" is the most criminally overlooked album ever and that George Harrison is the most criminally overlooked songwriter ever.
@@Charles-qn1bt there are tons of videos of people analyzing/covering his solos and I hardly found those who specifically drove into his "rhythm" in most songs. that's my point.
I love to listen to Eddie's guitar tracks, he plays with such power and confidence. I think it's the way he attacks the strings that gives him his sound.
First and foremost you are so dearly missed Eddie. There will never be another guitarist that shaped the electric guitar the way that you did. The music will live on forever and continue to inspire the next generations to come. RIP
Legendary guitar players . Such as Eddie Van Halen. Jeff Beck, Randy Rhoads. Stevie Ray Vaughan. . We’ll always live on. Their music and guitar playing well live on. R.I.P..
I would definitely put all four of those players in the same group. They were cut from the same cloth. Just the way they approached the instrument, and what came out of it, put them a cut above.
@@robplante8631 No offence to Stevie Ray Vaughan, he just copied Hendrix playing and style. But all the other guys were unique. So maybe he doesn't really belong with the other guys.
@@Atlas65nahhh you're doing a disservice to a virtuoso player. Yes he was heavily influenced and flat out copied a bunch but SRV had his own thing going that was epic. Even EVH would play Crossroads note for note.
Unchained is a Masterpiece. As a Youngster it was "Hot For Teacher" that really got me hooked along with "Jump", I have been playing piano 35+ year's and that is so much fun on a Synth. Just the fact that Eddie built his own guitar's , worked on his equipment, developed his own sound....geez, he did so damn much. "Runnin' with the Devil"...though I Really walk with Jesus , is an infectious riff. "Panama" is an amazingly intensely fun riff. R.I.P. EVH. That was a great chat btw!!!
Of all the amazing tunes they wrote Hot for Teacher and Jump ? Jump is the reason I and many others strayed…Total gayness lol I’m the One On Fire Somebody Get Me a Doctor THATS Van Halen Cmon man…..
This is the unspoken secret of all musical success. Nearly all practiced like a fulltime job. Driven. Clash, Pistols, JD, Fripp, Nirvana, Beatles, EVH. Hours of relentless practice with no money in often squalid conditions. Unheated practice spaces. 25cents for corndogs, homeless, eating whitewash paste for food. Years of practice in his bedroom ages 17 to 22. 8 hours a day for 5 yeas.15,000 hours of practice.
@@willywayne5299 i would partially agree with you that one has to have an innate talent for “hearings” the right notes. And then of course craft it to perfection.
Eddie had a natural feel and swing when he played that no one else does and no one ever will. He was one of the best rhythm guitarists who ever lived, in addition to his virtuoso lead playing. He was a very rare musical genius and a true innovator. RIP EVH, we miss you.
Eddie created his sound from the hardware out. He built his guitars, hacked his amps, tuned for the song, and practiced practiced practiced. His dedication to tone and technique was unprecedented. He was disruptive in the best possible ways and that's why we'll never stop talking about him.
More videos like this would not hurt my feelings at all. Enjoy you guys detailing why it sounds so amazing and why Eddie was special. Like John said its much more than the soloing, it's the whole package. The riffs. OMFG. Never gets old. It's like a warm blanket every time.
Hearing those isolated guitar tracks shows how massive those riffs really are. Very cool video, Rick, and it's nice to see your brother and put a face to some of your stories about growing up.
The explanation of tuning to the chord at the end of the video is one of the most enlightening aspects of the guitar to ever be explained on the internet. I work with Tony Franklin and he uses fretless basses which means the guitars better be in tune to what's right to your ears and not just the pedal board or overdubs will be a nightmare. Great conversation guys.
Had this kind of conversation with my buddies who play...it never gets old and the more you really listen the more it's gets better like aged wine...when we were young in the 70s,80s..we were drinking did pay attention..but now ..truly amazing R.I.P
I saw every Van Halen tour from Women and Children through 5150. Eddie Van Halen was the absolute best. A truly complete player and great entertainer. Not only an inntovator guitarist but also a genius in equipment development. He will be greatly missed and never forgotten.
That's why IMO he loved & respected Les Paul so much because they were (obviously completely different in style/genre) however from the same mindset of innovation, playing, & always working on taking it further than anyone else had. Les felt the same about him, they knew they were both far ahead of their time. RIP to them both as they both changed the world of music for guitar.
Man, lucky..sadly, I never saw them live at all, one of my regrets from my teenage/20's years....I wish I had seen every VH tour from VH1 through Balance....
When I watch Eddie play the solo section in Live Without a Net 1986, and he starts with the 3:16 melody... That whole next 10 min section is just magic🙌You can feel it in his expressions, this is a guy in the zone and truly doing what he loves. I'm extremely grateful I got to see them live once. What a monster of an icon the music gods crafted with EVH🙏🎸 My Mt Rushmore for fun😁: Eddie Van Halen, Dimebag, Jimmy Page, Tony Iommi
Unfortunately, I was born a little too late, but I have Eddie's live without a net solo as my wallpaper on my pc. I wish I coulda seen them live. All my favorite artists have passed or don't play with the whole band (queen)
Eddie Van Halen has and will always be the hero of my life. From the first time I heard him to the time I met him to this very post, his unmatched talent and innovation is a gift to us all. The skill that he provided, the sounds he honed, the energy, the passion and the ability to create whatever he wanted without boundaries or concern will be talked about for generations. Listening to him through these years and now with isolated tracks makes you stand in awe of just how amazing he truly was. He wasn’t trying to outplay anyone he was just a man with a passion for music and his guitar playing is timeless
EVH, like Mozart, heard the music in his head first. He hears the sound in his mind’s ear, and then fashioned the acoustics to match what he had imagined. He always gave credit to the divine, for giving him the gift to create original sounds, and was way more humble than anyone would imagine. Monart’s birthday was January 27th, Eddie’s was January 26th, as is mine, and I too compose multi-layered tracks, with one-off recordings, as I hear the sounds in my mind’s ear as well.
With today's tunes there is a machine beyond artists with an army of producers, additional song writers, and engineers to cultivate the catchiest mainstream songs for the masses. . What Van Halen did, showing up to the studio to record live, their own stuff, and have that same impact to the masses , Bravo! Hope we can go back to that form one day.
I love this. I started playing guitar in 1977 because I saw Kiss on (of all things) a PBS broadcast of one of their concerts. My Dad's annoyance and the explosions had me hooked for life, but as I started to get serious about the guitar, Van Halen provided the same mind explosion for me as described in this video and so many others. And I love that you guys talk not about the technicality, but the tone and the tuning and the feel - because after all these years, I think that is why we still talk about Eddie - the emotion he elicits with everything he plays - the fact that it is also technical is just what makes it that much more amazing. But the differentiator is that anyone listening to a Van Halen riff can't help but be moved BECAUSE of the tone, the feel, the execution that provides that emotional transcendence.
We guitar players have always been frustrated with those slight variations in the B string, and even the G string. I loved this whole discussion with the Eddie clips of his raw recordings and then your discussion about these tuned by ear chords.
Eddie’s stuff is alive! His rhythm parts are the liveliest rhythms ever. His solos, at first listen seem otherworldly but are actually incredible call and response that is so damn pleasing to the ear and his songwriting…….he was the whole package. Legendary.
I personally LOVE the Hagar years of Van Halen. His playing, musical choices, and tones are just so beautiful sounding, diversified by his ripping playing... PLEASE RICK, do a Van Hagar video!!!!!!!!!!! 🙏
Indeed, while I do enjoy Dave on the recordings he wasn’t that good live apart from being a great showman, Hagar brought the good lead vocal to VH both on the records as live.
My friend asked me , who was the best front man? He said DLR. I said my first requirement for that position is , can he sing? Can he deliver the goods live? For that reason alone I wouldn’t pick DLR. It would be like picking the best guitarist on looks alone but he can’t play guitar. Just my thoughts, everyone has an opinion.
EVH is the most influential rock player to come along since Hendrix. PERIOD! They both dropped MAJOR 💣s and still influence players to this day. Their contribution to guitar / music is immeasurable… that’s why we are still talking about EVH, respectfully!💯🤘🏾🙏🏾
The first VH album is the greatest debut album of all time. Not a week goes by that I don’t listen to it. Mindblowing sound from the virtuoso of my formative years. RIP, EVH!
The best thing that happened to Eddie was that interview at the Smithsonian where he described in great detail, his childhood, his parents, his early piano competitions, Alex, and the experimentation he did with removing pickups, soldering new ones in; basically, his quest for the perfect tone that HE knew was out there and only HE could create with his own intense efforts. Some of what he did with pickups became the industry standard. That interview made us understand who Eddie really was. A genius.
And then the influences he had in the world of guitar manufacturing and amps and pedals. He was important and groundbreaking in literally every aspect of playing guitar. He lived in my hometown, Nijmegen, the Netherlands, before he and his family moved to the US. I think it’s ridiculous that Eddie still doesn’t have a statue in Nijmegen. ❤❤❤
Every time I hear EVH’s guitar it captures a part of my soul - it’s like entering a time warp back to college (1979ff). The sound he captured was so powerful. He has really carved out his own fresh space on the guitar. Much like Gilmour, Page, Beck, The Edge, etc. Such music and guitar playing really is a kind of mystery - a gift from the divine. Beauty.
I could listen to this all day. EVH was more than just a guitar hero, he was a music hero. Who else would think to UN-tune strings to make the riffs sound better?!? This is just one of many of his innovations to music and guitar playing. There’s just no way to get that tone. And, I hope no one else ever does.
I absolutely love EVH. Yes, I too was influenced by Lynch, DeMartini, Bratta,etc… but Eddie is the dude that got me to pick up guitar. His riffs, sound, phrasing, made his own mods… yeah we all agree! RIP Eddie❤
10,000 hours is an understatement. I heard DLR say in an interview he was a 40,000 - 50,000 hour guy. And that was back then. Think about that for a hot second. Jesus. For someone where that was simply his playing style and it came natural to him - thus he developed a style folks emulate today. He said if he took lessons, he wouldn’t have sounded like that. He just did what sounded good to him. Take a step back, and holy f-ing wow. I’ve been playing 35 years and have well over 20K hours of practice myself over that time. Im not close.
Hearing his isolated tracks, particularly from the first record up to Fair Warning, is just something that does not get old! I was 12 when the first record came out & had been listening to Zeppelin & Hendrix & was just completely blown away. That record is one of those that every f**cking song, is sick! But the solos man, On Fire, is a VERY good example!
My God, I miss EVH so much. Please listen to the rhythm guitar during the guitar solo to “Feel Your Love Tonight”. So catchy, so badass, so legend. Cheers to you Eddie!
Temperament in Van Halen! As a VH fiend and bass player-turned-lutenist, it's delightful to hear a discussion in which the bread and butter of lute and Renaissance music is applied to good ol' rock 'n' roll. Another gem, Mr. Beato. Thank you.
It's been a long while since I visited and your enthusiasm hasn't diminished. I'm not a musician and I still love to listen to you LOVE music. Continued Success.
Ed is the best of all time…a true musical genius in every aspect of guitar: technique, innovation of gear, song writing, creativity, etc. Fair Warning I think was the pinnacle of his sound and tone. Thanks Rick for the great video!
We are all talking about Eddie because he changed everything in rock n roll. So many things he brought to the table for us to chew on. There will never be another like him.
Eddie is/was my favorite thing in music. His exuberance while he played, always smiling, never looking at the guitar…it was a literal extension of his arms. As mentioned other guys in the early to mid 80s homaged, mimicked, or copied him but man that zest for playing just was not present like it was with Eddie. For a great example of it, watch him on the Live without a Net concert in New Haven Connecticut. He is alive.
EVH: THE most important guitarist of the "modern era"! He: 1) invented a STYLE of playing and the SOUND to go with it, 2) the GUITAR to play it on, AND with these innovations 3) influenced a large chunk of the WORLD of Music (and beyond) in MANY ways. NO ONE can reasonably deny this "legacy"!
Wow I remember constantly tuning the b&e strings after using the tuner, I thought why even with the intonation set up did they sound wrong. This shows the attention Eddie gave not only to his playing but how everything sounds. Definitely a Musical genius that only comes around once in a lifetime. Also an amazing innovator. Eddie is sadly missed.😢
Disagreed. VH1 was the pinnacle. The tone and playing still go unmatched to this day. End of story. I do love 1984 too, but the first album is the greatest rock guitar album of all time. Period.
@@goneflying140 its a tough choice between the self titled and 1984 but the level of the band and status has to be taken into consideration. 1984 was the peak And also the End.
To me beyond the innovation and killer lead playing, it's his sense of groove and ability to fill space with one guitar track that makes him special and standout. Watch him play Feelin' live in 95 and see how full and majestic it sounds with just one guitar part, incredible
I’m 17 and I got into rock music a few years ago. (I didn’t grow up with rock) and evh will always be my favorite. Beautiful inside and out. Absolute king.
I began watching more videos about a year ago with Eddie and VH, and he overall, now is my favorite guitar player of all time. Genuine and honest player, could feel the joy that playing and performing brought him and he could project onto us, his audience. He was the music. And then coupled with his absolutely fantastic band mates, wow we got to experience an experience!
I was, and am, amazed by Eddie's skills. But that hit me the most when I saw him play live the first time on their first tour was how happy Eddie was while playing on stage! That cat was grinnin' ear to ear and having the most contagious time of his life!! I found myself grinning as big as he was. What a natural he was. Just amazing.
It's interesting when you compare him to other guitarists including those who were trying to copy him because so many of them always played with that stupid tough-guy, serious look. I love that Eddie was like, "Eff that, I'm having fun, and I smile when I'm having fun!" He really embodied joyfulness.
That’s a very rare example of tuning to fit the overtone series mathematically. Equal temperament is a compromise. I discovered this by accident back in high school. Great stuff!
His son Wolfgang is doing an amazing job carrying his dads rock legacy as well with his band WVH Mammoth, the song Distance paying homage to his father will bring tears to your eyes
@@markalan8784 true there will never be another Eddie Van Halen but the fact his son was so impacted by his career and followed in his footsteps goes to show not only was EVH an amazing musician but also an amazing father and man
@@markalan8784 And Wolfgang is quite happy to go his own way. He is determined to create his own identity instead of becoming a tribute/homage to his old man. Wolf is just getting started.
@@Chrsly completely agree with this, saw him live earlier this year with Alter Bridge and dare I say he sounded better than the headliner that night, and I love Alter Bridge.. WVH is definitely a talent all his own!
As a Steinway trained piano technician/tuner I love that he tuned the B and E string flat. I’m a guitarist that became a piano technician. I’ve tuned for Jackson Brown, Bruce Hornsby, The Eagles and several Classical pianist. It’s cool to know he tuned that down. The guitar is tuned in fourths until you get to the B string, then it switches to a third. In the equal temperament thirds vibrate pretty intense compared to pure fourths. Thanks for creating such an interesting channel! Love your videos. Keep um comin Rick!
Good stuff Rick, I still remember sitting in the sun in my backyard and heard Running with the Devil and was hooked and after 40 years still listen all the time
I think the best part is having a brother that you can talk about all this stuff with
I think Rick's brother is probably a better guitarist --- and you can sorta sense that Rick is jealous of that
@@fredwerza3478he needs to have his brother on more often.
Didn’t sense any jealousy whatsoever
but who was Mom's favorite,lol?
❤
When I hear Eddie's tracks isolated I get chills. It's like bearing witness to a miracle that was recorded.
I literally get huge goosebumps hearing the greatest guitarist ever.
Yes. No one has ever duplicated his tone. Many have tried. Also his playing. Many copy it but none of them have been able to play with the same fluidity and feel. He really was a one of a kind.
It's great but a Miracle? Yeah no...
@@MusicGoodies-yes. A miracle of musicality.
Eddie Van Halen will be talked about and listened to for the rest of human existence. Immortal talent.
He won't many have already forgotten him the tapping a curse it gets boring he was far better without the continuous tapping
@@ChrisThornburn-i3eWhen Van Halen first came out, it was like when Hendrix did … a totally new game! You had to have been playing back then to understand how different of a player he was.
Tappers are everywhere now but back then it was something completely different.
@@m.vonhollen6673 don't play guitar then tapping wasn't new Eddie was far better without it he got boring live ruining songs with over the top tapping
EVH's has been largely forgotten for decades now. He's more of a musician's guitarist. Gifted at playing the instrument but the music itself hasn't aged particularly well.
@@ChrisThornburn-i3ePretty sure his Eruption Live solo is getting more views at a higher rate now then ever. The younger generation is learning about this now.
Eddie was just a mad scientist/artist/sonically gifted human being who chose to express himself through music. He heard things differently than everyone else. There will never be anyone like him again, and frankly, I’m glad for that. If there were several of him, then his abilities would not be as unique and wonderful.
His rhythm playing is so hypnotic, it has such a grit to it
He was the best rhythm guitarist ever.
If anyone had the definition of the Guitar Hero, it would surely be EVH. Innovative on technique and style, fantastic and heavy riffs, and an iconic image. Guitar literally would not be the same without him!
He's so much of a guitar hero, they even made a Guitar Hero: Van Halen spinoff in the GH franchise, which was the biggest no brainer ever. Great game too!
Right!!
He had the chops and the looks
Definitely the Mean Streets album! God the sound of his guitar in that and the way he played! Perfection
With each passing year I'm more thankful for that window of (rock and roll) time when I first heard a Van Halen song. It was different to the point of being profound. Not unlike he first time I heard progressive rock.
It's been 53 years since Hendrix died, 41 years since Rhoads died, and 33 years since SRV died. They might not be with us, but their musicianship will always live on.
I don't think Rick talks about SRV (god i miss him) much? I'm still really new to the channel tho... you can never talk about him too much in my mind. lol
They were all geniuses
I heard first Van Halen LP in 78 and it was like reinvention of heavy rock like a injection of adrenalin. But I did think some of the playing was like Hendrix which Eddie doesn't claim to be as influenced by. The way he plays solos is a bit like a jazz instrument. Though Hendrix music is more varied than Van Halen. Eruption was like something out of this world!
Immortal words
Rock 'n' roll ain't noise pollution
Rock 'n' roll ain't gonna die
Rock 'n' roll ain't noise pollution
Rock 'n' roll, it will survive (yes, it will)
These people are from another planet, came here for a while to show us things on the guitar we thought were impossible. Then left us early, wondering:”What the hell was that?” But inspired, and trying to figure out other inventive ways to make this incredible instrument sound. God bless ‘em all.❤
It's a tragedy how the tapping became the main focus of attention on Eddie's playing. His technique across the board was utterly impeccable, and he was doing things on guitar on the debut album that seemed like nothing short of a whole new style (and playing level) out of thin air. It's like he fell to Earth from outer space.
I always like to point out cathedral, a song which requires precise manipulation of the volume knob (sometimes even to the breaking point) and it sounds like an alien spaceship. Or even intruder, which pairs well with the music video. But when I listen to it unaided, I can envision a breaking and entering senario with the breaking glass, screaming family, sirens going off etc. Eddie was a hidden master at painting a picture with music.
Disagree about tapping being a major focus.... maybe for non musicians, and it wasn't a big deal when EVH was touring from first 4+ albums.
EVH was multi dimensional in every aspect of playing guitar/song writing/taking it apart to make it better/and just being the showman.
You cannot pigeon hole EVH to one thing or two things or even three things.
EVH was a gift from GoD to all of us.
To say anything less is treasonous and just wrong in every way.
Yeah that's a great tragedy, several families died, some cities got massacred even and just because of a EvH trick...!!
I think it was the never before heard sounds, the master of the fill, the slipped in the notch two notes, the double stops, the rhythm bits that were difficult a f.
The "how'd he do it" spots
( long before videos and now just taken apart clinicians for 40 years breaking it down on TH-cam )
It was a taste and style immediately it's own, a sound all his own, and an effortless live mastery that captivated and stunned anyone in attendance...and as Rick said..."uncopyable"
Kinda funny to watch folks struggling to copy cat after countless years and hours of study...give it up, one and only original model of EVH, rip legend.
Only the novice players will cling to the tapping.. who cares!! The true players will appreciate, study, and keep his memory alive for centuries!!
There was so much joy and happiness in his playing. EVH played guitar like someone who loved being alive. Some guys can shred but can't write. Some guys can write but can't shred. Eddie could do it all.
Seriously one of the greatest songwriters that ever lived.
So can BucketHead
And he rewrote Beat It! Michael Jackson loved what he did to it
@@Skwid-Lives So can Prince.
@@Skwid-Liveslol.
I'm 59 and I got to live through Eddie's greatness from start to finish. I wouldn't trade it for anything.
Eddie was a gift to rock music. He had that teenage "edge" with aggressive playing, experimentation and curiosity through his whole career.
Kind of like Jeff Beck.
Nicely put.
Yes, he was always evolving and experimenting...
@@teleguy5699 Really Beck has influenced way less guitarists and didn't reach the masses like EVH. Still I like Jeff Beck but Eddie is the King to me.
@@dyer2cycle Yes messing with amplifier power with attenuators and we all know about the Frankenstrat. The dude was one in 100 million.
Nothing better than talking music with your brother!
Your brother's comments on the 'whole package' are so spot on.. people tend to get focused on the solos, tapping, etc.. but there was SO much more that he was a master of.
Just discovered "Ripley" from the wild Life soundtrack..sort of remember the movie but not the score. What a beautiful piece, not for blistering solo or massive crunch, just great music, and immediately thought of that piece after reading your comment.
I've often heard that many guitarists admire Eddie for his phenomenal rhythm playing --- his leads and solos got all the attention but his rhythm ability in songs like "Beautiful Girls" really stands out to me!
He played guitar like a drummer. The combo of the crazy techniques mixed in with his insanely good rhythm is like nothing else.
Eddie always came up with a cooler riff than anybody else and we loved him for it. RIP Meastro
I love this Rick. I think the reason we are still talking about Eddie is because we love and miss him. In addition to this for our age group just takes us back to a nostalgic place. Man every time a Van Halen tune comes on the radio I just smile. Reminds me of driving in the 80's or 90's to go catch a Van Halen show somewhere. The music was loud, the audience was locked into the band, girls were dancing and guys were drinking. The whole time you got this kid Eddie on stage grinning. What a monster. Miss EVH
Eddie is the GOAT for me. There was something about him, the feel, the tone, the joy... it all came through in his playing. Loved hearing him play and it was a honor to watch him live.
Got to see Ed play quite a few times...my fav was when a buddy and I scored tix for the 5 th row right in front of Eddie on the reunion tour. I yelled out to Ed in between songs and he looked at me... gave me the cool Eddie grin and a thumbs up...I suddenly knew how someone felt seeing The Beatles lol
agree 100% i would also add SRV in the mix...like Eddie the longer SRV solo'd the more interesting they became.
Absolutely. My first concert was Black Sabbath with VH. Smaller general admission venue. My buddy and I managed to get around 30'. The entire show Including Sabbath was incredible. Then had to go see VH on their headlining tours and always Eddie killed it.
Edward had the one thing that all others lacked, and that is he had the whole package:
✔️ Incredible rhythm
✔️ Incredible soloing
✔️ Incredible songwriting
✔️ Intuition to create his own sound
thank you!
Might have been the case early on, and that's not to take anything away from EVH as a guitar player or musician, but it's like you're ignoring that Van Halen put out arguably more crap than good albums in their career.
Take away the songwriting part and you are spot on.
In fact EVH was quite the messy songwriter. It was always through the filter of the other band members (especially Michael Anthony and later Sammy Hagar) that the riffs turned into great songs. There is one record in which Eddy almost fully took the reins and that turned out to be Van Halen III.
I'd have to argue with your post.
He had all that and he looked fkn cool too
I’m a drummer, and I could listen to you talk about EVH all day. He was such an amazing musician, and he brought out the best in the other musicians he played with.
same here. I love Al too but Ed brought the goosebumps. Amazing we are still feeling it after all these years. What a legacy to leave.
Chris, I AGREE with you as well 100% on your comment!.........I saw VH (live) a few times as a teenager 1983-1986, and, STILL enjoy their music ANYTIME I hear it!!!!!......It's great NOW, to hear (isolated/studio/raw, etc.) tracks giving all the tools at our access/availability in todays world.........Good luck with all your drumming/music. Todd Walker
He’s truly the Mozart of guitar. Plus he had the looks and the fun attitude that just took the guy to a level few others could achieve.
If you're reading this now and you're a guitar player, this is why you really need to see the movie "Amadeus." Watching it now, it reminds me a little of EVH. All the metal guitarists who were on the scene when EVH came out on the first VH album are a little like Salieri in that movie.
💯
@@danielstoddart indeed
His early classical piano knowledge truly helped with his future blending of distortion and harmonics on his axe sound. He himself said that he was "A Tone Chaser". But was like an exuberant young kid with a ferocious appetite for tone in a musical candy store.
Coincides with biblical teachings,
"Unless you change and become like little children, you will never enter The Kingdom of Tone Heaven". It was a great time for music for many, and a great time growing up in America. Especially the 1980's. It was A Great Music Renaissance of Great Sound, Great Bands, and Great Music.
EVH had such a natural phrasing in everything he played. Every note flows into the next in a pattern that is naturally expected. His solo's, his riffing, is exactly the direction where my mind expects it to flow. Eddie was a shredder, but it felt effortless. All the shredder's that followed shredded for the sake of shredding, but rarely did it feel like it added to the music or had to be there.
That's why I laugh at guys like Yngwie and Kirk Hammett --- really great shredders, but no emotional depth like King Edward had
I'm not really a fan of EVH, but lots of his stuff fit the music his band played. Sure he was more musical then a lot of tech death and mathcore which I hardly listen to. Heck, I even like the keyboard solo in Jump more then the guitar solo. As for playing with "feel" a solo that comes to my mind when thinking of that is "The Best of Times" last solo from John Petrucci. If you want another modern shredder that is very musical then check out Plini who is one of my favorite modern guitar players.
@@fredwerza3478 Laughing at another guitarist style seems silly and childish. "Mature" guitarist might like one or both players equally, but its a matter of personal taste. I'm blown away that you start "laughing" when you hear some guitarist play. It seems strange to me. I'm also curious, how old are you?
Well said man. I can play some VH. You know who I sound like? Me. Ed cannot be copied. He had swing and swagger in his feel and attack. His hands were so strong , he had to have his guitars tuned 14cents off. If you or I picked up Ed`s guitars, we would be totally out of tune.
What I find amazing about EVH is that his guitar playing had a different approach on every album from VH1 to 1984. I can't come up with anyone having the same natural flow in both rhythm and solo.
Edward came along and had the ear to search for his sound, the technique to make new sounds, and a drive to get a guitar and amp that delivered what he wanted to deliver. He didn’t just want a weird body shape for the sake of the newness of it, he wanted the sounds and capabilities he needed to get his sound. He wanted amps and gear that lived up to his expectations and specifications. He wrote brilliant melodies, and supported those melodies with rhythm and riffs that made great songs. He didn’t just play, he transformed the musical landscape by transmitting his sound in his head out to all of us. Some say he was the biggest thing since Hendrix. I would go back farther. With his search for sound, techniques, guitar and gear to support his search, I put him closer to Les Paul than Jimi.
Using all that delay to basically create saturation was just genius. Never losing clarity. Absolute beastly playing. EVH forever will be the king.
So glad you mentioned Unchained. It is my favorite hard rock song of all time. I saw them on the 1984 tour (3rd show, Lakeland, Fl), and when they opened with it, it was pure power.
Same.
This is the next-level deep dive stuff that so many of us EVH fanatics (and guitar hacks) want more of. Keep it coming, Rick!
I teach a guitar class at a local community college. I told the students last night that, at least in my world, when Van Halen comes on (like at a ball park or on the radio), time stops: it's Eddie. Still the king. For me it was always tone and rhythm that kept bringing me back. Drop Dead Legs? Forget about it!!
Hilarious to look at tablature for "Drop Dead Legs". It is 100% his swing, swagger, and tone that brings it to life. So perfectly, uniquely his.
Nobody covers Van Halen, because it would sound kinda ridiculous.
His brown sound just oozes out of drop dead legs.
We will always be talking about him. He’s the greatest in my opinion.
TOP 3 for sure. Gotta give #1 to Hendrix
Of making mid music
@@chantz888 cope
@@revwillyg6450 doesn’t make his music pleasing to listen to to everyone.
Chantz no likey lol
As much as I love VH1, Fair Warning will always be the ultimate VH album and tone for me.
And Unchained their best tune to me.
@@seminolefantodd4736💯
It’s the perfect balance of Eddie’s maturity and DLR’s immaturity.
Just that "Mean Street" intro alone
*uck yeah!!
Eddie: Had the craziest hooks, lightning taps, harmonics all over the keyboard, two-handed insanity, stellar speed, killer dive bombs, perfect rhythm, and could sing harmony vocals, too. Not bad on piano, either. Total package.
bEST ALBUM??
Drums too.
@@jeffpodrug8942 Alex was always better than Ed at the drums though!!!!
His style was bouncy.
Without forgetting how excellent Alex was, that they were in full intuitive sync, the synchopations between them made it magical.
With some other drummer the outcome would have been very different. I definitely think their family jazz background was a key element.
People are looking back on him and like they've done with the Beatles, are gaining a new appreciation for how good and unique he was. His rhythm pocket playing, song writing, live performances, improvisation in mid-song, guitar tone and tech developments. Just a one of a kind that comes along every so often.
The groove, the feel, the swing, the aggression, and most importantly the confidence in his abilities. Fearless playing. Nobody had ever attacked the guitar with such precision like that before. And it's been said that he had a light touch! Incredible. Will we ever see another player come along again and change the way we look at everything guitar related? Probably not to that extent. I hope so, but Ed was an anomaly. The chosen one. The legend will live on forever.
Eddie’s comping is simply unbelievably original and groovy as hell. There’s no one comparable.
For sure. The ‘quiet’ part in Panama is one of my fav guitar parts of all time.
@@Domn879 For all his face-melting shredding, Ed had a subtle and deft touch when the tempo and volume came down. I'd love to have heard him do jazz.
what's comping ?
Amen ,so unique and creative the king
Exactly. The groove, and swing, that he brought into his riffs and even lead work was just SO damn interesting and unlike any of his peers and future peers... except maybe for Randy Rhoads
What I love about Eddie is not just his amazing licks and solos, but also how amazing his rhythm was!
"Jamie's Cryin'" is a horn section on electric just like the 60s bands did it.
The Beato family's knowledge of music is incredible - love it.
Hearing those isolated guitar tracks is amazing. I still get the same feelings as I did in the 80s. It's not just music. It sounds like a living creature, all knowing, feeding on pure energy. A universal language. Everyone is invited 😀👍😎🤘
.........Was thinking the same exact thing!!!!!!
Eddie had an incredible ear, was trained on piano and had impeccable rhythm!!! He was amazingly creative and really never fully satisfied, always chasing tone and perfection!
He also started on drums and his brother on guitar.
What you are really illustrating is the hard work and discipline that Eddie applied to his craft. He took great care in both creating a fantastic tone and being able to produce chops like no one else. The opposite of younger guys today showing how fast they can play with little or no finesse.
Ed was our childhood. The soundtrack of our youth. The mountain to climb. The dude was a song writing genius.
Eddie was the most unique soul on the rock guitar. No one could ever swing like him while sounding so awesome. He is forever my favorite guitarist and always will be. Eddie changed my world with my first listen to Eruption and I'll never forget it.
EVH definitely blew my mind and I'm grateful to have embraced great music wherever it takes you
I love this about Eddie..he was complete…master songwriter, arranger, just the fact that you pick out his dropping just a few cents off perfect tuning so the cords are perfectly pleasing to the ear while pommelling you at the same time… long live, Edward Van Halen! Thanks Rick keep it going. And your bro to.
The thing about those early records was that - as perfect as Eddie's playing was -- the tracks sounded like the song was going to fly apart at any second. The production made them sound wild and dangerous. They had this raw energy you can't get with click tracks and everything polished up. Ted Templeman knew what he was doing...capturing the "live" sound of the band.
Landee & Templeman 👏👌
That is a great characterization -- "like the song was going to fly apart at any second."
EVH was a criminally overlooked super great rhythm guitar player. I've been saying it for years. his timing precision was second to none.
You are correct!! Just try to pick up a guitar and play "I'm the one." The swing beat opening riff in that song is so hard to play that I have never seen anybody else do it correctly. His use of effects in his rhythm playing make it sound so good too. Examples: Aint talkin" bout love, and unchained. He was great at rythm!!!
LMAO. You used "EVH" and "Criminally overlooked" in the same sentence. Aside from Jimi Hendrix, there has never been a more celebrated guitarist than Eddie. Just because people were infatuated with his soloing and tapping technique, it doesn't mean his rhythm guitar playing was overlooked. Next you'll be saying "Wish You Were Here" is the most criminally overlooked album ever and that George Harrison is the most criminally overlooked songwriter ever.
@@Charles-qn1bt there are tons of videos of people analyzing/covering his solos and I hardly found those who specifically drove into his "rhythm" in most songs. that's my point.
I love to listen to Eddie's guitar tracks, he plays with such power and confidence. I think it's the way he attacks the strings that gives him his sound.
First and foremost you are so dearly missed Eddie. There will never be another guitarist that shaped the electric guitar the way that you did. The music will live on forever and continue to inspire the next generations to come. RIP
Legendary guitar players . Such as Eddie Van Halen. Jeff Beck, Randy Rhoads. Stevie Ray Vaughan. . We’ll always live on. Their music and guitar playing well live on. R.I.P..
I would definitely put all four of those players in the same group. They were cut from the same cloth. Just the way they approached the instrument, and what came out of it, put them a cut above.
@@robplante8631 No offence to Stevie Ray Vaughan, he just copied Hendrix playing and style. But all the other guys were unique. So maybe he doesn't really belong with the other guys.
@@Atlas65nahhh you're doing a disservice to a virtuoso player. Yes he was heavily influenced and flat out copied a bunch but SRV had his own thing going that was epic. Even EVH would play Crossroads note for note.
Unchained is a Masterpiece. As a Youngster it was "Hot For Teacher" that really got me hooked along with "Jump", I have been playing piano 35+ year's and that is so much fun on a Synth. Just the fact that Eddie built his own guitar's , worked on his equipment, developed his own sound....geez, he did so damn much. "Runnin' with the Devil"...though I Really walk with Jesus , is an infectious riff. "Panama" is an amazingly intensely fun riff. R.I.P. EVH. That was a great chat btw!!!
true words mall, i got you on running with the.
that soab is very musicsl too.
Of all the amazing tunes they wrote Hot for Teacher and Jump ?
Jump is the reason I and many others strayed…Total gayness lol
I’m the One
On Fire
Somebody Get Me a Doctor
THATS
Van Halen
Cmon man…..
People get blown away by how good Eddie was. But please remember he put mad hours of work and passion into it.
This is the unspoken secret of all musical success. Nearly all practiced like a fulltime job. Driven.
Clash, Pistols, JD, Fripp, Nirvana, Beatles, EVH. Hours of relentless practice with no money in often squalid conditions. Unheated practice spaces. 25cents for corndogs, homeless, eating whitewash paste for food.
Years of practice in his bedroom ages 17 to 22. 8 hours a day for 5 yeas.15,000 hours of practice.
Practice doesnt make perfect. Perfect practice makes perfect.
Yes this is true but You can be a great guitarist and but in all of those hours but You still won't be as great as Edward was. R.I.P. EVH
Naw dude,it all came naturally to him,in his head the notes where there,he just put them on the fretboard,come on man!
@@willywayne5299 i would partially agree with you that one has to have an innate talent for “hearings” the right notes. And then of course craft it to perfection.
Eddie had a natural feel and swing when he played that no one else does and no one ever will. He was one of the best rhythm guitarists who ever lived, in addition to his virtuoso lead playing. He was a very rare musical genius and a true innovator.
RIP EVH, we miss you.
Yes! Well put; that swing. The richness of their father's music really does shine through doesn't it?
@@mattblatchley2061
I agree. Jan Van Halen had a huge influence on the boys as they were growing up. 👍🏻😎
Jon’s a colleague of mine so it was so cool seeing him on the channel. Definitely have some more these conversations going forward, they are great
Eddie created his sound from the hardware out. He built his guitars, hacked his amps, tuned for the song, and practiced practiced practiced. His dedication to tone and technique was unprecedented. He was disruptive in the best possible ways and that's why we'll never stop talking about him.
🎯💯
Spot on!
Exactly!
More videos like this would not hurt my feelings at all. Enjoy you guys detailing why it sounds so amazing and why Eddie was special. Like John said its much more than the soloing, it's the whole package. The riffs. OMFG. Never gets old. It's like a warm blanket every time.
Hearing those isolated guitar tracks shows how massive those riffs really are. Very cool video, Rick, and it's nice to see your brother and put a face to some of your stories about growing up.
The explanation of tuning to the chord at the end of the video is one of the most enlightening aspects of the guitar to ever be explained on the internet. I work with Tony Franklin and he uses fretless basses which means the guitars better be in tune to what's right to your ears and not just the pedal board or overdubs will be a nightmare. Great conversation guys.
Had this kind of conversation with my buddies who play...it never gets old and the more you really listen the more it's gets better like aged wine...when we were young in the 70s,80s..we were drinking did pay attention..but now ..truly amazing R.I.P
I saw every Van Halen tour from Women and Children through 5150. Eddie Van Halen was the absolute best. A truly complete player and great entertainer. Not only an inntovator guitarist but also a genius in equipment development. He will be greatly missed and never forgotten.
That's why IMO he loved & respected Les Paul so much because they were (obviously completely different in style/genre) however from the same mindset of innovation, playing, & always working on taking it further than anyone else had. Les felt the same about him, they knew they were both far ahead of their time. RIP to them both as they both changed the world of music for guitar.
...I still miss him
Les Paul actually called up Eddie one time and said --- "Ed, you and me are the only ones who know how to build a guitar the right way" LOL
Man, lucky..sadly, I never saw them live at all, one of my regrets from my teenage/20's years....I wish I had seen every VH tour from VH1 through Balance....
I was just listening to Eddie's isolated tracks just the other day. MASSIVE sound. There's only one EVH 👑 Cheers Rick and Jon.
When I watch Eddie play the solo section in Live Without a Net 1986, and he starts with the 3:16 melody...
That whole next 10 min section is just magic🙌You can feel it in his expressions, this is a guy in the zone and truly doing what he loves.
I'm extremely grateful I got to see them live once. What a monster of an icon the music gods crafted with EVH🙏🎸
My Mt Rushmore for fun😁: Eddie Van Halen, Dimebag, Jimmy Page, Tony Iommi
Unfortunately, I was born a little too late, but I have Eddie's live without a net solo as my wallpaper on my pc. I wish I coulda seen them live. All my favorite artists have passed or don't play with the whole band (queen)
Every concert Van Halen played was live "without a net". ; )
Yo I was there new Halen conn what a. Show
Dimebag is kind of the oddball there.
I honestly can't put Dimebag and Iommi on the Mt. Rushmore of Guitarists --- to me it's Eddie, Hendrix, Page, Gilmour and SRV
Eddie Van Halen has and will always be the hero of my life. From the first time I heard him to the time I met him to this very post, his unmatched talent and innovation is a gift to us all. The skill that he provided, the sounds he honed, the energy, the passion and the ability to create whatever he wanted without boundaries or concern will be talked about for generations. Listening to him through these years and now with isolated tracks makes you stand in awe of just how amazing he truly was. He wasn’t trying to outplay anyone he was just a man with a passion for music and his guitar playing is timeless
EVH, like Mozart, heard the music in his head first. He hears the sound in his mind’s ear, and then fashioned the acoustics to match what he had imagined. He always gave credit to the divine, for giving him the gift to create original sounds, and was way more humble than anyone would imagine. Monart’s birthday was January 27th, Eddie’s was January 26th, as is mine, and I too compose multi-layered tracks, with one-off recordings, as I hear the sounds in my mind’s ear as well.
With today's tunes there is a machine beyond artists with an army of producers, additional song writers, and engineers to cultivate the catchiest mainstream songs for the masses. . What Van Halen did, showing up to the studio to record live, their own stuff, and have that same impact to the masses , Bravo! Hope we can go back to that form one day.
EVH never gets old. Love the deep dives into his creativity.
I love this. I started playing guitar in 1977 because I saw Kiss on (of all things) a PBS broadcast of one of their concerts. My Dad's annoyance and the explosions had me hooked for life, but as I started to get serious about the guitar, Van Halen provided the same mind explosion for me as described in this video and so many others. And I love that you guys talk not about the technicality, but the tone and the tuning and the feel - because after all these years, I think that is why we still talk about Eddie - the emotion he elicits with everything he plays - the fact that it is also technical is just what makes it that much more amazing. But the differentiator is that anyone listening to a Van Halen riff can't help but be moved BECAUSE of the tone, the feel, the execution that provides that emotional transcendence.
We guitar players have always been frustrated with those slight variations in the B string, and even the G string. I loved this whole discussion with the Eddie clips of his raw recordings and then your discussion about these tuned by ear chords.
Eddie’s stuff is alive! His rhythm parts are the liveliest rhythms ever. His solos, at first listen seem otherworldly but are actually incredible call and response that is so damn pleasing to the ear and his songwriting…….he was the whole package. Legendary.
I personally LOVE the Hagar years of Van Halen. His playing, musical choices, and tones are just so beautiful sounding, diversified by his ripping playing... PLEASE RICK, do a Van Hagar video!!!!!!!!!!! 🙏
Indeed, while I do enjoy Dave on the recordings he wasn’t that good live apart from being a great showman, Hagar brought the good lead vocal to VH both on the records as live.
Yeah. Much prefer the DLR days, but there are some bangers with Hagar. The tone on the Balance album is sweet.
My friend asked me , who was the best front man? He said DLR. I said my first requirement for that position is , can he sing? Can he deliver the goods live? For that reason alone I wouldn’t pick DLR. It would be like picking the best guitarist on looks alone but he can’t play guitar. Just my thoughts, everyone has an opinion.
EVH is the most influential rock player to come along since Hendrix. PERIOD! They both dropped MAJOR 💣s and still influence players to this day. Their contribution to guitar / music is immeasurable… that’s why we are still talking about EVH, respectfully!💯🤘🏾🙏🏾
The first VH album is the greatest debut album of all time. Not a week goes by that I don’t listen to it. Mindblowing sound from the virtuoso of my formative years. RIP, EVH!
Guns n roses would like a word 😉
Boston's first album immediately went to the moon. It wasn't until 'Dance the Night Away' on the second album that most even heard of VH.
@@timbucker That's ridiculous. VH1 was huge and EVERYONE immediately knew who they were.
@@liquidmagma They were not on the radio until VH2, the only folks that knew about them had gone to a Sabbath concert.
@@timbucker Not even close to correct. EVERYONE heard the eruption lead in to You Really Got Me followed closely by Running With The Devil.
The best thing that happened to Eddie was that interview at the Smithsonian where he described in great detail, his childhood, his parents, his early piano competitions, Alex, and the experimentation he did with removing pickups, soldering new ones in; basically, his quest for the perfect tone that HE knew was out there and only HE could create with his own intense efforts. Some of what he did with pickups became the industry standard. That interview made us understand who Eddie really was. A genius.
And then the influences he had in the world of guitar manufacturing and amps and pedals. He was important and groundbreaking in literally every aspect of playing guitar.
He lived in my hometown, Nijmegen, the Netherlands, before he and his family moved to the US. I think it’s ridiculous that Eddie still doesn’t have a statue in Nijmegen.
❤❤❤
Get that statue done, bro!
@@liquidmagma : I think I will. At least I can give it a try to find the right people who can make this happen.
@@mariodriessen9740 That would be awesome. I'm from the US, but I can try to contribute.
Every time I hear EVH’s guitar it captures a part of my soul - it’s like entering a time warp back to college (1979ff). The sound he captured was so powerful. He has really carved out his own fresh space on the guitar. Much like Gilmour, Page, Beck, The Edge, etc. Such music and guitar playing really is a kind of mystery - a gift from the divine.
Beauty.
I could listen to this all day. EVH was more than just a guitar hero, he was a music hero. Who else would think to UN-tune strings to make the riffs sound better?!? This is just one of many of his innovations to music and guitar playing. There’s just no way to get that tone. And, I hope no one else ever does.
I absolutely love EVH. Yes, I too was influenced by Lynch, DeMartini, Bratta,etc… but Eddie is the dude that got me to pick up guitar. His riffs, sound, phrasing, made his own mods… yeah we all agree! RIP Eddie❤
10,000 hrs… Ed’s passion for music (not just guitar!) and commitment sets him apart…miss him so much
10,000 hours is an understatement. I heard DLR say in an interview he was a 40,000 - 50,000 hour guy. And that was back then. Think about that for a hot second. Jesus. For someone where that was simply his playing style and it came natural to him - thus he developed a style folks emulate today. He said if he took lessons, he wouldn’t have sounded like that. He just did what sounded good to him. Take a step back, and holy f-ing wow.
I’ve been playing 35 years and have well over 20K hours of practice myself over that time. Im not close.
Hearing his isolated tracks, particularly from the first record up to Fair Warning, is just something that does not get old! I was 12 when the first record came out & had been listening to Zeppelin & Hendrix & was just completely blown away. That record is one of those that every f**cking song, is sick! But the solos man, On Fire, is a VERY good example!
Used to be able to play a decent version of that On Fire solo 😊
I love these videos with the Beato family. What a talented bunch of people. I still remember Aunt Penny and the influence she had on Rick.
My God, I miss EVH so much. Please listen to the rhythm guitar during the guitar solo to “Feel Your Love Tonight”. So catchy, so badass, so legend. Cheers to you Eddie!
He was the total package. Was talking about him tonight and what it would have been like listening to him progress from beginner to Rock God.
Temperament in Van Halen! As a VH fiend and bass player-turned-lutenist, it's delightful to hear a discussion in which the bread and butter of lute and Renaissance music is applied to good ol' rock 'n' roll. Another gem, Mr. Beato. Thank you.
It's been a long while since I visited and your enthusiasm hasn't diminished. I'm not a musician and I still love to listen to you LOVE music. Continued Success.
Ed is the best of all time…a true musical genius in every aspect of guitar: technique, innovation of gear, song writing, creativity, etc. Fair Warning I think was the pinnacle of his sound and tone. Thanks Rick for the great video!
Eddie was never simply strumming his guitar his technique was truly unique!! No one will ever sound like him ever🤘🏻🤘🏻🤘🏻
We are all talking about Eddie because he changed everything in rock n roll. So many things he brought to the table for us to chew on. There will never be another like him.
Eddie is/was my favorite thing in music. His exuberance while he played, always smiling, never looking at the guitar…it was a literal extension of his arms.
As mentioned other guys in the early to mid 80s homaged, mimicked, or copied him but man that zest for playing just was not present like it was with Eddie.
For a great example of it, watch him on the Live without a Net concert in New Haven Connecticut. He is alive.
So cool to see you guys just chilling and talking about what you love. This is what it's all about.
EVH: THE most important guitarist of the "modern era"! He: 1) invented a STYLE of playing and the SOUND to go with it, 2) the GUITAR to play it on, AND with these innovations 3) influenced a large chunk of the WORLD of Music (and beyond) in MANY ways. NO ONE can reasonably deny this "legacy"!
I wish this was longer. More Rick and John chats!
Wow I remember constantly tuning the b&e strings after using the tuner, I thought why even with the intonation set up did they sound wrong. This shows the attention Eddie gave not only to his playing but how everything sounds. Definitely a Musical genius that only comes around once in a lifetime. Also an amazing innovator.
Eddie is sadly missed.😢
Please please please do more conversations like this with your brother. This was fantastic.
The editing is top notch here. Love all the quick cuts to demonstrate what you guys are discussing.
1984 is Eddie’s pinnacle
Recording
Songwriting
Songs
Success
It all came together
And it was the peak for the band itself
A classic
Disagreed. VH1 was the pinnacle. The tone and playing still go unmatched to this day. End of story. I do love 1984 too, but the first album is the greatest rock guitar album of all time. Period.
@@goneflying140 its a tough choice between the self titled and 1984 but the level of the band and status has to be taken into consideration.
1984 was the peak
And also the End.
You're two albums too late. By 1984, the decline had not only already started, but was picking up steam.
I tend to agree with the Rick’s bro, VH1 and Fair Warning are *the* sound.
Absolute innovator, and a true artist. The band cared about how the music sounded, not if the hz were spot on - what actually matters. Love to hear it
To me beyond the innovation and killer lead playing, it's his sense of groove and ability to fill space with one guitar track that makes him special and standout. Watch him play Feelin' live in 95 and see how full and majestic it sounds with just one guitar part, incredible
I’m 17 and I got into rock music a few years ago. (I didn’t grow up with rock) and evh will always be my favorite. Beautiful inside and out. Absolute king.
I began watching more videos about a year ago with Eddie and VH, and he overall, now is my favorite guitar player of all time. Genuine and honest player, could feel the joy that playing and performing brought him and he could project onto us, his audience. He was the music. And then coupled with his absolutely fantastic band mates, wow we got to experience an experience!
I was, and am, amazed by Eddie's skills. But that hit me the most when I saw him play live the first time on their first tour was how happy Eddie was while playing on stage! That cat was grinnin' ear to ear and having the most contagious time of his life!! I found myself grinning as big as he was. What a natural he was. Just amazing.
Yep, it seemed like for him playing the guitar was as easy as breathing air.
Its like seeing professional sports live, especially when you have first row seats ! Life Changing !
Yep I feel the same way. Every picture, he is smiling.
It's interesting when you compare him to other guitarists including those who were trying to copy him because so many of them always played with that stupid tough-guy, serious look. I love that Eddie was like, "Eff that, I'm having fun, and I smile when I'm having fun!" He really embodied joyfulness.
That’s a very rare example of tuning to fit the overtone series mathematically. Equal temperament is a compromise. I discovered this by accident back in high school. Great stuff!
His son Wolfgang is doing an amazing job carrying his dads rock legacy as well with his band WVH Mammoth, the song Distance paying homage to his father will bring tears to your eyes
Yeah but hes not Eddie 😂
@@markalan8784 true there will never be another Eddie Van Halen but the fact his son was so impacted by his career and followed in his footsteps goes to show not only was EVH an amazing musician but also an amazing father and man
@@markalan8784 And Wolfgang is quite happy to go his own way. He is determined to create his own identity instead of becoming a tribute/homage to his old man. Wolf is just getting started.
just listened to Distance and i'm on the floor crying
@@Chrsly completely agree with this, saw him live earlier this year with Alter Bridge and dare I say he sounded better than the headliner that night, and I love Alter Bridge.. WVH is definitely a talent all his own!
As a Steinway trained piano technician/tuner I love that he tuned the B and E string flat. I’m a guitarist that became a piano technician. I’ve tuned for Jackson Brown, Bruce Hornsby, The Eagles and several Classical pianist. It’s cool to know he tuned that down. The guitar is tuned in fourths until you get to the B string, then it switches to a third. In the equal temperament thirds vibrate pretty intense compared to pure fourths. Thanks for creating such an interesting channel! Love your videos. Keep um comin Rick!
Good stuff Rick, I still remember sitting in the sun in my backyard and heard Running with the Devil and was hooked and after 40 years still listen all the time