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Steve

TalentlessIdiot":1p8dvdib said:Joeytpg":1p8dvdib said:So which VH album you guys recommend I buy first?
none of them? you don't like VH. why would you start listening to something that you dont like? just because other people like it?
a lot of people like raw oysters and cow's brains and mussels. there's no way in hell i'm gonna start eating them just because someone else says that its good. actually, i have had mussels, and i didn't like it. so why would i eat it again?
i tried Saki once. didn't like it. why would i try it again? just cuz someone said its good?
VH1. I've read through all this thread...and like some on here have stated...it's all about "context"...the time frame etc...Joeytpg":f4apo40n said:So which VH album you guys recommend I buy first?
jabps":rmhp2hq4 said:Joeytpg":rmhp2hq4 said:To add a little bit ot this thread...although what EVH originally did has been taken 100x further by todays players than what even Ed can comprehend...at the time EVH came out...it was like a Atom Bomb being dropped on the guitar community. I mean the popular players of the day were Joe Perry, Ace Frehley, Nugent...those were the hero's back then.
From that point on...as a guitarist growing up back then. It was like a kid in a candy shop. Every year, newer hotter players. Gary Moore, Rhoads, Vandenberg, Vivian Campbell, Sykes, Jake, Warren, Cavazo, Vito, Vai...etc. Even players that had been around upped their game...notably Neal Schon...it was just a fabulous time to be playing guitar, learning and watching it all grow.
sah5150":1bqugg5v said:Listen to the raw vocal track for "Runnin' With The Devil" that is floating around. Motherf'er could sing!...
Steve
Joeytpg":2apwmild said:So which VH album you guys recommend I buy first?
van hellion":38w50kwh said:Joeytpg":38w50kwh said:So which VH album you guys recommend I buy first?
Eddie is one of my biggest influences. I have spoke and hung with Guthrie alot and when i talk to him he speaks about his clapton/cream influence like i think about Eddie. Hell, my screen name is all about him. To me when speaking of rock guitar, there are 2 guys that completely took the book, threw it out the window, and then wrote an encyclopedia on how you play rock guitar. Hendrix, then everyone expanded on him, and then out of nowhere some 20 something year old reinvents the wheel. I man dude, eruption!?!!?! the GREATEST GUITAR SOLO OF ALL TIME!!!!! he reinvented the wheel. this is all opinion of course but it is how i feel at least.
as for starting album. dude start at the beginning with Van Halen 1. Put yourself in a mindset of the times, it came out in 78. just imagine if you can a world without Vai,Yngwie,Gilbert,Guthrie,Shawn Lane etc. Your riding down the road listening to the radio (doobie brothers, santanna, ted nugent, foghat etc) and out of nowhere you hear running with the devil, ice cream man, eruption, im the one. It would have been like an atomic bomb going off in your car!!!! sadly i wasnt born yet to have experinced that but to me eddie was, is, and always will be the king! its american rock and roll at its finest, and did i mention that he redefined guitar soloing FOREVER with a mere 1:42 second guitar solo. just sit back and think about it!!
now if you dont "get it" or like it thats ok too, but if you want to get it check out van halen 1 then 1984. GREAT SONGS!! not just playing, now if you want un apologetic Ed just ripping ass wide open go with fair warning.
Eddie changed my life forever, and will always hold a place at the top of the heap of my favorite and most influential players.
A Wood
TeleBlaster":259n5h1g said:sah5150":259n5h1g said:Listen to the raw vocal track for "Runnin' With The Devil" that is floating around. Motherf'er could sing!...
Steve
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I'm 45...I was old enough and did experience it...as I said above...it was exactly like an Atom Bomb going off. Like I said...Perry, Frehley, Nugent etc... all good meat and potatoes players were the hero's of the day. Most magazines at the time were still hashing out the same old Hendrix articles, Page was more or less the reigning living guitar god, Blackmore was...well Blackmore...more hype than actual substance. And of course Clapton...well think about it like this, Clapton...one of the true legends of the guitar, his big hit at the time was "Cocaine". And then out of the blue comes "Eruption"...the doors weren't just opened, they were blown off. Ed had the same effect on the guitar community as Jimi did nearly 10 years earlier.van hellion":1yxigbjf said:Joeytpg":1yxigbjf said:So which VH album you guys recommend I buy first?
Eddie is one of my biggest influences. I have spoke and hung with Guthrie alot and when i talk to him he speaks about his clapton/cream influence like i think about Eddie. Hell, my screen name is all about him. To me when speaking of rock guitar, there are 2 guys that completely took the book, threw it out the window, and then wrote an encyclopedia on how you play rock guitar. Hendrix, then everyone expanded on him, and then out of nowhere some 20 something year old reinvents the wheel. I mean dude, eruption!?!!?! the GREATEST GUITAR SOLO OF ALL TIME!!!!! This is all opinion of course but it is how i feel at least.
as for starting album. dude start at the beginning with Van Halen 1. Put yourself in a mindset of the times, it came out in 78. just imagine if you can a world without Vai,Yngwie,Gilbert,Guthrie,Shawn Lane etc. Your riding down the road listening to the radio (doobie brothers, santanna, ted nugent, foghat etc) and out of nowhere you hear running with the devil, ice cream man, eruption, im the one. It would have been like an atomic bomb going off in your car!!!! sadly i wasnt born yet to have experinced that but to me eddie was, is, and always will be the king! its american rock and roll at its finest, and did i mention that he redefined guitar soloing FOREVER with a mere 1:42 guitar solo. just sit back and think about it!!
now if you dont "get it" or like it thats ok too, but if you want to get it check out van halen 1 then 1984. GREAT SONGS!! not just playing, now if you want un apologetic Ed just ripping ass wide open go with fair warning.
Eddie changed my life forever, and will always hold a place at the top of the heap of my favorite and most influential players.
A Wood
Sad but true... Premature death tends to create timeless icons, especially when they get "removed" in the peak or pre-peak of their careerjabps":wt4olm6a said:van hellion":wt4olm6a said:Joeytpg":wt4olm6a said:So which VH album you guys recommend I buy first?
Eddie is one of my biggest influences. I have spoke and hung with Guthrie alot and when i talk to him he speaks about his clapton/cream influence like i think about Eddie. Hell, my screen name is all about him. To me when speaking of rock guitar, there are 2 guys that completely took the book, threw it out the window, and then wrote an encyclopedia on how you play rock guitar. Hendrix, then everyone expanded on him, and then out of nowhere some 20 something year old reinvents the wheel. I mean dude, eruption!?!!?! the GREATEST GUITAR SOLO OF ALL TIME!!!!! This is all opinion of course but it is how i feel at least.
as for starting album. dude start at the beginning with Van Halen 1. Put yourself in a mindset of the times, it came out in 78. just imagine if you can a world without Vai,Yngwie,Gilbert,Guthrie,Shawn Lane etc. Your riding down the road listening to the radio (doobie brothers, santanna, ted nugent, foghat etc) and out of nowhere you hear running with the devil, ice cream man, eruption, im the one. It would have been like an atomic bomb going off in your car!!!! sadly i wasnt born yet to have experinced that but to me eddie was, is, and always will be the king! its american rock and roll at its finest, and did i mention that he redefined guitar soloing FOREVER with a mere 1:42 guitar solo. just sit back and think about it!!
now if you dont "get it" or like it thats ok too, but if you want to get it check out van halen 1 then 1984. GREAT SONGS!! not just playing, now if you want un apologetic Ed just ripping ass wide open go with fair warning.
Eddie changed my life forever, and will always hold a place at the top of the heap of my favorite and most influential players.
A Wood
I really hate to say this but in all honesty...if EVH had died at an early age ala Jimi or Randy...he would be viewed, single handidly as the biggest influence in the history of guitar. At present he's at the very least top 5 in terms of "modern" players of rock...number 2 behind Jimi IMO.
Mopar...you'd have to add KISS along with Zeppelin as being the biggest in terms of world wide popularity, ticket and album sales during that era. Nobody can deny that, even if they hate KISS...in fact the year that VH1 was released, KISS pocketed nearly 120 million dollars, an absurd amount of money given 1978 and especially considering they didn't tour that year.67Mopar":6ltal8j8 said:I was born in 62, so EVH's playing hit me right in the middle of my 1st year of playing. While hearing VH I was truly a religious experience, even more important than that - VH saved rock music in a sense. Things were in total rut at the time... The 70's mantel of rock music really became "old-hat", and there were really not a lot of good bands left. The biggest bands at that time was probably Aerosmith, Rush, Ted Nugent, Heart, Queen, Thin Lizzy, Pink Floyd, UFO, Steve Miller, Sweet, Lynard Skynard, Allman Bros, Led Zeppelin... Except for Rush - many of those bands had already "shot their wad" so to speak... Enter Van Halen! I don't think there's a single teenager at that time that doesn't remember exactly what they were doing when they first heard VH I ? I was hammered-drunk in my bud's Rambler, going to a disco tech to pick-up some "bush"!![]()
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Being a teen in the 1970's could be stressful at times... This was a popular stress relief exercise: (Getting extremely "stoned" first was critical for this exercise...)
1. We placed our stereo speakers roughly 20 inches apart.
2. We then laid-back and placed our head between the speakers.
3. We then placed pillows at the back, top, and front of the speakers to prevent sound leakage.
4. We then played Pink Floyd's DSOTM at mega-high volume! (Supertramp "COTC" worked great as a 2nd feature!)
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