I feel that we will never really know what Warren might have turned into as a player. On the first album and the tour he was just TEARING it up. He was ridiculous as a player at that time. Tons of speed, fire and slippery flash.
Check out the lead and the trading off leads in this:
And the solo in this:
During the time of the first tour, Warren did an interview in Guitar For The Practicing Musician. It was his first interview in any guitar magazine and it was a big deal to him. One of the questions asked of him was the most offensive, ridiculous, calling him out question I have ever seen in a guitar magazine interview. The interviewer ( I think it was John Stix ), said something very similar to this:
"You sound too much like Edward Van Halen. Is there anything you can do to work towards having your own sound"? I remember reading that after I had bought "Out of the Cellar" and after I had seen this Ratt concert on Rock Palace that I linked to above and after I had seen Ratt live. Yes, there are some "vibe" similarities with EVH, but I have to tell you that I think what Warren was doing here was like the next generation player who grew up with an EVH influence and was going quite far beyond it lead-wise. I got so pissed that John Stix asked him that because I was AFRAID that it might cause him to focus on other things in his playing when I wanted him to keep going in this direction and just become SICK on guitar.
So I watched Warren's style "evolve" over time and I saw him pictured with vintage strats in interviews and getting bluesier and talking about Joe Perry and Keith Richards. His playing did change a ton too. I LIKED that bluesy swing sort of vibe he started doing. It was bitchin' and there were very few players playing stuff like that. It was kick ass. But, he almost completely did away with the young, ripping, bad ass, fire-filled Warren we see in these videos.
Why couldn't he continue to develop the fire-breathing monster we see in these videos and INCORPORATE the swingy blues licks lines with it? That would have made him completely the MAN in the 80's in my opinion. And he overused that swingy blues thing too.
For me, I can't choose between these two. Lynch was definitely more of an influence on me but I always held out hope that Warren would incorporate the two different "Warrens" and take over the guitar world.
John Stix may not have had anything to do with it, but I always felt that question was so off base to a young, up and coming guitar player and he really wasn't that guilty of being an EVH clone. Yeah, he had very cool, custom Charvels and long black hair but....... who didn't? Strangely, no one ever asked Vito Bratta that question about sounding too much like Van Halen.