#eddievanhalen #eruption #reaction Introducing 20Yr Old RAPPER to Eddie Halen Eruption Guitar Solo! for more G-Colo • G Colo X East Bonanza ... Join this channel to get access to perks: / @blackpegasusraps
The thing that motivated Edd to all these different sounds he created on his guitar was that when he was beginning, he could not afford to buy the sound effects equipment. So he found a way to create his own sounds with what he had. Brilliant!!!!
I know that this was five or six days ago but I have to chime in. I was born in Pasadena in 1957 and at a point in my childhood Eddie Alex and his family moved in Three Doors Down from us. I grew up with Eddie and Alex and their garage bands. And in answer to your question, this is the greatest guitar solo in the history of guitar solos. From GarageBand to actual concerts I've seen them 20 times or more. It actually makes me proud to be able to see younger Generations appreciating this man and his artistic ability. R.I P. Eddie
Missing my chance to see Eddie live is one of my greatest, most painful musical regrets. 😕 "Will I still be playing when I'm 80? Sure, if I'm still around. I might not be jumpin'. I might be sittin' on a stool, but yeah, I'll still be playing." - EVH, 1986
I saw 4 nights of this tour at the Worcester Centrum, Worcester, MA. And every night was amazing! And fun! EVH just always looked like he was having fun.
This is the greatest gitar solo ever. This is regarded as a landmark in Rock music because no one ever even tried doing this before this. This is pure guitar gold!
The “cello” sound is a combo of one handed taps on the fretboard, volume swells, copious delay on the signal with a hefty amount of chorus. He was also known to rely on a harmonizer, phaser and flanger to get the sounds he wanted. In addition to being one of the greatest players, he was one hell of an electronics wizard. The vast majority of his guitars, amps and pedals were made for him, by him, in his “shed”.
This is the compilation of extremely high level complex artistry of the master himself. Lastly, if you listen to his first album and and follow his advancement of style, he transends from explosive speed to a much more complex exploration in freestyle precision technical riffs and actually slows his play to a much higher level.
In my opinion, this is a freestyle improvisation that is based on snippets and pieces of other pieces of Eddie Van Halen’s studio music. But essentially all of his studio music was improvised. Especially eruption. He was just messing around in the studio and they included it on the album because it was so great.
Fun Fact, Quincy Jones called Eddie Van Halen up to play on Michael Jackson’s Beat it. It took Eddie only 20 minutes to do his part and asked for no money.
Yes, the original arrangement was Eddie playing a solo over the "dum, dum...dum dum..." part, and he felt that is was poor arranging. He felt his guitar solo over an instrumental replay of the verse would be much better and he was right. After all, the man composed some of guitar rock's greatest songs. Eddie of course got a lot of credit for his soloing, but the guy was one of rock's greatest rhythm guitar players ever, and of course he composed iconic hit songs still played today on radio, TV, sports stadiums, etc. Easily one of the most important musicians in the the last 50 years.
I love seeing these first reactions. looking at some of the comments they have answered most of your questions. I was lucky enough to see him play 5 times and that wasn't nearly enough. One thing that seems to always be omitted from the "best guitarist ever" debate is that Eddie taught himself how to play, built his guitar to make it sound EXACTLY how he wanted it to, had the talent to play the way he did, write GREAT songs the way he did, AND have that stage presence. Oh and that friggin boyish grin. Who else can claim all that? Game set and match. I cried like a baby when he passed.
@@commenceenavoirmarre Also watched this one because I saw the comment and it was a great suggestion. Honestly just the performance overall was one of the best I've ever seen. The solo was really solid as well
Yup. There's different types of rock with all kinds of styles. Here's a few more, Telegraph Road-Dire Straits, Fade To Black-Metallica, The Trooper-Iron Maiden. All excellent solos, all entirely different. One last thing, Every Dave Gilmour solo is a masterpiece (My humble opinion).
Masterclass!!! Until this I had never heard a guitar SING! Besides hearing violin and cello at one point you can almost hear words being sung! Incredible ❤❤❤ favorite smile Eddie! RIP
This is an extended version of Eruption from Van Halen's first album. It was well rehearsed and is not freestyle. But he did augment and change Eruption over the many years he played it - as it was a central piece of what fans wanted to hear when they saw Van Halen live. I saw Van Halen in their first national tour as the warmup band for Black Sabbath- and they had released their first album - and played everything note for note - but as I said - over years more was put into Eruption - so that there are different versions - but Eddie Van Halen practiced extensively for each tour - and had this version down pat.
I was coming here to say the same thing … extended but Eddie knows where and what he’s doing … try listening to 316. One vid he’s playing it with his son Wolfie Greatest Guitar Player Ever 🎸 glad I got to see them 10 times since 1978 R.I.P. EDDIE 😢
Hey Black Pegasus, I just love the fact that you're turning younger 'kids' onto EVH. I saw them three times way back when. When they opened for Black Sabbath in Niagara Falls, NY back in the late 70s and then a year later in Buffalo NY, and a couple of years later in Bismark ND when I was in The US Air Force. I've always loved Van Halen, and though Eddie is gone, the music lives on. Keep turning these 'young kids' onto Van Halen.
Thanks for the reaction! It's so great to see people react to Eddie. Unlike most of us, this is what Eddie does when he gets bored. That's why he's so good! At the end, I think that he has Beethoven beat. Also, the smile on his face says it all. He's just having pure joy. It's such a beautiful thing.
This should be a recurring thing for awhile, bringing folks together to experience guitar greatness. :) I was lucky enough to have seen Van Halen twice on the Balance tour. It was my very first concert, and my brother took me. It was awesome. At the first venue, Collective Soul opened up for them. At the second venue, Skid Row and Brother Cane opened up for them. Everyone was in top form both times. You would have never guessed that there were problems going on behind the scenes. At the second venue, Sammy climbed the venue's very large speaker stack and got stuck. He kept yelling at Ed to help him get down. They were laughing hard. Ed's live solos had a basic structure to them (playing Eruption, Cathedral, 316, the intro to Mean Street, etc.), but there was improv getting to those pieces. He would incorporate movie themes, animal noises (horses, elephants, whales, etc.). Also, sometimes he would just noodle around. Ed was definitely the Mozart of our time. Also, a lot of guitar tech came about because of him.
You hit 40, I hit 50, and here's what I've learned. I used to have musical opinions. I'm a rock guy or whatever. That said, I've started saying yes to every person who asks me to go see something live. Last one I went to was some rap guy. He was awesome. Before that, some Christian rock group. Blew my mind. Bluegrass Festival at the Tetons, out of control awesome. 25 years before that, I wouldn't have given anything a shot besides exactly what I defined as acceptable. Every time I think I'm getting confident at something I do which is pretty rare as I'm usually straight top of bell curve average, I'll see something like Eruption AGAIN which makes me think I suck at literally everything I've ever done. I heard this first time early high school, sawvVan Halen a couple times back in high school and college and it pretty much reminds meto just get decent at something. A lot of the bands I grew up with are like that, some still touring, most dying off. Do'n't really care what kind of music it is, you see something entirely great you're a better person. I remember when my dad made me go to Les Mis same night as NCAA BBall championship game one night way back. I was pissed. By the end of the show I was streaming tears, the talent and music was just so entirely great. Embarrassing when you're in your 20s, now, I don't care, I let those emotions fly.
Ed was incredible. What’s incredible is the respect he had for those who went before him. Roy Clark, Glen Campbell, Cher Atkins, Jerry Reed to name a few. Roy and Glen did a bit where they played the same guitar at the same time, how cool if he and Eddie has done it too. Eruption and Malagueña playing at once.
Steve Vai , Joe Satriani, Jason Becker, Yngwie Malmsteen,Roy Clark, Randy Rhoads. Richie Sambora, Zack Wylde and so on these guitarist are some of the best in the world , doing things Eddie Van Halen wasn't even doing yet. But Eddie was the man that really started this type of playing . Finger picking the lower strings.
Nuno Bettencourt is one of the best out there, and deserves to be mentioned with those you brought up. Roy Clark and those playing Bluegrass music were doing finger picking decades before EHV and others thought about it. Ricky Skaggs would be another one to throw in there from the Bluegrass genre.
Its hard to believe one if the best guitarist in the world is gone. The one and only Eddie Van Halen 💯🔥🤘🏼.... In this solo hes playing excerpts from many of Van Halens songs.
I am 53 years old and this VH 5150 tour was my first rock concert at the age of 15. The ticket cost me $16.00 and I was less than 20 feet from the side of the stage in San Antonio, TX. This is still the best live show I have ever been to in my lifetime...
You are correct on a lot of your comments. It's a combination of both improv and pieces of music he has written since 1978. I've seen him live eight times. He never plays the same thing the same way twice ever. Something's always different he's always improving . In my opinion he is the greatest guitar player that ever lived. Jimi Hendrix started it and was the man but Eddie Van Halen came out it was like an atomic bomb. He's the Mozart of our generation. In my opinion, I've been playing in bands since the early eighties and he is the original one that did that scissor kick is what. To a point where he had both hips replaced when he was older because of the damage. In my opinion it's not how fast you can play it's how innovative you are he not only changed the way music sounded but guitars were made amplifiers etc you did a good job but your analysis. You were right on. I'm a hard rocker from guitar player from Nashville 🤘🤘
Edward Van Halen was a legend, he revived guitar, had a different sound, a different style and took the instrument where it had never been. Making a guitar out of spare parts, changing guitar amplifiers to somewhere completely new and innovative. He was a better rhythm player and songwriter than lead player. Guitar changed with Edward in a way it hasn't since. He was a game changer, and what you feel when you see and hear this performance is something that doesn't happen very often, catching lightning in a bottle.
The original solo is a lot shorter than what you're seeing, and you are correct. In this video he plays eruption, but he's also adding big chunks of improv in between written sections of the original solo. It makes me happy seeing people discover Eddie for the first time. He really was a master. RIP EVH (Here is the original - ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-M4Czx8EWXb0.html)
It's my favourite guitar solo on RU-vid and if you check out other players doing a unnacompanied solo, none of them go for 12 minutes straight. Most live unnacompanied guitar solos are 3 to 5 minutes tops. The strength and stamina in Eddie's hands was legendary
Saw them twice as a teenager. VanHalen was earth shattering when their first album hit. Was in a HS rock band at the time… this was a game changer. I couldn’t tell you how many times I’ve listened to this band and I still love it. I get such joy out of watching young people react to the rock of my day… it’s very gratifying because we did know it was something special happening. Nothing like waiting for that next VanHalen record to come out. Thank you for loving the music of my youth. RIP EVH. BTW - Love what his son is doing.
The very best guitar solo, that I know of.. A couple of fun facts, this was from the "Live without a net" (VHS) Filmed in New Haven CT on August 17, 1986, I was there, floor seats. Eddies side of the stage. Yes, those are extra picks taped to the guitar. (mostly in case they drop a pick). All the sounds coming from the guitar are from a single pickup, there are no tone controls. He's using a technique called "Tapping". He never claimed to invent, he just brought out to its perfection. I also love how he sticks his cigarettes in the neck of the guitar, to take a drag when he wants to. Most of the solo is a mix, mostly a standard solo but he always added something else. @ 16:30 he's playing with nothing but Reverb and the volume control. If you want to see some more interesting sound, listen to their song Poundcake, He plays the guitar with an electric Drill. The greatest guitar player ever, R.I.P. Eddie Van Halen...
FYI eruption is on the album ..every guitarist tries to learn this however this is a very extended free style on top of the orginal that we all learned ..and this was also the intro to" you really got me "
Fortunately, I saw him live many times going back to 1980. Around 2011 people weren’t talking about VH as much they had in the past. The band had been on hiatus for so long that people were forgetting, but not me. At the time, I was dating the daughter of a well-known musician and was saying to him “when Ed is gone people will be devastated and he’ll be viewed as one of the greatest of all time” and here we are today😢
Have been to 12 VH concerts.......BEST LIVE GUITARIST EVER. Eruption has evolved and changed throughout their years. The core eruption has always been there...this solo has been played at every concert and is EVH trademark.
Eddie had a routine, but he improvised his routine as he went along. This particular solo is a video edit of two different nights solos. You'll notice the cigarette at the top of the guitar magically disappears at one point. It's a combination of both a practiced direction, but Eddie always improvised over his known riffs as he played live. The reason their earlier albums were so raw sounding is they put them together with live takes.
Arguably the best solo. He changes his solo but its basically the same thing just different order. He will change drastically once in a while. Genius the goat. He uses every piece of the guitar
A lot of the licks & tricks in this, were his warm up exercises he would do backstage before their shows. Someone told him he should make it a part of the show. And so it was.
I love watching young people see this genius for the first time! And this video is perfect b/c it focuses on the most important part of this solo - that man's hands! I've never seen a musician who knew every inch of his instrument like Eddie Van Halen knew that guitar!
He has a combination of various songs. It starts with 316 from For Unlawful Carnal Knowledge, it has most of Eruption, Cathederal sounds kinda like a Chello, and the rest is just bits and pieces of other songs, riffs, and sounds.
He wrote most of that solo. 316, eruption, cathedral and Spanish fly are all on albums. The other riffs you hear he's been playing a long time but here perfected it. Once in a while he will come up with something on the fly he says and tries to do it again and can't. He never did a solo the same way back to back. He'll play this solo different every night. Every thing is in there just different order. Genius. Hope I answered a few questions.
I watched him doing this solo at backyard parties many times in the mid 70s. I saw him preform it at The Pasadena Civic Center just before they left on tour promoting their first album which included Eruption. It has grown since then but the basics have always stayed the same and today I still consider it one of the best guitar solos in history. I saw it a final time at the US Festival 83.
improvisation mixed around the original eruption solo. Mixing the familiar with his most recent additions. That's why all these years later it just never gets old. Rest In Peace Eddie. I saw them several times, with all singers they had. All were unforgettable. phenom
Great review. I was lucky enough to have seen Van Halen with Sammy Hagar (singer) a few times. AMAZING performance EVERY TIME!!! RIP EDWARD VAN HALEN!!!!!
This is what I've seen explained: You are correct. It's a mix. A bunch of elements are a collection of solos from past songs. There is a basic initial structure. But Eddie will add and subtract from it as time goes on. Add to that whatever experimental stuff he's pleased with. The order will change. The solo elements will change _mostly._ A LOT of things will change in what he does from performance to performance. This is for certain: it was never predictable. And it was always amazing. Hope this sheds some light, and I hope I wasn't misinformed.
Eddie played a guitar solo on every tour since 1978. On most of the albums, he played an instrumental song, and over the years, he would culminate all of those instrumentals into one long guitar solo live. By the time of the making of the video, he was 9 years into touring and 7 studio albums. So if you go and listen to Eruption, Cathedral, Spanish Fly, Little Guitars, Mean Streets, and 316, you should hear bits of every one of those songs in this solo.
A creative genius and inventor of EVH gear one of the greatest to ever have lived. I was fortunate to see him live R.I.P. EVH 🤍🙏🤍🕊️ Love your reactions❤
People often complain that he does not play eruption the same way every time. I saw this live, so cool, so you are both correct it is half of stuff he wrote and part of of just noodling around. the cello sound is made by turning the volume knob up n down in time with picking with left hand. You can hear the intro of mean streets now .Did you know he changed M.J' beat it and did the solo while was M,J was out eating lunch FOR FREE...and Eruption was what he just used to warm up. WOW.
It pieces of parts of other riffs but mixed with Eruption. And Eddie was kind of legendary in his precise finger work. It’s almost a guarantee that he actually practiced this. But having seen him live 12 times, he can improve whenever he feels like it. Also, remember when this video was made they were at 20 years performing live, dude is going to know how to work.
this eruption seems to be a compilation of Eddie's career to date, with improvisation. the original, was the second track on Van Halen's debut album. that Eruption changed the world.
Mid summer, mid 1980s. Not sure what year. 80s were a little fuzzy but not enough that I can't remember. Meadowlands arena. Upper deck side stage. Eddie got on a sky lift and ended up 10 ft. from me playing this. Best concert of my life. EVER
@12:00 that performance is semi-freestyle, each segment of the performance are solos from older songs by this group, but Eddie improvised the bridges to bind them and would add extra riffs and fills to the pieces to make it unique for the show. I saw him in '89 do this solo in Greensboro NC and it was different from the one you see, but still encapsulated the main themes.
His whole solo was bits of Van Halen songs eruption came from when he was just fuckin around on his guitar in the studio and someone was recording him and as they say the rest is history
Nothing beats the 80's like raunchy guitar solos!!! And Awesome concerts!! A time never repeated.. who's a big hair band lover????? 80's metal!!! There's nothing like it and there will never be anything like it!!!! I lived it!!!!!
Love Eddie, and your guest asks absolutely the best question: how do you put something like that together. It’s different for every guitarist, but specifically with Eddie (and many other rock players): he has certain themes or shapes (almost like in a movie soundtrack) that are like the little islands or building blocks he works with. And it’s exactly because you have a couple of these ‘sure points’ in place, that you can experiment in from here to there. This solo is a compilation of themes from the original Eruption solo, a piece called ‘Cathedral’ (where he works the volume knob to get those delay swells), and I think there’s some Mean Streets in there as well. For me, best solo in total: ‘Total Abandon Australia, Steve Morse - with Deep Purple’.
You should check out Eddie’s son, Wolfgang Van Halen. He plays multiple instruments and does entries songs, songs all parts, plays all instruments himself. It’s fascinating. There is also a nice song he dedicated to his dad after he passed. Lots of home videos. It’s very touching.
So the slow part in the beginning is his solo called 316 @5:23 (from their "For Unlawful Carnal Knowledge" album which if I remember correctly was his son's birthday and it was a lullaby written for him}, then there is some other parts that I am not too familiar with that may be complete improv or might be parts of other solos, then he goes into his Eruption solo @8:56 (from their second album called "Van Halen") and then the part where he is not strumming but turning knobs is his solo called Cathedral @16:22 (from "Diver Down" album), then some more stuff that sounds familiar but I am not sure where its from, then back into Eruption @21:00.