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One thing about Steve is you always recognize his playing immediately. It’s unique and signature! It’s his voice, his thoughts, his feelings and his emotions. He’s my absolute favorite guitar player and always has been
Vai has been a hero to me since the 80's. Saw him a few times in smaller venues where I could be right up to the stage. IMNTBHO, he has mastered the electric guitar from wood to strings.....
Makes so much sense. When Steve says that the tone is in your mind. I am a guitarist and a keyboard player and "the tone is in your mind" is so true of both instruments.
7:00 the *'tone starts in your head'* idea is so true, every time I played a melody and riff into a recorder and it sounded exactly like it was in my head, then & every time listening it back, each of those times I kind of pre-imagined it. So. *My BODY did the work of making the SOUND come out right!!* What an insight...
Great interview!!!! Steve Vai is always so informative, his stories and jokes are great. Especially the DNA vai jem and maybe that guy cloned in the future can get his music on the radio 🙌🏻
Steve is the coolest nerd there is lol. Good job to the band by the way especially for the unrehearsed version of For the Love of God. The keys really added a nice flavor to the song. Thumbs up to you guys!
Tone is established in certain volumes of sustain like a Voilyn, lm a tone seaker Modules of authentic sounds, Tube design, play in the mix. Steve your excellent teacher So much too strive for, Guitar builders especially
I remember a brief moment in the 80's when the guitarist of Rock Island, Dom (I don't remember is full name) came to me, telling me Yngwie said he needed to slow down & find some soul. I was shocked, as a struggling nobody in the LA circuit, he came to. It turned out Dom was from wealth, never worried a thing. That contrasted my life where I earned every dime I had. We joined for a while. He played so fast Yngwie said slow down. I did little guitar work with Dom. We talked mostly about life outside his millionaire lifestyle & understanding life kinda sucks for some folks.... In 3 weeks Dom understood the blues. It ain't nothing but good folks hittin' bad times... I wish I knew where Dom is today!
That was Fricken awsome!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Man that ending waz epic I love him he's like what Jesus would look like with a guitar we always see the Devil with a mad get up, Steves kits pretty monstrous aswell! Super love his stories too wud love to interview u Steve a real fan who would ask u normal question that normal Steve loving people would ask doesn't always have to be about guitar and ur career but what gets u going what do u watch on TV do u even own a TV u knw normal everyday crap..
He refers to Eddie by Edward showing respect and little intimacy, taking into account his position as one of the greatest guitarists of all time. By the way, he shows respect for everyone else. Bravo Steve! You have my respect and admiration.
Vai has contributed so much through music and innovation. Is it really going too far to call him a genius? As if that wasn't enough, he also seems like a wonderful person.
@@bwgti he spoke of synergy amps in a really recent interview since carvin shut down. Looked like they were trying to get the business back up and running but guess not.
damn anyone else watch this with headphones. sounds as if i was there hearing steve play ! & stephen king ripping that bass lines and Steve giving props to monitors guy 43:09 and said "what's his name" interview " i dont know" cracked me up and Steve's Tone here.. uff
Yes that was the Randall MTS system. Developed by Egnater. Synergy has taken over and improved the modules. 2 channels, majority of modules are made by the actual manufacturer.
Look up reviews and you can find out the awesome benefits to Synergy adding channels to any amp with a serial fx loop. So, you can add a clean preamp to an amp that lacks a super clean tone. Hot rod a Fender Deluxe adding high gain that will turn heads. There is something for every type of player. Use an amp you got add to it without losing your fx loop. Build a rack setup, or use the head versions.
I wouldn't call all the dialogue a sales pitch. My observation personally was that the interviewer just wanted to talk about gear, but Steve kept pulling it back into the ethos of the playing and the philosophy of tone. He kept talking about the philosophy of crafting tone with the relationship between the mind and the fingers. Besides that, Steve focused mostly on the history of how he developed the gear he uses, and not so much a sales pitch per say.
actually no. sweetwater is a retail company so it's natural that they would talk about gear but i don't hear it here. god-vai has been very generous with sharing of his knowledge. and the audience ain't dead either, they're listening attentively just listen to how they laugh/cheer on 11:40.
This was shot at GearFest in the parking lot of Sweetwater Music. It’s an enormous FREE event for their customers. The artists play, but the audience is there, for the most part, for gear information.
Such a great musician and person!!! As a musician though, he does cross that line between inspirational and off-putting. What I mean by that is that he inspires people to learn, to want to be as good as him but can also make people give up because they believe they can never reach this level - that's also testament to his genius....
Once one rejects the myth of equality, his virtuosity is easy to accept. One then understands that greatness is for the few, not the many. Hence one then doesn’t fall prey to despair, and then simply cultivates one’s talents to the fullest extent possible, knowing that this extent is most likely to fall short of greatness. And that’s okay. Greatness, by its very nature, is for the few.
@@JeremiahAlphonsus I cannot deny the truth you speak but there is a difference between knowing the truth and feeling inadequate by the genius of others. For some, that genius inspires and whether they attain equality or at the very least greatness in their own style or contentment in the reality of their own ability, its still been an inspiration. Others though may feel inadequate, put off by their own lack of ability maybe made worse by their own physical ability (like an injury or some other reason that their body is limiting their musical growth). Its not just in music, not just in the learning to play an instrument. There are many examples where someone can inspire another to push themselves to achieve something whilst in others, that has an opposite effect or highlights their flaws more. Even with the support of friends/family, they cannot overcome their own feelings whether they are justified or just in their head. Knowing is not always the same as actually feeling/believing
BAM Mözzi He is great. It doesn't take anything away from your potential to be great. No need to feel inadequate. Once you hit a certain level, you start to understand how specialized these guys are. Vai is excellent in playing Vai, and that might create an illusion that he's great at everything. Which of course he's not, no one is.
I'm working on my own custom built guitar inspired by people like Frank Zappa who introduced me to the Sustainiac and Tom Morello who introduced me to the Kill Switch If I want "tone" I'll buy some nylon strings and conjure up the ghost of Julian Bream in some abandoned British Monestary with good acoustics Simple as...
Supremely quick and technical, and yet melody and expression is retained. How the hell does he do that? As speed increases and the gap between the notes decreases and what usually vanishes or becomes distorted is melody. I can only think of one other guitarist who can consistently achieve this, and that's John McLaughlin.
Steve Vai is such a great guy and openly shares things with his audience. My only comment is that the low end tone of his guitar is a bit fuzzy and there's some tuning issues. Other than that, he's good.
Finally? I’ve never heard Steve or any other player not give Eddie his respect. He was basically the Hendrix of the 80’s, except with many more imitators. And gear-wise, the Jem (and every superstrat) has EVH in its DNA.
MehYam2112 You’re not wrong. I’m just saying Steve has always been a pretty cool dude and I remember even in the ‘80s when the competition was steep hearing Steve five Eddie his props. I’d go one further, in my humble and debatable opinion, Eddie had more of an impact on rock guitar than Hendrix. There’s not another player in the planet that people try to model their tone after more than Eddie. Superstrats exist today because of Eddie. And his use of effects is second to none. His rhythm playing far surpasses any of his shred peers imo. All I’m saying is Steve is a cool dude and I personally have never seen too much disrespect toward Eddie from Steve.
Cesar Urbani Well I can sense when someone is about to be a dick. With the whole ‘think before you write’ bullshit. So I’ll politely say, if you can show me where Steve dissed Eddie I’ll gladly admit I’m wrong. I won’t say he never said he was better than Eddie. But that in itself isn’t disrespect. So yeah, show me where he bad mouthed Eddie and I’ll admit I’m wrong. I’ve personally never seen it.