Ed in guitar Aficionado out December 2.

TopicsAll ForumsGeneralVan Halen NewsEd in guitar Aficionado out December 2.

This topic has 12 voices, contains 36 replies, and was last updated by  wjamflan 3775 days ago.

November 24, 2013 at 8:40 am Quote #31078

Dutchie
(1771)

I’m kind of more hoping for pictures of his vintage collection…. Obviously, it will be great to see all the striped guitars again, but they have been done to death.

I wish he would do a photo like in the old Guitar Shop magazine used to do. They used to get the artist to pose with their entire collection for the poster in the middle of the mag. Shame ed never did it. There is a great photo of Slash doing it and I also saw one recently of Bonamassa’s collection too.

Having said that though, it would be killer to see a fresh shot of the Shark…


  Quote
November 24, 2013 at 11:09 am Quote #31082

King Edward
(1945)

unchainedheart: is it Ed or Jimmy Page on this cover?

Very funny. I agree…….but with that being said I think Ed looks pretty good.


  Quote
December 2, 2013 at 6:18 pm Quote #31251

PT5150
(6281)

Anyone get the mag yet?
Keen to here what photos are in there any any good insights in the article..
Thanks


EDDIE’S fingers aren’t fingers they are muscle-powered pistons that hammer guitar strings to the fretboard with the force of a rivet gun”.


  Quote
December 2, 2013 at 7:06 pm Quote #31252

vhrob
(1727)

Not available at my B&N yet. Called today. Oh well.

Rob


vhtrading member since 2000


  Quote
December 2, 2013 at 10:24 pm Quote #31257

mrmojohalen
(6391)

Will check this weekend.


When you turn on your stereo, does it return the favor?


  Quote
December 3, 2013 at 7:05 pm Quote #31271

PT5150
(6281)

From a guy at links:

There are photos of Ed’s different Fenders he has gotten over the years along with a few Les Pauls and his Gibson SG to mention a few. Don’t want to give too much away. It is definitely an article worth reading. It will hit the stands this week in the NYC area.

Quote:
Originally Posted by PT 5150
Cool thanks. Is the photo of Ed with his Frankie at the beach used? Was hoping there is a photo of the Kramer 5150.

Yes. There are two photos of Ed with Frankie at the beach. The Kramer is in there also!!


EDDIE’S fingers aren’t fingers they are muscle-powered pistons that hammer guitar strings to the fretboard with the force of a rivet gun”.


  Quote
December 3, 2013 at 7:42 pm Quote #31276

ron
(11519)

Now available for purchase in their store: http://store.guitarworld.com/collections/guitar-aficionado/products/guitar-aficionado-january-february-2014-eddie-van-halen
(Shipping for me was way high, so I didn’t order it, I’ll have to go looking in B&N’s and other mag shops)


  Quote
December 3, 2013 at 7:53 pm Quote #31279

PT5150
(6281)

Thanks Ron
Just ordered mine $19.74
Will be more than that at Australian shops.


EDDIE’S fingers aren’t fingers they are muscle-powered pistons that hammer guitar strings to the fretboard with the force of a rivet gun”.


  Quote
December 3, 2013 at 10:14 pm Quote #31280

Dutchie
(1771)

Just ordered mine, too.

Looking forward to reading it…


  Quote
December 4, 2013 at 2:47 pm Quote #31292

PT5150
(6281)

VanHalen.net

Eddie Van Halen Guitar Collection Reveals his Fascination with the Tools of the Trade
Posted by Ben5150 (online)

This is an excerpt from the all-new January/February 2014 issue of Guitar Aficionado magazine. For the rest of this story, including 14 pages of photos of Eddie Van Halen’s gear, head to the Guitar Aficionado Online Store.

A Different Kind of Trove: Cool, unusual, and full of surprises, Ed Van Halen’s extraordinary guitar collection reveals the legendary player’s endless fascination with the tools of his trade.

By Chris Gill | Photo by Kevin Scanlon

Most guitarists and fans who have paid close attention to Eddie Van Halen’s career likely think of him as a “serial monogamist” when it comes to the guitars he plays. During the early days of Van Halen, he was known for playing his Frankenstein guitar that he assembled from various parts, and during the Eighties he was usually spotted onstage with his trademark Kramer 5150 guitar.

After that, Ed went through a succession of signature-model guitars that he designed that were built by Music Man and Peavey. Those guitars led to the ultimate solution—establishing his own EVH brand, which produces various guitars, 5150 amplifiers, cables, accessories, and other products entirely to Ed’s own specifications, including the Wolfgang model guitars that are his main workhorse instruments today.

However, over the years Ed has amassed quite an impressive and deep collection of many other guitars that have played important, behind-the-scenes roles in Van Halen’s music. Some of these guitars inspired new songs, while others made cameo appearances during solos or overdubs recorded in the studio. Then there are several gifts given to Ed, particularly the various guitars that his mentor Les Paul gave to him over the years. And like anyone who has played guitar for a while, Ed has made a handful of impulse purchases, picking up instruments that catch his eye if only for their aesthetic appeal.

The storage space at 5150 studios where Van Halen keeps his gear makes Guitar Center’s Hollywood flagship location look like a humble mom and pop store. Boxes marked with the EVH brand logo are stacked neatly near the entrance, and row upon row of old, battered guitar cases line the walls, concealing their mysterious and alluring contents. As Matt Bruck, Van Halen’s business partner and our tour guide for the day, asks if there are any guitars we’d like to see, our minds are immediately flooded with recollections of rare or obscure guitars that Van Halen has mentioned in past interviews or that we caught fleeting glimpses of in old concert photos. Most of those instruments are still around, but even more fascinating are the guitars that we never knew Van Halen had.

“I’m not the typical guitar collector in the least,” Van Halen says as he goes through the stacks and pulls out a few of his personal favorites. “I’ve bought a lot of vintage pieces over the years, but I’ve destroyed quite a few of them. People might think, How could you desecrate the Mona Lisa? but I really don’t care what something looks like. I’m more concerned with a guitar’s functionality, sound, and playability. That’s why I started building my own guitars. Other guitars wouldn’t do what I needed them to do, so I made my own.”

Van Halen is not exaggerating. As the photos on the following pages show, he has no qualms about performing rather drastic surgery on instruments to achieve the sound or performance he desires. Vintage purists may want to look away, but the various scars, marks, and modifications that he’s made even on valuable vintage instruments tell the tale of a man who is constantly looking for ways to improve the tools of his trade and who refuses to accept the commonly held belief that all progress in electric guitar design stopped in 1959. That attitude resulted in a treasure trove of innovations that Van Halen either invented or inspired, including the hybrid Super Strat design (with PAF humbuckers instead of single-coil pickups), customized high-gain amps, bold graphic finishes, and other developments that most of today’s guitarists take for granted.

“There is always something new for me around the corner,” Van Halen says. “My tastes are always changing. I used a Wolfgang Stealth with an ebony fingerboard on our entire 2012 tour. Before that, my main guitars all had maple fingerboards, but one day I tried a guitar with an ebony board and thought that it felt pretty good. For the 2012¬–13 tour, I modified my 5150 III amp heads because my taste had changed again a little and I wanted to continue the evolution of the amp. We’re putting out the limited-edition 5150 III S with that mod, for anyone who wants what I am currently using. I just keep pushing to see what I can get out of something. Spinal Tap made a joke about things going to 11, but I’ve spent my whole life pushing things to 11.”

Frankenstein

What trips me out about this guitar is that when I painted it red, that made it more famous. A lot of people still don’t know that it’s the same guitar as the black-and-white guitar on the cover of the first Van Halen album. That guitar went through a lot of different phases and changes. On the first record, it had a stock vintage Fender Strat vibrato, then the Floyd came around, and then I added the dummy pickup at the neck. I kept changing it because I was tired of people copying my guitar.

This is an excerpt from the all-new January/February 2014 issue of Guitar Aficionado magazine. For the rest of this story, including 14 pages of photos of Eddie Van Halen’s gear, head to the Guitar Aficionado Online Store.

- See more at: http://www.guitaraficionado.com/a-different-kind-of-trove-eddie-van-halens-guitar-collection-reveals-his-fascination-with-the-tools-of-the-trade.html#sthash.LWIdxqXH.dpuf


EDDIE’S fingers aren’t fingers they are muscle-powered pistons that hammer guitar strings to the fretboard with the force of a rivet gun”.


  Quote
December 4, 2013 at 11:59 pm Quote #31298

ron
(11519)

The EVH issue was on the shelf at the mag shop this afternoon, so I now have a copy.


  Quote
December 5, 2013 at 12:41 am Quote #31299

PT5150
(6281)

Cool Ron what guitars are in the photos?
Is the Kramer 5150 in a photo or the guitar room at 5150?
Thanks


EDDIE’S fingers aren’t fingers they are muscle-powered pistons that hammer guitar strings to the fretboard with the force of a rivet gun”.


  Quote
December 5, 2013 at 11:31 am Quote #31302

ron
(11519)

Sixties Teisco Del Ray ET-440
Frankenstein
Kramer 5150
1976 Ibanez Destroyer
1963 Fender Bandmaster
1968 Marshall Super Lead 100 Model 1959
Dave Petschulat Mini Les Paul
Kramer Custom Double-Neck
Custom Steinberger Gibson Les Paul
1962 Gibson SG TV Junior
1955 Gibson Les Paul Junior
1961 Fender Telecaster
1964 Fender Stratocaster “5150″
1920s May Bell Acoustic
Circa 1910s Gibson Mando-Bass
Late Sixties Vinnie Bell Coral Sitar
1958 Gibson ES-335
Early Sixties Goya Model 90
Ventura Guitorgan


  Quote
December 7, 2013 at 7:42 pm Quote #31348

mrmojohalen
(6391)

Picked up a copy today. Very cool pics.

Here’s one of them:

 photo EVHga1_zps46062ea3.jpg

 photo EVHga2_zps0ff52198.jpg


When you turn on your stereo, does it return the favor?


  Quote
December 7, 2013 at 11:32 pm Quote #31355

Dutchie
(1771)

ron: Sixties Teisco Del Ray ET-440 Frankenstein Kramer 5150 1976 Ibanez Destroyer 1963 Fender Bandmaster 1968 Marshall Super Lead 100 Model 1959 Dave Petschulat Mini Les Paul Kramer Custom Double-Neck Custom Steinberger Gibson Les Paul 1962 Gibson SG TV Junior 1955 Gibson Les Paul Junior 1961 Fender Telecaster 1964 Fender Stratocaster “5150″ 1920s May Bell Acoustic Circa 1910s Gibson Mando-Bass Late Sixties Vinnie Bell Coral Sitar 1958 Gibson ES-335 Early Sixties Goya Model 90 Ventura Guitorgan

Cool list of guitars. I was hoping there would be a few pictures of his original Sunburst Les Pauls though… :(


  Quote

You must be logged in to reply to this topic.