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> <channel><title>VHTrading  &#187;  Topic: Eddie Van Halen &#8212; the long lost interview</title> <atom:link href="http://www.vhtrading.com/topic/eddie-van-halen-the-long-lost-interview/feed" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" /><link>http://www.vhtrading.com/topic/eddie-van-halen-the-long-lost-interview/feed</link> <description></description> <pubDate></pubDate> <generator>http://bbpress.org/?v=2.0</generator> <language>en</language> <item> <guid>http://www.vhtrading.com/topic/eddie-van-halen-the-long-lost-interview/#post-60347</guid><title><![CDATA[Eddie Van Halen &#8212; the long lost interview]]></title><link>http://www.vhtrading.com/topic/eddie-van-halen-the-long-lost-interview/#post-60347</link> <pubDate>Sun, 24 Mar 2019 03:29:29 +0000</pubDate> <dc:creator>ron</dc:creator> <description> <![CDATA[<div
id='q-60347'><p><a
href="http://www.loudersound.com/features/eddie-van-halen-the-long-lost-interview" rel="nofollow">http://www.loudersound.com/features/eddie-van-halen-the-long-lost-interview</a></p><p>Eddie Van Halen &#8212; the long lost interview<br
/> By Steven Rosen (Classic Rock)<br
/> 2019-03-23 09:00:00+00:00</p><p>Before Eddie Van Halen became a musical Goliath and a template for other musicians, writer Steven Rosen interviewed their young guitarist</p><p>On March 23 1979, Van Halen released their second album. Like many bands, they were faced with a conundrum: How do you follow a classic debut?</p><p>Many have dropped the ball, from Montrose to The Darkness. But Van Halen walked it, banging out their brilliant second album in just six days. It sounds like it, too: fresh, a little loose, fizzing with energy, its air of beer-fuelled spontaneity encapsulated in Roth&#8217;s fumbled lyric and giggles on Bottoms Up!</p><p>40 years on, it still holds up. &#8220;Van Halen II is just as good as the first album,&#8221; Steel Panther&#8217;s Russ &#8216;Satchel&#8217; Parrish tells us. &#8220;It rocks so fucking hard.&#8221;</p><p>The remastered version of Van Halen II is available now from all reputable streaming services.</p><p>It was sometime in &#8217;78. I was looking at my copy of Van Halen&#8217;s first album when I heard a car engine stop below my Laurel Canyon guest house window. I stuck my head out, looked down at this beat-up, nondescript car parked in front of my garage, and was about to walk down the stairs to tell the offender to move his vehicle. I was waiting for Eddie Van Halen to come by and I didn&#8217;t want some bozo taking up the spot.</p><p>I had spoken to Ed just a few weeks earlier at the Whisky, where I was introduced to him by Michelle Myer, my good friend and the club&#8217;s booker. Five minutes into our conversation he asked me for a pen because he wanted to write down his phone number. A couple of hours ago I found that piece of paper, called him and asked if he might want to get together some time and talk. He said: &#8220;I&#8217;ll be right over.&#8221;</p><p>I couldn&#8217;t believe he wanted to come over that same day. I hadn&#8217;t put together any kind of real interview, so I just jotted down a few things to talk about and hoped for the best. I was on pins and needles already, so when I saw that other car parked in my spot I was about to go insane. I walked down the stairs, and was ready to tell the intruding driver to move his car or I was going to have it towed.</p><p>The car door opened and Ed got out. I laughed nervously and thought: &#8220;Oh, shit. I almost had Eddie Van Halen&#8217;s car towed.&#8221; He met me halfway up the stairway and we shook hands and hugged. Any nervousness I had went away. He acted like there was no other place he&#8217;d rather be in early 1978 than sitting on my beat-up couch, smoking a cigarette and playing the &#8217;66 Strat he eyeballed the second he walked in the room.</p><p>He saw his album lying on the table and smiled. I told him how cool it was for him to drive over &#8212; he was still living in Pasadena with his parents at the time, which was about a 30-minute drive without traffic &#8212; and he just shrugged it off. I put the cassette player on the couch between us, pushed &#8216;record&#8217;, and began my first interview with this then 23-year-old wunderkind who was about to take over the world.</p><p>Continue reading: <a
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