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BILLY CORGAN: I was very familiar with all the David Lee Roth-era albums through 1984, but when I prepared for this interview, I listened to everything so my questions wouldn't be just about the past. What struck me about the Sammy Hagar-era albums was that there was a slow but distinct movement away from the kinetic approach of the early albums to a more song-oriented focus. But I sensed that on For Unlawful Carnal Knowledge [1991] your playing was in a weird place, that maybe you were getting in a rut.
But when I listened to your most recent album, Balance
[1995], it stuck me that you sounded like you were
really enjoying yourself again. There was more focus and you
sounded really energized.
EDWARD VAN HALEN: For Unlawful Carnal Knowledge took
a year to record; that's why the playing on it might sound somewhat
labored. Balance, on the other hand, was written and
recorded in only four months, so the whole process was quicker and
more immediate. I also think our producer, Bruce Fairbairn, had
something to do with the sense of excitement on Balance.
Instead of arguing with me, he encouraged me to pursue my own
ideas. He was somebody I could relate to. Together we were able
to create a vibe.
And creating the right vibe for things to happen is probably the
best thing a producer an do. We interviewed so many producers
before we started Balance, and he was the only one who said,
"Hey, wadaya got? Let's listen to some of your new music." The
others seemed more interested in trying to impress us with their
credits, rather than finding out what we wanted to accomplish. So
I'd have to say that musically nothing really changed between the
two albums, but Fairbairn created an environment where something
good could happen.
CORGAN: So after 20 years of recording, what makes you still
want to rock?
VAN HALEN: It's because I'm still 16 inside. I still have
that passion, and any true musician doesn't do it for any other
reason than passion. My motivation has never been financial.
Music is what I do. It's the only thing I know how to do.
CORGAN: But don't you ever have to fight yourself to keep
your music exciting?
VAN HALEN: Sure. I have my low points. For example, we
recently finished a pretty grueling 11-month tour and I was beat to
hell. I was depressed. I had the post-tour blues--whatever you
want to call it.
Usually, I can shake it by just doing some work in my studio. Up until that time I always thought of my studio as my sanctuary--a place to jam and clear my head. But, for the first time, it didn't seem that way. I just didn't have the desire to play at all. In fact, I was so fried I wondered whether I was ever going to be able to write anything again. So, I just simply let go. Then, boom, one day, all of the sudden the desire came back.
I think I learned something important. There are really three
parts to the creative process. First there is inspiration, then
there is the execution, and finally there is the release. The last
part is more important than I ever realized. And after the last
tour, I didn't allow myself to cleanse before I jumped back in, and
it really screwed me up for a while.
CORGAN: One of the things that struck me after listening to
all your albums is your fearlessness--you've never been afraid to
go where you've wanted to go. You've played blues, you've played
crazy music, you've played synthesizer music...
VAN HALEN: I think my desire to do my own thing came from my
dad. He was a real soulful guy. He played sax and clarinet like
a motherfucker. Unfortunately, he was also an alcoholic who died
when he was 66. But he lived a full life. My mom, on the other
hand, is 80, but she doesn't live. So I'm trying to find a balance
between them. I don't want to be like my mom and live to be 80,
and not live. And I don't want to die at 66 like my dad.
CORGAN: You created the sound of Van Halen. After all these
years, how do you confront your own legacy? Do you ever worry
about repeating yourself?
VAN HALEN: Not really. Change is a natural part of my
evolution as a player. It just happens, because everybody changed
over time. It's a very unconscious thing. I think the unreleased
acoustic piece I just played you before the interview sounds
different from anything I've ever done, yet I didn't sit down and
say, "I have to do something different."
CORGAN: I admire your attitude, because I feel like I'm
always fighting not to repeat myself.
VAN HALEN: I don't know. Every time I walk into the studio
it seems like the first time. It's like I've never written a song
before. I am just as scared. In fact, someone asked me the other
day, what I thought I had learned about making music after all
these years, and I said, "Nothing." I'm scared shitless all the
time. I'm really insecure that way.
CORGAN: At what age did you start playing guitar?
VAN HALEN: I started smoking, drinking, and playing the
guitar at age 12.
CORGAN: And how old were you when you recorded your first
album?
VAN HALEN: I was 22.
CORGAN: So how did you get from playing your first open G
chord to playing "Eruption"?
VAN HALEN: Practice. I used to sit on the edge of my bed
with a six-pack of Schlitz Malt talls. My brother would go out at
7 P.M. to party and get laid, and when he'd come back at 3 A.M., I
would still be sitting in the same place, playing guitar. I did
that for years--I still do that.
CORGAN: But where did that attack style of playing come
from? At 22, you were killing people.
VAN HALEN: I have no idea. I can tell you how I came up
with certain techniques, but the rest is a mystery. It's the way
I learned to communicate, because I was never very good with words.
I was just chosen.
CORGAN: I find it interesting that it was so
unpremeditated.
VAN HALEN: I believe that every one on this planet is born
with a gift, and I was just lucky enough to find mine. So I'm very
blessed, and very grateful.
CORGAN: So, what was it like to wake up and find you were
suddenly everybody's guitar hero?
VAN HALEN: It was weird. But I'll tell you what was even
weirder. Before our first record came out, this guy wrote an
article about the band in one of the major Los Angeles newspapers.
He singled me out as the important member. He just raved about me
playing and didn't really say much about Roth. And it freaked
David out because he was the lead singer and frontman. It really
upset him that I was getting the attention.
I kind of felt bad and really didn't know what to do. It was like
this journalist almost ruined the band and my life by praising my
work. He actually hurt me by putting the spotlight on me. I was
like, "Fuck you, just let me play." The tension it created in the
band was unbelievable. I was like, "Holy shit, David! What did I
do wrong? Did I play too good? I'll play worse. Will that make
you happy?"
CORGAN: Yeah, suddenly everyone was tapping and doing
whammy-bar dives. What was that like?
VAN HALEN: Actually, I thought it was kind of funny.
Because, with me, it was a form of expression--part of my style.
When I used the stuff I invented, I was telling a story, while I
felt tat the people who were imitating me were telling a joke. I
felt other players tended to use tapping and false harmonics as a
trick, instead of incorporating them into their vocabulary.
CORGAN: On your debut album, Van Halen [1978], your
guitar solo, "Eruption," was the second track. Wasn't it kind of
a bold move to place the crazy guitar instrumental so close to the
beginning of the record? Was it a conscious move?
VAN HALEN: The whole story behind "Eruption" is unusual. It
wasn't even supposed to be on the album. I showed up at the
recording studio early one day and started to warm up because I had
a gig on the weekend and I wanted to practice my solo guitar spot.
Our producer, Ted Templeman, happened to walk by and he asked,
"What's that? Let's put it on tape!" So I took one pass at it,
and they put it on the record. I didn't even play it right.
There's a mistake at the top end of it. To this day, whenever I
hear it I always think, "Man, I could've played it better."
CORGAN: But what was the idea behind making it the second
track? It certainly gave it more weight than if you had sequenced
it at the end of the album.
VAN HALEN: I think they put it there because it was
different, but I'm not really sure. At that point in my career, I
really didn't have any control over anything. I was like, "Yes,
sir. Whatever."
We barely had any input in the early days of the band. I mean,
there are so many things wrong with those early records--the drums
sound like shit on the first album and the bass is barely audibly.
We just played live, they recorded it, and it got put out.
CORGAN: How did you guys write the first album? It's my
guess that much of your early music evolved out of jamming.
VAN HALEN: A lot of the basic ideas were things that I came
up with when I used to practice on the edge of my bed. I would
take those ideas to band practice. At the time, we were rehearsing
in David's father's basement, so me and Al would go over there by
ourselves and jam on the ideas for hours until we came up with
something we were happy with. For example, Al and I jammed on the
basic riff from "And The Cradle Will Rock" two hours a day for two
straight weeks. [laughs] We didn't really know what to do
with it, but we were having fun because it sounded so wicked.
Then, out of nowhere, the chorus came to us and it was finished.
Sometimes you really have to work for inspiration. But ultimately,
it's not really work, because my brother and I genuinely love to
jam. I'd say that's the way most things happened in our band. It
usually begins with me and Al, which is funny in a way, because
most people don't usually think of the guitar and drums as a unit.
It's usually bass and drums.
CORGAN: But I think that's the way a band should be
constructed--the core of a band should be built on the relationship
between the guitarist and the drummer. It's the simpatico
relationship between me and our drummer, Jimmy Chamberlain, that
provides the foundation for the Pumpkins. Drums can do so much
more than just fold down the groove.
VAN HALEN: Exactly. I think Al's drumming is more musical
because he listens to me rather than just being concerned with
maintaining a steady groove. Billy, how do you write with
Pumpkins?
CORGAN: It's close to how you do it. I'm definitely
responsible for coming in with some basic chord changes, or ideas.
Everybody in the band looks to me to come up with the basic seed,
so it's not very productive to come in with nothing.
VAN HALEN: It's the same with us! You know, it's like,
"Well, watcha got, Ed?"
CORGAN: Yeah! And if you don't have anything, everybody
will stand around and look at their watches and say things like,
"This is boring. Uh, can I go? I got a date tonight."
On the other hand, you can't do it yourself. I'll come in with a string of riffs, and direct the musical ideas. But you still need a band and their input to make the ideas come alive. You can't underestimate band chemistry. you still need that--it's that weird jelling of people.
One of the cool things about Van Halen is that you've always been
able to write great hit singles. Unlike other hard rock bands, you
never shied away from writing pop music.
VAN HALEN: Again, I just go with whatever comes out. I
can't help the fact that I've written "Can't Stop Loving You" or
"Jump." Don't blame me. [laughs] Actually, if I could
deliberately sit down and write a pop hit, all my songs would be
pop hits!
Let's put it this way. I play what I like to hear. And sometimes
I like to hear something poppy, and sometimes I don't.
CORGAN: Van Halen II [1979] is a really good
record, but it sounds to me like you really didn't have the time to
full explore all your guitar and song ideas.
VAN HALEN: It was very hurried. We had just toured for a
year, and we only had two weeks to write and record. But I'll
never forget the questions we got after the second record was
released: "Why does this record sound different from the first
album?" Because it's not the first album! It's always a Catch-22
situation. They hate you if you're the same, and they hate you if
you're different.
CORGAN: But you agree that it wasn't completely
realized?
VAN HALEN: Yeah, but I don't think it was because of us.
There was a lot of cocaine of the console--and it wasn't
necessarily the band's. That was a problem. And we weren't
allowed any input on the mix.
But ultimately we were just plain rushed. That's why you hear that
little riff fade out at the end of the album--Al and I didn't want
to stop. [laughs] We weren't done, but we had a
deadline.
CORGAN: I think two great albums are Women and Children
First [1980] and Fair Warning [1981].
VAN HALEN: I was starting to get more involved.
CORGAN: And it shows.
VAN HALEN: Especially on Fair Warning. But what I
had to do to get involved was very strange. We'd work during the
day, and I wasn't very happy with the way things were going or the
way people were approaching the whole recording process. I would
sneak back into the studio at 4 A.M. with Don Landee, the engineer,
and completely re-record all the solos and overdubs the way I
wanted them. The fucked- up thing was, no one even noticed.
That's how uninvolved they were on a musical level.
CORGAN: Fair Warning is a really mean, dark album
[see below]. That was unusual for you guys. Up until that
time you were more of a party band.
VAN HALEN: It was kind of a dark period in my life. I was
getting married, which flipped Roth out to the bone. I actually
overheard him say, "That fucking little prick, not only is he
winning all the guitar awards, but he's also the first to marry a
movie star." So that's what I was up against. A guy that wanted
everything that was going my way. The funny thing was, I really
didn't want the attention, and it came to me, anyway. I didn't
want the press--it was like, "Leave me alone."
CORGAN: Let's talk about some of the specifics of Fair
Warning. What can you tell me about "Push comes to Shove"?
VAN HALEN: That was Roth's idea of trying to cash in on the
raggae thing. I said, "Okay, if you want that kind of beat, I'll
see what I can do."
CORGAN: That song has an incredible guitar solo!
VAN HALEN: I'll never forget that one. We were sitting in
the studio with our producer, Ted Templeman, and I knew exactly
what I wanted to do. I must have played that solo over 20 times,
and Ted kept saying, "No, it's not good enough." So I said, "Okay,
but I don't understand what you want." So we just called it a day.
Later that night I came back and played the same solo that I played
20 times that day and left it. The next day he heard it and said,
"That's great."
On the whole album I was angry, frustrated and loose. It's like the solo in "Unchained." I love that song. It's rare that I can listen back to my own playing and get goose bumps, but that's one of them.
My frustration continues to grow when we made our next album, Diver Down [1982]. Half that album was damn cover tunes, and I hated every minute of making it. David Lee Roth had the idea that if you covered a successful song, you were half way home. C'mon--Van Halen doing "Dancing in the Streets"? It was stupid. I started feeling like I would rather bomb playing my own songs than be successful playing someone else's music.
Ultimately, that's why I built the studio we're now standing in.
I built it so I could work on my music without having to battle
anybody. So after Diver Down I demanded that we do
1984 [1984] in my own studio, my way. The motivation
behind Diver Down--which was to play it safe and make money-
-was completely different from 1984. One had heart where
the other was bullshit. Diver Down is my least favorite
record--even though I still tried to put myself into it.
CORGAN: That's so strange, because a studio devoted to the
band seems like such a positive thing.
VAN HALEN: That's what I would've thought. But I was trying
to take the band in a direction that I thought was appropriate, and
Roth was trying to take the band in more of a Las Vegas direction.
And there he is.
CORGAN: You did what you felt was right and it succeeded.
I ran into similar obstacles recently. I met with a lot of
resistance when I wanted our newest album [Mellon Collie and the
Infinite Sadness (Virgin)] to be a double CD. Many people
thought I was going to ruin the band by doing it. But it proved to
be the right thing.
VAN HALEN: You have to follow your heart. But don't ever
get cocky and say to yourself, "Hey, I was right." Just do what
you fell. Do you understand what I mean?
CORGAN: Yes, you can't gloat.
VAN HALEN: Right. When "Jump" went Number One, I was almost
embarrassed. You did this double album because it's what you
wanted to do, not because you wanted to probe anybody wrong or make
money.
CORGAN: In the beginning, though, I have to admit that I did
have a chip on my shoulder. I did want to prove everyone wrong.
But after I went through the process and came out on the other
side, I realized why I had to do it. It wasn't about anyone else.
In face, the deeper I get into my life as a musician, I'm
discovering that it becomes less and less about other people, and
more about what I want to do. And that's a good place to be.
So I can understand what you're talking about. There are all these
fish swimming around you, and their motivation is not necessarily
to make sure that you're playing great or that you're going [to]
have a great show that night. Instead, it's, "Are there people in
the fucking seats?"
VAN HALEN: The thing is, after 20 years it doesn't change!
I hope you're prepared for that. [laughs]
CORGAN: I read in Van Halen II's liner notes that you
guys once parachuted into a stadium show. [laughs] What was
that all about?
VAN HALEN: That was one of Roth's big ideas. I'm not even
sure why, but he said, "Let's parachute into the stadium." Of
course we couldn't do it ourselves, so we hired four professional
sky divers to jump out of an air plane right before our set. The
idea was that we would wear identical gear and run on stage and
pretend it was us that jumped out of the plane. So there we were,
wearing these craze heavy outfits, sweating our balls off, waiting
for the sky divers to come down so we could jump on stage. It was
so silly, and it almost turned into a compete catastrophe, because
while we were trying to get out of the gear, Al severely twisted
his ankle and had to play the show with practically a broken
foot.
I guess that's why Dave's in Vegas. He saw playing music as show
biz, and it's not show biz to me. I should've known when Roth
said, "Let's say we're two years younger than we really are." And
I'd say, "Why? I'm only 22. What's the difference?" That still
causes problems for me to this day. I'm 41, and people think I'm
39.
CORGAN: But in a positive light, it sure made things
interesting in an incredibly dull period of music.
VAN HALEN: Hey, we were young and crazy. We were trying to
do all the things that Led Zeppelin did--throw televisions out the
window, and so on. We used to drive people crazy. For example,
very early on, we were on a tour supporting Journey. They would
never give us soundchecks and treated us like shit in general, so
we liked to fuck with them anyway we could. So while they were on
stage we would sneak in and destroy their rooms--we'd use fire
hoses and extinguishers, whatever we could get our hands on.
What really drove them crazy was that at the beginning of the tour no one knew who we were. The audience would say, "What the fuck is this?" But by 30 dates into the tour, we were the ones selling the tickets. In fact, halfway through the tour we wanted to bail, and despite all the shitty stuff we did to them, they begged us to stay on. Needless to say, we didn't. [laughs]
Here's another good story from that tour: We were in Madison, Wisconsin, and while I was out of my room, Al and David snuck in and grabbed my table and chairs, took out the screen and threw them out the window. When I came back to my room I was like, "Where the hell is my table?" So I looked out my window and there, seven stories down, were my chair and table lying in the snow. The screen had totally disappeared.
I figured it must have been Roth, so I went down to the desk and
said, "My name is David Lee Roth, can I have the key to my room?"
I went into his room, grabbed the table and chair and put them in
mine. When the cops came, they looked in my room and said,"Hey,
there's no screen here but here's a table and chair." Then they
looked in Roth's room and said, "Hey, there's no table and chair
here, but the screen is intact." They couldn't figure it out.
[laughs]
CORGAN: I saw the 1984 tour. In fact, I waited in
line all night and froze my ass off to get tickets, and I was on
your side of the stage, of course. It struck me that the band
seemed really disjointed at that point in time.
VAN HALEN: Well, yeah. It had degenerated into the The
Tonight Show. There were so many solo spots that it seemed
like we were doing the show one person at a time. We were never
out there as a band for more than 10 minutes.
CORGAN: Yeah, it was pretty strange. David would tell some
jokes, and you would disappear off to the side of the stage and go
off into "Eddie's House."
VAN HALEN: It was like, "Hey, Johnny, are you done with your
monologue yet?" It wasn't a band anymore. It couldn't have gone
on that way. It was a good thing that Roth quit.
CORGAN: Is it strange to you that even though you were going
through so much turmoil behind the scenes around the time of
1984, your public image was still so positive and
uplifting?
VAN HALEN: Roth was very good at maintaining the public
persona of the band. That was his thing. It's strange, because
we're still perceived as a party band, and I still never go out and
party. I guess that has to do with Sammy.
CORGAN: But there's nothing wrong with the fact that your
music makes people feel good.
VAN HALEN: That's my point. The music makes people
feel good. I'm not sure if it's our responsibility to also act the
part. The point I'm trying to make is that at this point in my
life I would like to strive for something deeper. There are more
emotions I would like to express that are difficult to express when
you are perceived as a "party band."
CORGAN: So do it. Do it, and take your lumps. I have
almost the opposite problem. I'm viewed as this weird, crippled
character. [laughs] And it's not always easy to know that
people view you as this overly emotional, overly sensitive big guy.
But artist to artist, you got to take your lumps.
VAN HALEN: Oh, I know, and I do. hey, c'mon man, I've been
at this for over 25 fucking years. I've taken them! There's a
plaque on our wall that says we've sold over 65 million albums, and
I don't feel I've accomplished anything. I feel like I'm just
getting started.
CORGAN: That's the artist in you speaking. Even in your
guitar hero days, your were never vainglorious of it. The band has
never appeared snooty or snotty. And I think that's why your fan
base is big. You guys never went through that "sick period" that
a lot of bands who've recorded for 20 years often go through, where
they hit rock bottom with their fans. Even around Diver
Down which admittedly is not your strongest effort, people were
still there for you. And I think that says a lot about you
personally. That you care, you want to have a good time, and you
want others to have a good time.
VAN HALEN: And I think there's a certain amount of honesty
and heart and soul that goes into it that people can feel, even on
Diver Down
CORGAN: That's why you'll always have people on the other
end for you.
VAN HALEN: Music is for people. The word "pop" is simply
short for popular. It means that people like it. I'm just a
normal jerk who happens to make music. As long as my brain and
fingers work, I'm cool.
I used to stay at this guy's house where my high school metal band practiced, and I remember getting up early one morning and playing along to Fair Warning. It struck me, then as now, as a mean, dark album. The worst-selling of all the Van Halen albums, Fair Warning openly displays the conflict between the party- 'Halen front and the real hard life. This was a tired and taxed band, and if the lyrics and guitar riffs have anything to say, it is that they were living a freaky nightmare would of freaks, bleaks, decadents and hollowed souls. This is Van Halen blues as they lived it.
The album opens with an insane, virtuoso Eddie riff, daring you to try and play along. From there he drops us down and dirty into the 'Halen "Mean Street." The riffs are menacing, the lyrics nihilistic, and the grooves taut and funky. "Dirty Movies" flashes a prom queen turned porno queen, then segues into the standard Van Halen breakdown with David Lee Roth encouraging her to "take it off, take it all off." Check out the third song, the double-timed "Sinners Swing!" A woman chases our humble 'Halen narrator. Does he want her, or does she want him? The shadows are never clear on this album. And Eddie is at his guitar meanest, sounding as if every track was recorded lat at night, cigarette in headstock and head down. Ed riffing into the cool California night.
"Unchained" is quintessential Van Halen. Taut voltage riffs slither into melodic lead drops, and yet another famous D.L.R. kickdown: "Give us a break, Dave." "One break--coming up!"
Fair Warning is consistently bluesy and unrepentant, with great titles like "Push Comes to Shove" and the classic "So This is Love?" The guitar playing is vintage brown, all dirt and molasses. The album even ends oddly, the synth-creep "Sunday Afternoon in the Park" giving way to "One Foot Out the Door," with Eddie soloing madly over out-of-control synths as Dave is chased by demons and someone's mean old man.
Fair Warning opens a small window into the true night-world of Van Halen, moving at great speed.