The resulting track was given the opening slot on the 1984 album, preceded by Eddie's keyboard intro, titled “1984.” On tour “Jump” was performed including its intro, and Eddie played keyboards on stage, though on later tours the keyboards would be played by an offstage musician while Eddie played guitar.
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Read More »The rock guitarist also contributed keyboards to some of Van Halen’s biggest hits.
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Read More »Up to this point, the main elements keeping Eddie Van Halen from using more keyboards as part of the band’s sound were lead singer David Lee Roth and producer Ted Templeman. Both felt that moving away from the simple four-piece, guitar-based hard rock sound the band had started with would alienate many of the group’s fans. But as Eddie began to write music for the band’s next album, 1984, he worked at the 5150 Studio that he had been building, creating demos and feeling as though he had the ability to work freely without Roth and Templeman looking over his shoulder. The synth piece that would turn into “Jump,” featuring I, IV, and V chords over a sustained pedal note in the bass, was something EVH had worked on and recorded in 1981 but that was initially rejected by the band. During the 1984 sessions, Templeman asked David Lee Roth to listen to the rejected track and Roth came up with an idea for the lyrics. The resulting track was given the opening slot on the 1984 album, preceded by Eddie’s keyboard intro, titled “1984.” On tour “Jump” was performed including its intro, and Eddie played keyboards on stage, though on later tours the keyboards would be played by an offstage musician while Eddie played guitar. 1984 also contained the synth-rock track “I’ll Wait,” the second single to be released from the album, which charted at #13. The rest of 1984 was guitar-based rock and the singles “Panama” and “Hot For Teacher,” the latter a high-speed metal shred, were also hits. “We recorded Jump live in the studio with me playing keyboards, and then I put the guitar on later. I used an [Oberheim] OBX-a keyboard, which they stopped making. I think we just recorded one take,” Eddie remembered. (Guitar World, interview, December 1996) It’s impossible to overstate the new lease on life that “Jump” and 1984 gave the band, but it also led to the demise of the original lineup as David Lee Roth left the group and was replaced by singer Sammy Hagar. Hagar remained for the recording of four studio records, most of which sold well. Eddie wrote several keyboard-based compositions for the group, including “Love Walks In” and “When It’s Love,” both of which became hits. These were stadium corporate rock numbers of the type that other rock bands, such as Heart and Foreigner, were doing and while they sound a bit generic now, they are signs that EVH was in tune with what was going on in the sound and production of rock music in the 1980s. It also got the band through the 1980s, a rough time for hard rockers, in fairly good standing.
Heaven will be a place of joy, not pain. He will wipe away every tear from their eyes, and death shall be no more, neither shall there be mourning,...
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Read More »By 1991 the band was looking for a ‘return’ to their rock roots on For Unlawful Carnal Knowledge. Hagar’s limited vocals and even more limited ability as a songwriter made it unlikely that the band would record anything as startling as their first few albums. Synthesizers were becoming less ubiquitous as well, and so Eddie dropped them, playing the acoustic piano (and some organ) on the hit song “Right Now” instead. “Respect the Wind”, Eddie Van Halen & Alex Van Halen, 1996 Twister soundtrack The whole deal with Eddie Van Halen’s keyboards reminds me a lot of how I listened to Zeppelin fans on a call-in show at the release of In Through the Out Door complain about the use of synths on the album even though these same fans were fine with the use of similar technology on “Kashmir” and a few other iconic Zeppelin tracks. I mean, Eddie Van Halen had a talent for composition and for using keyboards for sonic texture, and it undoubtedly benefited the band. It’s impossible to see how they would have continued to be as big a touring act as they were or expanded their audience through the 1980s without Eddie’s attention to the sound of the band and his dedication to bringing in musical elements that defined the group as more than just another hard rock band.
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