Posts Tagged Eddie Van Halen

Greg Renoff on Van Halen Rising

Van Halen Rising

Van Halen Rising

Once a band achieves fame, it becomes fairly easy to read a variety of articles about the members, or the music. If a band’s early days gets addressed, often those details are relegated to two to three paragraphs of a profile. So a while back comics creator Cully Hamner intrigued me, when he made folks aware that Greg Renoff‘s upcoming book, Van Halen Rising: How a Southern California Backyard Party Band Saved Heavy Metal, was to be released in October 2015. Renoff’s book title makes clear part of what he sets out to reveal, but the aspect that really hooked me into learning more was the author’s decision to focus on Van Halen’s pre-1978 days (aka before they were famous and successful). To get a glimpse of Renoff’s writing style (as well as a taste of his post-1978 Van Halen knowledge) be sure to read his recent Medium piece, which also features legendary photographer Helmut Newton. If that is not enough fun for you after reading this interview, please be sure to peruse Renoff’s Van Halen Rising website.

Tim O’Shea: This book was researched partially by 230 interviews you conducted. How long did it take to conduct all of them?

Greg Renoff: I did my first interviews in 2008. When I first started, I was spurred on by curiosity about Van Halen’s early days more than the idea I’d write a book. I talked to a LA nightclub owner who’d booked Van Halen in 1976 and then to a Pasadena drummer who’d seen the Van Halen brothers perform live long before David Lee Roth joined the band. Then about a year later, I had a break from teaching and decided to dig into the topic some more by doing more interviews. After I started hearing more tales of the band members’ wild days before they were famous, I saw that there was a great story here that needed to be told in book form.

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Michael Molenda on Guitar Player Presents Guitar Heroes of the ‘70s

Article first published as Interview: Michael Molenda, Editor of Guitar Player Presents Guitar Heroes of the ‘70s on Blogcritics.

Guitar Player Presents Guitar Heroes of the '70s

As a teen growing up in the 1980s, one way I broadened my musical horizons was reading interviews with musicians. So when I recently learned that Guitar Player editor-in-chief Michael Molenda had dug through the magazines archives to collect Guitar Heroes of the ‘70s, I was eager to interview him. This 262-page collection (published by Backbeat Books, a Hal Leonard imprint) documents a variety of guitar greats that helped form the iconic music of the 1970s. The roots of classic rock were built in this era, and this book documents the evolution of the music from the ground floor view of its creators. In editing the book, Molenda aimed to cover a great deal of ground and includes such guitarists as Jeff Beck, Eric Clapton, Ry Cooder, Jimmy Page, Bonnie Raitt and Pete Townshend (along with a variety of other famous and respected talents).

Tim O’Shea: How did you go about deciding what interviews to include in this collection? Were there some musicians that had been interviewed multiples times in the 1970s, so you had to choose which of the many would be the best to run?

Michael Molenda: There were the obvious choices, of course — the players who defined classic ’70s rock, such as Beck, Clapton, Page, Santana, Frampton, Townshend, Iommi, and so on. Those were the easy selections for inclusion in the collection. The challenges were determining who to spotlight out of the many players who, as a community, really helped forge one of the glory eras of the guitar, but who are not as much on today’s cultural radar. Jose Feliciano, June Millington, Lenny Breau, Roy Buchanan, and Steve Hackett are perhaps good examples here. However, I sincerely feel that every guitarist in the book absolutely affected the ’70s guitar culture in an extremely positive way, and, to varying degrees, inspired other generations of players.

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