Ozzy Osbourne and Black Label Society guitarist Zakk Wylde compared in an interview with Heavy Consequence (Transcribed by Blabbermouth) the importance of Jimi Hendrix and Eddie Van Halen to guitar playing. For the musician, there is no way someone can top what Hendrix have done.
Zakk Wylde compares Jimi Hendrix and Eddie Van Halen importance:
“He changed the world. Jimi Hendrix was basically the Jesus Christ of electric guitar. That’s the ceiling — you can’t do anything more with guitar. And all of a sudden — if this was a Catholic hierarchy, Eddie was the second coming of Christ. If Jimi is the Jesus Christ of guitar, Eddie was the second coming. It was just, like, a whole new bag of tricks and all this other stuff that no one thought was possible. And the way he changed amplifiers and everything like that.”
“Not only just his playing technique. But down to pickups, tremolo bars, with the Floyd Rose, amplifiers, the way amps are designed, with more high gain and everything like that. So I mean, he changed everything across the board. Not just because of his doing taps and everything like that. Even the way guitars are made and the way amps are made, he changed everything. And on top of it, he was just a complete package. Aside of the playing and the tone, his songwriting [was] just phenomenal — just amazing.”
“We’re really truly blessed that we had him till he made it to 65. If you really think about it, after those first two records. I mean, after the first record, if he would have retired from music, he already changed the game. After the first one, if he pulled a Howard Hughes and just walked away and never picked up a guitar again, there’s that first album alone — with ‘Eruption’ and everything he did on that record — he changed everything. But we’re just blessed that we had him around for as long as we did. He was just a really great guy too. He was a sweetheart.”
Van Halen’s technique
Considered one of the best guitarists of all time, Eddie Van Halen was recalled for making the tapping solo technique popular in the late 70’s and early 80s. Which allowed his rapid arpeggios to be played with two hands on the fretboard.
Early in his career, Eddie played the drums and the keyboard and Alex played the guitar and studied the keyboard. Over time Alex got better than Eddie on drums, and Eddie started to train the guitar, overcoming him. He was on the 8th position on the list of the 100 greatest guitarists of all time by Rolling Stone magazine and 7th on the Gibson list of the 50 best guitarists of all time.
Eddie Van Halen was inducted as a member of Van Halen into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2007. But only singer Sammy Hagar and bassist Michael Anthony went to the ceremony.