

That’s pretty much the extent of his investment as a consumer. THIS COVER STORY FIRST APPEARED IN BILLBOARD MAGAZINE GET THIS WEEK’S ISSUE HERE OR SUBSCRIBE TO BILLBOARD HEREĪs a high school student, he was obsessed with Eric Clapton and mildly interested in Black Sabbath and Deep Purple. But even that is rare.Įddie Van Halen : The Billboard Cover Shoot

He sheepishly admits he never even listened to most of the bands that opened for Van Halen and worries, “Does that make me an asshole?” Sometimes he listens to Yo-Yo Ma, because he loves the sound of the cello. He doesn’t listen to the radio in his car, much to the annoyance of his wife (“I prefer the sound of the motor,” he says). He appears to know only one Ozzy Osbourne song Randy Rhoads played on, and it’s “Crazy Train.” He scarcely listened to Pantera, even though he spoke at the funeral of the group’s guitarist and placed the axe from Van Halen II inside the man’s casket. He’s not familiar with the work of Radiohead, Metallica or Guns N’ Roses. The guitarist maintains that the last album he purchased was Peter Gabriel’s So, when it came out in 1986. I’d just asked if he ever revisits old Van Halen albums, but his disinterest in those records is merely the tip of a very weird iceberg: Unlike every other musician I’ve ever met, he does not listen to any music he isn’t actively making. “I don’t listen to anything,” he tells me from a greenish couch inside 5150, the expansive home recording studio built on his seven-acre residence in Studio City, Calif. Eddie Van Halen does not listen to music. This is not a fake-out or a misdirection, nor is it a seemingly straightforward statement that actually means its opposite.
