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Guitar World
Guitar World
Entertainment
Matt Owen

“The guitar I wanted to play did not exist. What I wanted was a cross between a Gibson and a Fender”: New Eddie Van Halen documentary traces the guitar journey that led him to create the Frankenstein – and it's narrated by the man himself

RAINBOW THEATRE Photo of Eddie VAN HALEN and VAN HALEN, Eddie Van Halen performing on stage, full length.

A new mini-documentary charting Eddie Van Halen’s pre-Frankenstein electric guitar journey has been released online.

Masterminded by Simon Alkin and narrated by old audio of Van Halen himself, The Journey to Frankenstein tells the stories of the guitars that helped carry the late guitar god’s early musical career, before he eventually sparked his lifelong affinity for Frankie.

The tale begins way back in 1967, when Van Halen purchased his first-ever guitar – a $40 Teisco Del Rey – at the age of 12. Over the next decade, Eddie would embark on a journey of six-string discovery, shredding his way through Les Pauls, Stratocasters, Destroyers and more before finally landing on an instrument that catered to all his needs.

Along his way to Frankie, Van Halen would also try out such instruments as the Univox 12-string – which he retrofitted into a six-string – that Eddie himself described as his first successful guitar experiment attempt.

It was followed by a $400 Les Paul Goldtop – EVH’s “first professional guitar” – which was used in the early-to-mid 1970s, as well as a raft of other Gibsons, including a 1958 Les Paul Jr. and an early 1960s ES-335.

Other oddball instruments that further facilitated Van Halen’s mod jobs came after, such as the Ibanez Destroyer that was transformed into The Shark, and the first Fender Stratocaster hybrid that served as the strongest segue into what would eventually become the Frankenstein.

The nine-minute mini-doc also charts the creation of Frankie, including the various aesthetic and functional upgrades that it received over the years, from its initial design to its final red-white-and-black striped form.

“The guitar that I wanted to play did not exist,” Van Halen can be heard in the doc’s audio. “What I wanted was a cross between a Gibson and a Fender. A humbucking sound with a vibrato.”

The Journey to Frankenstein was completed using previously unheard audio, with the help of EVH guitar expert and Guitar World writer Chris Gill, and EVH specialist Steve Rosen.

The full film can be viewed on YouTube now. And for more on EVH's early guitar journey, Gill's article on the true origins and evolution of Eddie Van Halen's legendary Frankenstein guitar is well worth a read.

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