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Professor Explained Eddie Van Halen’s Technique WRONG — Eddie Was in the Back Row

Eddie Van Halen was sitting in the back row of a UCLA music theory class attending as a guest at his friend’s invitation. The professor teaching a unit on rock guitar innovation played eruption and began explaining Eddie’s tapping technique to the class. Van Halen uses a standard classical positioning with his right hand, maintaining strict alternate picking discipline throughout the tapping sections.

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This allows for the precision you hear. Eddie, sitting incognito in jeans and a hoodie, raised his hand. The professor, not recognizing him, said, “Yes, question from the back.” Eddie spoke carefully. “Actually, I don’t use alternate picking for the tapping parts, and my hand position is completely non-class.” The professor smiled condescendingly.

“I appreciate your enthusiasm, but I’ve studied Van Halen’s technique extensively. Perhaps you’re thinking of a different guitarist.” A student in the front row turned around, recognized Eddie, and gasped. What happened next became the most legendary moment in UCLA music department history. It was a Wednesday afternoon in March 2003, and Eddie Van Halen was doing a favor for an old friend. Dr.

Robert Chen, a music professor at UCLA, had been Eddie’s neighbor for years. They’d had countless conversations about music theory, guitar techniques, and the intersection of classical training and rock innovation. Robert had mentioned he was teaching a unit on modern guitar techniques and jokingly said, “You should come sit in on a lecture sometime.

” Eddie had surprised him by saying, “Yes.” Not as a guest lecturer. Eddie didn’t want to be the center of attention, but just as an observer in the back row. Robert had agreed on the condition that Eddie wears something inconspicuous and sit quietly. “Just come experience what it’s like to learn about yourself from an academic perspective,” Robert had said with a laugh.

So Eddie showed up to Robert’s history of rock guitar innovation class wearing jeans, a gray UCLA hoodie he’d bought at the campus bookstore, and a baseball cap. He slipped into the back row just as class was starting. The lecture hall had about 80 students, most of them music majors, some just taking the class as an elective. Dr.

Chen was at the front setting up his laptop to play audio examples. He hadn’t seen Eddie come in. They’d planned it that way, wanting Eddie to be just another student in the crowd. “Today, we’re continuing our unit on revolutionary guitar techniques,” Dr. Chen began. We’ve covered Jimmyi Hendricks’s feedback manipulation, Jimmy Paige’s alternate tunings, and now we’re moving to Eddie Van Halen’s two-handed tapping technique.

Who here has heard of Eddie Van Halen? Nearly every hand in the class went up. Good. Eddie Van Halen fundamentally changed how rock guitar is played. Before him, tapping was occasionally used as a novelty. After him, it became a standard technique. We’re going to analyze exactly how and why his approach works. Eddie settled into his seat, genuinely curious to hear how his technique would be explained academically.

He’d never formally studied music theory. Everything he did was intuitive, learned by ear and experimentation. Dr. Chen played Eruption through the lecture hall speakers. Eddie listened to his own playing from 25 years ago, hearing things in it he’d almost forgotten. Little flourishes, tiny hesitations, the raw energy of a young guitarist pushing boundaries.

When the song ended, Dr. Chen pulled up a diagram on the projector. Let’s break down the technical elements. First, hand positioning. Van Halen uses a standard classical positioning with his right hand, maintaining strict alternate picking discipline throughout the tapping sections. This allows for the precision you hear.

Eddie’s eyebrows went up. That wasn’t right at all. His right-hand position was anything but classical, and he definitely didn’t use alternate picking during tapping sections. That would defeat the entire purpose of tapping. Dr. Chen continued, clicking to another slide showing musical notation. Notice here how Van Halen carefully follows proper scale patterns.

The tapping technique is essentially a classical scale exercise executed at higher speed. The innovation isn’t in what he’s playing. These are standard pentatonic patterns, but in how he’s executing them, Eddie leaned forward. That was also wrong. The patterns in Eruption weren’t standard pentatonic scales.

They were weird combinations Eddie had discovered by accident. Patterns that didn’t follow traditional music theory. A student raised her hand. Professor Chen, isn’t Van Halen’s technique based on breaking classical rules rather than following them? A common misconception, Dr. Chen said kindly. Van Halen may not have had formal training, but his technique inadvertently follows classical principles.

The best innovations are actually deeply rooted in tradition. They just appear revolutionary to untrained ears. Van Halen’s genius was applying classical discipline to rock music without realizing he was doing it. Eddie shifted uncomfortably in his seat. Should he say something? Robert was his friend.

He didn’t want to embarrass him, but the explanation was fundamentally wrong. Dr. [snorts] Chen moved to the next slide. The tapping itself works because Van Halen maintains perfect synchronization between his right and left hands using the same muscle groups a classical pianist would use for rapid arpeggios. The technique requires the same kind of formal training, just applied to a different instrument.

That was definitely wrong. Eddie had never touched a piano. The tapping technique came from him messing around with hammering on and pulling off notes, then realizing he could use his right hand on the fretboard, too. It had nothing to do with classical training or piano technique. Eddie looked around the lecture hall.

Students were taking notes, nodding along, absorbing information that was incorrect. He raised his hand. Dr. Chen noticed. Yes, question from the back. Eddie stood up slightly so his voice would carry. I have a question about the hand positioning. You said Van Halen uses classical positioning and alternate picking during the tapping sections.

I don’t think that’s accurate. Dr. Chen smiled, the patient smile of a professor dealing with an undergraduate who’d probably learned guitar from YouTube videos. I appreciate your enthusiasm, but I’ve studied Van Halen’s technique extensively. I’ve watched hundreds of hours of footage, analyzed his playing frame by frame, and consulted with multiple guitar instructors.

The positioning I described is correct. But I don’t use alternate picking during tapping, Eddie said carefully. That would make it impossible to tap with the right hand while the left hand is pulling off. And my right hand position is definitely not classical. Perhaps you’re thinking of a different guitarist, Dr.

Chen said, still patient but with a slight edge. Or perhaps you’re confused about terminology. Alternate picking in this context means I know what alternate picking means, Eddie interrupted gently. And I’m not doing it. When I tap with my right hand, I’m hammering on with my index or middle finger, not picking. My right hand comes up from underneath the neck, not over the top like classical position. Dr.

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