Influence on culture, music, and business
The band's musical style and on-stage presence were highly popular and influential. Both their 1978 debut and
1984 albums sold over 10 million copies. Both are regarded as milestones in
rock music, and the songs "Runnin' with the Devil" and "Jump" are listed as two of the top 500 most influential songs in the
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. The Kinks had a commercial revival largely because Van Halen covered
one of their songs. Every subsequent Van Halen album after their debut would breach the top 6 spot on the pop charts.
The song "
Everybody Wants Some!!" appears in the movie
Better Off Dead. While Lane Meyer (
John Cusack) works in a Burger restaurant wishing he were elsewhere, he imagines the food singing and dancing the popular track via claymation.
The instrumental "
Eruption" showcased a solo technique called
tapping, utilizing both left and right hands on the guitar neck. "Eruption" propelled Eddie Van Halen to popularity among guitarists (though in fact a form of tapping had existed prior to this). Before the release of the first album, Eddie hid his technique by playing solos with his back to the audience. The solo in "Eruption" was also voted #2 on
Guitar World magazine's
100 Greatest Guitar Solos.
Eddie used a volume technique in the instrumental "Cathedral". He hammered notes on the fretboard with one hand while rolling the volume knob with the other. This altered the attack and decay of the notes so they mimicked the sound of keyboards. This "
volume swells" sound was originally popularized by 70's progressive rock bands like Yes and Rush, but was usually performed with a volume pedal, at a slower pace. "Cathedral" also employs an electronic delay, with the delay set at 400 milliseconds (ms) and the delayed note set at the same amplitude as the original note. Most of the composition's notes come from hammering on the notes of a major 5th string barre chord (ascending and then descending) and replicating this pattern up and down the neck of the guitar. The end result of this technique made the composition sound as if it is being played on a church/cathedral organ.
Van Halen also introduced the guitar world to the band's signature "
Brown sound," a nickname given to the sonic result of Eddie's guitar/amp combination and technique. With
Templeman's production, Van Halen produced a distinctive and popular tone.
In the 1985 movie Back to the Future Marty McFly uses a portable cassette player to torture his father by playing Van Halen at excessive volume. The music was not actually from any Van Halen recordings, but was scrapped demo tapes recorded by Eddie.
Sammy Hagar's tenure saw broadened use of the Van Halen brand, as they expanded their reach into other media, with high-production films, live concert footage and their own cantina in
Mexico. Hagar's more conservative 'working man' persona turned Van Halen into a marketable iconic franchise. Each of the four studio albums released with Hagar reached number 1 on the
Billboard 200 charts.
Van Halen pioneered the way for the modern "Rock and Roll Show" with their extensive use of the concert technical
contract rider. Although contract riders existed before, Van Halen's use of them to specify their "wish list" (production, transportation, personal requirements etc.) was new and established practices now used throughout the
music industry. As one of the first major bands with a full stage show to appear in smaller cities, Van Halen had an extensive set of requirements including power availability and stage construction details. Many venues had not previously dealt large-scale shows, and were not equipped to handle the massive stage and light show, sometimes resulting in damage to band equipment and the venue, once nearly killing a roadie. The band's demands were not limited to technical issues: their infamous contract rider specified that a bowl of
M&M candies, with all of the brown ones removed, was to be available in the band's dressing room. According to David Lee Roth (from his autobiography,
Crazy from the Heat), this was listed with the technical portion of the contract to check up on whether the venue and technical staff were correctly reading and honouring the technical and safety provisions in the contract. On arrival, if brown M&M's were found in the dressing room, then the band had reason to believe other parts of the contract were also not being fulfilled, and subsequently, every line of the contract was to be double-checked.
On Cartoon Network in the late 1990's there was a series called
The Justice Friends, a group of superheroes who exist in the universe of
Dexter's Laboratory. One of the main characters,
Valhallen (a contraction for Valhalla and Van Halen), an axe-wielding Viking God of rock with Southern Californian mannerisms, is a melding of Norse God Thor and Eddie Van Halen. His axe is shaped like a guitar to re-enforce this.
Influential American
punk trio
The Minutemen recorded a 40-second cover version of "Ain't Talkin' 'Bout Love" for their landmark double album
Double Nickels on the Dime (only the third verse, a guitar solo and the "hey, hey, hey!" outro were used).
Rapper
Tone Loc used uncredited samples from "Jamie's Cryin'" on his hit "Wild Thing," but was not sued by the band; in Alex Van Halen's words, "It was 1987, who knew?"
2 Live Crew later sampled the riff of "Ain't Talkin' 'Bout Love" for their song "The Fuck Shop" on their 1989 album
As Nasty As They Wanna Be. Dance music act
Apollo 440 sampled the guitar intro from "Ain't Talkin' 'Bout Love" for their 1997 single "Ain't Talkin' 'Bout Dub".
Despite the band's clear and important influence on rock music, both collectively and - in Eddie, Roth and Hagar's cases - as individuals, Van Halen's fame has fallen away greatly since the mid 90s. Following Hagar's departure in 1996, the band received press attention about the controversy of his exit from the band. A poor selling album/tour (Van Halen III) with vocalist Gary Cherone, no public activity at all 2000-2003, and an overpriced (and thus, largely unaffordable) 2004 tour with Hagar in which Eddie's sobriety was questionable followed. In 2006, the band's long-time bassist Michael Anthony was forced from the band. With all the disagreements between Eddie and the group's lead singers, and with Alex quietly backing up his brother, Anthony was often seen as the voice of reason within the band. The activity (or lack thereof) during the period between 1996-2006 helped diminish the band's reputation among fans, and the inclusion of Eddie's teenage son, Wolfgang, as the new bassist announced for the Fall 2007 tour has not helped in the eyes of the harsher critics. The general public, though, responded to this new version of Van Halen with rapid sellouts in many venues, signaling a possible return to the band's former prominence.
Their arrangement of the song "
You Really Got Me" (performed by other artists) was featured in the
video game Guitar Hero II.