Eddie Van Halen on Frankenstein, and why he never apologized for modding

 Eddie Van Halen performs onstage with Van Halen at the Aragon Ballroom in Chicago, Illinois on April 26, 1979.
Eddie Van Halen performs onstage with Van Halen at the Aragon Ballroom in Chicago, Illinois on April 26, 1979.
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Eddie Van Halen was never one to sit still in the realm of guitar gear. Having constructed his modded “Frankenstein” Stratocaster himself – creating nothing less than an entire genre of electric guitar in the process – Van Halen always looked to tinker with established tools until they fit his needs.

Consequently, despite the iconic status of his most-used guitars – none more famous than “Frankenstein” – Van Halen himself did not view them as museum pieces, even though Frankenstein would later become a literal museum piece.

Speaking to Guitar Aficionado in 2014, Van Halen reflected on the evolution of Frankenstein, revealing that its changing specs came in part due to the guitarist's desire to keep copycats one step behind.

“That guitar went through a lot of different phases and changes,” the late guitar hero said. “On the first [Van Halen] record, it had a stock vintage Fender Strat vibrato, then the Floyd came around, and then I added the dummy pickup at the neck. I kept changing it because I was tired of people copying my guitar.”

According to Eddie's son, Wolfgang, that cavalier attitude toward the legendary instrument never changed with time, even long after the former had stopped using it onstage.

Prior to Eddie's death, Wolfgang brought the guitar out of storage to use on two of the tracks on what would become his first album under the Mammoth WVH banner. Though he described the experience of holding it as “terrifying,” Eddie had no such feelings.

“When we were pulling it out of its safe, Dad picked it up and he was just noodling with it for a second,” Wolfgang told Total Guitar in a 2021 interview. “He’s like ‘Yeah, feels about the same’ and he tossed it onto the couch. Everyone just gasped when he did that. To Dad, it’s just a little piece of junk that he built himself, but to us it’s the most famous thing in the world.”