The Hold Steady’s Steve Selvidge, our reader of the month, and PG editors vote on first albums that changed the game and stand the test of time.
Q: In your opinion, what is the best debut album by a band?
Photo by Kelly Shee
Steve Selvidge
The Hold Steady
A: I'd have to go with Van Halen. It's always hard to rate music when so many people's favorites are tied up with memories and personal musical tastes. There have been a lot of “game-changer" debuts. To me, the best serve as an artist's Statement of Intent. Everything that follows from there is set up on that first album. You could point to debuts from both the Jimi Hendrix Experience and Led Zeppelin as examples, and many more.
Van Halen's debut certainly did this and more. As a debut, it's a perfect album. All killer no filler, as they say. The mix of sunny Southern California hooks and groundbreaking riffs has never been equaled. But for me, it's just the simple fact that Van Halen changed so much upon its release and afterward. This is obviously a very guitar-centric opinion, but I can't think of another album that created such a monumental shift in the way the guitar was played, promoted, and even manufactured. The legacy of all of that is still very evident to this day.
Current obsession: Lonnie Johnson. I was always familiar with his earlier acoustic recordings, but I only recently discovered the later period when he was playing electric guitar. I'd actually heard him on electric for a while but was unaware it was him! One of my favorite records is a solo album by the great pianist Otis Spann. It's all solo piano and voice, save for one song that has a beautifully sympathetic electric-guitar accompaniment.
Photo by Russell Lee
I was always so seduced by the tone and phrasing of this guitar, but there were no credits to let me know who it was. Many, many years later I stumbled upon a YouTube video of Lonnie Johnson playing a Kay Value Leader guitar and singing “Another Night to Cry," and it was like finding the Rosetta Stone. There he was! I knew for sure it was him. That was the magic guitar player on that Otis Spann album. Now I'm trying to find as many albums of his from this period as I can. I also bought a one-pickup Kay Value Leader just like his. I don't sound at all like Lonnie, but it's still a lot of fun to play.
James Miller
Reader of the Month
A: Chicago Transit Authority. Up until that release, there were no bands like Chicago. It was an unheard of for the time—a double album, incredibly well recorded, and every song stands up over 50 years later.
Current Obsession: The session players known as the Wrecking Crew. I knew many of the songs they played on but didn't realize it was the same core of amazing musicians that played the music on those hits. When I happened upon the excellent documentary by Denny Tedesco, Tommy Tedesco's son, I was in awe and it sent me down the rabbit hole of finding and listening to as much music the Wrecking Crew performed on as possible. There will (probably) never be another group of session musicians like the Wrecking Crew again and I want to ensure I take the time to truly enjoy the hundreds, if not thousands, of songs they performed on.
Rich Osweiler
Associate Editor
A: A ridiculously difficult question when 20 albums come to mind almost immediately, but I can't not go with Van Halen. Why? It awakened the world to EVH's genius, was a complete rewriting of what a guitar and human are capable of, and introduced us to arguably one of the greatest rock frontmen of all time. Just as important, Van Halen cooked up 11 tracks that remain as fresh and mind-blowingly amazing as they did at first listen.
Current Obsession:Jimmy Carter: Rock & Roll President. I didn't know much at all about 39's deep ties and friendships with so many legend-level influencers in music, but I now like him even more. Highly recommended!
Jason Shadrick
Associate Editor
A: So many albums flash through my head but the one that really sticks with me is Pat Metheny's Bright Size Life. Metheny brought a Midwest sensibility to jazz, which proved that not every chord needs to have a seventh in it and triads can be melodic as hell. Not to mention that this record introduced the world to Jaco Pastorius (his self-titled album wouldn't be out for another seven months).
Current Obsession: The beauty and musical simplicity of a trio is fascinating to me and I've been immersing myself in what that format is capable of. Considering Chick Corea's recent passing, I went back and dived into Now He Sings, Now He Sobs with new ears. The freedom is astounding and inspiring and fulfilling. Other groups that are getting major rotation are Joshua Redman's Elastic Band, Delvon Lamarr's Organ Trio, and anything with Paul Motian.
Testament's shredder recollects how EVH's swinging, sneering ripper redirected him down the path of a hard-rock lead guitarist.
This ’60s solidbody is exceptionally cool, but knowing it’s the same model Sir Edward started out on makes it much cooler.
Like so many others, I’ve been thinking a lot about the passing of Eddie Van Halen this past month. I’ve also been remembering his popularity in Japan. While Van Halen the band was worshipped there in their early days, Eddie, in particular, was absolutely revered. My best friend in Japan, named Tadashi, is a huge fan, and his most prized possession is a signed ticket stub I got from a local teenager when Van Halen played in my area. Gift giving is a big thing in Japan, and I figured the best gift I could offer Tadashi was that signed stub.
During my last visit to Matsumoto City, we spent a lot of time talking about all the guitars Eddie used over the years. Like so many youngsters in the ’60s and ’70s, Eddie’s very first axe was a Teisco ET-440 (Photo 1). So, for this month’s column, I want to shed a bit of light on both the model and Teisco’s place in the electric guitar explosion at the time. Tip: Search “Van Halen Teisco mom” and you’ll be offered up a nice old photo of a young, beaming Eddie with his mom and guitar.
The introduction of the Teisco ET-440 coincided with the huge jump in worldwide electric guitar sales in the ’60s. The Japan-based Teisco had already been introducing new models every year, and constantly tweaking things like headstock shapes, fretboard inlays, and pickup designs. The ET-400 made its first appearance in a Japanese music trades magazine, where a brand-new Teisco lineup was introduced in June of 1964 (Photo 2). This was the same year Teisco introduced a truly awesome 6-string bass (TB-64), as well as an interesting amp-in-guitar model called the TRG-1.
Still, the guitar with all the bells and whistles was the ET-440. Its body shape featured longer bouts and a few more curves than the older, boxy, and clunkier Teisco models, making the 440 much sleeker. Gone was the sketchy old clamshell tremolo, and in its place was a large floating-plate tremolo that was quite the feat of engineering. When set up properly, it was probably among the first of the old Teisco tremolo units that could actually hold a tune! The ET-440 also featured a nice adjustable bridge.
Photo 2 — photo credit vintaxe.com
Early versions of the ET-440 were sometimes equipped with grey-colored pickups (Photo 3) with rounded S-style edges. And although these pickups sound very good, with a little bit of old Rickenbacker tone in them, they’re sealed and just about impossible to repair. The gray top pickups are really rather rare and help the keen-eyed observer place this model firmly in the 1964-’65 range. Teisco later fitted the ET-440 with square pickups housing square pole pieces. which were found on a number of other Teisco models as well. The first versions of these fabulous pickups were wound hot and in series, and truly sound amazing.
While the headstock on this initial incarnation of the 440 was first seen in 1964, it went out of style by 1966, and the company switched to a 4+2 configuration. Back in the day, the ET-440 would have totally worked as a solid guitar to learn your chops, but some big mitts were required since almost all the old Teiscos had a truly mammoth deep-V neck. It’s quite a piece of lumber, so I often chuckle when I feel the “modern interpretations” of a ’50s- or ’60s-style neck. Folks, you simply have to try out one of the old Teiscos to get a true feel for a large neck profile.
Photo 3
Teisco’s importing and distribution in the U.S. was handled by Chicago-based W.M.I. (Weiss Musical Instruments). This relationship was a major step for a Japanese guitar company, and the name Teisco soon became almost synonymous with any Japanese electric guitar. Just like Q-tip or Kleenex, Teisco was a bit of a household name, especially for young guitarists growing up in the 1960s. And whether you grew up in Amsterdam or Anaheim, you could probably get your hands on a cool guitar with enough switches and pickups to operate a space-age cockpit. Thousands of youngsters were learning on Japan-built guitars, and Teisco was the king of the times.
So, leave it to Eddie Van Halen to have picked up a Teisco ET-440 from that pivotal era of Japanese electric-guitar history for his first axe. Of course, the frets and action were probably poor, and I can say from experience that if you learned to play on one of these guitars, you really had to earn it. Eddie certainly earned it.
I recall many years ago seeing an auction on eBay for the actual receipt from the sale of Eddie’s ET-440. I didn’t put in a bid and hadn’t really thought about it much until now, but here’s to Eddie Van Halen and his very first guitar!
See and hear this 1964 Teisco ET-440 demoed by Mike Dugan.