Wolfgang Van Halen Breaks Silence On Backlash Over Blaming Eddie For Ruining The 80s Rock

Bihter Sevinc
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Bihter Sevinc
Hi! I'm Bihter. I'm interested in rock music, literature, cinema, and doing research in Cultural Studies. Please don't hesitate to contact me if you have any...
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In a series of tweets, Wolfgang Van Halen addressed the backlash he received for saying Eddie Van Halen ruined ’80s rock.

“I think you used a poor choice of words when saying that your Dad (indirectly) ruined the musical landscape of the time,” a user wrote to Wolf on X. “Honestly you weren’t even alive yet to experience those times. Yes people copied Eddie. He was the best IMO. But I’m grateful for all the other guys too.”

“It was a joke,” the rocker replied to the comment. Wolfgang made this statement about his late father in an interview on the WTF with Marc Maron Podcast last month.

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He said, “In a way, Dad kind of ruined the musical landscape, because instead of everybody wanting to find out who they are, they wanted to be that.” The musician added, “People focus on the guitar playing, but, overall, it was the fact that dad is a great songwriter. And that’s what I shoot for, too. It’s not about flashy stuff.”

In other tweets, Wolf also replied to the comments about him not being like his father. “How many times to I need to play ‘Panama’ to successfully respect my father, Chris?” he wrote to a user on X.

“Good thing I’m not trying to be my dad,” he responded to another commenter on the platform. “Otherwise people might be mad at me,” the singer said in a follow-up tweet. “But also if I try to be my dad, people will be mad at me too soooo…,” he also added.

Van Halen thinks just being alive is enough to honor Eddie. “It’s [referring to Eddie] very important… he’s the reason why I do what I do,” Wolf told Audacy Music last year. “I wouldn’t exist if it wasn’t for him. That’s [references] certainly very important… I think just doing what I do is enough of a reference and tribute. Just me existing and continuing to be my own person in my own musical space.”

He continued, “I don’t think people realize that me just doing that is enough of a tribute and respect towards the life that he gave me and the interests he instilled in me. I don’t have to play ‘Panama’ in order to respect him, but, yeah, especially with the guitars, his whole line of guitars he made was named after me.”

After Eddie passed away in 2020, Eddie didn’t continue Van Halen although some fans wanted him to. He instead focused on his own band Mammoth WVH and released two albums so far.

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