Brian Young Interview

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  • SoCalChelle
    Veteran
    • Jan 2004
    • 1597

    Brian Young Interview

    Brian Young Interview
    Formerly Tormented VH Fan
    Facebook: Chelle Marley
  • TMR

    #2
    You're the BEST!!!!!!!!!!!

    Thanks!!

    Comment

    • SoCalChelle
      Veteran
      • Jan 2004
      • 1597

      #3
      Oh man, you are gonna get SO flamed for that, LOL. But thanks. :D
      Formerly Tormented VH Fan
      Facebook: Chelle Marley

      Comment

      • TMR

        #4
        FAVORITE PART OF THE INTERVIEW, THIS IS WHAT MAKES DLR SO GREAT!



        I mean, if
        someone started recording something and he wasn’t there, he
        wouldn’t even wanna listen to it. He was like, “let’s start again guys.”
        He’s gotta be there, it’s almost like he’s gotta have
        his vibe be part of the thing, which is cool. In fact, one time we played through a song and we’re
        doing these sessions at 9 in the morning to like 10 at night and
        – this was kinda funny – we were playing a song and Dave stopped us halfway through and
        he was in the control room listening to us play the rhythm tracks
        and he just stops and says, “Ok, guys, imagine that you’re
        playing in a bar and it’s after hours and they’ve kicked most
        of the people out and there’s just a party in there with a few
        people. And now play
        the song again.” And
        we did it, and he’s like, “THAT’S the vibe I want.” He’s really good at drawing pictures of what he wants,
        he’ll say like imagine this and imagine you’re here. Sometimes he’ll say “Imagine you’re playing at an
        outdoor party and there’s a bunch of girls dancing. Get that kinda vibe.”
        Or he’ll put on a song and say, “Hear that song? Think like this.”
        Even
        if it’s a completely different kind of song, he’ll go,
        “THINK like this. Think
        about how that guy’s thinking right there and think like that
        and play the song.” It’s
        really cool. He’s a
        fun guy as a producer.

        Comment

        • TMR

          #5
          Originally posted by SoCalChelle
          Oh man, you are gonna get SO flamed for that, LOL. But thanks. :D
          NO WAY....THESE VAN HAGAR fans can go to HELL! NICE TO HEAR NEWS FROM BAND MEMBERS OF DAVE!

          I don't care for Ed, Alex, or SPAM....they can go to Mars and never come back!

          Comment

          • GAR
            Banned
            • Jan 2004
            • 10881

            #6
            why not just post the beiouyatch here, Chelle insteada making me go read it there?

            You know "Cut?"
            You know "Paste?" (not "pasta", mmkay..)

            Thanks, hon.

            Comment

            • TMR

              #7
              <p><font face="Comic Sans MS"><img border="0" src="http://tormentedvhfans.com/Brian_Age_15.JPG" alt="Brian Young, Age 15" align="left" width="300" height="400"></font><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: Where did
              you grow up?&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</font></p>
              <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: I grew up
              in Camarillo, CA which is in Ventura County</font></p>
              <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: When did
              you move to LA?</font></p>
              <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: I graduated
              high school in 1982. In
              1983, I moved to Hollywood. A
              friend of mine wanted to go to GIT, so he talked me into going
              with him. So I went to GIT during ’83 and ’84, so I lived in
              Hollywood. I stayed
              there until almost the end of ’85, then I moved back to Ventura
              County for about 2 years. And
              then somewhere around ’88 I moved to North Hollywood and then I
              lived there for 5 years. And
              then I moved back to Ventura in like ’92 or ’93. And then I moved to where I live now, Woodland Hills, in
              ’95. And I’ve
              been here ever since.</font></p>
              <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: Ah, so
              you’ve always lived in the Southern California area. Do you have any brothers/sisters?</font></p>
              <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: I have 4
              younger brothers and they all play music.</font></p>
              <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: That was
              my next question – if any of them are musically inclined.</font></p>
              <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: Yeah,
              everybody in my family plays music. My dad played classical guitar. My mom played piano her whole life and was the organist in
              the church and all that stuff. And she played accordion on the radio when she was 7 years
              old. So it’s a very
              musical family. But
              here’s the weird thing...if you wanna know how much music is in
              our blood...like I said, my 4 younger brothers all play music, but
              when I was 30, my mother told our family that she had a kid before
              she was with my dad and put him up for adoption up in Northern
              California. And she
              was asking our permission to search for him. We were like ‘Wow, we have a brother we don’t know
              about!’ So she went
              through an agency and tracked him down and contacted him. He was kinda interested in finding out who
              his real mother
              was anyway...it turns out that he’s the only guitar player in an
              entirely non-musical family. He’d always wondered where his music came from, and he
              thought, well it must have come from my adoptive family and sure
              enough he meets a family of FIVE musician brothers. And he works for Mobile Fidelity Sound Labs, the place that
              makes the gold ultradisc CDs. So he worked
              for a CD company and played guitar and had NO music in his family
              out there at all. So that was really crazy.</font></p>
              <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: Wow,
              that’s cool. How
              long have you been playing guitar?</font></p>
              <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: Uh, let’s
              see...I started when I was about 12, so I guess about 28 years...cuz
              I hate to say it but I’m FORTY..</font></p>
              <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: No way...</font></p>
              <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: Yeah,
              really. I guess you
              can put that in the interview (laughs). I don’t try to pretend I’m not 40, but at the same
              time, since I don’t look 40 I don’t usually go around
              advertising it.</font></p>
              <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: Have you
              ever played any other instruments?</font></p>
              <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: What’s
              weird is my mom played piano and gave piano lessons and I just
              never got into piano at all. I kinda feel bummed that I didn’t learn it, I just
              wasn’t into it. I
              played trumpet in 4<sup>th</sup> and 5<sup>th</sup> grade school
              band and I quit that, which I also wish I could still play that.
              And then in the past 10 years I’ve kinda messed around on
              violin. I’ve got a violin, I play it for fun once in a while. I taught myself out of some books.
              And then I goof around on...I have a ukelele. I actually jammed in a band where I played ukelele about 10
              years ago. It was a
              kind of a side shoot from my rock band, we did this little ukelele
              band. It was pretty
              fun.</font></p>
              <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: Cool, you
              should talk Dave into letting you do that...</font></p>
              <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: (laughs)
              Yeah, it’s funny cuz there’s a lot of stuff Dave doesn’t
              know about me...like I didn’t really tell him I play ukelele. But he does like playing old bluesy stuff, so ya never
              know.</font></p>
              <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: At what
              age did you decide you were going to play music for a living?</font></p>
              <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial"><img border="0" src="http://tormentedvhfans.com/My_Hendrix_painting_80.JPG" width="400" height="300" align="left" alt="&quot;Some classmates and I painted the Jimi Hendrix picture as a class project, my Sophomore year in High School.&quot; -- Brian Young">Brian: Well, I
              mean, I guess when I was 12 I semi-decided it, because at that
              point I was serious and that’s what I really, really wanted to
              do. Even in school, I

              Comment

              • TMR

                #8
                remember in 10<sup>th</sup> or 11<sup>th</sup> grade I had to have
                a meeting with my career guidance counselor. And the meeting was, “Brian, what do you want to do with
                your life?” And I said “I want to be a professional
                musician.” &nbsp;I was
                probably 16 at the time and he goes “Well, that’s very nice. That sounds like a nice profession. &nbsp;
                But what would you want to do in case that didn’t work
                out?” And I said,
                “Uh, nothing. There’s
                nothing else I wanna do.” And
                he said, “Well, Brian, you know, being a musician is really
                tough and it’s really hard to get into and you really need to
                have something to fall back on.” And I said, “Well you know what...I definitely don’t
                want to plan on failing...so it’s either I’m going to be a
                musician or I’m just going to work at Taco Bell. Because I don’t want to do anything else and I don’t want
                to waste any of my time to study something I don’t wanna do
                which would take away from valuable guitar practicing time.” Cuz if being a musician is THAT hard, you really gotta put
                it ALL into it. And
                it’s a gamble, but my thing was, I’m gonna do it or die
                trying.</font></p>
                <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: Do you
                still feel that way? I
                mean if you couldn’t be a musician, your hands fell off or
                something, what would you be instead?</font></p>
                <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: I think
                now, I don’t know what I’d be, but I think because I’ve been
                making a living playing music since ’85. Since ’85 if you add
                up all the jobs I’ve had it might add up to like 6 months...of day jobs.
                So I
                feel pretty lucky. But
                I’ve done every kind of gig. I played $50 a night Top Forty gigs, 5 nights a week for
                YEARS – five 45 minute sets for $50. And I did that because I was playing music, I was making a
                living - a meager living - but it was enough for me to survive on
                and I was enjoying it and basically learning the ropes. I learned all different styles of music cuz I was playing
                Top Forty, so I had to learn all kinds of music that I didn’t
                really like at the time. I was this rocker/heavy metal guy when I
                was younger and playing all this Top Forty stuff that I thought
                was lame and I hated. But
                after doing it for a couple years, as hits started growing on me,
                I started to like them. And
                I started noticing that songs that I hated, like...you remember
                that song Relax by Frankie Goes To Hollywood? That was a song I just HATED when it came out I thought
                “Oh, this is goofy new wave shit.” And the bass player was saying, “Well, it’s in the
                charts, so we gotta learn it.” And I’m like, “aaaah, whatever.”
                But you know what, we’d go out there and the dance floor
                would be packed and I’d go “Well I DO like that.” (laughs) &nbsp;
                I
                like a song that packs the floor with chicks...like, OK there’s
                <i>something</i> good about
                this song.. So I started liking more stuff, got more well-rounded,
                which you really need if you’re gonna be a musician and you want
                to be professional you gotta learn how to play even stuff you
                don’t like. And
                then you’ll learn to like it too.</font></p>
                <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: Who are
                your biggest musical influences?</font></p>
                <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: That would
                go back to, I guess, back to my beginnings. Really, why I play guitar – KISS.
                I had the poster of Ace Frehley with a smoking Les Paul. And I was like, “WOW, that’s the coolest thing in the
                world and I wanna play guitar!” I was 12 years old. Then,
                really soon after getting into guitar, I started liking Ted Nugent
                – he was really big at the time – and Foghat, and then I
                started digging Hendrix, and Zeppelin, and then I just loved
                guitar players. When
                I was 16 I got into Al Dimeola, he’s more of a jazz fusion kinda
                guy. &nbsp; And I just liked
                everybody that came out, in general. Eddie Van Halen, Steve Vai, Joe
                Satriani, Yngwie... all
                those guitar players I liked...just anybody who shredded, because
                I liked guitar that just ripped my head off. &nbsp; Nowadays, I don’t care about that stuff as much as I used
                to. In the ‘80s I
                was just into practicing my ass off and playing really fast and
                all that kinda shit, ya know?</font></p>
                <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: Are you
                married/dating anyone? Do
                you have kids?</font></p>
                <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: I’m
                married and I have no kids.</font></p>
                <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: How long
                have you been married?</font></p>
                <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: Well,
                let’s see, I’ve been with my girl for 13 years, I count it
                like that, but we’ve been married since January 1, 1996...8
                years.</font></p>
                <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: What would
                folks be most surprised to know about Brian Young?</font></p>
                <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: Uh, let me
                think now...My favorite sport is chess. (big laugh).</font></p>
                <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: Oh really?</font></p>
                <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial"><img border="0" src="http://tormentedvhfans.com/Brian-Surf.JPG" align="left" width="500" height="280">Brian: I’m really not into any sports...like football,
                baseball, basketball, I’ll watch the big game at the end, like
                I’ll watch the Super Bowl, I’ll watch the playoffs for the
                Lakers...but I love chess more than anything as far as that kinda
                stuff goes. Even
                though it’s not a physical sport, it’s a mental sport. Once in a while I see shows like Conan O’Brien and
                they’ll make fun of chess players, they’ll show like a chess
                match and they’ll show two guys staring at the chess board and
                they’ll talk about (in serious voice) “The excitement of the
                chess match” and I’m all, “Hey man, it IS exciting! (laughing) You just don’t understand!”
                I mean I could stare at a board for a half hour making a
                move and it’s thrilling (laugh). Also I love surfing, that’s my other favorite pastime.<img border="0" src="http://www.tormentedvhfans.com/smile/surf.gif"></font></p>
                <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: I know

                Comment

                • TMR

                  #9
                  someone that used to take guitar lessons from you. Do you still give lessons?</font></p>
                  <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: I have a
                  few students right now, I don’t really...I’ve been kinda busy,
                  so I don’t really give lessons, but there’s like two students
                  that just because of close ties, I teach. I might start up again if things slow down. &nbsp;</font></p>
                  <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: What’s
                  in your CD player right now?</font></p>
                  <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: Uh, let me
                  think now...honestly, there’s NOTHING in it right now...but I
                  can tell you the song I’ve been playing the most is Hey Ya by
                  Outkast (laughing). I
                  put it on my computer one day when I was cleaning the house and I
                  just cranked it and let it run over and over. I was just running around and it made cleaning really
                  fun. (fyi I downloaded it legally from iTunes.)</font></p>
                  <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: (still
                  laughing and recovering from the mental image of Brian Young
                  dancing around and vacuuming) So, you do your own house cleaning, that might be more
                  surprising than...</font></p>
                  <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: HAHA, what
                  might be the MOST surprising thing - that my favorite song’s Hey
                  Ya (laugh)</font></p>
                  <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial"> <img border="0" src="http://tormentedvhfans.com/Joe_and_Brian_-_7-6-02_-_Whiskey_-_Photo_by_Christy_W.jpg" align="right" alt="Brian Young, sitting in with the Atomic Punks at the Whiskey. Joe Lester on Bass. - 7/02" width="480" height="387">Chelle: How did
                  you meet and start working with Ralph Saenz?</font></p>
                  <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: We were
                  playing disco together, we both did the Boogie Nights thing. This
                  was before Metal Shop, I think I started playing gigs with him
                  around ’96. And
                  then I heard that he was in this Van Halen tribute band. And I went to see them play and I was like “WOW!”
                  Ralph was just awesome when I first saw him, I couldn’t
                  believe it.</font></p>
                  <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: What are
                  some of your other side projects and bands you’ve been in? Like, I know you taught Piper Perabo to play guitar for
                  Coyote Ugly. Any
                  other projects like that we might not know about?</font></p>
                  <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: Yeah,
                  actually I got offered to do that guitar teaching gig again for
                  that movie, Freaky Friday, but I was on the road with Dave, so I
                  couldn’t do it. Bummer. But lately, when I come home, I try to drum up gigs, so
                  usually it’s working gigs. Like, I’m doing the Full Metal Jacket thing in Vegas with
                  Ray. And a lot of
                  times I have to learn a big pile of songs to do some gigs and make
                  money when I’m home. And
                  then I teach some lessons. So
                  I haven’t really done any original projects lately. I just haven’t found anything that my heart is in.
                  I have to meet the right singer that has the same or some
                  vision that I’m totally into, or else a band that I really like
                  that’s looking for a guitarist. I’ve done a few original projects over the last 5 years,
                  but nothing where I was just completely going, “I love this.” And I have to completely love it if I’m gonna do original
                  music. Also I might do some gigs with Mike Tramp from White Lion
                  this summer. He was
                  trying to get White Lion together, but I think to call it White
                  Lion he needed...since Vito Bratta wasn’t gonna do it...he
                  needed James LoMenzo and the original drummer but James is gonna
                  be going out with Zakk Wylde and Black Label Society, so he
                  couldn’t do it. So
                  he might just have to call it Mike Tramp, not White Lion. I talked to our manager and he’s talking about Dave doing
                  gigs in July and this Mike Tramp thing is in June, so it’s
                  possible I could actually do it.</font></p>
                  <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: Is that
                  Full Metal Jacket thing going to be just in Vegas, or will you be
                  bringing that out here?</font></p>
                  <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: Actually,
                  we might be playing some L.A. shows soon. So keep your eye out for
                  Full Metal Jacket. &nbsp;</font></p>
                  <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: Have you
                  ever recorded any original music? If so, where can we hear it?</font></p>
                  <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: As far as
                  stuff that was ever released, I was in a band called Beau Nasty in
                  1989. It was on CBS
                  Records. We were on
                  Headbanger’s Ball and stuff like that, we toured with Loverboy
                  ’89-’90. We
                  toured with Love/Hate also. Never
                  really hit it, but the album’s out there but you’ll never be
                  able to find it. Might
                  be able to find it in the fifty cent bins, ya know. Before that I was in a band with Jeff Scott
                  Soto. After he sang for Yngwie, he started a band called Lamour and I played guitar in that band and we never got a deal, but
                  we recorded tons of songs, but nothing every really got
                  released...so I dunno if there’s any way of hearing that. Then after Beau Nasty I was in a band called Sykotik
                  Sinfoney, which was a really wild, crazy band we played around in
                  Hollywood from 1990 to ’93. We ended up in a movie called Bad Channels, a
                  sci-fi/horror/comedy kinda thing, B movie. They needed some bands and they saw and we were really
                  bizarre so they put us in the movie. We’re on the soundtrack, we did a couple songs for the
                  soundtrack. And we played a polka...they needed a polka for the movie and
                  I played accordion on a polka song...</font></p>
                  <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: (laughing)</font></p>
                  <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: Yeah, yeah,
                  it was funny. (laughing) We did the polka song as a different band, we were Sykotik
                  Sinfoney but we called our polka band the Ukelaliens. We actually wrote and recorded an original polka song for
                  the movie. So that
                  was a lot of fun. Then
                  after that, I went to New York with this singer for a while and
                  wrote some songs, but it just wasn’t happening so I came back.
                  During this time period I was doing a lot of demo work with Curt
                  Cuomo He’s a producer/songwriter. He produced KISS Psycho Circus
                  and wrote a lot of stuff with them. I used to do a lot of studio work for Curt and I got to
                  work with John Wetton, Paul Stanley, and Eddie Money and, in fact, I ended up recording a song with
                  Sammy Hagar.</font></p>
                  <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: REALLY?</font></p>
                  <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: Yeah, do
                  you know Rick Phillips from Bad English? It kinda started through him.
                  I met him and he started hiring me for recordings in the
                  ’88-’89 era and that turned into the Curt Cuomo thing. Through
                  him, I ended up recording with Jesse Harms, Sammy’s keyboard
                  player. And then
                  Jesse Harms started hiring me and he ended up hiring me to play on
                  a song that Sammy was singing on called Dangerous Curves.</font></p>
                  <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: Was the
                  song released?</font></p>
                  <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: No, it was
                  just a demo. It was
                  called Dangerous Curves, it sounds a LOT like I Can’t Drive 55
                  (laugh) so it’s pretty cool. I’ve got a tape of the song, so it’s kinda neat that I
                  have a tape of me playing with Sammy Hagar.</font></p>
                  <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: I’d love
                  to get a copy of that, if possible, to put up on the site...</font></p>
                  <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: Oooh, I’d
                  have to ask...cuz I had to ask Jesse Harms if I could get a copy,
                  and then he had to ask Sammy to give me one. And this was like 1990...I finally burnt a CD off this tape
                  I’ve had all these years, but I’d probably have to get
                  permission, I don’t know what the copyright situation is, so...</font></p>
                  <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: Well,
                  it’d be really cool if you could...</font></p>
                  <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: Yeah, I
                  would like people to hear it. And then I did some recording with Eddie Money and I ended
                  up playing on one of his records. Just on one song. Love
                  And Money was the name of the record. I ended up almost being in his band, but then what happened
                  was, I was rehearsing with him and then he went back east to do
                  some promo and around that time Jeff Soto called me up and told me
                  about this Boogie Knights thing. The deal was that Boogie Knights was steady work and Eddie
                  Money was not. It was
                  like a couple gigs here and couple gigs there and it wasn’t
                  gonna be enough for me to make a living. At the time, I needed steady work, so I did the disco thing
                  instead of the Eddie Money thing.</font></p>
                  <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: Any
                  regrets?&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
                  <img border="0" src="http://tormentedvhfans.com/RalphandBrian.jpg" width="400" height="265" align="middle" alt="Brian and Ralph - Atomic Punks"></font></p>
                  <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: No,
                  absolutely not. 'Cuz
                  that disco thing is what led to me making a living playing music
                  again from ’95 to ’04 and then meeting Ralph and playing with
                  the Punks and then getting with David Lee Roth. All of the things that have happened since then have been
                  because of that day I chose to do disco. It was definitely the right thing to do back then.</font></p>
                  <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: How did
                  you get the word that Dave wanted you in his band? Did he call you personally?
                  Were you expecting it, or was it a total surprise?</font></p>
                  <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial"> <img border="0" src="http://tormentedvhfans.com/Ralph_Brian_Ray_-_Whiskey_-_7-6-02-_AlbertR.jpg" align="left" alt="Brian and Ray Luzier on stage with &quot;David Lee Ralph&quot; - the Atomic Punks at the Whiskey, July 2002" width="480" height="284">Brian: Well, I was
                  kinda expecting it...here’s what happened. When I got in the Punks, I was replacing Bart Walsh, who
                  had joined Dave. Within 6 months of me playing with the Punks,
                  Ralph and Scott were saying, “Oh, it’s only a matter of time,
                  man, before Dave hears about you. He’s gonna steal you. &nbsp; You’re gonna get <i>the call.</i>”
                  (laugh) That’s what THEY were saying. But at the time, I was like, “Hey, I’m happy, I’m
                  making a living playing gigs, it’s fun, so like whatever.” And I didn’t really think anything would happen. &nbsp;
                  But I was friends with Ray through the disco stuff too. Ray
                  and I were playing a funk gig, a steady gig, in Ventura every
                  Saturday and I remember when he first recorded the demo for Dave. One day he calls after his gig and he said, “Brian, man,
                  you’re not gonna believe this! &nbsp; I played on a David Lee Roth demo!”
                  And I was like “COOL, man, that’s awesome! What’s that guy doing nowadays?”
                  I didn’t even know, ya know? Next thing ya know, like two months later, he’s like,
                  “Dude! I’m
                  playing on his record with him now!” and I’m like, “Fuck!
                  Awesome!” The thing is, I wasn’t even saying, like, “Get me in”
                  or anything cuz at the time I didn’t really know...if I’d
                  known at the time he was gonna be coming out playing Van Halen
                  tunes I woulda been totally into it. I wasn’t really up on what he was doing, and I wasn’t
                  really interested, it was just a cool gig for Ray. And then I heard that Bart was playing with Dave and they
                  were going on tour playing ALL Van Halen shit and I was like
                  TOTALLY bummed! I was
                  like “NOOO!” If I
                  had known that, I would been “get me an audition!” So, I missed that boat.
                  But it came back around a couple years later. (laugh) After
                  3 years of playing with the Punks, what happened was, Dave’s
                  manager saw me play a gig with them. I didn’t know he was in the audience, but a couple days
                  later, I saw Ray and he was like, “Brian, our manager saw you
                  and said you were good.” So
                  I said, “Hey cool, well if you ever need a guitar player..”
                  (laugh) That was the end of 2001, and then early 2002, February, my phone rings and this guy says, “Brian, this
                  is Matt Sencio with David Lee Roth..” And I was thought “oooh, this is that call that Ralph and
                  Scott were telling me about (laugh) They said it was only a matter of time before this guy
                  called.” So then I
                  got the audition, and got in the band...</font></p>
                  <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: What’s
                  it like working with Dave? Is
                  it what you expected?</font></p>
                  <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: Uh, no I
                  don’t think so. I
                  think nothing I’ve ever done has been what I expected. It’s always been different.
                  It’s usually been cooler in some ways and less cool in
                  other ways. Like
                  travelling, going to Japan...I always pictured what it was gonna
                  be like and it was totally different, but it was totally cool. &nbsp;
                  Working with Dave, I didn’t know that he was so schooled
                  on old blues music. That
                  was one of the most surprising things was hanging out with him and
                  he was playing a bunch of CDs and just kicking back and going
                  through his CD collection, bringing out a bunch of old songs and
                  playing them for us. I
                  was pretty surprised at the amount of musical knowledge he had. And also, I was a little surprised – now it makes total
                  sense – but at the time I was surprised that he listens to
                  everything except hard rock/metal kinda stuff. And I’m kinda the same way though, like I love Hey Ya and
                  I love Coldplay...it’s because I PLAY metal and like the last
                  thing I wanna do, man, after blowing my brains out all night, is
                  put on heavy metal and blow ‘em out again the next day. I mean, from 1980 to 1990, I was blowing my brains out
                  playing heavy metal and pretty much disintegrated all those brain
                  cells. So now I’m
                  working on some different brain cells. I’ll still put on old stuff that I liked, but usually
                  I’m like listening to mellower stuff. I guess it DOES happen – you get older, you get mellow.
                  (laugh)</font></p>
                  <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial"> <img border="0" src="http://tormentedvhfans.com/Dinner_in_Tokyo.JPG" align="right" alt="Dinner after the Tokyo show" width="400" height="300">Chelle: How does
                  working with Dave compare to working with Ralph?</font></p>
                  <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: Oh,
                  there’s absolutely no comparison. It’s two completely different species of humans.
                  I love working with both of them, I mean, I miss working
                  with Ralph. It was a
                  total blast. He’s
                  great. One difference
                  is, with Ralph, we played all the obscure songs of Van Halen. And with Dave, we don’t.
                  So that’s one thing. Like, we’ll never play Loss of Control or Sinner’s
                  Swing with Dave. It
                  just ain’t gonna happen. But
                  with Ralph, we played stuff even Van Halen hardly ever did live. So that was kinda cool. &nbsp;
                  And Ralph, musically, he listens to all that ‘80s metal. He still does, man.
                  We’re
                  driving in the car, he pops it in. He’s got the hair bands going all the time.
                  So with Dave there’s none of that stuff. He likes all this James Brown and all this old soul stuff and
                  then some current dance stuff. And then also, hanging out with Dave is like a history

                  Comment

                  • TMR

                    #10
                    lesson sometimes. As
                    far as like, we’ll be driving by some place and he’ll point at
                    some old building and say, “That place...” and he’ll know
                    all this stuff about it. And
                    we’re like, “How do you know all this stuff?” He can read a book and start telling you about it and
                    he’ll remember 80% of what he read. And if I read that same book, I’ll remember maybe 10%.</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: Ray said
                    something like that too. In
                    his interview, he said he learns something from Dave every time he
                    talks to him.</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: Yeah, and
                    he’s so quick-witted too. His
                    answers, the things he says, man... it’s almost like a comedian
                    would have to write for an hour to come up with that one joke and
                    Dave will just spurt it out, off the cuff, just like that. This guy’s as quick as Robin Williams.</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: I’ve got
                    a couple questions here, contributed by readers of my site...First
                    one: What strange
                    rituals, quirks, routines, etc do the other band members do while
                    you’re cooped up together on the road?</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial"> <img border="0" src="http://tormentedvhfans.com/Charlies_BBQ.JPG" align="left" alt="Charlie's BBQ in Portland, Oregon" width="400" height="300">Brian: (laugh) Ok,
                    let’s see here. Well,
                    before we go on stage, Ray is always tapping and hitting his
                    drumsticks and doing all this stuff, always spinning them around
                    and he ALWAYS drops one. And
                    my joke’ll always be, “I know it’s gonna be a good show if
                    Ray drops a stick while he’s warming up.” And let me see....strange stuff...hmm..I guess we’re
                    pretty boring guys (laugh) let me think...we pretty much do the
                    same old shit every time...if we have a day off, we’ll go out
                    and find a bar or club, go out and party, have fun, meet people.
                    And if we know people in the town, we’ll always try to ask them,
                    “Hey, where’s somewhere cool here?” &nbsp; Like in London, we became friends with a guy, Paul, in the
                    Choirboys, they were the opening band. And everywhere we went, Paul knew people.
                    And like in Japan, with Toshi, he’d know where to go. It’s cool to know people, so that when you get to a new
                    town, they can take you to all the cool places instead of
                    wandering around aimlessly trying to find out what’s cool to do
                    in this town. But as
                    far as habits or....I can’t think of anything. I wish we were weirder (laugh)</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: What’s
                    the one thing you’ve learned about Dave that you never would
                    have imagined?</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: (after much
                    thought) I guess just
                    all of that current dance music that he cranks in his dressing
                    room when he’s warming up. He’ll be doing his exercises and his stretches and it
                    sounds like a nightclub in there. But that really isn’t that surprising cuz when I listen
                    to all the covers that Van Halen’s done, like Dancing In The
                    Streets, now I know – that’s a Dave idea, like hey man let’s
                    rock this tune out. (laugh) cuz he likes all that Motown and all
                    that kind of stuff. I
                    didn’t know that, but it wasn’t that surprising really –
                    he’s a musician, he’s into music. He’s a singer, he’s an
                    entertainer and frontman, so he’s into all kinds of stuff. And then, I guess, how smart he was...it didn’t surprise
                    me, but it stoked me. I
                    was like wow. The
                    first two months, I was like totally blown away and I’d come
                    back and tell my wife, “God, Dave is so fucking smart!” He knows so much shit, I didn’t have any idea.
                    One of Dave’s assistants saw me playing chess, and he
                    said “Oh man, Dave takes chess lessons from a Russian chess
                    master.” And I was
                    like, “REALLY! Whoa,
                    I wanna play him!” and we’ve never played a game of chess
                    (laugh).</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: Here’s
                    another one from my readers – What’s the most interesting
                    thing you’ve seen in DLR’s refrigerator?</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: Uh,
                    wow....let me think now...man, these are tough questions....it
                    seems like it’d be so easy, but...so, the most interesting
                    thing....in his REFRIGERATOR?....(laugh) &nbsp; I don’t know that I’ve ever looked in his house
                    refrigerator, I don’t think I have...I’ve been there, but
                    usually when we go to his house it’s to do something and it’s
                    always like almost catered. We
                    go over there to rehearse and someone will run out and buy us all
                    El Pollo Loco or something, or if it’s a photo shoot, they’ll
                    have actual catering there. So
                    I don’t think I looked in his fridge, but I’d imagine it’d
                    be empty for some reason (big laugh). In his dressing room fridge he’ll just have beers and
                    water and Gatorade and like Jack Daniels on the counter....in the
                    food department, I guess I could tell you one thing that’s
                    interesting about Dave. After
                    a show, we usually have a big meal and when we were on the Sammy
                    tour we always had filet mignon and vegetables and potatoes and
                    pasta and sauce...I’ve been one to go up and get a little bit of
                    everything - the vegetables, the meat, maybe a little pasta, the
                    whole deal. But
                    Dave’ll just grab a steak and start chomping it down, sometimes
                    he’ll just hold it in his hand...he doesn’t do all the other
                    stuff, he’s just a straight up steak/protein guy. I think it’s because all those starches and
                    carbohydrates, I think he stays away from that, I think that’s
                    what keeps him in shape.</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: Well, it
                    appears to be working for him. He looks great.</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: Yep, he
                    even says, it’s torture, he LOVES all this food but he just
                    won’t do it. He’s
                    pretty disciplined.</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: What’s
                    the most humorous thing that’s occurred since you’ve been on
                    tour with Dave?</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: Oh wow, the
                    funniest thing is always Dave’s jokes, but as far as things
                    that’ve happened...I can tell you one of the weirdest moments
                    that I had, it made me laugh to myself and just go “HOW did I
                    end up HERE?” We were in Detroit and Kid Rock was at our show. After the show, I was walking
                    around the hallway of the
                    venue and our manager told me “Go in there” and pushed me into
                    this room. I ended up
                    kicking back – it’s me, Dave and Kid Rock – sitting there
                    drinking shots of tequila. And
                    I’m sitting there, and all of a sudden I’m thinking, “I’m
                    in a room right now with David Lee Roth and Kid Rock. How the heck did THIS happen?”
                    And then Dave went to the bathroom and I’m just hanging
                    out with Kid Rock and he’s calling Pamela Anderson and I’m
                    thinking “this is a cool dream.” Another cool thing was when Robin Zander from Cheap Trick
                    was at a show and he came up and – Cheap Trick was the first
                    concert I ever saw, like in ’79, Dream Police, ya know? – so
                    he comes up to me after the show and was just telling me how great
                    I was for like 10 minutes. And
                    I was just sitting there thinking “Wow this is awesome.” When
                    I was a kid, watching Cheap Trick in front of 50.000 people at the
                    Rose Bowl or the Coliseum, I would have never, ever dreamed that
                    there would come a day when that singer was gonna be watching me
                    play and telling me I’m great. That, to me – those are the biggest payoffs – like Ted
                    Nugent complimented me once...those are the things, I go
                    “Fuck!” I grew up listening to Ted Nugent and Van Halen and
                    Cheap Trick and all those bands and these guys are actually
                    telling me good things about my guitar playing. If you could go back in time and tell me that was gonna
                    happen, I would just die. Those moments mean more to me...when I’m an old man,
                    those are the moments I’m gonna remember. Those moments of my idols telling me that they liked my
                    playing. It doesn’t
                    get any better than that.</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: Does Dave
                    ever lose the Diamond Dave persona when the cameras aren’t
                    around?</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial"><img border="0" src="http://tormentedvhfans.com/Brian_Manzanillo_Up_Close.jpg" align="right" width="480" height="272">Brian: Uh, not
                    really (laugh). The
                    time that I’d say I have the coolest conversations with him,
                    when he’s really mellow and absolutely not Diamond Dave, have
                    been when it’s just me and him alone late at night on the bus
                    when maybe everyone else is crashed out and we’re kicking back
                    in the front lounge. We’ll
                    start talking about stuff and it’s like, he doesn’t do the
                    routine, and we talk about totally cool, different stuff....like,
                    I went on a surf trip to Nicaragua about 3 years ago. And I know Dave likes all that outdoor stuff - going to the
                    Amazon and paddling around in a canoe, climbing Mt Everest and all
                    that stuff – so I was telling him about my surf trip and he was
                    just completely listening and I was like...cuz usually you’re
                    listening to Dave, so there’s not much I can say to get his
                    attention, he’s been everywhere, done everything, heard it
                    all...but he was interested in my Nicaragua story. That was when Dave was not like Diamond Dave, but just a
                    dude that was just totally a nature guy, going like “Wow,
                    that’s cool, man.”</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: He’s
                    probably thinking, “Hey, wait a minute...I’VE never surfed in
                    Nicaragua...”</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: In fact,
                    he’s interested in surfing. He’s been talking to me about surf
                    lessons, so I gave him a number of a buddy of mine. I don’t know if he’s done it yet, but I’m hoping he
                    does it because I think he’d enjoy it. That’s the stuff – when Dave’s talking about
                    adventures he’s been on – that’s when he’s not Diamond. He’s like the Explorer Dave.
                    And he really is, he’s really done all that crazy stuff
                    in all these exotic places...those kind of trips where people
                    could almost die...climbing a mountain people getting
                    frostbite...he’s been there. Wow, that’s gnarly stuff.</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: Does he
                    ever talk about Eddie and the boys? If so, what does he say?</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: He
                    doesn’t talk about them too much. It’s surprising. I
                    was expecting to hear a little more. I asked him a few things here and there, never really any
                    personal stuff about any of those guys. Once in a while I’ve asked him things about when they
                    recorded a song or something. And sometimes, he’ll just be talking about like when he
                    was in the studio singing Jaime’s Cryin’ and he’ll tell me
                    little stories and stuff. But
                    he doesn’t really talk about ‘em.</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: Have you
                    heard any of the material he worked on with them in 2002?</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: No, I wish
                    I had, but nope. It’s
                    possible our manager has a copy of it. I would think he might, cuz he was definitely involved in
                    that. I’ve never really asked.</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: What are
                    your thoughts on the Van Halen reunion?</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: Ya know, I
                    was one of the only guys that didn’t CARE if they got back
                    together. I kinda
                    didn’t want them to get back together cuz I was thinking, what
                    if they’re not as good as they were? What if you go out and see them and...I mean they better go
                    out and kick complete ASS or I’ll be bummed. I have heard from a
                    guy who was at Eddie’s house a couple months ago, that he heard
                    Eddie practicing and he was just jamming and sounding KILLER. I
                    was questioning that for the past year, cuz I’d heard a lot of
                    stories about what’s been going on with him. I think maybe a
                    year ago, he wasn’t playing too good. I don’t think he was playing too much anyways, but he has
                    a reason to practice now so I think he’s excited and...Like I
                    say, you get TIRED of something after years and years and you
                    wanna take a break and he’s out golfing and stuff and playing
                    cello. &nbsp; He’s
                    probably like going, “Man, I’ve been a Guitar God for 25
                    years. I need a
                    break.” And now,
                    after a few years of not playing, I think he’s ready maybe to
                    get a second wind and go out there and kick total ass. And hopefully I’ll catch a show.</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: Do you
                    know how to play any Sammy era Van Halen?</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: We’d mess
                    around in the Punks, but I don’t even know if I could play a
                    Sammy era Van Halen tune all the way through. I like some of those songs a lot, but I’ve never sat
                    around and learned them. By
                    the time Sammy was in Van Halen, like ’85, I was more interested
                    in trying to write my own music and stuff. Between ’78 and ’82 is when I learned the most songs of
                    rock stuff I liked. Once
                    I was 21 and playing bar gigs, I would just learn whatever song I
                    had to play with the band on stage...Oh yeah!...I used to play Why
                    Can’t This Be Love in a cover band I used to be in. Maybe a couple more songs, I can’t remember now.</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: Do you and
                    the guys, including Dave, ever read any of the DLR/VH related
                    sites on the internet?</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: I don’t
                    know if Dave does, but I do. &nbsp; I usually go to <a href="http://www.diamonddavidleeroth.com">diamonddavidleeroth.c om</a>.
                    Usually when we’re on the road, I like
                    to read reviews of shows, just to see what people say about the
                    show, stuff like that. They’re
                    usually pretty good reviews, so I’ve never got too bummed out
                    about anything. But
                    I’ve seen a few things...where people are assuming things. Things happen and they were like totally wrong.
                    It’s kinda funny when I read stuff and I know what’s
                    really going on...it’s kinda weird that people guess what’s
                    happening....”why did they do this?”....”why did Dave do
                    that?”...and then they all start guessing and guessing and they
                    don’t have any idea, it’s so funny. And the real reason is usually nothing, there’s usually no
                    reason at all, but people try to find a reason for everything. I’ve gotten a lot of humor out of those stories.
                    There’s been a few times I was just DYING to type in,
                    type in the real story, but thought, “Nope, nope, I’m not
                    gonna get involved in this” (laugh)</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: What was
                    the first gig you played with Dave?</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial"> <img border="0" src="http://tormentedvhfans.com/_Whos_That_.JPG" align="left" alt="Brian and Diamond Dave, doin' what they do best." width="400" height="300">Brian: Atlanta
                    Midtown Music Festival.</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: How’d
                    that go?</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: It went
                    good! It was
                    good....30,000 people, so one of the biggest shows I’ve ever
                    played was that first show. And
                    it was raining that day, but it stopped raining before we went on
                    so that was cool cuz it was a big outdoor thing.</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: What was
                    it like playing in front of that many people for the first time?</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: It was a
                    blast! It was fine, I felt totally comfortable. It was just all fun. &nbsp;&nbsp;</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: Did Dave
                    give you any advice or words of wisdom before that first show?</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: Uh, I
                    don’t remember for the FIRST show, but he did have a big pep
                    talk with us before the second show, which was Cleveland with
                    Sammy Hagar, that Sammy tour. We did a lot of live radio stuff before we did Sammy, we
                    did 10 radio morning shows on acoustic guitar. So before the Sammy tour he took us aside and gave us a big
                    talk to set the tone of the tour. And he just said things like, “Look tough on stage.”
                    It was funny because, like in the Punks, I’m usually a
                    smiler and he’s saying like, “Look at Jimmy Page on stage. He’s not smiling, man, he’s looking cool.
                    And Keith Richards, he’s looking tough.” So he’s saying basically go up there and look like you’re
                    bad ass. &nbsp; He wanted us
                    to look bad ass and fucking play our asses off. Cuz basically Sammy’s show was a big party with all kinds
                    of balloons and streamer tape and confetti and bright colors and a
                    fiesta and party drinks. And
                    he goes, “I wanna be the opposite of that. I wanna go out there with a wall of amps and fucking roll
                    over them like a tank. Just pummel them with music.” And that’s what we were playing, just the
                    heavy stuff...Atomic
                    Punk, DOA...and I don’t know if you noticed, we were just
                    playing song, song, song.. we have maybe 5 seconds between every song, there’s no
                    talking between the songs.</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial"><img border="0" src="http://tormentedvhfans.com/Brian_Chelle_BYoung.jpg" align="left" alt="Brian (Parrothead), Michelle (SoCalChelle) and Brian Young, Before the Roth/Hagar show, Universal Amphitheatre - June, 2003" width="342" height="480">Chelle:
                    Yeah, we saw that show at the Universal Amphitheater from
                    like the 7<sup>th</sup> row. Great show.</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: You saw the
                    year we played with Sammy, or the other one?</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: Yeah,
                    well, both..</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: Yeah, so
                    you see how it was just night and day. Some people thought Dave was gonna throw a party. But Dave’s thing was, “Let’s not do the same thing
                    Sammy’s doing. He’s
                    gonna be the party band, let’s just fucking ROCK.” And it was cool.
                    I
                    mean, some people liked Sammy’s approach better than ours and
                    some people go, “Man, Sammy’s was FUN and Dave’s....where
                    were all the chicks and the things like Sammy had?” And then other people were like, “Well Dave’s was heavy
                    and Sammy’s was just goofy.” I could see their points, I mean the Sammy show looks fun
                    to me...drinking tequila on stage, girls in bikinis serving you
                    drinks, confetti flying all over the place, Sammy’s bullshitting
                    between the songs so you kinda stand around and have a beer. Hey, looks like a fun party, actually like you’re playing
                    at a big ol’ fiesta and that’s cool too. But with Dave (laugh) one time about two weeks into the
                    tour I took a drink of beer between songs and after the show, Dave
                    goes “Brian, you don’t need to be drinking between the songs. It’s a 90 minute show.
                    We’re gonna go out there and pummel and you can wait
                    until after the show to have your drink.”</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: So he can
                    drink Jack Daniels, but you can’t have your beer (laugh)</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: Well, Jack
                    Daniels, that’s his thing, but he was of the approach like I’m
                    a wuss if I can’t make it through a show without a beer. So I was like, OK that’s it, he’s kinda like making me
                    step it up, (laugh) like it was a challenge. I remember this one time Michael Anthony was trying to get
                    me to do a shot of tequila before the show. He was like, “C’mon Brian, let’s do a shot.” and
                    I’m like, “Aw, dude, I can’t drink before the show.” That was just my personal thing.
                    I wanted to just go up there and kick total ass and I
                    didn’t wanna be sloppy and buzzed. But he did talk me into it and I did a shot and pretty much
                    didn’t ALLOW myself to catch a buzz (laugh). This last year, it’s a different kind of show, more
                    mellow and little more jamming and I drink some whiskey during the
                    show, so it’s all fun. But
                    that year basically I had something to prove, cuz I knew that
                    everywhere I went all these guitar players were gonna say, “ooh,
                    let’s see if this fucker can play the shit.” So I wasn’t gonna go up there buzzed, and suck.</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: Is it
                    difficult going up on stage wanting to be your own person, and
                    people see you as wanting to take Eddie’s place?</font></p>
                    <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: Ya know
                    what...In the beginning of the Sammy tour – I felt it most in
                    the beginning. When I
                    joined, I knew there was gonna be a lot of people saying, “Hey,
                    who’s this new guy?” and we were going on the road with Sammy
                    Hagar, so I knew there was going to be a lot of publicity and a
                    lot of “Oh, they’re gonna play Van Halen, let’s see who this
                    guy is. My style is nothing
                    like Eddie’s at all, to tell you the truth, not a bit, I just
                    happen to be able to play that stuff and I love it – it’s
                    really fun to play. But
                    after a little while, after I went on the internet and read a few
                    lame reviews, well not really lame reviews, but people were like
                    not getting it...Here’s an example again of something Dave told

                    Comment

                    • TMR

                      #11
                      me to do and then I read a bunch of shit on the internet and
                      it’s like completely off base. When we played that very first show in Atlanta, we’d done
                      all our rehearsals and it was a couple days before the gig and
                      Dave says, “Do you do a guitar solo?” and I was like, “Yeah,
                      what do you want? I’ll jam for a few minutes...” And he goes, “Why don’t you do just the beginning of
                      Eruption and then go into something of your own. About a minute and a half.”
                      So I’m like, OK, right on, whatever. So we go to Atlanta, play the show, I do the first part of
                      Eruption and then I busted into my little over-the-neck thing that
                      I do and then what do I read in the reviews? A bunch of people write, “Oh, that guy couldn’t play
                      the end of Eruption.” (both laughing) “He started off right,
                      but he fucked up at the end.” And then a bunch of other people said, “What right does
                      that guy have to play Eruption? It’s not even a David Lee Roth song!”
                      So immediately, I just said, ya know what I’m not gonna
                      play Eruption cuz that IS an Eddie Van Halen song, not a Dave
                      song. So ever since
                      then, I’ve just been doing this thing where the band hits an A
                      chord, like the beginning of Eruption, then I just jam in A and do
                      my own thing and guess what...people STILL think I’m playing
                      Eruption, but now they think I’m playing it COMPLETELY wrong.
                      (laugh)</font></p>
                      <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: I’ve
                      been in the first few rows of a few shows now, and there’s
                      always that ONE guy that’s grumbling, “Oh, he thinks he’s
                      Eddie Van Halen.” I just wanna slap that guy.</font></p>
                      <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: It’s like
                      hey, hello, I don’t think I’m Eddie, I don’t wanna be Eddie.
                      You know what, I just wanna tell those people, Dave PAYS me
                      and he tells me what to do and I do it. If Dave wants me to play Eruption, I’ll play Eruption.
                      Luckily, after I told him I didn’t wanna do it, he said
                      “Fine, do your own thing.” He was really cool cuz he understood.
                      But the bummer is, when people write the setlist down, they
                      still write Eruption. Sometimes
                      people write Guitar Solo which that is what I’d like it to be
                      called. Really, I
                      don’t give a crap if I do a guitar solo at all, but what’s
                      kinda neat is I invented that double-hand-over-the-neck thing,
                      like a piano...I did that when I was jamming with Jeff Soto in
                      1985 or ’86 and every band I’ve been in, that’s been my one
                      little trick, my one invention, and it took me 17 years to finally
                      bust it out on a big tour. And
                      then all they do is say I play Eruption wrong (laugh).</font></p>
                      <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: Have you
                      ever met Eddie Van Halen?</font></p>
                      <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: Nope</font></p>
                      <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: If you
                      could interview him what would you want to ask him?</font></p>
                      <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: Oh wow,
                      that’d be tough. I’d
                      have to spend about a night thinking about the questions. It’s funny, I’m kinda weird when it comes to the music
                      thing. I’m not
                      really big on having to meet people and I’m not really
                      interested in stuff...I’d be like, “Wanna play chess?”
                      (laugh) I mean seriously, I’m more into like, if he surfed, I’d wanna go surfing with him. I don’t talk shop too much.
                      Unless someone asks what I do, I don’t even mention
                      guitar. It’s just
                      one of those things, I don’t really say “Hey, I’m in a band,
                      I play guitar. What
                      kind of guitars, what kind of picks do you use?” I never really
                      ask anybody. There’s
                      plenty of things I’d like to know, but I’d never ask him cuz
                      most of it would be stuff he doesn’t care about anymore. Like, what guitar did you play on that song?
                      Or, what fingering did you use on that one riff? But I would rather say...like I know that he drinks wine,
                      so I’d rather talk wine with him. (laughs) Cuz I’m a wino.</font></p>
                      <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: Well, ya
                      never know, I just might get an interview with him someday...so if
                      there’s any questions you’d like to contribute...</font></p>
                      <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: Tell him
                      Brian Young wants to know what his favorite red wine is. (laugh)</font></p>
                      <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: I’ll put
                      that on the list. The techies among my readers would like to know
                      what guitar/pickups/amp/etc you’re using on tour.</font></p>
                      <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: I have two
                      main guitars. Mike
                      Charvel, Wayne Charvel’s son, did most of the work on my
                      guitars. I’m using Seymour Duncan pickups. One’s called a Custom Custom that I’m using.
                      Floyd Rose tremolo, and it’s pretty basic. Got the D-Tuna thing on it.
                      And then the amps I’m using are two Peavey 5150 II’s
                      into two 100 watt Marshalls and into some power amps...there’s a
                      Marshall 100 watt power amp and an H&amp;H power amp to drive speakers on the other side of the stage.
                      So it’s a lot of power going on. And then, I’m just using an MXR Phase 90, MXR flanger and
                      a Boss digital delay and a Bad Horsey wah-wah pedal. And a
                      Bradshaw switching system to switch all my effects.</font></p>
                      <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: We’ve
                      all heard the infamous “No Brown M&amp;M’s” story. Does Dave still do anything like that?</font></p>
                      <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial"> <img border="0" src="http://tormentedvhfans.com/Almost_Ready.JPG" align="right" alt="Gettin' ready for the show - Milwaukee, WI." width="400" height="300">Brian: Not THAT one.
                      We
                      do have a rider, we have stuff we ask for, but it’s always
                      THERE, so I’ve never seen what happens if it doesn’t show up. His main thing is no garlic in the spaghetti sauce.
                      He’s not into people with garlic breath breathing on him. One thing he really has to have, when he walks in his
                      dressing room, he wants the music already on. So the venue guys gotta go in there and get the tunes
                      happening and cranked up, so when he goes in there....that’s one
                      thing, Dave’s always got the music on. He plays it LOUD too. Before shows, I usually like to be in a quiet room by
                      myself, I’m just the opposite, I like to get all mellow and zone
                      out, maybe practice my guitar a little bit and have like maybe one
                      beer before I go on stage.</font></p>
                      <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: What’s
                      the one thing you can’t live without on the road?</font></p>
                      <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: The only
                      thing I thought I wasn’t going to be able to live without was
                      surfing. When I went
                      out on that Sammy tour, I was like “Wow, a whole summer of waves
                      I’m not gonna get.” But
                      I’m getting better at that, I can live without it. Slowly adjusting to life without surfing.
                      (laugh) But
                      what do I need on the road? I
                      guess a good meal and some wine once in a while, ya know? There’s not a lot of shit I do.
                      I bring a bunch of books with me, my chess set...my
                      routines are pretty boring...</font></p>
                      <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: So it’s
                      not the wild rock and roll lifestyle we all hear about, huh?</font></p>
                      <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: Not as wild
                      as I was hoping (laugh) Like everything in life, it’s not all
                      what you expected it to be. Sometimes the travel is pretty rough. I mean, like the bus, late at night, 3 or 4 in the morning,
                      you’re trying to sleep, you’re on some bumpy road and all of a
                      sudden you hit bumps, BUMP BUMP BUMP BUMP and you feel like
                      you’re gonna fall off a cliff and die (laugh) and you’re just
                      like, “Oh, this is great. I’m
                      gonna die on a fucking tour bus.” Of course, it’s still the greatest thing in the world.
                      No matter how shitty the travel is, or how early I have to
                      get up, ya know what...this is what I’ve waited my whole life
                      for, so I’m not gonna complain. One thing about being with Dave that’s a bummer is I’m
                      spoiled now, cuz we’re always staying in these nice hotels, the
                      tour bus is always really nice cuz Dave gets the best and we’re
                      in the bus with him, so we get stuck with the best too (laugh). So that’s always nice.
                      He always takes good care of us.&nbsp;</font></p>
                      <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: Dave’s
                      done a number of cover tunes...is there any song that you’d like
                      to see him cover?</font></p>
                      <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: Let me
                      think, I thought of this once...aww, I can’t think of it. It was some song that I heard and I thought it had a cool
                      riff, I could picture Dave singing it. It was a Johnny Winter song, but I can’t think of it
                      right now...at the time, I even bought the CD and gave it to Dave
                      and said “Hey man, check out this song. I think it’d be
                      cool.”</font></p>
                      <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: What’d
                      he say?</font></p>
                      <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: He took it
                      and listened to it, but it just didn’t end up happening, I
                      don’t remember the specifics. But there was a lot of different songs we were talking
                      about, this was just one of the ones that didn’t happen.</font></p>
                      <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: Tell us
                      about the recording sessions for Diamond Dave. Did you work in the studio together most of the time?</font></p>
                      <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial"><img border="0" src="http://tormentedvhfans.com/DLR_Band-Joint.JPG" alt="The David Lee Roth Band during sound check - &quot;The Joint&quot;; Hard Rock Hotel & Casino, Las Vegas, Nevada" align="right" width="400" height="300">Brian:
                      Yeah, ALWAYS. He
                      was there ALL the time for everybody. Even when we weren’t always there...like I was there for
                      when we did all the basic tracks, we did the drums, bass and
                      guitar together. Then
                      I would be there for all my guitar tracks and for some of Dave’s
                      vocals. But Dave was
                      there for <i>everything</i>. I mean, if
                      someone started recording something and he wasn’t there, he
                      wouldn’t even wanna listen to it. He was like, “let’s start again guys.”
                      He’s gotta be there, it’s almost like he’s gotta have
                      his vibe be part of the thing, which is cool. In fact, one time we played through a song and we’re
                      doing these sessions at 9 in the morning to like 10 at night and
                      – this was kinda funny – we were playing a song and Dave stopped us halfway through and
                      he was in the control room listening to us play the rhythm tracks
                      and he just stops and says, “Ok, guys, imagine that you’re
                      playing in a bar and it’s after hours and they’ve kicked most
                      of the people out and there’s just a party in there with a few
                      people. And now play
                      the song again.” And
                      we did it, and he’s like, “THAT’S the vibe I want.” He’s really good at drawing pictures of what he wants,
                      he’ll say like imagine this and imagine you’re here. Sometimes he’ll say “Imagine you’re playing at an
                      outdoor party and there’s a bunch of girls dancing. Get that kinda vibe.”
                      Or he’ll put on a song and say, “Hear that song? Think like this.”
                      Even
                      if it’s a completely different kind of song, he’ll go,
                      “THINK like this. Think
                      about how that guy’s thinking right there and think like that
                      and play the song.” It’s
                      really cool. He’s a
                      fun guy as a producer. For
                      me, some of the coolest things that have happened in the studio
                      have happened with him. I
                      always tell my chick about the stuff that happens, like the Story
                      Of The Day...OH! Here’s
                      another one (laughing his ass off) this is a great one! This is one of my favorite Ray stories...Ray’s playing
                      the drums and he’s out there by himself, we’re all in the
                      control room, and Dave says, “Hey, put some more fills in there.
                      Spice it up a little bit.” So Ray starts doing all this really rad drummer shit and
                      Dave’s like, “Stop! Stop! Those things you’re doing are really great and a lot of
                      drummers will think it’s really difficult to play. But those guys don’t buy tickets and they don’t give
                      you blowjobs after the show. Play for the people that matter. Don’t play for the drummers, play for the chicks!”
                      (BIG LAUGH) And
                      I just thought that was the coolest thing ever. I ran that one through my head 10 times so I wouldn’t
                      forget it. &nbsp; Even with
                      Eddie, I’m sure he probably did stuff like that. Judging by the stuff I’ve seen Dave do, I can picture
                      that he’s the guy that took Eddie’s raw talent and made it
                      sellable. Cuz here’s one thing he told me about Eddie - he said when
                      he met Eddie, the band was a 3 piece and Eddie would sing. He said they were playing all these really long solos and
                      long drum solos and they were all shredding. I totally believe that if Dave and Eddie didn’t meet, I
                      don’t think Eddie would be the superstar guitar god that he is. He was so into instrumental and shredding and all this
                      hard-to-play music stuff, that it’s quite possible he would have
                      formed a band that would have been too...you know like jazz
                      musicians that are great but nobody cares about because they
                      don’t have music that people wanna listen to? So it’s quite possible that Eddie would have been like
                      that. Cuz Dave even
                      told us, when Eddie’d start jamming, Dave would say “We’ve
                      gotta make this stuff danceable so we can play clubs. People don’t wanna hear a 15 minute drum solo.”
                      He basically directed them in a way to sell it to the
                      public. Cuz I guess
                      Eddie was basically playing for the musicians. And I’m just guessing this, but I can totally picture
                      that it took a guy like Dave - the Diamond Dave/Vegas/Car
                      Salesman/Fast Talking Showman that had all the moves and all the
                      talk - and he took that and added it to Eddie’s phenomenal
                      guitar playing and bam! The rest is history.</font></p>
                      <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: How much
                      influence did you have on the sound of the new album?</font></p>
                      <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: Oh, wow, I
                      don’t really know how much...I mean, cuz everything we played
                      Dave did mold and shape it, but he let us do our thing and let us
                      experiment with our sound. I’d
                      say that Dave was at least 50% and the other 50% was split up
                      among the rest of us, maybe even Dave was 60%. (laugh) Bottom
                      line is, it was Dave’s final say about everything. It was his record and if he didn’t like something, he
                      would just tell you, “I don’t like it. Try something else.” And
                      there were a few times when I liked something and he didn’t and
                      he made me try something else. But most of the time, he was right.
                      Every time he made me do something different, in the end
                      result I liked what he had me do better. This one time, I was doing this solo and he was like,
                      “Dude, do a burning solo on this song.” So I started doing all
                      this fast stuff and he was like, “No, not burn like Steve Vai,
                      burn like Joe Perry.” He
                      said “burning solo” and I thought, “yeah I can do that.” But he meant burn like Billy Gibbons (mouths the sound of
                      ZZTop guitar solo) burn on ONE note. He even said, “Get outta the ‘80s.” &nbsp;</font></p>
                      <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: He told
                      you that?</font></p>
                      <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: Yeah
                      (laugh). What he
                      meant was that solo was very ‘80s guitar gymnastics and he goes,
                      “Dude, get outta the 80s.”</font></p>
                      <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: Out of all
                      the people you’ve met and musicians you’ve played with, is
                      there one that still makes you go, “Wow! I can’t believe I met_______!”</font></p>
                      <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: Darn,
                      that’s a tricky question...I’ve met so many people over the
                      years...I’ve gone swimming with Yngwie Malmsteen...</font></p>
                      <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: (big
                      laugh) I bet not too many people can say THAT!</font></p>
                      <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: Yeah, well,
                      I was hanging out with Jeff Scott Soto and he lives in the Valley.
                      Yngwie only lived a couple miles away, so he’d come over
                      and go swimming. That was way back in ’86 or ’87. When I was younger, that kind of stuff was more mind
                      blowing to me. Right now, I think, just because of my life, the
                      person I’d be most stoked to meet would be Jimmy Page. Just because there’s a ton of legends out there that I
                      dig, but Led Zeppelin’s always been special to me. Their vibe is
                      so bitchin’ and I think about all the stuff those guys did back
                      in the day and I think it’d be cool to meet Jimmy Page. But then again, I’d probably just be like, “Hey, nice
                      to meet ya.” That’s
                      the thing, I think a lot of people that wanna meet Dave – I’ve
                      seen so many people every night that wanna talk to Dave – it’s
                      weird cuz when you see a person that’s waited their whole life
                      to talk to Dave and then what do you say? You only got 2 minutes. (laugh)<br>
                      <br>
                      <img border="0" src="http://tormentedvhfans.com/Brian_and_Moby.JPG" align="right" alt="Brian and Moby, his guitar tech.- Osaka, Japan" width="300" height="400">Chelle:
                      Yeah, I was in that position New Year’s Eve. I saw you guys New Year’s Eve in Hollywood.
                      Me and my boyfriend waited around after the show, cuz I
                      just wanted to meet him – I’d been in love with him since I
                      was 14 – so I just wanted to shake his hand, ya know? Finally, after they were shooing us all out of there, we
                      ended up walking down the stairs right behind Dave and Animal. So I was like, “I gotta say something.
                      If I just let him walk away without saying anything, I’ll
                      be kicking myself for the rest of my life.” So I asked him for an interview for the site, it was the
                      only thing that would come out of my mouth (laugh). But I was just happy that I did end up getting to meet him
                      and actually talk to him and didn’t even pass out or anything!
                      (laugh)</font></p>
                      <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: (laughing)
                      Yeah, that’s exactly what I mean. You can’t possibly say
                      anything important in two minutes. “Hi, I love your work, nice meeting ya” and that’s
                      about it. I get a lot
                      of people asking me, “Can I meet him?” and I’m just like,
                      “It’s not my department.” I mean Dave sometimes comes out and talks, sometimes not,
                      that’s all his business.</font></p>
                      <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: He did end
                      up turning me down for the interview, through his people, but
                      maybe once he sees all his band members up here on the site...</font></p>
                      <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: Then
                      he’ll REALLY turn you down (both laughing)</font></p>
                      <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: Many would
                      say you’re living the dream at this point, playing and touring
                      with DLR. What’s
                      the next dream/goal in your musical career?</font></p>
                      <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: Wow, my
                      only dream is just to be able to keep doing it, really. What I found out in my career is that everything I’ve ever
                      ended up doing was something I didn’t ever expect I would do. Like, I never expected I’d play disco.
                      Never expected I was going to play in a Van Halen tribute. And then I never expected I was gonna play with David Lee
                      Roth. Of course
                      it’s always been different than what I’ve been expecting it to
                      be, like I was expecting it to be my band, my records, but it
                      didn’t happen that way – and I still have hope it could happen
                      – but in the meantime, as long as I can make a living playing
                      music, I’m happy doing any kind of music. &nbsp;</font></p>
                      <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: Where do
                      you see yourself 5 to 10 years from now?</font></p>
                      <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Brian: I
                      absolutely have no idea. All
                      I want is to be happy and I hope I’m still playing guitar for a
                      living. And if I’m not playing guitar for a living, I hope it’s
                      because I’m doing something better. I don’t know what that could possibly be, but
                      (laugh)....I mean if somebody woulda said 10 years ago, “Where
                      do you picture yourself 10 years from now?” there’s no way on
                      Earth I woulda pictured this. So I don’t even try to guess. I just go with the flow and hope and I can usually feel
                      when it’s flowing right...ya know how sometimes you take wrong
                      turns in life and you know you’re fucking up and going the wrong
                      direction and then you gotta get back on track? So I feel like I’m pretty on track right now, so I hope I
                      stay on track and hopefully 10 years from now you’ll still wanna
                      interview me...what’s it 2004 right now?...2014 hopefully I’ll
                      be doing something and...</font></p>
                      <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial">Chelle: I’ll
                      give you a call! (laugh)</font></p>
                      <p><font face="Comic Sans MS,Tahoma,Verdana, Arial"> <img border="0" src="http://tormentedvhfans.com/Hows_My_Hair_.JPG" align="left" alt="On the Roth/Hagar tour - 2002 " width="300" height="400">Brian: Here’s
                      what I would LIKE to be doing...I’d like to be in an original
                      band, still playing cool music that I like and hopefully traveling,
                      I’d
                      really like to see the whole world. And I’d want to do it playing guitar.
                      The best thing about guitar playing is all the traveling I’ve gotten to do.
                      When
                      I’m in England and I’m thinking, “Man, my GUITAR got me
                      here! This is the
                      coolest thing ever!”</font></p>
                      <p>&nbsp;</p>
                      <p align="center"><font size="2">Interview Date: March, 2004 |
                      Transcribed by: M. Williams, B. Young &amp; B. Eller</font><br>
                      <i><b><font face="Tahoma" size="2">(C) 2002-2004 Tormented VHFans.COM -- All Rights
                      Reserved<br>
                      </font></b></i><font face="Verdana" size="1" color="#000000">Interviews
                      may not be published, reproduced or redistributed<br>
                      &nbsp;in any form without written permission. </font>
                      </p>
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                      Comment

                      • GAR
                        Banned
                        • Jan 2004
                        • 10881

                        #12
                        MWAAHAHAHA~! Badass, TMR!!! Thank you

                        ".. cuz i knew that all these guitar players were gonna say "ooh, lets see if this fucker can play the shit."

                        oh MAN!

                        Let me just say: That Fucker could play the shit! Big TYME BOYEEEE>

                        Comment

                        • TMR

                          #13
                          pictures

                          There are some COOL PHOTOS at her website where is this interview came from! Check it out!

                          CLICK ON CHELLE's link !!



                          Last edited by TMR; 04-18-2004, 12:26 AM.

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                          • Panamark
                            DIAMOND STATUS
                            • Jan 2004
                            • 17161

                            #14
                            Great Interview Chelle !
                            BABY PANA 2 IS Coming !! All across the land, let the love and beer flow !
                            Love ya Mary Frances!

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                            • DavidLeeNatra
                              TOASTMASTER GENERAL
                              • Jan 2004
                              • 10715

                              #15
                              noone should ever bash this guy again...coolest read!!!
                              Roth Army Icon
                              First official owner of ADKOT (Deluxe Version)

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