Eddie Van Halen's Biographer: "Drugs Ruined Our Friendship" | Steve Rosen
Jun 13, 2026•Channel
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Video Details
Published1 month ago
Duration1:06:24
Video IDX92OKGsh7lc
Languageen
CategoryEntertainment
PrivacyPublic
Made for KidsNo
Video TypeRegular Video
Performance Metrics
Views769
Likes28
Comments4
Engagement Rate4.16%
Likes per 100 views3.64
Comments per 1K views5.20
Video Tags
#facts verse#eddie van halen#edward van halen#van halen#steve rosen#tone chaser#eddie van halen interview#van halen interview#eddie van halen death#eddie van halen biography#brown sound#eddie van halen guitar#greatest guitarist#eruption#alex van halen#david lee roth#sammy hagar#eddie van halen smoking#rock history#classic rock
Description
Get Steve Rosen's Eddie Van Halen biography, Tonechaser, on Amazon: https://amzn.to/4v0WXtz
His new book on Jeff Beck is available now: https://amzn.to/4vHSM5X
Journalist Steve Rosen spent nearly a decade as one of Eddie Van Halen's closest confidants, and the stories he tells here reveal a side of the guitar god almost no one saw. Eddie personally sanctioned Rosen to write his authorized biography, handing over phone numbers and telling him to carry a microphone and record anything he wanted. But the book collapsed when Eddie kept stalling with the same excuse: "If we sit down now, the next album won't be part of the book." The two had a bitter falling out in 2003, and the project sat dead until 2020, when Rosen rediscovered what he calls the "Twilight Tapes" and began writing again, just six weeks before Eddie passed away.
In this conversation, Rosen shares the intimate moments that defined the real Edward: the night Eddie cried talking about his father's death, the chain-smoking that Rosen believes ultimately killed him, the time Eddie drove his Lamborghini to Guitar Center and had to borrow ten dollars for strings, and the painful end of a friendship Rosen still doesn't fully understand. He explains Eddie's "brown sound," his admission late in life that he was a "tone chaser" who never found the sound he was after, and why he lied about his own age to build the legend. It's an unguarded portrait of the most influential guitarist who ever lived, from the man who knew him when the cameras were off.