"I
Dreamed about using DiMarzio products as a kid. Everygreen
sound. The perfect audio synapses between my heart
and hand." -Steve
Vai
Steve Vai is
no stranger to modern guitar lovers. From his early
years with Frank Zappa to the the G3 tours with Joe
Satriani. Following his promotional photoshoot for
DiMarzio, Steve has a chat with DiMarzio founder and
good friend, Larry DiMarzio.
LARRY
DIMARZIO: To
start with, thankyou so much for doing such a great
job.
STEVE
VAI: Thank you
once again as always Larry. not just for the photo
shoot today, its the photo shoots that Larry has been
doing for a long time. You know. Everybody knows Larry
DiMarzio and his extraordinary pickups.
When I was
just a young kid, guitar player, dweeb, from Long
Island, Some things never change (laughs) The cool
thing was to have humbuckers on your guitar, and I
remember the word DiMarzio, and I remember seeing
it for the first time in a magazine, and my friends
were always talking about it. I never thought DiMarzio
was a person, I just thought it was a cool word associated
with Humbucker pickups. (Steve turns 16 years old
again) Did you get your Dimarzios? Do you have DiMarzio?
And I remember when I first went out and bought my
first DiMarzio pickups and then I realised there was
actually a guy behind it. And its was Larry DiMarzio,
and you know, one thing leads to another, you move
out to California from Long Island or from wherever
you are and if you are lucky enough to get a good
gig and you start meeting people in the business and
I remember, when I had met, the 'Larry Dimarzio'.
And it was quite a thrill really. I dont know if I
ever told you that.
LD: No, No, Thank you so much. I
appreciate that. Well you know DiMarzio and its relationship
with performers has always been what I've been about.
I was a performaer myself as a kid , and I loved working
with people, Especially people like yourself that
are just Olympic Class talent.
SV: Thank you
LD: You know , the photoshoots started
out as ......
SV: It
was like a hobby for you right?
LD: You know , it was a way of doing
advertising and commercial work for the company .
SV: Thats the thing
about Larry, everything he does is always shrouded
in complete class and professionalism. And you know,
he could afford the best cameras. I remember our first
photoshoot and it was like at a mansion, with a vineyard
(both try to think of the name)......
LD: Oh yeah the chateau Marmont
on Sunset Strip.
SV: Yeah thats right,
thats right. I was thinking, oh oh. He makes good
pickups but how can he know anything about photography.
And till this day those are some of the best shots.
LD: Thanks alot. Its just a pleasure
to work with you.
SV: Thankyou Larry...(both
laugh as the 'love in' continues). You know this guy
gets to live the dream. Not only does he get every
guitar player worshipping him, but he gets to take
pictures of not only guitar players but he gets to
take some phenomenal photos of the playboy bunnies
and stuff like that
LD: Yeah. I've done several projects
for Guitar World magazine but we also got to do photoshoots
with the playmates and I got to go to the playboy
mansion which was pretty out of control last year
SV: It is nice to
have the opportunity to shoot with you. Cause your
photos really do have a different look and feel, than
alot of the others. I think photographers are kind
of like musicians in a sense, that they all have a
particular touch and they all have a particular sense
of lighting .
LD: Yeah the short of it is , point
of view. Its like when you play, 3 notes in and I
can tell that its you playing. There is an unmistakeability
and energy, but enough about me lets talk about your
playing. You just finished with a new CD and DVD,
and its completely different. lets tell them a little
bit about that
SV: Well I just
recently had a record out on Sony and the DVD is coming
out in about a month or so and it was recorded with
the Metropol orchestra in Holland. It was a project
that started years ago. You know before I even played
guitar I was reading and writing music. I was always
fascinated with the little black dots. And, over the
years I have composed alot of music, but its very
hard to get your stuff performed when your'e a rock
'n' roll guitar player. Especially with an orchestra,
Its prohibitively expensive. I was fortunate to
have a friend that worked at NBS (radio staton in
Holland) . You know, europe has a completely different
culture than America. He started this program
that would solicit funds from the Dutch Government
to put on these cultural events. He would gather musicians
whom he thought could help the orchestra which is
a very adventurous, young orchestra in Haarlem. He
approached me, to compose this music for the Metropol
, and the concert was broken down into two segments
basically. The first segment was music that I had
composed for the orchestra without me playing guitar.
I didnt really perform with the orchestra, they are
just compositions. Which is a really different kind of
expressive realm. It was about an hour or so long.
Some of the material was very old and was written when I was like in my 20's , and then I brushed it
up and re-orchestrated a bit. In the second half of
the concert I would come out and play with the orchestra,
and its basically collections of my work that people
would know or that the fans are familiar with. And
the concerts were great. We did five shows. All recorded.
The last show was filmed and then we went away
and cut it up. I tried to get the best take from
here and the best take from there, to create a double
record worth of material with the orchestra and it
turned out nice.
LD: I was blown away. I got advanced
copies to get an idea of what to do with the visuals.
SV: well im blown away by the photos.
( Dimarzio laughs)
LD: Not many people
will know this but you have your own studio.
SV: I have actually never not had
a studio. When I realised what sound on sound recording
was, I had an epiphony. And when I moved to California,
my first apartment was on Fairfax avenue, and it was
called 'Sci-Vai Studios'. Then I moved to Selmar,
and found this house with a shed that I converted
into a studio. It was where I recorded alot of Warfare , passion and all of Inflexible.
The was 'Stucco Blue Studio '. Then I moved to Hollywood
and found a house that had a whole floor that I gutted
and redesigned into a studio, and thats the 'Mothership'.
Thats where ive recorded most of my records. Now I
live in another town in LA and I have a studio. I
dont like to go out into the real world and record.
There are alot of reasons . I just like to record
in the privacy of my own home.
LD: The sound and
material were amazing. Maybe people dont know how
good you are behind the board. Steve is also incredible
at mixing and recording.
SV: well im ok
LD: How has that
kind of access affected the way you write music.
SV: well sometimes its a deterrent
because when you own the studio you almost take much
more time than you should. But also, im a forever
tinkerer. Im guilty of over producing beacuse I ...
well I over produce. Sometimes it gets in the way.
But then again, my goal is to create a catalogue of
music thats relatively undiluted you know. For me
the vision doesnt just stop with how I invision the
song or the guitar solo. It goes into how I want to
stack the audio spectrum and how I want it qued and
how I want it too sound like, how I want the artwork
to look. Kind of like that. A whole picture.
LD: The other thing
you've been involved with are the guitar projects,
designing the guitars, and youve been involved with
us on the pickup end . I know you've got several pedals
youve worked on, and the cable! (Steve interjects
'DIMARZIO cable ! ) Is there anything you feel or
want to say to people about creating their own stuff
and putting kits together to record their own music
?
SV: well , you know these days
the technology has evolved to the point where virtually
anybody can purchase the equipment that will get you
recording in no time. I remember when I was a kid,
and all kids were fascinated looking at guitars. And
you know what it feels like when you get a catalogue.
And you just see a set of pickups or a drum kit and
its very exciting. And I used to get excited like
that. Now these days kids dont know what it was like
without computers. You can go online know and thats
just the way technology is evolving.
LD: Yeah that fascinates
me.
SV: You've worked with virtually
most guitarists to some degree. Im sure people would
love to hear you discuss the demands of some of the
people youve worked with. Simply because artists are
naturally insane. Anybody who has to work with
an artist, in a position where they have to take creative
insight, it must be quite a challenge.
LD: The good thing is that
I started doing guitar repairs back in the early 70's.
So it was right from the get go. Being a player myself
to some degree, I liked working with creative people.
Typically most of the people I work with, im fortunate
, like yourself, beacuse they know what they want
and you give us the opportunity to do that. You know,
you can run into situations where it is a little more
difficult (no names mentioned)
SV: Any similarity with
me and Howard Stern is purely coincidental
LD: Im thrilled to be working with
the kind of people I can work with. Its a great opportunity
. I mean, look at the dream, I grew up in Queens which
is not that far from where you grew up. And you know
the dream to me was being at the Fillmore and watching
bands play, and thinking boy do I want to be on stage
wow. I wish I was good enough to be on stage.
SV: And I was wishing,
boy I want to make pickups.
LD: (both laugh) haha , that was
the thrill, that was the fun.
SV: So were you able to
make pickups when you were younger? before you were
selling them you must have been making them?
LD: Back in the early 70's was
when I started hot rodding the guitars. I was broke,
and I was good with my hands. I could take take things
apart and put it back together. I was the kid that
would walk down the street and someone had thrown
away an old tv and Id go and gut the TV and take out
all the resistors and tubes and capacitors, just to
have all of that stuff. And then id try and build
something. Lots of it didnt work ofcourse.
SV: But it must have been
pretty cool when you put a pick up together for the
first time and it worked.
LD: It was it was, but only after
the 35 hundred failures
SV: Do you still have those
pickups?
LD: (thinks) ahhh no , I just took
them apart all the time and put them in something
else.
SV: The forever tinkerer
LD: Yeah, they suffered . The first
few ones were not very good at all. You know one of
the funny things years ago as a kid I played with
Gene Simmons .Gene
wanted me to join the original Wicked Lester band.
SV: So you might have been
in Kiss?
LD: Couldn't you just see me with
face make up?
SV: Ace Ferely would have
been out of a gig! (both laugh)
LD: It was really a great timne.
There was so much going on creatively. Even when I
stopped being involved in the playing end of things,
I still wanted to be involved with that energy. So
hence , working with you, working on projects, doing
photo shoots and to promote things.
SV: It really is nice to
work with you on more than just the pick up side.
In all sincerity, apart from the pickups, you really
do wonderful photographic work for all your artists.
Its nice to see a hobby like that being done so well.
To see you enjoying it aswell. Ive seen you do this
for years and I really dig it. It really shows, so
congratulations..
LD: Well thank you for being such
a willing subject.
VIDEO
COMING SOON