Great interview. Frank’s impact on the best musicians in the world speaks volumes about his legacy.
@mark_fox_music3 ай бұрын
Vai is such an awesome human being.
@cboch3075Ай бұрын
I saw Frank live five times from 1979 to 1988. Always an amazing show. Simply the best band you could ask for. Like watching athletes who have trained for the Olympics. I've seen Dweezil five times now as well. Also a great show. Vai and Bozzio have both toured with him.
@loucontino480429 күн бұрын
I remember seeing Frank in 1981 at the Halloween Show in NYC at The Palladium. Vai was a force on that night and just blew me away. When he did Stevie's Spanking I was floored. Not one of my friends knew who he was and I only knew him from Frank's records. But I told everyone who would listen about Vai after that show. I remember, at that time everyone was heavily into EVH, but I just knew Steve was something special and no way was that level of talent going to be contained. I'm writing this in 2024 and the history of Steve speaks for itself. An tremendous musical genius.
@museinglis19792 ай бұрын
Vai is the GOAT! …played with Zappa, Whitesnake, Roth… It’s no wonder Belew chose him do Fripp’s role in the upcoming King Crimson project! …and with TOOLs percussionist! 😮 👏
@JeffreyWilliams-dr7qeАй бұрын
@museinglis1979 quite a B team Resume. Whitesnake?
@globaltrud66853 ай бұрын
Thank you for this jewel !
@talesfromthetoiletseat829518 күн бұрын
That blows my mind having to know 80 songs cold. Stuff like Zappas music must of been nightmare!
@SteveRussell-q6v2 ай бұрын
So clever at such a young age.
@thomascerulli80137 күн бұрын
One of my biggest regrets. Was never seeing Frank Live. My fiends didn’t hear him. And as an a native NYer. His Halloween shows in The City every year. Are that of legend
@shearn66620 күн бұрын
"Shovel it on, brother, cos I got this!" You don't often hear Vai speak with such cockiness & confidence; he's normally quite measured and humble. But you can tell he's proud of what he achieved with Zappa, as well, he should. It set him up for a long & successful career in one of the toughest industries there is.
@edwardeller45796 ай бұрын
Great interview!
@TristanWeijermars3 ай бұрын
A great musician talking about (maybe) an even greater musician. Fascinating stuff. Is there a longer version of this interview?
@FullChokeFowl Жыл бұрын
Never realized until now, how much Steve looks like Hugh Hefner. Uncanny.
@JS---4 ай бұрын
Might be his offspring😊
@bcsemotorworks24622 ай бұрын
Haha well he didn't but now he does.
@frankiezap7 күн бұрын
...can't unsee it now
@mbingham6664 ай бұрын
That's how I got into rock music at 11, Guns N Roses Illusion records came out sept of 1991, i had just turned 11. I had only been into things like MC, Hammer and vanilla ice...stupid 5th grade bs. My parents took me to Target and there was a giant display with the illusion records. There was just something about "Use Your Illusion II" with the blue and black, i had to have it For some reason I thought that they were something of an outlaw country band, along the lines of Willie Nelson or Waylon Jennings.... My aunt listened to that kind of music when I was younger and I was really into it. Obviously I got the record home and it was nothing what I thought it was going to be. It absolutely blew me away, and got me really into rock music. People don't remember that within a couple of weeks those GNR records came out, metallica black album, nirvana nevermind, pearl jam ten, red hot chili peppers blood sugar sex magic, and Soundgarden's badmotorfinger.... All came out August and September of 1991. Guns n' roses got me into Queen, megadeth, danzig, there was so much good music coming out in the early '90s... In 1992, Best friend and I went to the record store to buy his father a CD for his birthday. He misheard what his father liked and bought. Steve Vai instead of Stevie Ray Vaughan. His father didn't want the record, So we listen to it and discovered passion and warfare.... I became a huge Vai fan immediately, then his band Vai in '93 with devin townsend.... And it all started with just what the album cover look like.... Kids today Just don't get to experience albums like we did, It was an experience to open up an LP with its giant images and lyrical inserts, So you could study the lyrics and know what they were saying back before you could just look them up online
@beckylynn209 Жыл бұрын
I saw Zappa in Portland Oregon when I was a teen in the 60s or 70s, n I don't remember much of it.. I believe he did a song called The Mudshark Dance.. 🤨🤗🤘
@Frunobulax74 Жыл бұрын
@beckylynn209 - That would be 1970 or 1971
@leepd12 ай бұрын
This aint no party.. this aint no disco.. this aint no fooling around.. being in Franks band was clearly not for the faint hearted.
@robbinsteel4 ай бұрын
Funny thing how Steve picked the first album.
@timwhite5562 Жыл бұрын
I'm constantly getting distracted throughout the interview wondering what the hell that thing is in his right hand.
@NateBliss Жыл бұрын
It appears to be a Trigger Finger Splint
@whotube3574 ай бұрын
Love Vai but never got Zappa....he sounds like a racket
@sabtahi1313 күн бұрын
Having seen FZ more than a dozen times, I can attest that his set list varied show to show, consecutive nights. Frank at the Auditorium Theater when he got banned, that was the most memorable show for me. It involved an inflatable sex doll, which went from female to trans in an instant, hilarious! The next time I saw him he was playing a University Hall, oops!
@meyou-dv8ns2 ай бұрын
Steve Silverman gave Steve his first guitar lessons, but Steve never mention's poor Steve Silvermans name ever in any interview
@frankiezap7 күн бұрын
...maybe he didn't like him
@JeffreyWilliams-dr7qe4 ай бұрын
Permanent stain on Zapps legacy!
@kelleychilton2524Ай бұрын
I've heard that Zappa was a difficult person, plus his kids have a lot of negative things to say about him and their mother.