Guitar Master Yngwie Malmsteen on Miami Heat: "LeBron James Is a F#$%in' Virtuoso" | Crossfade | Miami | Miami New Times | The Leading Independent News Source in Miami, Florida
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Guitar Master Yngwie Malmsteen on Miami Heat: "LeBron James Is a F#$%in' Virtuoso"

Yngwie Malmsteen is a six-foot, three-inch guitar monster from Sweden. He left the dark and bitter cold of Stockholm at age 19 and moved to L.A. for a record deal, got famous, and drunkenly crashed a Jaguar E-Type V12 convertible into a tree, breaking the steering wheel with his head...
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Yngwie Malmsteen is a six-foot, three-inch guitar monster from Sweden.

He left the dark and bitter cold of Stockholm at age 19 and moved to L.A. for a record deal, got famous, and drunkenly crashed a Jaguar E-Type V12 convertible into a tree, breaking the steering wheel with his head. But Malmsteen not only survived. He beat a blood clot on his brain. He remastered the guitar. And then he moved to Miami in the late '80s.

Famous the world over for his neoclassical heavy metal shredding and "arpeggios from hell," Yngwie's new book, Relentless, tells the truth behind how it all happened. He's also got a new album, Spellbound. And next week, he's coming home to Grand Central.

So we here at Crossfade called up this axe master to chat about fast cars, the rock star lifestyle, and the Miami Heat.

Crossfade: Wasup, dude. Awesome book. I read that shit fast.

Yngwie Malmsteen: Thanks.

What part of Miami you live in?

I live on the beach. You might have seen me in a Ferrari. I do a lot of cruising, you know.

Can you compare improvising a guitar solo with driving a Ferrari as fast as it goes?

Two different kinds of sensations, but they're both amazing. It's more difficult to play guitar, but you can't be sleeping at the wheel in either case. In that sense, it's very similar. You have to be very aware.

What do you think of the DJ star culture? Is it possible to become a virtuoso of selecting and playing music?

I think it's possible. You can become a virtuoso of anything. If you perfect something, it doesn't matter what it is. It's all, like, niche-based, you know. LeBron James is a fuckin' virtuoso. You know where I'm coming from?

Hell yeah. You played the Soviet Union years before that motherfucker Van Halen. Would you play in any other communist countries? Cuba? North Korea?

I will play anywhere. I don't wanna encourage anybody that leads the people in a bad way. Communism and any oppression of any kind is wrong. But I'm not a politician. If I can bring people happiness playing music, I'll do it anywhere.

How many people have you punched out in your life?

A long time ago, I did that a lot. That was more then. I'm a lover, not a fighter.

For all the musicians out there, what advice do you have about snakes in the grass?

They're all over. You gotta have eyes in your neck. They walk off with your money. That's an unfortunate thing about the music business.

What are some of your signature rock star stage moves?

I do a lot of shit like play with my teeth, throw guitars around. I grind them against the Marshall stacks. Whatever it takes. I smash 'em up into a thousand pieces. It's all a part of the show. I never wanted to see someone just stand there and play.

You play behind your head?

Yeah, all the time.

Upside-down and backwards behind your back?

That too.

Holy shit. What do you think about death metal starting in Tampa?

I understand that sort of darkness coming out of Norway. But from Tampa, I never understood it.

When you're playing the shit out of a guitar, can you achieve a higher state of consciousness?

Yeah. It's not really even in this dimension almost. Once you get into it, it's like you're somewhere else. Very magical.

You have a couple blues songs on Spellbound, like "Let Sleeping Dogs Lie" and "Iron Blues."

I got the blues, man. Trust me. That's where I started. You have to have the blues to play guitar. You have to have the foundation, which is the blues. And after that, you do whatever. I play it every night.

What do you think about the arpeggio as the most perfect form of expression for guitar?

It's also much more than that. It's the violin technique of isolating notes, patterns, and vibrato that influence me a lot. I love the sound of it. That's something I worked many years on. Violinsts like Paganini are mind-boggling. I wanted to do something like that on guitar. That's how Bach and Tchaikovsky and stuff like that influence me. Classical is awesome.

Can a computer-generated tone ever beat a human-played guitar one?

No. Absolutely not. No chance. A musician at a certain level uses the instrument to express what it's like in his soul, you know. And a computer doesn't have a soul. The idea of the virtuoso goes way deeper than just the technique, and it cannot be duplicated.

Improvisation means making shit up as you go, how is that important to your style?

I just played 30 shows now in a row, and never the same thing twice. Improvisation, to me, it's perfection. It's crazy to expect that of yourself, but I've always been demanding.

Yo, man, you're fucking awesome at playing guitar.

I just do it superloud through Marshall stacks. That's what I do.

Yngwie Malmsteen. With Burning Heat and Martyrd. Saturday, May 25. Grand Central, 697 N. Miami Ave., Miami. Thw show starts at 7 p.m. and tickets cost $25 plus fees via ticketfly.com. Call 305-377-2277 or visit grandcentralmiami.com.

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