
“I played it like a baby giraffe on roller skates – but it was heaven”: Steve Vai recalls surreal encounter with the Brian May as he celebrates his own custom Red Special guitar
Steve Vai has told the story of his long-running admiration for Brian May after receiving a custom-built reimagining of the Queen guitarist’s iconic Red Special.
Built by master luthier Andrew Guyton of Guyton Guitars, the instrument channels the spirit of May’s original DIY classic while introducing a series of bold, Vai-approved updates, including a quilted maple top, jumbo EVO-gold frets, a mahogany neck and a striking translucent green finish.
The original Red Special is, of course, one of the most famous handmade guitars in rock history. Constructed in the early 1960s by a teenage Brian May and his father Harold using repurposed materials, it became central to Queen’s sound and a constant presence at the band’s most historic performances.
READ MORE: Brian May believes it should be “impossible” for someone who has a “love of art and music” to be cruel to others
Describing May as one of his “absolute heroes” when he was “a kid in Carle Place trying to figure out how to play anything in tune”, Vai says the Red Special was never “just a guitar” to him, but “a mythical object, an alchemical wand built by a young genius and his dad”.
“I studied every photo and rumour I could find,” he recalls. “That guitar planted the seed that maybe someday I could build my own, which thankfully never happened, due to a total lack of expertise.”
That mythology became reality in 1980, when a 20-year-old Vai – newly arrived in Los Angeles and working with Frank Zappa – crossed paths with May at the Rainbow Bar and Grill.
“One night I walk in… and see Brian just standing there. Alone. Like a normal human. I thought I was hallucinating,” he says. “Brian was incredibly kind to this unknown kid and then did the unthinkable, he invited me to a Queen rehearsal at Zoetrope. Sitting in a room with the entire band was already unreal enough, but then I saw the Red Special. I pointed and said, ‘Is that it?’ Brian said, ‘Yup. Want to try it?’ Time definitely slowed down.”
“After idolising that guitar my whole youth, holding it was seismic,” Van continues. “I thought, ‘This is it, I’m finally going to sound like Brian May.’ But much to my chagrin, I didn’t of course. I sounded like me. And between the gauge .08 strings, ultra-low action, and a neck the size of a small tree, I played it like a baby giraffe on roller skates. Still, it was heaven.”
Years later, after Passion and Warfare had cemented Vai’s legacy, another full-circle moment arrived. While working with May on a Guitar Legends concert in Seville, the Queen guitarist recalled a young player he once invited to try his guitar.
“Brian told me the story about a young guitarist he once let play his guitar at rehearsal, a kid who was in town working with Zappa and who played amazingly well,” says Vai. “I let him tell me the whole story and then said… ‘Brian, that was me.’ This stands as one of the most satisfying full-circle twists the universe has offered me.”
Vai says he is now “truly humbled” to own the ‘Green Red Special’, describing the instrument as “beyond beautiful” and praising Guyton’s work as “devotion made tangible”.
“I own a lot of guitars, but this one stands alone,” he adds. “Its soul and history are baked into it and topped with a healthy smattering of love. I will treasure it for the rest of my life, and yes, I’m taking this one to the grave with me.”
View this post on Instagram
The post “I played it like a baby giraffe on roller skates – but it was heaven”: Steve Vai recalls surreal encounter with the Brian May as he celebrates his own custom Red Special guitar appeared first on Guitar.com | All Things Guitar.
Source: www.guitar-bass.net










