Little Guitars
| "Little Guitars" | |
|---|---|
| Single by Van Halen | |
| from the album Diver Down | |
| Released | 14 April 1982 |
| Recorded | 1982 |
| Genre | Hard rock |
| Length | 3:49, :43 (intro) |
| Label | Warner Bros. Records |
| Writer(s) | Michael Anthony / David Lee Roth / Alex Van Halen / Edward Van Halen |
| Producer(s) | Ted Templeman |
"Little Guitars" is a song performed by Van Halen. It was included on their album Diver Down.
The song is notable for its intro, an acoustic flamenco-style solo by Edward. This was accomplished by using his right hand to pick a single-note trill on the high E string. He then used his left hand to play the melody on the A and D strings using hammer-ons and pull-offs.
| “ | "Everyone thinks I overdubbed on that. Then I show them how I did it. Classical guitarists can do that, but they finger-pick. I can't finger-pick. No, I definitely cheated. I'm good at that. If there's a sound in my head and I want it, I'll find a way to do it. I bought a couple Montoya records. I actually tried to finger-pick, and I'm going, 'Screw this, it's too hard.'" - Edward Van Halen [1] | ” |

In addition to the intro, the song is also notable for the mini-Les Paul guitar that Edward used for the main track. This is the only Van Halen recording that the guitar was used for. The mini-Les Paul was made by Nashville luthier David Petschulat, and was pitched and sold to Eddie during a tour stop in Nashville, Tennessee. Eddie purchased a second mini-LP guitar that was then built to slightly different specs; the first being a honey-sunburst with mini-humbuckers, and the second being dark wine-red with a thicker body and full-size humbuckers.[2]
| “ | "And the song is titled this because its played on a copy of a Les Paul three inches longer than your forearm to the tip of your finger so you could put the whole thing in your pocket if you wanted to. It makes a very distinctive sound- different from your traditional rock axe. I got the idea for the song from the acoustic part. It sounded Mexican to me, so I wrote a song for a Señorita." - David Lee Roth [3] | ” |