Yngwie Malmsteen


Yngwie Malmsteen

Born: Sweden – June 30, 1963

Style: Hard Rock – Heavy Metal Guitar Virtuoso

Instruments: Guitar

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Yngwie Malmsteen is arguably the most technically
accomplished hard rock guitarist to emerge during the ’80s.
Combining a dazzling technique honed over years of obsessive
practice with a love for such classical composers as Bach,
Beethoven, and Paganini, Malmsteen’s distinctively baroque,
gothic compositional style and lightning-fast arpeggiated solos
rewrote the book on heavy metal guitar.

1
His largely instrumental
debut album, Rising Force, immediately upped the ante for
aspiring hard rock guitarists and provided the major catalyst for
the ’80s guitar phenomenon known as “shredding,” in which the
music’s main focus was on impossibly fast, demanding licks
rather than songwriting. Malmsteen released a series of albums
over the course of the ’80s that were strongly similar to Rising Force. Critics charged him with showing
little artistic progression. He was also reviled as an egotist whose emphasis on blazing technique
ultimately made for boring, mechanical, masturbatory music with no room for subtlety or emotion.

Yngwie Malmsteen
Yngwie Malmsteen

2 Malmsteen responded by insisting that since he was already playing music he loved, he had no desire
to develop any further, and that his love did come through in his playing. He also vehemently insisted
that it was his imitators, not him, who reduced songwriting and composition to merely generic
vehicles to show off the guitar player’s amazing technique. Toward the end of the decade,
Malmsteen fell out of favor with metal audiences, and even some of his musician fan base seemed to
tire of him and the incredible amount of practice it would take for them to emulate him. Following a
series of personal setbacks, tragedies, and even injuries, Malmsteen eventually resurfaced on small,
independent labels and has been recording at a prolific, rapid pace in recent years, continuing to play
the music he loves in his patented neo-classical style.

3  Yngwie (pronounced “ING-vay”) Malmsteen was born in
Stockholm, Sweden in 1963.
When seven-year-old Yngwie saw a television special on the death of Jimi Hendrix
featuring live performance footage of Hendrix setting his guitar on fire, he became obsessed with the
guitar, learning to play the music of both Hendrix and favorites Deep Purple. Through Purple guitarist
Ritchie Blackmore’s use of diatonic minor scales over simple blues riffs, Malmsteen was led towards
classical music, and his sister exposed him to composers like Bach, Beethoven, Vivaldi, and Mozart.
He spent hours practicing obsessively until his fingers bled, and by age ten, his mother allowed him to
stay home from school to develop his musical talents, particularly since he was considered a
behavioral nightmare.

Jimi Hendrix
Yngwie Malmsteen

4  Also at age ten, Malmsteen became enamored of the music of 19th-century
violinist/composer Niccolo Paganini, as well as Paganini’s flamboyant style and wild-man image; this
would provide the blueprint for Malmsteen’s synthesis of classical music and rock. By the time he
was 18, Malmsteen was playing around Sweden with various bands attempting to find an audience
for his technically staggering instrumental explorations, but most listeners preferred more accessible
pop music; frustrated, Malmsteen sent demo tapes to record companies overseas. When Mike
Varney, president of Shrapnel Records — a label synonymous with the term “shredder” — heard
Malmsteen’s tape, he invited the guitarist to come to the United States and join the band Steeler in
1981.

5  Steeler recorded one album with Malmsteen on guitar, but dissatisfied with the band’s rather generic
style, Malmsteen moved on to the group Alcatrazz, whose Deep Purple and Rainbow influences
better suited the guitarist’s style. Then formed his own band, Rising Force, with longtime friend and keyboardist Jens Johansson. The new band’s first album, also called
Rising Force, was released in 1984; it was a largely instrumental affair spotlighting Malmsteen’s
incendiary guitar work and Johansson’s nearly equally developed technique. The album was an
immediate sensation in guitar circles, winning countless reader’s polls in guitar magazines, reaching
number 60 on Billboard’s album chart (no mean feat for an instrumental album), and receiving a
Grammy nomination for Best Rock Instrumental Performance. Malmsteen’s subsequent albums,
Marching Out and Trilogy, also sold quite well and consolidated his reputation and influence as a
composer as well as a soloist.

Yngwie Malmsteen
Yngwie Malmsteen

6 
However, on June 22, 1987, a speeding Malmsteen crashed his
Jaguar into a tree; in breaking the steering wheel with his head, he received a blood clot in his brain
which nearly killed him and extensively damaged the nerves leading to his picking hand. In the course
of recovery, he learned that his mother had died and that his manager had swindled him out of his
earnings. Undaunted, Malmsteen regained the use of his hand and recorded Odyssey, his most
accessible, radio-friendly collection to date; the single “Heaven Tonight” widened his audience
beyond a devoted core of guitar fans and helped push the album into Billboard’s Top 40. Following
a world tour including the then-Soviet Union, the Rising Force unit disbanded, and Malmsteen
formed a new band in his native Sweden for 1990’s Eclipse. The album was a success in Europe
and Japan, but stiffed in the U.S. without much promotion.

7 
An angry Malmsteen left PolyGram and, prior to the release of 1992’s Fire and Ice, he was married
to and divorced from a Swedish pop singer. Fire and Ice debuted at number one on the Japanese
charts, and Malmsteen toured the world again. However, disaster struck frequently over the next
two year. Hurricane Andrew destroyed Malmsteen’s Miami property; his manager of four years died
of a heart attack; Elektra dropped him from their roster; a freak accident left the guitarist with a
broken hand, in addition to frequent bouts of tendinitis caused by his lightning technique.

Yngwie Malmsteen
Yngwie Malmsteen

8 
In August 1993, Malmsteen’s future mother-in-law, opposed to his engagement to her daughter, had
him falsely arrested for holding the woman hostage with a gun. The charges were quickly dropped,
and Malmsteen secured a deal with the Japanese label Pony Canyon after his hand had healed
completely. He returned to recording with a vengeance, releasing The Seventh Sign in 1994, as well
as two mini-albums (Power and Glory and I Can’t Wait), and then Magnum Opus in 1995 and the
all-covers album Inspiration in 1996. While his popularity has largely faded in the U.S. due to a
backlash against the excesses of ’80s shredders, Malmsteen still finds audiences in Europe and is
more popular in Japan and Asia than ever. — Steve Huey, All-Music Guide

9  His latest offering, Facing the Animal, was released Feb 1998:
“the playing is still jaw-dropping. “Alone in Paradise” has a
wistful, inspirational quality. “Heathens from the North” is a sweeping tale of
Nordic heroes of the past. And the title track is sexy and predatory, like its
subject matter. “Like An Angel” is a 80’s-era power ballad, and the brief
but memorable “Air on a Theme” is a showcase piece for the Paganini of the
pickup”



Links

Official Website

Yngwie’s Wikipedia Page

Yngwie now has his own line of guitar accessories

Guitar Jokes includes a good Malmsteen one!


Additional Resources…



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