Eddie Van Halen was visiting a music college as a favor to an old friend when the proctor mistook him for a janitor and asked him to move the equipment. What happened next was something no one in that room ever forgot. It was a Tuesday morning in October the 1983 and the Berkeley College of Music in Boston was buzzing with nervous energy.

Final examination week had arrived and the performance hall on Massachusetts Avenue was being prepared for the afternoon’s guitar assessments. Chairs were arranged in precise rows. Microphone stands were adjusted to exact heights. Seven Gibson and Fender guitars sat on their stands at the front of the room like silent judges waiting to pass verdict on the students who would soon stand before them.

Eddie Van Halen had no intention of being there that day. He was in Boston for a single night, killing time between legs of the 1984 World Tour rehearsals. His old friend and session musician Robert Calibrazy had called him two weeks earlier with an unusual request. Calibrazy taught advanced guitar theory at Berkeley and wanted Eddie to consider speaking to his students.

Nothing formal, just a casual conversation about the music industry. Eddie had agreed, mostly because Calibrazy had once done him a favor he never forgot, lending him a car during a broke stretch in 1974 when Van Halen was still playing Pasadena backyard parties. But when Eddie arrived at the college that Tuesday morning, Calibra was nowhere to be found.

A message left with the front desk said his class had been moved to the afternoon. Eddie, dressed in worn jeans, a faded flannel shirt, and a canvas jacket, was told he was welcome to wait in the performance hall where the guitar exams were being set up. He slipped inside quietly and took a seat near the back, happy to watch the preparations without drawing attention.

Eddie Van Halen did not look like the most celebrated rock guitarist on the planet that morning. He looked like a guy who had slept on a tour bus and hadn’t bothered to find a mirror afterward. His dark hair fell loosely around his face. His jacket had a paint stain near the left pocket that he’d never managed to wash out.

He carried no guitar case, no entourage, no identifier of any kind. He was, for all appearances, nobody in particular. Outside in the corridor, students were moving between classrooms with the slightly hunched posture of people carrying invisible weight. Exam week at a music conservatory had its own particular atmosphere somewhere between a hospital waiting room and the backstage of a theater.

Everyone was rehearsing something in their head. No one made extended eye contact. Eddie watched them through the small rectangular window in the performance hall door and felt something he hadn’t expected. A kind of fondness for the anxiety he was witnessing because he remembered a version of it from a time before anyone knew his name.

The proctor that morning was a man named Gerald Witmore. Whitmore had been administering music examinations at Berkeley for 11 years and had developed the particular confidence of someone who believes that knowing the rules of a place is the same as understanding it. He was efficient, organized, and deeply certain of his own authority in that room.

When he noticed the casually dressed stranger sitting in the back row, Whitmore walked over with his clipboard tucked under his arm. “Excuse me,” Whitmore said, not unkindly, but with unmistakable authority. This room is reserved for examination purposes. Are you with facilities management? Eddie looked up. No, he said simply. I’m waiting for someone. Robert Calibracy.

He teaches here. Whitmore consulted his clipboard, then looked back at Eddie with the expression of a man who has made a decision. Professor Calibray’s students won’t be in this hall until this afternoon. We have examinations beginning in 40 minutes, and the room needs to be finalized.

He gestured toward the equipment near the stage. If you’re not with facilities, I’m going to need you to wait outside. And if you could move those cable cases near the side entrance before you go, I’d appreciate it. The stage hands seem to have left them in the wrong place. There was a pause. Eddie Van Halen looked at the cable cases. He looked at Whitmore.

Then he stood up, picked up both cases without complaint, and moved them exactly where the proctor had indicated. Whitmore nodded, already turning back to his clipboard. Thank you. You can wait in the corridor. Eddie was almost at the door when one of the guitars caught his eye. It was a 1958 Gibson Flying V, an instrument so rare that most guitarists went their entire careers without touching one.

It was propped on its stand with the casual indifference of something that didn’t know its own value. Eddie stopped walking. That flying V, he said, turning back toward Whitmore. Is it being used in the exam? Whitmore looked up. It’s one of seven instruments available for the assessment.

Why? The tuning peg on the B string is slightly loose, Eddie said. You won’t notice it until someone tries to hold a sustained note. Then it’ll drift about a quarter tone flat. In an exam setting, that’s going to be a problem for whoever draws that guitar. Whitmore stared at him. And you know this how? Because I’ve played about 800 of them, Eddie said. Not with arrogance.

Just as a statement of fact, the way a mechanic might mention he’s changed a thousand oil filters. Whitmore’s expression shifted slightly, but he held his ground. The instruments were checked this morning by our technician. I’m sure they were, Eddie said. Can I show you anyway? There was something in his tone that was so completely without ego, so genuinely unbothered by Whitmore’s skepticism that the proctor found himself nodding before he’d consciously decided to.

Eddie walked to the flying V and picked it up with the practiced ease of someone for whom holding a guitar is as natural as breathing. He didn’t make a show of it. He simply sat on the edge of the stage, rested the instrument across his knee, and played a single sustained note on the B string. It was perfect.

Then he bent it slightly, held it, and as the sustain stretched out, the pitch began its slow, inevitable drift downward. Whitmore heard it immediately. “I’ll be damned,” he said quietly. Eddie set the guitar down. “You’ve got a small Allen wrench.” 2 minutes later, with a wrench borrowed from a cabinet near the stage door, the tuning peg was tightened.

Eddie retuned the string, played the same sustained note, and this time it held clean and true from beginning to end. By now, two faculty members who had been arranging chairs at the front of the room had stopped what they were doing. A young woman named Patricia Howell, who taught music history at Berkeley and was assisting with exam administration that morning, had been watching the entire exchange from 6 ft away.

She was the first one to recognize him. She said nothing. She simply stared. Then she walked quietly to where the other faculty member, a theory instructor named Marcus Webb, was standing and leaned close to his ear. Webb’s head snapped up. He looked at the man on the stage edge with the canvas jacket and the paint stain and the expression of someone who was already thinking about the next thing.

“You’re Eddie Van Halen,” Webb said. It came out not as a question, but as the verbal equivalent of a man stepping off a curb he hadn’t seen. Eddie looked up. “Yeah.” The word landed in the room like a stone dropped in still water. Whitmore’s clipboard lowered very slowly. Patricia Howell put her hand over her mouth.

Marcus Webb sat down in the nearest chair. Eddie Van Halen, the man who had released Eruption 5 years earlier and rewritten what the guitar was capable of doing. The man whose playing had caused working guitarists around the world to put down their instruments and reconsider their entire relationship with the instrument. the man who in a back room at a recording session in 1979 had recorded a guitar overdub for Michael Jackson’s Beat It in one take because he was bored and curious and didn’t know how to approach anything halfway. The man who

had just fixed a tuning peg and moved two cable cases because a proctor he’d never met had asked him to. “Why didn’t you say something?” Whitmore asked. His voice had lost its administrative authority completely. He sounded like a man who had just realized he’d handed Mozart a mop. Eddie shrugged.

You needed the cases moved. They were in the wrong place. He looked around the room with what seemed like genuine curiosity. This is a nice hall. Good acoustics in here. The ceiling height is doing a lot of work. Nobody said anything for a moment. Then Marcus Webb, who had recovered slightly, asked the question that was sitting in everyone’s mind.

Would you? I mean, we have students coming in 40 minutes for their guitar assessments. Would you be willing to stay? Eddie considered this. He thought about the corridor and the 2-hour wait for Calibra and the fact that he had nowhere particular to be. Sure, he said. What followed was something that none of the 14 students who came through that examination room that afternoon ever fully recovered from.

in the best possible sense. Eddie did not take over the examination. He did not insert himself into the formal proceedings or undermine the structure that Witmore and the faculty had established. He sat in a chair off to the side, quiet and unobtrusive, while students performed their prepared pieces for the panel. But when each student finished, Eddie asked if he could ask them one question.

Every single student said yes. Some of them were shaking. The questions were not what anyone expected. He didn’t ask about technique or theory or practice hours. He asked things like, “When did you stop hearing that passage and start feeling it?” And what were you thinking about 30 seconds before you walked in here? And did it show up in how you played? And to one student who had performed a confident, well ststructured piece with a slightly mechanical quality.

You knew exactly where every note was going. Did you ever let yourself get lost in there even for a second? The student, a junior from Connecticut who had practiced that piece 200 times, said no, he hadn’t. And Eddie just nodded like that was the most important information he’d collected all day. And to one student who had executed a technically flawless piece with the emotional temperature of a tax form.

You played every note right. What would happen if you played it wrong on purpose once just to see what’s in there? That student, a 20-year-old named David Park from Seoul, who had been practicing his examination piece for four months, stared at Eddie for a long moment. Then he turned back to his guitar and played the entire piece again, unrehearsed, and somewhere in the middle of it, he made a mistake that turned into something nobody in the room had heard before.

A bent note that shouldn’t have worked and worked completely. And when it was over, Patricia Howell was crying. and David Park looked like a man who had just found a door in a wall he’d been staring at for years. Eddie nodded once. “That’s the one,” he said. “That’s the note.” Whitmore, who had spent 11 years believing that examinations were about assessment, sat in the back of the room that afternoon and watched something he didn’t have a rubric for.

He watched a man who had moved cable cases without complaint because someone had asked him to sit with 14 young musicians and remind them one by one that the technical mastery they were being assessed on was only the beginning of what they were actually trying to do. When the last student had finished, Calibrazy finally appeared at the hall door slightly out of breath and full of apologies for the scheduling confusion.

He stopped when he saw the faces in the room then looked at Eddie. I see you found something to do. Calibbrazy said. “Your proctor put me to work,” Eddie said, and there was no irony in it at all. Whitmore, who was standing nearby, opened his mouth and then closed it. He looked at his clipboard for a long moment, then set it down on a chair. “Mr.

Van Halen,” he said finally. “I owe you an apology.” Eddie picked up his jacket from the back of a chair. “For what? The cases needed moving.” He said goodbye to Calibra, nodded to the faculty members who were still standing in the slightly stunned configuration of people who have witnessed something they’ll spend years trying to describe accurately and walked toward the door.

Patricia Howell stopped him before he reached it. Can I ask you something? She said, “Sure. You fixed the guitar. You moved the cases. You didn’t say a word about who you were.” She paused. Why? Eddie thought about it for a moment. the way someone thinks about a question that has an obvious answer they’ve never actually said out loud because none of that had anything to do with who I am.

He said the guitar needed fixing. The cases were in the wrong place and those kids needed someone to actually listen to them play. He zipped his jacket. I was just the guy in the room. He was gone before anyone thought to ask for an autograph. David Park went on to become one of the most distinctive session guitarists in Los Angeles.

Known specifically for his willingness to find the unexpected note inside a technically correct passage. He spoke about that afternoon at Berkeley for the rest of his career. [snorts] Gerald Witmore retired from Berkeley in 1997. In his final year, he introduced a new informal element to the examination process.

After each students formal assessment, a faculty member would ask them a single non-technical question about their relationship to the music. He never fully explained where the idea had come from. Patricia Howell kept the program from that afternoon’s examination in a frame on her office wall. Not because of who had been in the room, but because of what she’d written in the margin during David Park’s second performance.

The moment the wrong note became the right one. The Flying V stayed in the performance hall for another 3 years. Every technician who tuned it from that day forward checked the B-string tuning peg first. Nobody ever moved the cable cases to the wrong place