“These recordings were going to be the next Van Halen record.” Alex Van Halen on the new Van Halen album and Steve Lukather’s role in it
The album project was revealed in March 2025, and Alex says they’re now looking for a vocalist
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Alex Van Halen says the Van Halen album he’s working on with Toto’s Steve Lukather was intended to be a follow-up to 2012’s A Different Kind of Truth, and that the pair are now looking for a vocalist.
It’s just shy of a year since Dutch newspaper, De Telegraaf, reported that the drummer and brother of late virtuoso Eddie Van Halen had sought Lukather’s help to turn unfinished demos into a Van Halen album. That followed claims by former bass player Michael Anthony that there was a treasure trove of unheard Van Halen material, leading many to believe that it was the pool of riffs that the pair would be working with.
Following De Telegraaf’s article, Lukather promptly clarified his role in the project, saying, “I will not ever play a note on a Van Halen song.” Given Lukather’s long-standing friendship with Eddie Van Halen, Alex hints that he was drafted as director rather than lead man.
Now, speaking to Brazilian outlet, Kazagastão (via Blabbermouth), he's offered the deepest insight into the project’s context yet.
“These are recordings that were going to be the next [Van Halen] record,” Alex states, noting that the process was halted following Eddie’s passing in 2020. “The drums are already recorded. The drums, the guitar, and the bass are already in there. What we didn’t have was a vocalist.”
It isn’t known if Eddie’s son, Wolfgang, is on the record, or if Ed himself played bass on the track. Either way, the album is one step closer to completion. Whoever is chosen as vocalist would become the band’s fourth singer after David Lee Roth, Sammy Hagar and Gary Cherone.
Roth had returned to the band for their 12th LP. Still, Sammy Hagar has taken the mantle following Eddie’s death, with Roth reportedly refusing to acknowledge Ed’s legacy during a mooted tribute tour.
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As such, Hagar has turned to Joe Satriani for the Best of All Worlds Van Halen tribute shows, and released a song he claims features “beyond the grave” contributions from Eddie.
“Ed and I had a lot of stuff that we made [and] never let go,” Alex Van Halen continues. “Many people have asked, what about releasing unreleased stuff? Well, we're not gonna release it in its embryonic form because it wouldn’t make any sense.
“I’ve been fortunate enough to have Steve Lukather, but it has to be of the quality and the level of where we left it. Steve is the connective tissue. I can’t play guitar — I can work things out on a keyboard, but it takes me too long to figure it out. By that time, the moment is gone.
“Steve knows where to put the solo. I have my opinions, and he has his, and they are just opinions. So he can facilitate things that would've taken me 10 times as long.”
In 2024, Alex shared the previously unheard song “Unfinished,” currently the only posthumous Eddie Van Halen material that has been released.
A freelance writer with a penchant for music that gets weird, Phil is a regular contributor to Prog, Guitar World, and Total Guitar magazines and is especially keen on shining a light on unknown artists. Outside of the journalism realm, you can find him writing angular riffs in progressive metal band, Prognosis, in which he slings an 8-string Strandberg Boden Original, churning that low string through a variety of tunings. He's also a published author and is currently penning his debut novel which chucks fantasy, mythology and humanity into a great big melting pot.

