Re: What pickups did Vinnie Moore use on Mind's Eye?
It all started when i discovered Yngwie in a Guitar World about three years ago and I've been on a shred craze ever since. Last week I got a $50 gift card(graduation present) to Tower Records and bought Mind's Eye and Edge of insanity. I trying to figure out why people hate Shrapnel artists:eek13: .
Ahhhh, there is hope for the youth of today!

Feels good every time I hear this. EDIT: Errrrr, I guess I should have said Ahhhh, the youth of 11 years ago!!!
I was a little younger than you in the late '80s when I started playing, and metal/shred was everywhere. The insanity probably peaked around '91, then a little fellow named Kurt Cobain appeared in '92 and slaughtered the entire metal genre almost overnight!

I liked some of the better "alternative" bands, but wasn't sad to see them plummet into the abyss only ~6 years later under the weight of their own bloated pretense. Where are those former "A-level" MTV alternabands now??!!
The thing I resented most was the uppity Alterna-wankers who declared that it was no longer "cool" to play guitar solos, or even know how to play, or take a shower. Those fools looked very silly a few years later when it became obvious to everyone they had run out of ideas and were already getting long in the tooth. There was nothing else captivating about their "art", so they themselves disappeared almost overnight. Then the likes of the Boy Bands and the Wappers followed in their wake, for an even darker era of horror until metal was finally reborn.
Much of the '90s were dark times to be a technical player indeed. And an absolutely wretched era for the formerly great metal bands of the '80s. I never wavered in what I liked (you could buy metal gear CHEEEEP!!), although I did expand into other ideas at that time. In the end, I always come back to my first love, which is '70s/80s influenced hard rock/metal. Rock has always been about excess, and some people got carried with it and forgot about being "musicians", but man the best stuff was fun, and still is fun and still alive. Carry on!
You should check out Al di Meola. He came around starting in the '70s and influenced the likes of Yngwie and others. Al is my favorite steel string acoustic player. He can hold his own with anyone!
And before he was a forgetful elderly reality star and who picks up dog poop on camera, Ozzy was a killer in the '80s. Get all of his albums with Randy Rhoads and Jake E. Lee, which were recorded in his prime.