This guitar is 100% handmade with scalloped X bracing, Master Grade Claro walnut back and sides, Master Grade Western Red cedar top, genuine koa body, fingerboard and headstock binding, ebony fingerboard/bridge, bone nut/saddle and custom MO 18:1 tuners.
Appointments include an abalone fingerboard vine inlay, dual abalone rosette rings with hand-engraved abalone leaf inlay in ebony middle ring rosette, abalone front body purfling, back body purfling with center stripe, B/W/B fingerboard and headstock purfling, polished black ebony headplate with Mother of Pearl Magnum Opus script inlay and abalone torch.
After decades of playing guitars bearing the Washburn logo, Nuno Bettencourt has launched a line of instruments under his own name. But Nuno Guitars isn’t just about slapping a famous name on a headstock, and it’s not merely another signature line. The new venture is a hands-on operation that lets him oversee everything, from tonewood selection and hardware choices to the way each model is built and brought to market.
The brand is launching with three distinct ranges. At the top sits the Thoroughbred Series—Masterbuilt guitars hand-crafted by longtime N4 builder Chris Meade in his Cincinnati shop. This series consists of the Dark Horse and White Stallion models, featuring exotic wood combinations chosen by Bettencourt. “I wanted to switch it up,” Bettencourt says. “I didn’t want to just go, ‘Well, here’s a Washburn with the Nuno logo on the headstock.’” The Dark Horse boasts an alder body with a ziricote top, while the White Stallion has a three-piece avodire (white mahogany) body and a curly maple top. The ziricote caught his eye, he says, because it creates the illusion of a paint job while being entirely natural wood, with each guitar’s grain pattern being completely unique.
The Thoroughbred Series Masterbuilt White Stallion (l) features a three-piece avodire body and curly maple top, while the Masterbuilt Dark Horse boasts an alder body and ziricote top.
Katarina Benzova
Adding to the arresting visuals on the Dark Horse and White Stallion is the wood striping across the body. Inspired by the B.C. Rich Mockingbird Nuno’s older brother Luís owned growing up, these aren’t painted stripes, but rather actual contrasting woods, ebony and maple, inlaid into the instrument. On the Masterbuilt models, these stripes run completely through the body. “When I drew the design, I really connected with it because of what I remembered from my childhood,” Bettencourt says. “It felt like me, and it felt like a great way to go into this new era of guitars.”
The second range, the Stable Series, represents the U.S. production line built in Oxnard, California. This series offers the Dark Horse, White Stallion, and N4 models, all maintaining premium quality—alder bodies with wenge (Dark Horse) or swamp ash (White Stallion) tops, genuine Floyd Rose bridges, and the same U.S.-made Nuno signature pickups found in the Masterbuilts. The differentiator isn’t quality, but exotic versus traditional materials. “The Masterbuilt is like the Ferrari of the guitars,” Nuno says. “But still, you’ve gotta be able to jump into a Mercedes, and take that thing onstage and say, ‘I could play this all day.’ That’s the U.S.A. guitars.”
“I didn’t want to just go, ‘Well, here’s a Washburn with the Nuno logo on the headstock.’”
The Stable Series (l-r): Dark Horse, N4, and White Stallion
Katarina Benzova
The Colt Series rounds out the line as the import offering, manufactured in China. All three models—Dark Horse, White Stallion, and N4—are available in this series with woods including alder and swamp ash for the bodies and rock maple for the necks. While these guitars also use budget-friendly components—licensed Floyd Rose-style hardware rather than genuine Floyd units, Korean-made Nuno pickups—Bettencourt stresses that they are not mere entry-level instruments. “With the stuff that’s coming from overseas, everybody’s always like, ‘Yeah, those are beginner guitars, whatever.’ No. It was like, who are the best of the best [builders], where they can fool you into going, ‘Wait—this was made where?’”
All electric models feature the Extended Cutaway neck joint—a 5-bolt design that’s been Nuno’s signature for decades and provides exceptional upper-fret access—as well as Floyd Rose tremolo systems: Original Floyd Rose units on the Masterbuilts, genuine Floyd Rose bridges on the U.S. production models, and licensed Floyd Rose-style systems on the imports.
A point of interest is the fingerboard options, which include a flamed maple offering on the White Stallion—Nuno’s first maple board in many years. Limited signature runs with Washburn occasionally featured maple fretboards, and he famously played one in Extreme’s 1990 video for “Decadence Dance.” “That was an N3,” he recalls. “And stupidly, in the last shot in the video, I dove into water. You see me splashing around like an idiot.” He laughs: “I think I ruined the guitar, but then it got stolen, anyway.” Years later, just the body resurfaced at a Hard Rock Cafe in Asia—the neck was gone, but the shadow of the N3 sticker remained.
Bettencourt with the Dark Horse
Katarina Benzova
While all White Stallions feature flamed maple boards, the Dark Horse models and N4s stick with ebony fretboards. All models maintain the 25.5" scale length, 22 frets, and dot inlays that have been Nuno hallmarks. The necks themselves are birdseye maple on Masterbuilt models, hard maple on U.S. production guitars, and rock maple on imports.
Nuno’s classic N4 tone came from a Seymour Duncan ’59 in the neck paired with a Bill Lawrence L-500 in the bridge, and the new guitars feature custom Nuno signature humbuckers designed to capture that trademark sound. U.S.-made versions of these pickups appear in both Masterbuilt and U.S. production models, while Korean-made versions populate the import line. All models feature the same minimalist control layout Nuno has always preferred: one volume knob, a 3-way toggle, and no tone pot.
The N4 itself remains in the line, and since it was always Nuno’s design—and one that he controls—it has come over to Nuno Guitars virtually untouched. Notably, the N4 is the only model that features chrome hardware; the Dark Horse and White Stallion models all sport black hardware regardless of production level.
“I didn’t want anything super extravagant. I didn’t want a ton of guitars. I just wanted ‘mine.’”
Additionally, Nuno Guitars will offer an acoustic model—the Lusitano, which features a grand auditorium body with a solid spruce top and mahogany back and sides, with custom f-holes alongside a traditional soundhole. It’s fitted with a soundhole-mounted preamp and an under-saddle Piezo pickup system, chrome hardware, ebony fretboard, and 20 frets, with a 12th fret inlay of the Portuguese national emblem, a nod to Nuno’s heritage. “It’s full black, with white trim all around,” he says of the Lusitano. “We also do some different things with the neck, because I’ve always wanted an acoustic that plays more like an electric. Why wouldn’t you?”
Across all three electric series, and the acoustic, the quality approach remains consistent. From the Masterbuilts with their exotic woods and premium finishes to the U.S. models to the imports to the Lusitano, each guitar has its place. “I didn’t want anything super extravagant,” Nuno says. “I didn’t want a ton of guitars. I didn’t want a big line. I just wanted ‘mine.’”
Getting to that point wasn’t easy. “It was really hard for me to do this,” he admits. “The main reason was because of my name on the headstock. It felt really, really egotistical and self-serving.” But after a lifetime of playing, he realized it was time. And that means being involved in and fully committed to every aspect, from Chris Meade’s Cincinnati workshop to the factories in Oxnard and overseas. It’s the same philosophy he brings to the stage—the work ethic doesn’t change whether it’s a small club or a stadium, and it extends from his playing to the instruments themselves. “I’ve never done anything but be all in on everything,” Nuno says. “It’s either you’re that or you’re out. And when it comes to that passion for the instrument, I’m all in. That’s why I did this.”
PG contributor Tom Butwin demos the new Fishman Fluence Acoustic multivoice pickups, breaking down the nondestructive design, dual-voice control, and three distinct models built for everything from solo fingerstyle to full-band stages.
Fishman
FLUENCE ACOUSTIC: ROCK ICON
All eras of rock have leveraged the driving sound of an acoustic guitar for depth and counterpoint. The Rock Icon delivers punch and clarity, with a killer second voice that sits above the mix.
Voice 1: Solos and clean picking. Dynamic and forward.
Voice 2: Vintage-inspired, riff-centric voicing. This is the acoustic tone that created legends.
When all eyes are on you, the Spotlight is there to help you shine. Its two voices provide warmth and articulation, making it well-suited for the solo artist or small ensemble.
Voice 1: Sweet and mellow, perfect for vocal accompaniment and more intimate arrangements.
Voice 2: Articulate and clear for solos or breaks, whether picking or playing fingerstyle.
The Nashville Legend’s two voices provide you with ultimate versatility, ideal for flatpicking or fingerstyle whether performing on stages big or small.
Voice 1: Forward, clear, and articulate. A natural, well-balanced tone.
Voice 2: Up-front, percussive, round, and clear. Great for cutting through the mix.
To celebrate the late great Space Ace, we called up PG’s favorite Kiss fan, Chris Shiflett.
On at least one of your 100 Guitarists hosts’ favorite episode of Shred with Shifty, the Foo guitarist sat down with Ace to talk about his guitar playing on “Shock Me.” It’s a fun interview with lots of great anecdotes and killer vibes. But Shiflett has a lot more perspective on Ace, going way back to meeting the members of Kiss without their makeup as a kid.
Just Mustard performs at Dublin's 3Olympia Theatre.
Sean McMahon
All it takes is a minute or so of listening to Just Mustard’s music—a bewitching and unruly blend of fuzzy, guitar-driven post-punk and shoegaze-y noise rock—to make one thing abundantly clear: They’re not exactly aiming to challenge Taylor Swift for chart supremacy. “No, we’re not really interested in having pop singles,” says David Noonan, who, along with fellow guitarist Mete Kalyon, delights in creating cavernous, atmospheric walls of sound for the Irish quintet. “We’ve always been trying to make music that’s more avant-garde. I know it’s a cliché, but we like to push boundaries.”
He pauses for a second, then adds, “Which isn’t to say that we don’t want to be popular, because that would be great. We just want to do it our way.”
Just Mustard (which also includes singer Katie Ball, bassist Rob Clarke, and drummer Shane Maguire) have a doozy of an album with their new We Were Just Here, which builds on the strengths of its predecessors, 2018’s Wednesday and 2022’s Heart Under. Like those records, it’s an immersive sonic extravaganza, brimming with walloping, cavernous soundscapes and gnarly, twisted guitar lines that dart off in all kinds of directions. At the same time, it ventures into warmer, friendlier territory. Lead single “Pollyanna” is one of the band’s most cheerful efforts to date—Ball’s enchanting, ethereal vocals float though its feedback-laden textures—and the propulsive, synth-like title track has an irresistible early-’80s peppiness to it.
“It’s interesting—people have said that song reminds them of early New Order, which isn’t what we were going for,” Kalyon says. “I think when you try to make guitars sound like synths it actually works sometimes. But I never want to disguise the sound of the guitars entirely. I’d rather have people say, ‘Wow, that’s a cool guitar sound,’ not ‘Are you playing a synth there?’”
David Noonan
Ginger Dope
Unconventional as they may be in their guitar approaches, both Noonan and Kalyon came by their love of music by way of bands like the Beatles, Queen, and Led Zeppelin. “I wanted to be a saxophone player and a drummer at first, but they were too loud, so my parents got me a guitar,” Noonan says. His first guitar—a Squier Strat—practically became firewood when he discovered Nirvana. “The music was so exciting, and I thought that’s how you were supposed to play guitar, by throwing it around your bedroom and breaking things,” he says.
"I think when you try to make guitars sound like synths it actually works sometimes. But I never want to disguise the sound of the guitars entirely."—Mete Kalyon
It was also Nirvana that ignited the spark for Kalyon. “I used to listen to their greatest hits album, and that made me go, ‘All right, I need to learn how to play guitar,’” he says. “I got a crap guitar and played the hell out of it.” However, Kurt Cobain wasn’t the only Seattle guitarist who excited him: “I used to play loads of Jimi Hendrix’s stuff on guitar, but I can’t do it anymore,” he says.
Noonan laughs and says, “The first thing I remember about Mete was that he could play Hendrix’s ‘Little Wing.’ We were so impressed that he could break something like that out.”
Noonan met Kalyon in the college town of Dundalk, where he and pal Clarke, enthralled by electronica and groups like the Pixies and Sonic Youth, had moved in the hopes of starting a band. Hooking up with Ball put things in motion, but they soon realized they needed a second guitarist to fill out their sound. “It wasn’t quite an abduction, but I guessed they had heard that I played guitar and was into their kind of music,” Kalyon recalls. “I just remember David grabbing me off the street and saying, ‘Quick—you’re joining our band.’ It was quite shocking, really. Just like that, I was in.”
After a few jam sessions, it became apparent to both guitarists that their experimental approaches to sound complemented each other perfectly. “We grew up with traditional rock and blues, but we did away with that once we formed the band,” Noonan says. “The idea was to sound like electronica, but with guitars making all the noise.”
“The idea was to sound like electronica, but with guitars making all the noise.”—David Noonan
Over the course of their first two self-produced albums, the duo created abrasive sheets of pedal-driven textures—loud then soft, continuing the Nirvana template—with Noonan driving home sparky lead lines wherever they seemed to fit. But the two insist that there’s no dedicated “lead player” in the group. “We’re quite capable of swapping roles,” Kalyon says. “If I’m making one sound, David does the other, and vice versa.”
Noonan graduated to producer on We Were Just Here, and his basic approach involved recording the band live and then adding numerous guitar tracks—Noonan on a Fender Jaguar, Kalyon on a Fender Telecaster—to heighten the overall impact. “Silver” is an unnerving yet wondrous full-frontal assault on which Noonan piles tracks of pitch-shifting noise, enhanced by a Hologram Effects Dream Sequence. He and Kalyon ratchet up the chaos on “Endless Death”—its engulfing sonic boom is spiked with jagged melody lines that seem to escape at random times, shrieking and sputtering from all ends of the frequency range.
Mete Kalyon
James Streiker
“We kind of came at that one with everything we had,” Noonan says. “There was a lot of tinkering that went into that song, and now we have to figure out how to play it live.”
The matter of transferring their new material to the stage is a task that the band is now pondering, and Noonan admits that it’s going to be a harder nut to crack than before. “On some level, we just have to do what feels right at the moment, which is what we’ve always done,” he says. “Here’s a guitar melody that sounds right, but then you’ve got to slip back into the sonic happening and play something that’s not necessarily a lead part.”
He continues, “When we’re in the studio, there’s a lot of constructing bits that can make everything sound overproduced, but we don’t want to get to the level with some bands where you go to see them live and they have to have backing tracks or add these session musicians who go on tour with them. When you come see us, we want you to experience what you’re hearing on the record, which is us playing everything.”
The Electro-Harmonix story is long and complex with more untold stories beneath the surface than most could imagine. Part of that untold story is all of the pedal ideas that never got made for one reason or another. EHX aficionados Josh Scott and Daniel Danger had been digging through all of the EHX’s history when they came upon an old schematic at the home of original Big Muff Pi designer, Bob Myer. Initially passed over by EHX Founder, Mike Matthews, for what would become the Op-Amp Big Muff Pi back in the late 70’s, this schematic serves as a window into that untold story of forgotten pedals, so Josh went to work to bring this circuit to life in collaboration with Electro-Harmonix. The result, a Dual Op-Amp fuzz that’s very much Big Muff with its own character dubbed the Big Muff Pi 2.
The Big Muff Pi 2 is a slight detour from the usual Big Muff tone. Slightly lower gain, slightly less refined edges with a unique feel, but with the signature sustain and full-bodied BMP tone known and loved by countless players. Housed in EHX’s Nano-sized chassis in a vibrant refinish with graphics by Daniel Danger, the pedal features the familiar SUSTAIN, TONE, and VOL controls. SUSTAIN controls the amount of distortion from heavy crunch to full speaker pounding saturation. The TONE knob is a classic BMP-style tone control, boosting treble and cutting bass as it’s turned up, from wooly to searing. VOL adjusts the overall output of the effects.
This lost piece of the pi ships a 9 Volt battery (power supply optional), is available now and has a U.S. Street Price of $122.00.