Frisell divulges the inner workings of this album, clues us in as to how he manages to juggle so many intense projects simultaneously, and tells us about the 16-second delay that got away.
For many of us, 6:50 a.m. on a Monday morning would probably be the last choice of times to schedule an interview. But for Grammy-winning guitarist and composer Bill Frisell, this criminally early time was his only opening in the midst of a whirlwind tour, so we jumped at the opportunity to chat while he was waiting to board a plane at Los Angeles International Airport.
As one of the most sought-after guitarists in a wide variety of styles, demand spreads him so thin he literally doesnāt have a second to spare. To give an idea, in a five-week span around the time of our interview, he debuted and conducted a score based on Allen Ginsbergās Kaddish (commissioned by and performed at the Park Avenue Armory in New York City), then flew out to Oregon the next day to lead three group projectsāa quartet performing the music of Jimmy Bryant and Speedy West, a quintet performing the music of John Lennon, and his 858 Quartet, which is most often set up as a string quartet, but with guitar replacing one of the two violins. He performed a solo concert over a twoevening run at the Portland Jazz Festival, and then a few days later headed to Japan to do concerts with Vinicius CantuĆ”ria. He returned to the States to tour the West Coast with his Beautiful Dreamers group (headlining a night at the L.A. Philharmonic), and then jumped over to the East Coast with folk singer Sam Amidon, while hitting points in between as a guest with the Dale Bruning Trio and performing music heād cowritten for the 2012 film The Great Flood. In just over a monthās span, heād taken on enough musical personalities to make Sybil the poster child for normalcy.
While Frisell is most often classified as a jazz guitarist, thereās no question that heās infinitely more forward thinking than the many jazzers who focus on improvising over standards armed solely with a Gibson ES-175 and a Polytone amp. Sure, Frisell can fulfill his jazzbo duties by navigating the hardest of chord changes with the best of them, as heās done on āMomentās Noticeā with none other than McCoy Tyner, and when tearing through John Coltraneās ā26-2ā with his 858 Quartet. But he unapologetically incorporates disparate influences like Americana, country, avant-garde, and contemporary classical into his music, and has no inhibitions about whipping out a looper, distortion pedal, or a sound freezer. In addition to working with a āwhoās whoā of musicians across virtually all stylesā Bonnie Raitt, Elvis Costello, John Zorn, Elvin Jones, and Ron Carter, among many othersāheās scored films, including Finding Forrester and American Hollow, and had his music featured on several TV shows.
Frisell started out on the clarinet but picked up the guitar after being inspired by the pop music heād heard on the radio. He attended Berklee College of Music during the ā70s, which was a particularly fertile time in the schoolās history. During this decade, Mike Stern (who met his wife Leni through Frisell) and John Scofield were also students at Berklee, and Pat Metheny was on the faculty. By the ā80s, all four guitarists were becoming jazz icons by ushering in the era of modern jazz guitarāreshaping the sound of jazz by breaking certain taboos that crippled the genreās continued viability in the changing musical landscape. They took a page from the Miles Davis playbook and incorporated influences like pop and rock, among other styles, and made it okay to use effects.
What notably differentiates Frisell from his jazz peers is that heās been exalted to royalty not based on virtuosic ability but, rather, on his pioneering sonic vision. Frisellās ethereal sound is instantly recognizable, and though youāll hear tons of musicians who are obviously influenced by him, youāll rarely hear them parroting his licks. Frisellās style is more about individuality, conception, and politely giving the middle finger to the stylistic rulebook.
One of Frisellās recent convention-defying ventures is Floratone, a collaborative ensemble project that takes a recorded improvisation andāwith time and a lot of studio-generated revisionsāmorphs it into something unusual and unexpected. The sessions start with Frisell and drummer Matt Chamberlain just letting tape roll as they freely improvise. These master tapes are then put in the hands of producers Lee Townsend and Tucker Martine, who rummage through the files to dissect choice parts for compositional repurposing.
This studio reconstruction is somewhat reminiscent of Teo Maceroās work on Miles Davisā In a Silent Way and Bitches Brew, two albums that had a profound impact on the budding guitarist. āThose records are gigantic inspirations,ā says Frisell. āFor me, it was sort of like The Beatles, as far as being huge and basically changing my life.ā Floratoneās self-titled debut was released several years ago and received critical acclaim. The collaborative recently released the follow-up, Floratone II, which also features appearances by industry legends Jon Brion and Mike Elizondo.
In this interview, Frisell divulges the inner workings of this album, clues us in as to how he manages to juggle so many intense projects simultaneously, and tells us about the 16-second delay that got away.
Floratone really blurs the line
between improvisation and composition.
Can you explain the bandās
unique writing process?
Of all the things Iāve done, Floratone is
definitely the most studio-involved. Most
of my own music is more of a documentation
of a band or some composition
that I write, and it sort of captures whatever
happens in a particular couple of
days. The germ or the seed of Floratone
comes from this wide-open improvising
with Matt Chamberlain and myselfāitās
a completely spontaneous thing. Weād go
in the studio for a day or two, and put
hours of stuff on tape, and then just leave
Tucker Martine and Lee Townsend with
this big mess of stuff. We give them the
tapes and let them go wherever they want
to, and itās wild to hear what comes back.
Did you edit the tapes before presenting
the music to them?
They just take the whole thing. So much
of the responsibility is up to Lee and
Tucker to figure out a way to get it all into
a manageable one hour of music. Itās kind
of a luxury. If it were my own record, then
I would be sweating over every little second
of it and worrying about this and that.
Floratone II happened over an even longer
period than Floratone.
This approach must involve an extremely
high level of trust from all parties involved.
All of these people are super close-and-trusted
friends Iāve worked with a lot. Lee, Iāve done
about 30 albums with. I havenāt done that
many with Tucker, but weāve known each
other for around 25 years. Floratone is like a
band, but for those guys, their instrument is
the studio. This is a way to let them go full
tilt into what they do. At the same time, Iām
going full tilt into what Matt and I do.
Did you try to steer the Floratone II sessions
into a different direction than Floratone?
I didnāt. Lee and Tucker were the ones
that made those decisions about what was
going to be on it, so much of the direction
is really pointed by what they chose.
Iām not sure; I guess Iād have to ask them
if they actually consciously thought about
trying to make it different.
Did you or Matt present any guidelines
like tempo, key, or feel to each other
before starting a jam?
There was no discussion at all, which was
great. It was like, bam, and we just start
playing. There was no stress or anything
and it was really fun. Matt is like an idea
machineāevery second something amazing
would come out of him.
Youāre also involved in the process again
later, right? You compose string and horn
parts to be layered, and you and Matt
also add more guitars and drums.
It happens in all these layers. It starts with
just improvising, then editing, and then we
go back and start adding more guitars and
drums. I wrote those string and horn parts
and then they went to L.A. I wasnāt there
for that either. That was weird, too, because
I think the last thing I did was write those
melodies. After we recorded that, Matt put
on some more drums and they did some
more editing. They went to L.A. and Jon
Brion put some stuff on and Mike Elizondo
put bass on. And then they mixed the
whole thing and I didnāt hear it until it was
completely finished. It was kind of far out.
It must be a trip to hear the final product.
I wonāt even remember what we played and
then a couple months later weāll get together
and theyāll have this thing whittled down to
an hourās worth of music. I think at one point,
even a year went by without me hearing anything.
It was like, āWow, where did all that
come from? I donāt even remember playing it.ā
When you heard the final outcome, at
any point, did you think to yourself,
āThatās not what I had in mind at all?ā
No. I didnāt have any preconceptions about
what I wanted it to be. I just hoped that it
would be cool. It was really fun and surprising
when I would hear it after all that time.
So when you were improvising, you
didnāt have any specific harmonic frameworks
in mind that you expected them
to later work with?
No, not really. There are certain things
that happen maybe a little bit later in the
writing process where there are harmonies
that were more intentional. But absolutely
nothing was figured out beforehand. I
didnāt think, āOh, Iām going to play this
chord progression or that.ā There was
really no thought.
Considering your jazz background,
where mastery of harmony is a requisite,
and the fact that youāre still currently
playing difficult, chord-changeintensive
Coltrane tunes like ā26-2ā and
āMomentās Notice,ā you probably canāt
un-know what you know. How are you
able to let go of your harmonic awareness
and just play freely?
I think that having played those kinds of
tunes definitely has a huge impact on what
my instincts are aboutāIām not thinking
that way but I know it. Itās not a conscious
thing. No matter how abstract I get or
whether Iām thinking about chords or not,
having had the experience of playing that
kind of harmony definitely had an effect
on me. Thatās why I keep playing that
song ā26-2,ā to get it to the point where
itās so deeply ingrained that it feels the
same as if Iām just completely spontaneously
making stuff up.
This brings to mind Mike Stern. I played āGiant Stepsā thousands and thousands and thousands of times, over and over again with himājust the two of us. We would practice that tune or āMomentās Notice.ā He definitely took it to an incredibly deep level of understanding. I did a lot of that stuff with him and it was an amazing time.
The multiple layers on the tracks are like
a jigsaw puzzle and itās fun trying to figure
out which part came first. For example,
in āParade,ā thereās a short guitar
solo. It starts off with the same two notes
the ensemble plays earlier in a repeating
two-note descending minor-third figure,
just in a slower rhythm.
Iām not positive. Iām trying to remember. I
played some guitar when we recorded the
horns. But it also could have easily been
something that was there in the track that I
was reacting to when I wrote the horn part.
A Frisell fan might hear a track like
āDo You Have It?,ā which on the surface
just sounds like a layered groove,
and not āget itā until he understands
the compositional process behind it. I
hope this doesnāt come off the wrong
way, but is an awareness of the compositional
process integral to having
an appreciation of some of the tracks
on Floratone II? How would āDo You
Have It?ā hold up as a piece on its own
compared to your other works, if you
removed the compositional process
from the equation?
Wow ⦠only time will tell. I have no
idea. I guess the hope is that in the end,
itās just going to be music. Itās more about
the whole overall sound of the thing than
solos. Hopefully you donāt have to understand
where it comes from. Hopefully itās
going to be good to listen to.
You typically juggle a mind-boggling
number of high-intensity projects
simultaneously. How do you keep it all
straight in your head?
The music itself is never a problem. Itās all
kind of swimming around in my head all
the time almost simultaneously. So when
Iām right there with the people Iām with,
itās never a problem. If Iām really playing
itās all coming from the same place. As
soon as Iām in the music, the music takes
over and everything is cool. Where I really
get stressed out is just preparing for when
I go out on these trips and Iām gonna
have five different things that I know I have
to deal with when I get to wherever Iām
going. Itās more about just remembering all I
have to bring with me.
Jazz musicians tend to be pretty conservative
and true innovation is often met with
resistance. How did you find the courage
to pursue your own voice in what could
sometimes be a hostile climate?
Iāve been real stubborn about trying to do
my own thing, but at the same time I realize
itās kind of a fragile thing. Weāre all trying
to find our own way. Every once in a while
I guess Iād come up against some resistance
or something, but I think Iāve been super
lucky. Right at a crucial moment thereās
always someone there who encourages
me rather than discourages me. Iāve been
discouraged a few times, but more often
somebody will say, āYeah man, you sound
great.ā Playing with somebody like Paul
Motian was a huge thing for me as far as the
confidence in doing my own thing. Really,
it started with my parents, who were cool
about me wanting to play music, or thinking
back to when I was playing with Mike
Stern all the time. If these people hadnāt
come along right at a particular moment,
the story could be completely different.
Stern, Pat Metheny, and John Scofield
also attended Berklee College of Music,
and all four of you later became instrumental
in moving jazz guitar forward.
Were you all there at the same time?
Mike Stern wasnāt even really in school
anymore, but he was around town when he
wasnāt out with Blood, Sweat and Tears. Pat
was no longer teaching at Berklee when I
got there in the spring of ā75, but he was still
living in Cambridge and playing with Gary
Burton along with Mick Goodrick. He did
gigs at little places like Zircon and Pooās Pub
with Bob Moses and Jaco Pastorius. Scofield
had already left town just before I got there.
I actually didnāt meet him until I moved to
New York in ā79 or ā80 but everybody was
talking about him. Thereās a quartet record
with him and Terumasa Hino, Tony Williams,
and Ron Carter thatās just incredible.
Another way that youāve carved your own
path is with your equipment. While the
hollowbody is still the de facto jazz guitar,
youāve used an SG and even headless
guitars at one point. Speaking of which,
are you still using the Klein guitar?
No, I havenāt used that for a long time. I sent
it back to get repaired years ago and it went
away from me for quite a long time, so during
that time I started getting back to mostly
Fender stuff. Iāve been playing Telecasters
a lotādifferent versions of itāand most
recently Iāve also been playing Stratocasters.
Mexican- or American-made Fenders?
A bunch of them. I had a Mexican-made
Thinline Tele. I changed all the parts on it
and everything.
What swaps did you make?
Oh man, Iāve definitely gone off the deep
end. Getting into Telecasters you start
thinking, āWhat does this pickup sound
like and what does that pickup sound
like?ā I have Lollar, Don Mare, Lindy
Fralin, and Seymour Duncan pickupsāthe
Antiquity model. I also use a Tom [TV]
Jones FilterāTron pickup in the neck position
of a Nash Tele-style guitar. Whatās
kind of seductive is that itās all still this
basic Telecaster and I can get comfortable
with the scale, size, and shape of the guitar
to where it feels at home, but from one to
anotherāputting certain pickups in certain
guitarsāthere are amazing differences.
Any other guitars?
I also have a few Tele-style guitars that are
put together or modified by J.W. Black.
He also recently made me a Strat-style
guitar that is very similar to my original
ā63 Strat, which I played a lot, along with
a Yanuziello guitar, on All We Are Saying. I
also have a Rick Kelly Tele-style made out
of pine from a piece of wood taken from
Jim Jarmuschās old loft on the Bowery. Itās
got Lollar Charlie Christian pickups, and
I used that one on a lot of thingsāSign
of Life, The Windmills of Your Mind. I Just
got a Collings I35-LC, which is an incredible
guitar.
Your use of effects also opened the floodgates
for many jazz-based guitarists. First
off, letās talk dirt pedals. Are you still
using the Pro Co Rat?
Sometimes Iāll use the Rat. Mostly though,
itās an Ibanez Tube Screamer, and I also use a
Fuzz-Stang pedal, which is made in Portland.
Bill Frisell's Gear
Guitars
Fender Telecasters,
Fender Stratocasters, Fender
Jaguar, Fender Jazzmaster, J.W.
Black T-style and S-style guitars,
Yanuziello, Rick Kelly T-style
guitar, Collings I35-LC, Nash Tstyle,
Gibson ES-125, Collings D1,
Gibson LG-2, Andersen Concert
Model flattop, Andersen Custom
17 archtop, Andersen Little Archie
Amps
Fender blackface Princeton,
Gibson Explorer 1x10, Carr
Sportsman, Jack Anderson
Effects
Line 6 DL4, TC Electronic
Hall of Fame, Ibanez Tube
Screamer, Pro Co Rat, Electro-
Harmonix Freeze, WrightSounds
Fuzz-Stang, Voodoo Lab Pedal
Power 2
Strings, Picks, and Accessories
DāAddario .011s
(sometimes .010s), Dunlop medium
(green), George Lās cables
What are you using now for that characteristic
shimmery sound?
I use the Line 6 DL4 a lot. I also have a TC
Electronic Hall of Fame reverb.
Does the Hall of Fame replace your
Lexicon MPX 100 rackmount?
Yeah, it started making noise and stuff.
This little thing is kind of amazing. Iām just
carrying all my stuff aroundāI donāt have
roadiesāso itās good if itās small.
Do you still have that Electro-Harmonix
16-second delay?
I wish. Thatās one of the most amazing pedals.
I actually have two of them, but they
donāt work.
Have you tried the reissue that came out
a few years ago?
Itās totally not the same thing. A couple of
months ago I was in a store in New York
City and they had an original one in perfect
condition. I started messing with it againā
I hadnāt used one for a long timeāand it
brought back memories like, āOh man.ā
Did you buy it?
No, I just got scared. It was $1,300. So, I
actually have to board the plane now.
Youtube It
A glimpse of Bill Frisellās 858 Quartet playing
a wicked rendition of John
Coltraneās brain-busting ā26-2.ā
Frisell accompanies Elvis Costello on
āIf I Only had a Brain,ā a song popularized
by The Wizard of Oz.
Frisell and jazz giant Jim Hall play
a duo version of Frisellās hauntingly
beautiful ballad āThroughoutā at the 1995
Umbria Jazz Festival.
Grez Guitars has introduced the Grez GrandTour Bass, a short scale semi-hollow carve-top instrument available in 4-string format.
The Grez Grand Tour Bass, designed in collaboration with bass powerhouse Ian MartinAllison is, like all Grez instruments, a modern sleek interpretation of the classic instruments from the 50ās and 60ās.
The instruments feature a carved Spruce top, Honduran Mahogany body and neck. The 30" scale construction includes a Macassar ebony fretboard, 12ā radius with 21 jumbofrets. Each bass comes equipped with a Halon bridge, Grez string anchor and LaBellaDeep Talkinā long scale 45-105 flatwound strings. Electronics include Curtis Novak Bisonic/Darkstar pickups with coil tap.
The Grand Tour bass features a nitro finish and is available in a variety of colors(pictured here in custom Toasted Marshmallow).
Grez Grand Tour Bass with Ian Martin Allison
Barry Grzebik explains: āI love process of design instruments, marrying acoustical,electrical, visual and ergonomic engineering with industrial and artistic design. In this case creating something that artfully balances the desire for a robust acoustic voice with the need to hold up to professional touring and stadium stage volumes. One small notable detail is that although this is a short scale instrument, because of the after-length of string past the bridge, it uses standard long scale strings which dramatically increases sting options and availability.ā
Ian Marin Allison shares, āIām inspired by the unique character of vintage hollow andsemi-hollow basses, but they donāt always live up to our modern expectation of stability, playability, versatility and QUALITY. Iām proud to have helped create something that doesā.
The Grez Grand Tour Bass, is available now from Grez Guitars and their dealers with astreet price starting at $5,999. Light customization is welcome with delivery times aslittle as 8 weeks.
New RAT Sound Solution Offers a Refined Evolution of Distortion
ACT Entertainment ās iconic RAT brand has unveiledthe Sterling Vermin, a boutique distortion guitar pedal that blends heritage tone with modernrefinement. With a new take on RATās unmistakable sound, Sterling Vermin delivers a new levelof precision and versatility.
āThe Sterling Vermin was born from a desire for something different ā something refined, withthe soul of a traditional RAT pedal, but with a voice all its own,ā says Shawn Wells, MarketManagerāSound, ACT Entertainment, who designed the pedal along with his colleague MattGates. āBuilt in small batches and hand-soldered in ACTās Jackson, Missouri headquarters, theSterling Vermin is a work of pure beauty that honors the brand legacy while taking a bold stepforward for creativity.ā
The Sterling Vermin features the LM741 Op-Amp and a pair of selectable clipping diodes.Players can toggle between the traditional RAT silicon diode configuration for a punchy, mid-range bite, or the BAT41 option for a smoother, more balanced response. The result is a pedalthatās equally at home delivering snarling distortion or articulate, low-gain overdrive, with a wide,usable tonal range throughout the entire gain spectrum.
The pedal also features CTS pots and oversized knobs for even, responsive control that affordsa satisfying smoothness to the rotation, with just the right amount of tension. Additionally, thepolished stainless-steel enclosure with laser-annealed graphics showcases the merging of thepedalās vintage flavor and striking design.
āFrom low-gain tones reminiscent of a Klon or Bluesbreaker, to high-gain settings that flirt withBig Muff territory ā yet stay tight and controlled ā the Sterling Vermin is a masterclass indynamic distortion,ā says Gates, an ACT Entertainment Sales Representative. āWith premiumcomponents, deliberate design and a focus on feel, the Sterling Vermin is more than a pedal, itāsa new chapter for RAT.ā
The RAT Sterling Vermin is available immediately and retails for $349 USD. For moreinformation about this solution, visit: actentertainment.com/rat-distortion .
The Miku was introduced about 10 years ago and is based on the vocal stylings of Hatsune Miku, a virtual pop icon. But it does much more than artificial vowels and high-pitched words.
Itās tempting to think of this pedal as a joke. Donāt.
It all started a few years ago through a trade with a friend. I just wanted to help him outāhe really wanted to get a fuzz pedal but didnāt have enough cash, so he offered up the Korg Miku. I had no idea then, but it turned out to be the best trade Iāve ever made.
Hereās the truth: the Korg Miku is not your typical guitar pedal. It wonāt boost your mids, sculpt your gain, or serve up that warm, buttery overdrive youāve always worshipped. Nope. This little box does something entirely different: It sings! Yes, sings in a Japanese kawaii accent thatās based on the signature voice of virtual pop icon Hatsune Miku.
At first glance, itās tempting to dismiss this pedal as just a gimmickāa joke, a collectorās oddity, the kind of thing you buy for fun and then forget next to your Hello Kitty Strat. But hereās the twist: Some take it seriously and Iām one of those people.
I play in a punk band called Cakrux, and lately Iāve been working with a member of a Japanese idol-style girl groupāyeah, itās exactly the kind of wild mashup youād ever imagine. Somewhere in the middle of that chaos, the Miku found its way into my setup, and weirdly enough, it stuck. Itās quirky, beautiful, occasionally maddening, and somehow ⦠just right. After plenty of time spent in rehearsals, studio takes, and more sonic experiments than I care to admit, Iāve come to appreciate this pedal in unexpected ways. So here are a few things you probably didnāt know about this delightfully strange little box.
Itās Not Organicāand Thatās OK
Most guitar pedals are chasing something real. Wah pedals mimic the human voiceāor even a trumpet. Tube Screamers? Theyāre built to recreate the warm push of an overdriven tube amp. Cab sims aim to replicate the tone of real-world speaker setups. But the Miku? It breaks the mold. Instead of emulating reality, it channels the voice of a fictional pop icon. Hatsune Miku isnāt a personāsheās a vocaloid, a fully digital creation made of samples and synthesis. The Miku doesnāt try to sound organic, it tries to sound like her. In that sense, it might be the only pedal trying to reproduce something that never existed in the physical world. And honestly, thereās something oddly poetic about that.
A World-Class Buffer
Hereās a fun fact: I once saw a big-name Indonesian session guitaristāyou know, the kind who plays in sold-out arenasāwith a Miku pedal on his board. I was like, āNo way this guyās busting out vocaloid lines mid-solo.ā Plot twist: He only uses it for the buffer. Yep, the man swears by it and says itās the best-sounding buffer heās ever plugged into. I laughed ⦠until I tried it. And honestly? Heās not wrong. Even if you never hear Miku sing a note, this pedal still deserves a spot on your board. Just for the tone mojo alone. Wild, right?
āThe Miku is one of those pedals that really shouldnāt work for your music, but somehow, it just does.ā
Impossible to Tame
Most pedals are built to make your life easier. The Miku? Not so much. This thing demands patienceāand maybe a little spiritual surrender. First off, the tracking can be finicky, especially if youāre using low-output pickups. Latency becomes really noticeable and your picking dynamics suddenly matter a lot more. Then thereās the golden rule I learned the hard way. Neverāeverāput anything before the Miku. No fuzz, no wah, no compressor, not even a buffer! It gets confused instantly and says āWhat is going on here?ā And donāt even think about punching in while recording. The vocal results are so unpredictable, youāll never get the same sound twice. Mess up halfway? Youāre starting from scratch. Same setup, same take, same chaotic energy. Itās like trying to recreate a fever dream. Good luck with that.
Full Range = Full Power
Sure, itās made for guitar, but the Miku really comes to life when you run it through a keyboard amp, bass cab, or even a full-range speaker. Why? Because her voice covers way more frequency range than a regular guitar speaker can handle. Plug it into a PA system or a bass rig, and everything sounds clearer, richer, way more expressive. Itās like letting Hatsune Miku out of her cage.
The Miku is one of those pedals that really shouldn't work for your music, but somehow, it just does. Is it the best pedal out there? Nah. Is it practical? Not by a long shot. But every time I plug it in, I canāt help but smile. Itās unpredictable, a little wild, and it feels like youāre jamming in the middle of a bizarre Isekai anime scene. And honestly, thatās what makes it fun.
This thing used to go for less than $100. Now? Itās fetching many times that. Is it worth the price? Thatās up to you. But for me, the Korg Miku isnāt just another pedalāitās a strange, delightful journey Iām glad I didnāt skip. No regrets here.
Two guitars, two amps, and two people is all it takes to bring the noise.
The day before they played the coveted Blue Room at Third Man Records in Nashville, the Washington, D.C.-based garage-punk duo Teen Mortgage released their debut record, Devil Ultrasonic Dream. Not a bad couple of days for a young band.
PGās Chris Kies caught up with guitarist and vocalist James Guile at the Blue Room to find out how he builds the bandās bombastic guitar attack.
Brought to you by DāAddario.
Devilish Dunable
Guile has been known to use Telecasters and Gretsches in the past, but this time out heās sticking with this Dunable Cyclops DE, courtesy of Gwarsenio Hallāaka Jordan Olds of metal-themed comedy talk show Two Minutes to Late Night. Guile digs the Dunableās lightness on his shoulders, and its balance of high and low frequencies.
Storm Warning
What does Guile like about this Squier Cyclone? Simple: its color. This one is also nice and easy on the back, and Guile picked it up from Atomic Music in Beltsville, Maryland.
Crushing It
Guile also scooped this Music Man 410-HD from Atomic, which he got just for this tour for a pretty sweet deal. It runs alongside an Orange Crush Bass 100 to rumble out the low end.
James Guileās Pedalboard
The Electro-Harmonix Micro POG and Hiwatt Filter Fuzz MkII run to the Orange, while everything elseāa DigiTech Whammy, Pro Co Lilā RAT, and Death by Audio Echo Dream 2āruns to the Music Man. A TC Helicon Mic Mechanic is on board for vocal assistance, and a TC Electronic PolyTune 3, Morley ABY, and Voodoo Labs Pedal Power 3 Plus keep the ship afloat.