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GALLERY: Riot Fest 2016

See what guitars and basses the punks, metalheads, and hardcore rockers used during the Windy City’s other 3-day festival.

Holy White Hounds’ Brenton Dean

The band’s frontman did some heavy reworking of his main axe—a Fender Jazzmaster—as he gutted the electronics from his older DeArmond M-75T, hence the tailpiece having a ‘D’ on it, and dropped in a set of TV Jones Super’Trons.

Here’s how 21 killer players from the past year of Rig Rundowns—including Justin Chancellor, Zakk Wylde, MonoNeon, Carmen Vandenberg, Sturgill Simpson, Jason Isbell, and Grace Bowers—use stomps to take their sounds outside the box.


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Light and very comfortable to play. Creative tonal options. Excellent hardware.

P-90s may be too hot or bright for some. Middle pickup not as articulate as expected—and surprisingly difficult to activate on the fly.

$1,229

Vola Guitars JZ FRO
volaguitars.com

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4.5

Pro hardware, unusual circuit tweaks, and killer playability lend new twists to the P-90 solidbody template.

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There’s no disputing the influence B.B. King has had on the history of electric guitar music. We’re talking about his sound, his best records, his guitars, his showmanship, and his collabs, from an all-star jam at the 2010 Crossroads festival to, yes, even his 1988 U2 collab, “When Love Comes to Town.”


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Tighten up your rhythm playing by focusing on how to get a great sound, balancing your wrist and elbow, and understanding how to subdivide rhythms.

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