Premier Guitar features affiliate links to help support our content. We may earn a commission on any affiliated purchases.

Railhammer Reveals New Billy Corgan Z-One Pickups

Railhammer Reveals New Billy Corgan Z-One Pickups

Sporting custom artwork etched onto the covers, the Railhammer Billy Corgan Z-One Humcutters are designed to offer a fat midrange and a smooth top end.


Billy Corgan was looking for something for heavier Smashing Pumpkins songs, so Joe Naylor designed the Railhammer Billy Corgan Z-One pickup. Sporting custom artwork etched onto the covers, the Railhammer Billy Corgan Z-One Humcutters have a fat midrange and a smooth top end. This pickup combines the drive and sustain of a humbucker with the percussive attack and string clarity of a P90. Get beefy P90 tone plus amp-pummeling output with the Railhammer Billy Corgan Z-One.

Patented Railhammer Pickups take passive guitar pickups to a new level with rails under the wound strings lead to tighter lows, and poles under the plain strings offer fatter heights. With increased clarity, the passive pickupā€™s tone is never sterile.

Railhammer Billy Corgan Signature Z-One Pickup Demo

For more information, please visit railhammer.com.

- YouTube

PG contributor Tom Butwin digs into seven very different boost options, from classic clean boosts to tone-sculpting EQ beasts. Whether you're chasing midrange magic, vintage character, or gig-saving utility, there's something here for every board.

Read MoreShow less

Hammett remains big daddy to the Mummy, one of his favorite instruments. It also evokes his love of classic horror films.

Photo courtesy of The Collection: Kirk Hammett, Gibson Publishing

In a lavish new coffee table book from Gibson, The Collection: Kirk Hammett, Metallicaā€™s lead guitarist shares some of his most spectacular vintage instruments and the stories that go with them, as well as his love of Hawaii.

Read MoreShow less

Rafiq Bhatiaā€™s guitar is a Flip Scipio Flippercaster with vintage Teisco and DeArmond pickups and has a strikingly original voice, even without effects or processing.

Photo by shamrockraver

The Son Lux guitaristā€”and David Lynch aficionadoā€”says an experimental musician needs creative uncertainty, that an artist must be curious, and should ask questions in the process of creating sound. With the release of his new EP, Each Dream, A Melting Door, he breaks down the methods and philosophies he practices in his own work.

ā€œIt feels like a lifetime ago, but yes,ā€ experimental guitarist/composer Rafiq Bhatia says when I bring up that he studied neuroscience and economics in college. Today, Bhatia is far more defined by his musical careerā€”primarily with his band Son Lux, which also composed the Oscar-nominated score for 2022ā€™s Everything Everywhere All at Once. However, he shares that there is an intersection between these seemingly disparate fields.

Read MoreShow less

Duane Betts enjoys a control set modification that was preferred by his father, the late, legendary Dickey Betts.

Duane Betts and reader Steve Nowicki join the PG staff to discuss their favorite ways to customize their setups.

Question: Whatā€™s your favorite guitar mod?

Read MoreShow less