If you can’t figure out how to play Joe Bonamassa’s solo from “Blues Deluxe,” don’t worry. Neither can Chris Shiflett. But it all changes when Shifty sits down with Bonamassa for this special episode of Shred With Shifty. No surprise that both of them reach for their Les Pauls, and Bonamassa even reveals why he switched from Strats to Gibsons in the early 2000s.
Bonamassa is known for his dazzling collection of vintage guitars—which he says has become a target for haters—but he explains that you don’t need a ’58 Les Paul to get the goods. “It’s also the mystique,” he says. “If Jimmy Page played a Tokai, everyone would want a Tokai.” A guitar made two weeks ago, he says, is just as good as a classic.
Bonamassa’s lightning-quick soloing style, which conjures a hurricane of major and minor pentatonic notes with some phrygian flair, is the stuff of legend, and his tricks on “Blues Deluxe” are plenty. Even though he tries to adhere to a “divide by two” rule to simplify his phrasings, he still stumps Shiflett with a volume swell trick he learned from Roy Buchanan and Danny Gatton.
This solo is no walk in the park. Any brave takers up for giving it a shot? Share it and tag us so Shifty can have a look! Most importantly, remember to have fun. “Do whatever you want with the damn thing,” says Bonamassa. “It’s just a guitar.”
Credits
Producer: Jason Shadrick
Executive Producers: Brady Sadler and Jake Brennan for Double Elvis
Engineering Support by Matt Tahaney and Matt Beaudion
Video Editors: Dan Destefano and Addison Sauvan
Special thanks to Chris Peterson, Greg Nacron, and the entire Volume.com crew.
The Grammy-winning duo takes Premier Guitar through their live rig.
For more than two decades, trailblazing acoustic guitarists Rodrigo Sánchez and Gabriela Quintero have been blending metal, flamenco, pop, and jazz with their Grammy-winning duo Rodrigo y Gabriela, and they’re not showing any sign of slowing down. They’re currently on the road in support of their seventh full-length album, In Between Thoughts…A New World, released in April. It’s a characteristically adventurous endeavor, arranged as a single, album-length composition and augmented with electronics and orchestral elements.
The eclectic guitar maestros toured PG’s John Bohlinger through their respective rigs before their show at Nashville’s Historic Ryman Auditorium.
Brought to you by D’Addario Pro Plus Capo.
Nylon Niceness
Sánchez’s main acoustic guitars are custom-built Yamahas based on the company’s NX series. They are the latest in a line of different versions and prototypes; his current stage models are the sixth and seventh iterations. They run in stereo, with one channel running the signal from the pickup beneath the saddle. The other boosts a series of Piezo pickups placed in strategic positions within the body for when Sánchez keeps rhythm on the guitar like a cajon. Sánchez replaced the undersaddle Yamaha pickup system with an LR Baggs Element Active system.
Sánchez’s Yamahas feature nato wood (AKA eastern mahogany) back and sides, with spruce tops and rosewood fingerboards, which are strung with D’Addario EJ45 strings. When he’s not fingerpicking, Sánchez goes for Jim Dunlop 47R3S Nylon Jazz picks. The duo’s veganism means they don’t use any genuine leather straps.
Silver and Black
In the past, Rodrigo y Gabriela have always performed with both players on acoustics, but Sánchez started bringing electrics into the mix beginning in 2020—including this all-stock Gibson Les Paul Custom Silverburst he bought in Nashville in 2008. Sánchez strings his electrics with D’Addario EXL115s, and switches to Jim Dunlop 44R1.0 Nylon picks.
Blue Cats
Sánchez also hauls two gently modded dark blue Fender ’60s Jaguars with a sparkle finish. There’s not much messing around with them—the top and bottom switches stay taped in place.
Slidin' Down Broadway
The final electric in Sánchez’s tour arsenal is this stock Gretsch G5700 Electromatic Lap Steel, finished in Broadway Jade. It features a Gretsch single-coil pickup and a mahogany body.
Rack City
Sánchez’s acoustic signals leave his guitar via a stereo jack into two Shure transmitters. The two signals are then sent to two different inputs: the undersaddle pickup goes to the input of his Fractal Axe FX XL+ via his pedalboard, and the body’s piezos go straight to a separate channel via DI box. For the acoustics, the Fractal is simply used on a basic bypass patch, with no effects beyond a noise gate on the input and a dB boost on the output.
This same rig is used when switching to electric. The wireless frequency channel used for the undersaddle on the acoustic is used to send the Jaguar or Les Paul to the Fractal, where the Axe FX’s basic Marshall- and Fender-style amp and cab sims are engaged along with some delay, reverb, and occasionally the odd flanger or overdrive out front.
Above Board
The pickup return from the wireless rack goes to the volume pedal via a Lehle 3at1 switcher, then out to a Lehle P-Split signal splitter. The direct out from the P-Split goes to another Lehle splitter, while the ISO line out runs to the rest of the pedals before ending up at the Fractal. (The ISO out of the first splitter goes to the JHS Mini A/B pedal into the BOSS OC-3, then to a separate channel on the desk.)
Pardon The Quinterruption
Quintero tours with two Yamaha prototypes based on the manufacturer’s NTX series, with spruce tops and nato wood backs and sides. Over the years, Quintero has swapped in different undersaddle pickups, but like Sánchez, she’s settled on the LR Baggs Element system for nylon-string guitars. Quintero’s Yamahas take D’Addario EJ45s, which are plucked only with fingers.
The guitars have five custom-made Yamaha piezo pickups loaded directly onto the soundboard in different places, plus an extra piezo directly under the fingerboard inside of the body. These piezos are run through a three-channel Yamaha preamp, and out on the ring of the stereo output jack. That’s not all: there’s also a DPA 4099 mic fitted inside the guitar.
Three different Shure wireless transmitters handle all of this input. The first channel sends out the soundboard’s piezos; the second handles the LR Baggs Element; and the third relays the DPA’s signal. From the wireless receivers, the first two channels are run to Quintero’s pedalboard. The DPA runs directly to a DI, which hits the front of house and monitors.
Do The Splits!
Quintero’s pedalboard funnels the first two channels—the undersaddle and the body’s piezos—into a stereo volume pedal. From there, they run through a Dunlop Crybaby. The signal is then split, with the first side going back to the DI, and the second running through a Dunlop volume pedal into a BOSS OC-3 for an extra bottom octave.
This Canadian player took over a luthier friend’s restoration project and turned it into a reliable gigging machine.
Name: Robert Morency
Location: Montreal, Canada
Guitar:Gibson Melody Maker
The story begins with my good buddy Pavlo Haikalis, a guitar builder at PHG Guitars here in Montreal, acquiring a vintage Gibson Melody Maker in a trade a few years ago. It had no serial number, but its single cutaway and narrow pickup indicated it was either from 1960 or 1961. The guitar was in poor shape and needed more than a little TLC. It had a bad refinish and lost quite a bit of its thickness due to prior sanding.
In his spare time, Pavlo proceeded to strip it and refinished it in a nice reddish brown, reminiscent of those double-cut Les Paul Juniors of the late '50s. He even managed to save the original Gibson headstock logo, which was covered in black paint, by lightly sanding it down to the original paint and then buffing it. He did an awesome job, but then it sat in his shop with no parts or frets for some time, as he was busy making his own guitars.
One day I asked him what he planned to do with the guitar and offered to finish it, as I'm a luthier myself and have been restoring vintage instruments for years (decades, actually). I thought it would be a cool guitar to use on gigs with my trio, Unkle Groove. Lucky for me, he accepted and I got the guitar with a bag of parts a few days later.
I began by re-fretting it with jumbo frets and working on the original nylon nut, which had seen better days. I found a newer wraparound bridge, but since the body had lost about a 1/4" in thickness, I had to cut the inserts, as they were now too long to fit flush. With a proper setup, the action was low, with no buzz, and the guitar played and sounded great acoustically. Then it was time to work on the electronics. I rewired everything with new CTS pots and an old Switchcraft jack I had lying around. But the pickup was quite microphonic, so I took it out and dipped it in my “special blend" of wax, et voilà! The pickup sounded great and pretty full for a single-coil, and no feedback … unless I wanted it to.
The neck originally had the thinner, early-'60s profile, but the extra sanding had made it quite thin. Surprisingly, it can still handle my heavier string gauge (.012–.052) without compromising the action or playability. The tuners are the usual open-gear variety found on cheaper instruments, but they stay in tune great and never give me any problem live.
I have to say, it was a fun project, and the Melody Maker has become my main gigging guitar for the past two and a half years. It's a light, resonant, solid guitar that's extremely versatile for a tiny, one-pickup plank. With Unkle Groove, we play everything from Hendrix to Pink Floyd and ZZ Top, and it delivers on all of it. I would encourage readers to find their own “basket case" and, who knows, with a little bit of work, the end result might surprise you.
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