Tonemaster Joey Landreth takes PG through his current touring rig, from his Novo baritone to a trio of trusty Two-Rocks.
Canadian alt-country group the Bros. Landreth have become known for bringing not just layers of blues, rock, and eclectic modern influence to the traditional country sound, but for Joey Landrethās depth as a guitarist and stunning tone on the instrument.
Built on a lifetime of brothers Joey and Daveās absorbing classic country music, the band was launched with the release of 2013ās Let It Lie, through which they not-long-after made a mark on the scene when the album garnered a JUNO Award for Roots and Traditional Album of the Year in 2015. Following the release of 2019ās ā87, the group later received another major accolade when Bonnie Raitt covered Let It Lieās āMade Up Mindā on her 2022 release, Just Like Thatā¦
While the original lineup included drummer Ryan Voth and pianist Alex Campbell, and the band has toured with guitarist Ariel Posen, the brothers have since taken a step back from the larger band arrangement to lead as a duo. Their latest, 2022ās Coming Home, spotlights the two in that dynamic, while featuring a few backing players.
Joey Landreth hung with John Bohlinger and the PG team before the Bros. Landrethās show at Nashvilleās Riverside Revival, where Landreth played some mind-blowing guitar and demoed his unique method for reproducing his studio sound live.Brought to you by DāAddario String Finder.
Golden Tradition
Landreth has been seen playing a Sorokin Goldtop for years. His new No. 1 is the Sorokin Pluma, handbuilt by Alex Sorokin in Edmonton, Alberta. āAlex is a master builder, and he has nothing but respect for the tradition of these guitars,ā says Landreth. The Pluma features a one-piece Honduran mahogany neck and body, Eastern hard-rock maple top, hide-glue construction, and Ron Ellis LRPs pickups. Itās strung up with Stringjoy .019ā.056 or .017ā.054, depending on tuning.
Built Like a Mule
This Mulecaster was built in Saginaw, Michigan by Landrethās good friend Matt Eich. Constructed with a metal body, it comes loaded with two benders, and according to Joey, Eich builds everything on the guitar (with the exception of the benders), including the pickups. āThe first tune in our setlist is a song called āForgiveness,ā and the benders are a big part of the hook,ā Joey shares. āI canāt play that song on literally any guitar, so this guitar comes along to play that tune and a couple of other ones.ā Strings are Stringjoy flatwounds, gauged .019ā.056 or .017ā.054, depending on tuning.
High-Strung Baritone
Joey mainly keeps this Novo baritone, which was built in Nashville and features Lollar pickups, in low open tunings. Heās worked with Stringjoy to get just the right strings to play comfortably in those tunings. āThat's the thing about those guys,ā he says, āis you can say, āI like .011s in E, what would be a comparable set of strings for D? And theyāll plop it into their computer and say, āThis is what we think would be comparable.āā Joey asked the company for a set that would work with an Ab tuning on the baritone, and they hooked him up, butāāI have no idea whatās on this guitar. I hope I don't break a string.ā
Landreth uses his Rock Slide signature slide, Paige Capos, and Blue Bell Straps, made in Spain. Landreth uses mostly Digiflex cables, but also has a few Caulfield cables as well as some made by Runway Audio Cables out of Nashville. As for picks, he doesnāt really have a preference.
Choice Circuits
Landreth uses a three-amp combination, the center being his new signature Two-Rock, which only carries the dry signal. The development of the amp came out of a meeting with guitarist Josh Smith, who turned Joey onto Two-Rockās tones after Landreth jammed with his model. Joey reached out to Two-Rock, and a few years later, the company agreed to work with him on an amp that included a complicated-to-install harmonic tremolo, on his request. When he was sent the third and final prototype, he says, āI plugged it in and legitimately shed a tear,ā laughing. āIt was like, āItās beautiful.āā
The two other amps in Landrethās trifecta are Two-Rock Studio Signatures. Where the first only carries dry effects, these two only carry wet. With 1x12 speakers, theyāre considerably smaller. āThey are killer little amps,ā he says. āPart of the appeal is that, if weāre going to go do a quick press video or something, I can just grab one of those little guys ā¦ and we donāt have to unpack the entire van.ā
Joey Landreth's Pedalboard
Mounted on a pedalboard made in Melbourne, Australia, all of Joeyās pedals go directly into the GigRig G3, with the wet effects all going into a Morningstar ML10X that lives under the board. It allows Landreth to do more complex routing with custom routing for every preset, and also lets Landreth only use one stereo loop for all wet effects. Those pedals include the Empress Echosystem, Chase Bliss Thermae, Chase Bliss Blooper, Chase Bliss MOOD MkII, Chase Bliss Generation Loss, and Chase Bliss CXM 1978.
They all go into the ML10X which then goes into the GFI Duophony, which gives Landreth a parallel mixer with a ton of options, including gain for each individual loop. Landreth uses the Duophony as a master volume for all wet effects, which are set up on an expression roller that Landreth controls with a custom box that he built. The Duophony also allows Joey to add the dry signal back in, either by preset or just in real-timeāwhich is ideal when Landreth uses a backline with only one or two amps.
Among Joeyās additional pedals is the Shnobel Tone VPJR tuner mod, plugged directly into the EXP input of the Chase Bliss Condor for volume and low pass filter control. The remainder of his board is made up of the Maxon SD-9, Fairfield Circuitry Randyās Revenge, Fairfield Circuitry Shallow Water, DanDrive Bonk Machine, Mythos High Road Mini Fuzz, and Axess Electronics Obvious Boost/Overdrive.Shop Joey's Rig
Shop Lindsay's RigThe soulful slide wiz shows off his Teisco-inspired baritone and several "different" tone tools that have inspired his pandemic projectsāincluding a knockout Custom Shop Jazzmaster.
Ariel Posen entered as a sideman. His scintillating work with the Bros. Landreth made him a guitaristās guitarist. Heās since stepped out on his own to show heās more than just shadowy specialist.
His 2019 solo debut, How Long, caught some fans off guard and shined brightly because of his song-first approach. āThese days, I like listening to songs and the story and the total package,ā Posen told PG in 2019. āI just trusted my gut and I can reach more people by playing songs, and I get moved more by a story and lyrics and harmony, so thatās where I naturally go. The live show is a lot more guitar-centric.ā
But saying all that, Posen still gets down on the guitar. His slide might do most the talking (look no further than How Longās sizzling āGet You Backā), but his fingerstyle flourishes and potent phrasing make him an all-around threat. And on top of all that, the dude can sing, too!
His brand-new album Headway expands on the success of How Long by incorporating more rootsy Americana vibes (āHeart by Heartā or āCarry Me Homeā) and slinky neo-soul touches (āWhat Are We Doing Hereā). And guitarists, donāt worry, he still cuts a grooving, silky solo (āComing Backā or āHeart by Heartā).
Just before releasing his emotive, heartfelt 12-song collection, the burgeoning-songwriting guitarist virtually welcomed PGās Chris Kies into his Canadian-home jam space.
In this episode, we find out how a $50-pawnhsop purchase inspired his No. 1āa custom-made, S-style baritoneāand he explains why all of his guitars (and their tones) have to be ādifferent,ā and he goes through his travel-ready pedalboard thatās been grounded for over a year, but has still been a big asset for recording.
D'Addario XPND Pedalboard:https://www.daddario.com/XPNDRR
[Facing a mandatory shelter-in-place ordinance to limit the spread of COVID-19, PG enacted a hybrid approach to filming and producing Rig Rundowns. This is the 43rd video in that format.]
If youāve spent any time with Ariel Posenās first solo record, How Long, an auditory high mark might be the ripping, raunchy slide solo packed within āGet You Back.ā As explained in a 2019 PG interview, Posenās pairing for that song were two cheaposāa $50 Teisco Del Ray into a Kay combo. However, when he took the pawnshop prize onstage, the magic was gone. āIt wouldnāt stay in tune and wouldnāt stop feeding backāit was unbearable [laughs].ā
Posen was familiar with Matt Eich of Mule Resophonicāwho specializes in building metal-body resonatorsāso he approached the luthier to construct him a steel-bodied, Strat-style baritone. Eich was reluctant at first (he typically builds roundneck-resos and T-style-baritones), but after seeing a clip of Posen playing live the partnership was started.
The above steel-bodied Strat-style is Posenās second custom 25"-scale baritone. (On Mule Resophonicās website, itās affectionately named the āPosencaster.ā) The gold-foil-y pickups are handwound by luthier Matt Eich and are actually mini-humbuckers. He employs a custom Stringjoy set (.017ā.064 with a wound G) and typically tunes to B standard. The massive strings allow the shorter-scale baritone to maintain a regular-tension feel. And when he gigs, he tours light (usually two guitars) and so heāll use a capo to morph into D or E standard.
If touring were a thing right now, Posen would take this Josh Williams Guitarsā Mockingbird on the road for open-C duties. (Again, also using a capo to unlock more doors while still traveling lean.) It speaks with a set of Ron Ellis PAFs that sit in the 7-8k range.
Another one that saw recording time for Headway is the above Fender Custom Shop Masterbuilt '60s Jazzmaster (by Carlos Lopez). Making it work better for him, he had the treble-bleed circuit removed, so when the guitarās volume is lowered, it actually gets warmer.
Here is Posenās Fender Ultra Telecaster that was recently upgraded with a sharp faux-tortoise-shell pickguard constructed by Chris Moffitt. (Heās a Northern Ireland-based luthier who works under the name Kithara Guitars.) Another mod he did to this tele was swapping out the stock Ultra Noiseless pickups for a vintage-voiced, ā50s-era, T-style set from Ron Ellis. For pandemic projects heās had this one set in standard tuning and outfitted with Ernie Ball Slinkys (.012s).
Above is a Wide Sky Guitars P125 Cutaway model built by luthier Patch Rubin. The New Mexico-based shop focuses on classic singlecut, LP-style electrics and golden-age acoustics. The P125 features a chambered sapele body with a carved maple top, mahogany neck with a bound ebony fretboard, and it came loaded with a mixed set of Curtis Novak pickupsāa P-90 in the neck and a PAF in the bridge.
Easily the wonkiest guitar in Posenās collection is this custom ride created by Dahlberg Intruments. The body is based on their standard Crusader model, but the rest is unique to Ariel. Its fiesta red body is made from swamp ash, it has a walnut neck, a fretless ebony fretboard with aluminum fret markers, custom LĆ¼cking gold-foil pickups, and a rubber-coated floating wooden bridge.
On the surface, this looks like a junky ā50s Kay. And while youāre not entirely wrong, the guitar is quite playable and has a character all its own thanks to being fully refurbished (completely with a Seymour Duncan Hot Rails in the soundhole) by luthier Reuben Cox of L.A.ās Old Style Guitar Shop.
Posenās favorite style of acoustic is a dreadnought. His prized Martin D-28 rests back home in Winnipeg, but during quarantine heās been bonding with this Collings D1 T thatās seen work during recent recording projects.
If youāve caught Ariel onstage, youāve probably seen him plug into a Two-Rock. For the recording purposes of this Rundown, he fired up his Classic Reverb and routed it into the Universal Audio Ox Load Box.
Another tone machine used during the pandemic is Posenās Revv D20 (sitting on top of the aforementioned UA Ox Box).
Posen toured with this setup for over a year before everything shut down. In the Rundown he mentions that he uses it quite a bit for sessions, proving to be flexible while compacted into a travel-friendly package.
Starting at the top left, you have a Chase Bliss Tonal Recall, Walrus Audio Monument, and a Chase Bliss Dark World. Down below that he has a Vemuram Jan Ray overdrive and a KingTone Germanium miniFUZZ. And the bottom row he has a Morningstar FX MC6 MIDI Controller and a TC Electronic PolyTune3 Mini Noir.
But wait ā¦ thereās more!! Underneath the top two rows sits a trio of stompsāa Mythos Pedalsā Argonaut Mini Octave Up, Eventide H9, and Arielās signature Hudson Electronics Broadcast AP that he leaves on all the time (cleaning up with his guitarās volume knob).
Another big piece of the tonal pie for Posen is using his signature brass Rock Slide. He worked alongside Rock Slideās Danny Songhurst to develop his namesake slide that features a round-tip end that helps Posen avoid dead spots or unwanted scratching. While he prefers polished brash, you can see about that itās also available in a nickel-plated finish and an aged brass.
The second day of NAMM was full of highlights from Vox, Jam Pedals, Catalinbread, Synergy, Soldano, and more!
Synergy Amps Signature
Synergy Amps came to Anaheim bearing the fruit of the partnership with Steve Vai that they announced here at NAMM exactly a year ago. The shred lord's signature tone module features dual 12AX7s and two channelsāone dialed to match his Carvin Legacy amp, and another based on a Synergy module called Bman whose tonal bent you can probably guess at. The module goes for $399 street.