Out on the road, the post-hardcore supergroupās gunslinger works in pairs, with two guitars, two pedalboards, and a Twin.
Formed during the pandemic, L.S. Dunes is the answer to every early-2000s emo kidās prayers. Spearheaded by Circa Survive and Saosin frontman Anthony Green, the band was announced to the world in 2022, and their debut record, Past Lives, arrived in November of that year. Along with members of Coheed and Cambria and Thursday, My Chemical Romance guitarist Frank Iero joined the supergroup, and theyāre not wasting any time: Following an EP in November 2023, their second full-length record is due out January 31.
Even though L.S. Dunes covers some similar ground to each memberās previous projects, itās certainly its own beast, and Iero notes that his rig with the band is totally different from his setup with My Chemical Romance. Ahead of Dunesā performance at Nashvilleās Marathon Music Works, PGās Chris Kies met up with Iero to see which āfavorite kidsā get brought out on tour.
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Float Like a Butterfly, Sting Like a Ray
Iero loves this Ernie Ball Music Man StingRay RS for its stellar trem system and rock-solid tuning. He can reef on the whammy bar as hard as he wants, and it stays on pitch. (He even thought he broke it one night after hearing a loud āpop,ā but his tech couldnāt find any issues.) Itās always in standard tuning, with Ernie Ball Burly Slinky strings.
FrankenFender
This Fender āJazzmasterā was a special order made by Dennis Galuszka in Fenderās custom shop. Frankās friend (and occasional PG contributor) Mike Adams (the āObi-Wan of offsetsā) scooped up a ā60s Jazzmaster from the corner of a flooded-out basement somewhere, and after some fix-ups, nicknamed it āPancakeā for its flat, playable neck. Iero was obsessed with it, and asked his friend if heād loan āPancakeā to Galuszka to scan and recreate the neck. The first result of that collaboration goes on tour with My Chemical Romance, while this second one comes out with L.S. Dunes. Itās got a 25.5ā²ā² scale lengthāIero calls it his āJag and a halfāāand comes out for the last three songs of the set. It rocks blacked-out goldfoil pickups in the neck and middle positions, and a P-90 in the bridge. Thereās a built-in killswitch on the upper bout, too.
Twin for the Win
Ieroās perfect pedal platform is the Fender Twin Reverb, which he runs into a Marshall 4x12 cabinet loaded with Celestion Vintage 30 speakers.
Frank Iero's Pedalboards
Ieroās main board, which stays at his feet, is controlled by a Carl Martin Octa-Switch II system. Itās got a Jackson Audio 1484 Twin Twelve Pedal, Boss TR-2, EHX POG, Amplified Nation Bigger Bloom, Temple Devices Reel Dealuxe, EHX Holy Grail Nano, Boss DM-2W, Boss CH-1, EHX Synth9, Boss GE-7, SNK Pedals VHD, Fulltone Fat-Boost, and EQD Ghost Echo. All those toys are kept in line by his Ernie Ball volume pedal and a TC Electronic PolyTune 3.
Ieroās second, always-on board stays safe behind his amp. It has a 29 Pedals OAMP, Bowman Audio Endeavors Bowman Overdrive, and 29 Pedals EUNA, which form the basis of his tone.
See what guitars and basses the punks, metalheads, and hardcore rockers used during the Windy Cityās other 3-day festival.
Holy White Houndsā James Manson
For the bandās midday set, Manson went the distance with this Epiphone Firebird that he bought online because of how beautiful it looked with its gold hardware. Manson hasnāt done anything to the guitar since buying it, but the pickups have so much sweat, beer, and grime in them that their tone has been muddied up, so he employs a few select stomps to brighten up his sound for the stage.
Tom Keeley and Steve Pedulla of the influential post-hardcore band Thursday discuss the importance of roots, how trust and respect empower their dual-guitar partnership, and how broken gear and effects accidents brought fresh sounds to their new album, "No Devoluciān".
Thursdayās Tom Keeley (left) and Steve Pedulla onstage with their guitars of choiceāFender American
Standard Telecasters with Seymour Duncan Hot Rails bridge pickups. Photo by Dave Summers
Since emerging from the late-ā90s hardcore underground and achieving wide acclaim, Thursday has been credited with helping pave the way for modern-rock heavyweights like My Chemical Romance, exposing the world to great new hardcore bands via the opening slots on their tours, and maintaining street cred by recording with up-and-coming bands like Japanās Envy. More than anything though, Thursday will be remembered for defining the emo/post-hardcore blueprint via Steve Pedulla and Tom Keeleyās scintillating dual-guitar attack, Geoff Ricklyās passionate singing and open-hearted lyrics, and the utterly dominating rhythm section of bassist Tim Payne and drummer Tucker Rule.
Indulging in extreme dynamics while melody battles discordance is Pedulla and Keeleyās raison dāĆŖtre. This juxtaposition was first explored on the bandās second album, Full Collapseāwhich they have been recently performing in its entirety to celebrate its 10-year anniversary. Thursdayās major-label debut, War All the Time expanded on the sound with a keener sense of eloquence as pianos and choirs found their way into the oft-ferocious mix. The bandās 2009 release, Common Existence, showed a conscious shift away from the post-hardcore constraints they helped establish, and now their sixth album, No Devoluciān, finds them exploring deep valleys and high peaksābe they emotional or melodic, expressed in subtler or more intriguing ways.
āThere are traditional chord structures in things we do,ā explains Keeley, ābut there was sort of an effort to circumvent the guitar or approach guitar parts other than thinking of them as guitar partsākind of undoing the guitar as a traditional rock instrument and using these different effects, chord structures, and strumming patterns to make a more nebulous, melodic vehicle.ā
As Pedulla puts it, āA big part of what makes us Thursday is that there are sometimes parts that are almost two leads going on, and they interlock in some strange or unconventional wayāso thereās definitely a different dynamic to how we write. Itās the type of thing where both of us will be vamping on a part to try and find what weāre going to play, and we sort of have this unspoken rule where we say, āRight . . . bear with me. Iām going to fall on my face a lotābut I will find something.ā We have that trust. We know weāre not being judged by each other.ā
Keeley agrees. āItās a million different thingsāitās never the same equation twice. Sometimes we just ignore each other and play as many notes as possible. Sometimes we dictate to each other. I think itās safe to say thereās a mutual respect for our different points of view and different practices of guitar playing. I couldnāt imagine these songs without Steveās unique voice. Itās a weird alchemy, a weird experiment. There are a lot of mistakes, a lot of revisions, and tons and tons of editing, historically anyway. And, eventually, even if our parts are fighting each other, we know when itās working and we know when itās not.ā
Pedulla reaches to the nether regions of his Teleās fretboard. Photo by Elise Shively
As far as ānebulous melodic vehiclesā are concerned, itād be hard to argue that Keeley and Pedulla have been anything but successful on that front with No Devoluciān. Written in the wake of Ricklyās divorce, it has an emotional rawness set to churning fury, chiming elegance, and wreaths of eclectic treatments.
āBut the whole record isnāt that,ā Keeley is quick to add. āItās not like our guitars sound like ghosts or anything! We certainly have a lot of power chords and traditional angular guitar workāwhich is sort of our thing. In that sense, it was business as usual. But with [producer] Dave Fridmann, thereās a lot of attention to pushing things toward the weird.ā
Fridmann has produced Thursdayās last three records, but reportedly it was the latest oneāwhich was barely demoed at all and was written in just a weekāthat particularly fired his imagination. What is it about Fridmann that keeps the band coming back to him for production duties?
āYou rely on Dave to tell you when to cut the shit, quit thinking, and just play,ā says Keeley. āBut if I say to him āHey, man, I donāt know if this part is right for this recordāhow does this sound?ā heāll reply āIt sounds like a guitar.ā That means itās my responsibility to dial in exactly what I need. In the past, Iāve gone, āIāve got no idea what guitar tone I wantā what do you think would be a good idea?ā to other producers, and theyāll come up with all these suggestions. Dave does do this on occasionā heāll fine-tune thingsābut generally itās āWhat do you want it to sound like? Whatās your vision?ā Thatās scary, but ultimately it forces us to become better musicians with better ears. He generally trusts our gut and our instincts, as far as getting into the weird spots. Itās terrifyingābut completely empowering.ā
For a band of self-described non-musicians, Thursday encompasses a scope and spectrum of aural possibility thatās perhaps wider than musicians who play āby the rules.ā Thursdayās distinct sound has always revolved around Pedullaās and Keeleyās clashing tones. Clean melodies run parallel to each other before soaring through molten distortion, generally grappling with each other and causing semitone clashes, off-kilter countermelodies, and ending in all sorts of pleasing chaos. You expect dropped-D tunings, escalating octave melodies, furious tremolo picking alongside thrashed minor 7th chords, and, more often than not, the delight of crashing from clean, intricate chords to full-tilt, metal-tinged riffs. Light chorus and a splash of delay keep the flashier melodies sounding like theyāll float into forever, but itās the stop-start breakdowns punctuated by complete silence that define Thursdayās guitar MO.
Devolving the Guitar
For No Devoluciān, Thursdayās guitar team endeavored to unlearn the guitarāto almost completely deprogram their whole style, only occasionally bringing in their familiar melodic impalement. āNot every song has that,ā Pedulla says, ābut we really like to have a wide dynamic range in terms of getting real quiet and cleanāand then really heavy. Itās a keystone of what we do, for sure. A good example is on the last song on the record, āStay True.ā It does the same thing but in a completely different way.ā
The song in question begins with an electric guitar thatās so gently picked itās almost imperceptible. The drums enter, followed closely by a flood of EBowed feedback in the background. Thereās a tension that sits underneath the calm and, three minutes into the seven-minute epic, Ricklyās voice becomes histrionic and the guitars build up along with the pummeling drums. Though it never reaches the abrasive levels of previous material, thereās a simmering darkness that never wouldāve come across in the vicious heaviness of their older material.
Pedulla and Keeley are happy to discuss some of their favorite guitar moments on No Devoluciān, as well as how they managed to get some of the more out-there sounds on the record. The first track, āFast to the Endā, has a wild noise soloāa warped, Tom Morello-esque skittering across fluctuating pitches. āIt was a lot of fun to doāand Iām actually wondering how Iām going to recreate it liveābut I know Iāll figure it out,ā Pedulla says. āI had set up various filter and modulation settings on one of those Line 6 M13s, and I also put some parameters into the expression pedal to control each one. So I would hit a chord and switch back and forth between the different settings and also work the expression pedal. On some of the takes, I wasnāt even aware of the guitarāI would have it on the floor, hit the note, and then just play the pedals with my hands and kind of go for it. We started to realize that when you go to this effect, it does this thing and thatās a good opening, and then when you go to this, thatās a great mid section, and this is a good closing. So it was almost directed improv.ā
In comparison, Keeley contributes a beautiful, slightly atonal melody to the skeletal and haunting ballad of loss, āEmpty Glass.ā But while the duo envisioned the type of vibe you hear on the album, the way they got it was actually a mistake.
Keeley (left) engages his bridge pickup and barres high on the neck as Thursdayās
keyboardist, Andrew Everding, strums . . . you guessed itāa Telecaster with a Duncan
Hot Rails bridge pickup. Photo by Elise Shively
āWe recorded it during the last session,ā says Keeley. āGeoff had the vocal part and the Hammond organ part and not much else. We knew we needed to finish it, so it fell on me to make the glitchy instrumental sections. I was really excited about that, but it was very frustrating to make, too. It ended up as a clean guitar run through a reverb pedal and a Line 6 DL4 Delay Modeler. Instead of strumming, I just turned the reverb and gain up and fretted the string with my strumming-hand finger. With all that sustain, I was able to play the guitar more like a violin. There were six layers of the main progression and six layers of harmonies, and that was going to be the partāthis forward-moving thing. But then I accidentally stepped on the DL4ās loop reverse-play button, and it was suddenly a more powerful piece in reverseāwith these suspended melodies and a weird timing that pulls you along in this uncertain way. The sweet note of the progression is delayed just a little bit too much, and at first I was like āAh man, I wish Iād taken that one set of four beats out so it hit right where I wanted.ā But everyone was like, āDude, youāve gotta leave itāthatās whatās going to really engage people and make them listen more intently.āā Keeley adds that, if it hadnāt been for Fridmannās āwriting doesnāt end until the mix is overā ethos, there wouldnāt have been nearly as many spontaneous moments like that.
But as Keeley previously mentioned, No Devoluciān isnāt all abstract soundscapes. The whiplash switch-ups and intense guitar buildups that have kept Thursday fans enthralled throughout the bandās existence manifest themselves in the savage shift from seething fuzz to all-out saturation on āPast and Future Ruins.ā But even that has evolved.
āThe chorus riff has a swing to it that we havenāt had before. To expose myself a little bit, it was my attempt at making a Silversun Pickups song,ā Keeley confesses with a laugh. āI donāt think it sounds anything like them, thoughāwhich is usually the story with me: If I have a favorite band and I try to write something like them, Iām usually not good enough to nail it, yāknow?ā
Gear Simplicity
Despite the number of textures and deceptively intricate ideas throughout Thursdayās back catalog, Pedulla and Keeley have pretty simple rigs. The latter tends to favor Marshall and Vox AC30 amps and standard Fender Telecasters with a Seymour Duncan Hot Rails bridge pickup. Pedulla is a bit more adventurous in his use of multiple effects units, but he also favors Telecasters with a Hot Rails bridge unit. He also has a custom First Act hollowbodyāwhich is also stocked with Hot Rails.
āFor some people, thatās a weird pairingā to put that hot of a pickup in a guitar like that,ā he says of the double-cutaway, Bigsby-outfitted guitar. āBut itās awesome, and that got used probably the most. āDave also has an awesome Harmony Rocket that we used, and I have a Jaguar that I played on a couple of things.ā
Amp-wise, Pedulla has recently gotten into Bad Cats. āI used to use the Bogner Ecstasy Classic for distortion and I tried various combos for clean sounds, but I just got myself a Bad Cat Lynx and thatās all I use now. The second day of the tour, our front-of-house engineer came up and was, like, āDude, that is the best your guitar has ever sounded!ā And I feel the same way. For the first recording session, I really wanted that Bad Cat but I didnāt have one, so I borrowed one. After two weeks or a month off, it became a challenge to find one for the next session. Dave was pretty adamant tooāāYou need to make sure you have that amp again.ā Luckily, a friend of mine had an extra one he sold me at an amazing deal. So that and the Line 6 M13āthatās all I need. The only thing I use in the studio that I donāt have in my live rig, at least for now, is a DigiTech TimeBender Digital Delay pedal, which is a lot of fun.ā
Keeley, on the other hand, had some difficulties with gear during the No Devoluciān sessions. āWhen we went into the studio, a lot of my gear was in disrepair,ā he says. āSo the biggest change for me was, āSteve, can I play your guitar here?ā and āOh, this doesnāt workābut it sounds kinda cool.ā It was a hodgepodge of amps that did or didnāt work or were blown or wires that were disconnected. Itās definitely strange making something thatās going to last forever in a context where youāre not confident in what youāre using. Itās impossible for that not to affect what you play, as well as the energy of the parts. It can add to the tension of a part or a song or just the energy of a record. I can hear things like that, at least in my own playing.ā
Keeley sees the light live. Photo by Louise Lockhart
He missed one amp more than anything else. āThereās a Marhsall JCM900. Itās Geoffās amp, but itās the one I played in the basement days for years and years. It has been historically troublesome and finicky, but it sounds fantastic. Beyond that, the most frustrating thing was that I have a couple of AC30s that sound fantastic, but the noise . . . we couldnāt get rid of it no matter what we did! That was a daily struggle.ā
Home Is Where the Hardcore Is
What separates Thursday from some of the more dubious exponents of the genre they helped create is their willingness to embrace newcomers and their steadfast refusal to turn their back on the hardcore scenes they grew up in. Whether itās offering opening slots to recent up-and-comers TouchĆ© AmorĆ© and La Dispute on tour or Pedulla revealing that studio communication often involves requests such as, āPlay something like an old Quicksand drum beat,ā the guys in Thursday continue to have a hand in the DIY scenes that made them who they are today.
āItās a school of thought we were exposed to at a young age, and it became an inherent part of our personalities and our philosophy for life,ā Keeley says. āBe authentic, donāt sell people on an idea. Rather than selling people on an idea, present them with a piece of art and allow them to take it from you and accept or reject itāand be okay with that.ā
And No Devoluciān is indeed a piece of artāarguably with more emotion, innovation, and hardcore attitude than anything Thursday has done before. All without returning to what theyāve done beforeāand all without turning their back on it, either.
LEFT: Keeleyās Marshall-and-Vox amp rig backstage before a show. The Bogner head belongs to Thursdayās keyboardist, Andrew Everding, who occasionally plays rhythm guitar during live shows. Photo by Clive Patrique RIGHT: Effects-wise, Keeley keeps things quite simpleāhe stomps on a Line 6 DL4 Delay Modeler, a Lehle Dual amp switcher, a Fulltone OCD, and (not pictured) a Boss TU-2 Tuner. Photo by Clive Patrique
Guitars
Fender American Standard Telecasters with maple fretboards and Seymour Duncan Hot Rails bridge pickups
Amps
Marshall JCM800, Marshall 1960 AV slant Cab, Vox AC30 Hand- Wired reissue
Effects
Fulltone OCD distortion, Lehle Dual amp switcher, Line 6 DL4 Delay Modeler, Boss TU-2 Tuner
Miscellaneous
DR Strings (.010, .013, .017, .030, .044, .052), Dunlop .60 mm Tortex picks, Mogami cables with Neutrik plugs, Line 6 Relay G50 wireless
Guitars
Fender American Standard Telecaster with a rosewood fretboard and a Seymour Duncan Hot Rails bridge pickup
Amps
Bad Cat Lynx head, Bogner 4x12 with Celestion Vintage 30s
Effects
Line 6 M13 Stompbox Modeler, Line 6 EX-1 Expression Pedal, Voodoo Lab Pedal Switcher, Voodoo Lab Ground Control Pro MIDI foot controller, Voodoo Lab Pedal Power 2 Plus, Boss TU-2 Tuner
Miscellaneous
DR Strings (.010, .013, .017, .030, .044, .052), Dunlop .60 mm Tortex picks, Mogami cables with Neutrik plugs, Line 6 Relay G50 wireless