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Rig Rundown: My Chemical Romance

Check out the gear that guitarists Frank Iero and Ray Toro and bassist Mikey Way brought out to shake stadiums this summer.

After their Covid-delayed, smash-success reunion tour a few years back, My Chemical Romance plotted the Long Live the Black Parade North American stadium tour this past summer.


PG’s Chris Kies joined the run at Soldier Field in Chicago, and before the show, he rendezvoused with techs James Bowman, Josh Schreibeis, and Joe Saucedo—who handle Frank Iero, Ray Toro and Mikey Way’s rigs, respectively—for a look at the axes, amps, and effects the heavy-hitting emo titans are using these days.

Brought to you by D’Addario.

Dose of Castedosa

A black electric guitar stands in front of a rack filled with various other guitars.

After Iero got this Castedosa Marianna Semi Hollow, it became the show starter for this summer’s tour. This, and all other guitars, are tuned down a half step with Ernie Ball Paradigm strings (.011–.052).

Bury Me in White

White electric guitar stands in front of a rack filled with various guitars.

Iero favors Ernie Ball StingRays like this one, in matte “Stormtrooper” white. The only mod on this guitar is the addition of Luminlay dots on the side of the neck.

One and Done

An off-white electric guitar stands in front of a backdrop of various other guitars.

This 1992 Gibson Les Paul gets played only for the title track off the band’s 2006 record, The Black Parade.

Under Pressure

A vintage electric guitar stands in front of a case filled with various other guitars.

This tiny, light Abernethy Guitars electric takes Bowman forever to string. If anyone has tips, send them his way.

Purple Reign

Two guitar amplifiers with unique designs, accompanied by a fan and a warning light.

After using Marshall Super Lead heads with the Dookie mod on the previous tour, Iero found these slick purple heads and brought them to Dave Friedman to match the Dookie specs and add some EQ tweaks. These two, a main and backup, are responsible for the bulk of Iero’s sounds.

A Fender Twin Reverb onstage is responsible for “small-amp sounds,” while a Twin Reverb Tone Master underneath it sends a clean DI signal for the mix in Iero’s in-ear monitors.

Welcome to the Rack Parade

A selection of guitar effects pedals arranged on a black pedalboard, with various brands and models.

Iero’s backstage rack includes three main racks of effects, all powered by Strymon Zumas.

The first carries a Mesa Boogie 5-Band Graphic EQ, Amaze by Analogman Prince of Tone, Bowman Audio Endeavors Bowman Overdrive, JHS Hard Drive, and Hayashi Craft Trick Gain.

Drawer two is about modulation, and includes a Boss TR-2, MXR Phase 100, Boss DM-2W, EarthQuaker Devices Ghost Echo, EHX Micro POG, and EHX Holy Grail.

The last drawer bears a Jackson Audio Twin Twelve, EHX Deluxe Memory Man, Ibanez Tube Screamer Overdrive Pro, and Bowman Audio Bellyacher.

Toro’s Top

A black electric guitar stands next to sound equipment and tangled cables on stage.

Toro plays this 1978 Les Paul to start the show, including tracks “The End.,” “Dead!,” and “House of Wolves.” He runs .011–.052-gauge strings on all his guitars.

Second Fiddle

Brown electric guitar leaning against equipment cases on a stage.

This sunburst Les Paul has been outpaced by the black ’78, but it still comes out for “Welcome to the Black Parade” and “Famous Last Words.”

Super 6

A black and white electric guitar rests on stage next to a road case and equipment.

This 2005 Fender Custom Shop Telecaster sees action on six tunes in the band’s set.

Ray Toro’s Amps

Two guitar amplifiers stacked in a road case: Marshall on top, Metropoulos below.

A head combo of a Marshall JMP and Metropoulos Amplification Metro (both running into Fryette PS-100s) comprise Toro’s main tones, while an Amplified Nation Wonderland Overdrive 1x12 combo is used for solo sounds, and a Fender Deluxe Reverb handles cleans. Toro’s signal is pumped through two 4x12 cabs—one Marshall, one Bad Cat.

Ray’s Really Rockin’ Rack Rig

Close-up of guitar effects pedals in a rack, featuring BigSky, Time, and Sleep units.

A Shure Axient wireless system sends his guitar’s signal to this system backstage, where it hits a Radial JX44 and a pair of RJM Effect Gizmos.

One drawer holds an MXR Duke of Tone, MXR Custom Badass ’78 Distortion, Boss GE-7, Boss CH-1, Kernom Moho, Kernom Ridge, and Wampler Gearbox.

In the next are two Boss GE-7s, two Bowman Overdrives, a Death by Audio Fuzz War, a Source Audio EQ2, a Bowman Bellyacher, and a Keeley Compressor Mini.

The third shelf is home to an EHX POG2, 1981 Inventions DRV, Chase Bliss Preamp MK II, Boss TR-2, MXR Carbon Copy, Keeley Loomer, and MXR EVH Phase 90.

A fourth level hosts a Strymon TimeLine, Strymon BigSky, and Source Audio EQ2.

Out onstage at his feet, Toro keeps a pedalboard with a TC Electronic PolyTune, a custom RJM Mastermind PBC/6X, Ibanez TS808, Bowman Audio Bowman Overdrive, EHX Micro POG, Boss TR-2, MXR Carbon Copy, and Strymon BigSky.

Strymon Zumas keep everything chugging along.

Comeback Kid

A shimmering silver bass guitar stands against a black backdrop with gear cases nearby.

This silver-sparkle Fender Jazz bass was built for the band’s reunion tour, intended to mimic Way’s earlier signature model. It’s since been treated to more affordable Mexico-made production runs. Way runs Ernie Ball Hybrid Slinky strings (.045–.105) and plays with Clayton triangle picks.

Red!

This eye-catcher was made by Fender’s Brian Thrasher, and is equipped with pickups from the Adam Clayton signature bass. Way relies heavily on this one, then switches to an identical one for down tunings.

Dodger That

Way secured permission from Major League Baseball and the Los Angeles Dodgers to use the team’s exact hue of blue on this custom instrument.

Mikey Way’s Amp

Way runs through a Fender Super Bassman head into matching 8x10 cabs, with a DI signal also running to front of house.

Mikey Way’s Effects

Way keeps things simple. Along with an Origin Effects DCX Bass and Cali76 set to push his Super Bassman, his setup includes a pair of Aguilar Agros, an MXR Sub Octave Bass Fuzz, and a Malekko B:assmaster.