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Slash's Blues Ball Band Rig Rundown

Rig Rundown: Slash's Blues Ball Band with Tash Neal

The rock ’n’ roll icon brings his blues-rockin’ Orgy of The Damned to the people headlining the S.E.R.P.E.N.T. Blues Festival tour.


Slash’s blues-rock romp Orgy of The Damned debuted at No. 1 on Billboard’s Blues Albums Chart this spring. Now, the legendary guitar slinger is taking it to the people with his 29-date S.E.R.P.E.N.T. Blues Festival tour. When Slash’s Blues Ball Band played an intimate pre-tour gig at the Gibson Garage in Nashville, they invited John Bohlinger and the PG team.

Before shooting our Rundown with singer/guitarist Tash Neal and Slash’s tech, Ace Bergman, Slash sat down with PG for a chat. The maestro tells Bohlinger about how he found his blues sound on a 1963 Gibson ES-335 he picked up at Norman’s Rare Guitars in Los Angeles. That guitar was copied by the Gibson Custom Shop for the Slash 1963 ES-335 Collector’s Edition model, which he now brings on the road.

On Orgy of the Damned, Slash and company are digging into a different repertoire than his usual hard-rock-’n’-rollin’ fare. In this case, he’s re-exploring influences and old bands. “All these songs had … a very specific influence on me,” he explains. Back in the ’90s, Slash formed his Blues Ball Band, and he was inspired to pick that project back up, record, and hit the road to play “music that I really loved when I was a kid.

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Bettin' on 'Birds

Slash tours with a pair of Gibson Custom 1963 Firebird Vs. He doubles up almost all of the guitars he carries. This red one is his go-to, while a green one serves as backup. “They just sound great,” he explains. Bergman says both are “pretty straightforward” models, and like most of his guitars, they’re tuned a half-step down and strung with Ernie Ball .011–.048s.

The Prototype

This prototype of the limited Collector’s Edition reproduction of Slash’s 1963 ES-335 sports a vintage sunburst finish with Murphy Lab light aging to match his original. It also includes a Bigsby B7 vibrato tailpiece, unpotted Custombucker pickups, and period-correct nylon saddles.

“This one looks so much like the original,” explains Bergman, “that when they were doing the photoshoot, they had to keep them separate, just so they wouldn’t end up in the wrong case and get mixed up.”

Scala Special

This heavily relic’d Gibson Custom Shop Master Artisan Collection Leo Scala Explorer was built to ’58 specs by luthier Leo Scala. (Tech Ace Bergman notes that it was influenced by the famous Big Ed 1958 Gibson Explorer.) “It’s a real special guitar; he loves it a lot,” says Bergman.

Winner by a Neck

Slash’s black 1986 Gibson Les Paul Standard rocks a set of his signature Duncan pickups. Other than that, it’s what you’d expect. “It’s a Standard, so you can find the specs anywhere,” says Bergman. “One of the main things he looks for in a guitar is the neck. If he likes the neck, that’s a big plus.”

Metal Warrior

The only non-Gibson in the arsenal is Slash’s Travis Bean, used primarily for slide. “They’re really cool guitars,” Slash says of the vintage aluminum-neck model. Look closely, and you’ll see where his preferred settings are marked with red tape on each knob.

Amped Up on Magnatones

Slash has long been known to let it rip in front of an army of Marshalls. These days, though, he reaches for a Magnatone. “That changed a lot of things,” he says of the switch, calling them growly and old-school. “You could really get into the tones of the guitars.”

For gigs with the Blues Ball Band, he’s using M-80 combos loaded with Celestion Vintage 30s. Bergman assures that “they’re super loud.” Out of sight, Slash’s Talkbox is driven with a Magnatone Super Fifty-Nine M-80 head.

With His Own Two Feet

“I haven’t had a pedalboard in front of my feet since the ’80s,” Slash tells us. With the Blues Ball, though, he’s keeping it simple and stomping his own boxes. His chain includes a Peterson Strobostomp, Dunlop Cry Baby, MXR CAE Boost/Line Driver, Ibanez TS-9 Tube Screamer, MXR EVH90, BBE Soul Vibe Rotary Simulator, Boss DD-3 Digital Delay, MXR Uni-Vibe, and everything is powered with a Voodoo Lab Pedal Power 2 Plus.

All pedals are taped down with their settings dialed-in. When his signal leaves the board, it hits a Whirlwind Selector A/B box, where it splits off between his amps and his Talkbox rig.

Goin' for Gold

“I’ll play anything with six strings,” explains Neal, “but not everything is going to inspire stuff.” Tash tours with just two guitars. Both are completely stock, and both feature P-90 pickups. His go-to is this Gibson 1956 Les Paul Goldtop Reissue.

Mahogany Marvel

Neal’s backup is a beloved Gibson SG, which he bought a while ago after a back surgery, when he says he “needed a light guitar.” He’s used to breaking a lot of strings, so he started using heavier gauge D’Addario .011s on each axe to help keep them intact through the set!

New-Old Rock

“Pedals are cool, but it’s paramount that the amp itself is doing it,” Neal explains. The singer/guitarist’s Fender ’59 Bassman reissue, which he says sounds warm and emotive, does the trick.

Spare Stompin'

Neal keeps a modest pedalboard at his feet, which is loaded up with a D’Addario Chromatic Pedal Tuner, Dunlop Cry Baby, XTS Custom Pedals Precision Multi-Drive, EHX Green Russian Big Muff, and a Fender Waylon Jennings Phaser, all powered by a T-Rex Fuel Tank.

The Mick Ronson Cry Baby Wah, meticulously recreated from his own pedal, offers fixed-wah tones with a custom inductor for a unique sound.

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Photo by Mike White

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Bob Mould wrote his last album, Blue Heart, as a protest record, ahead of the 2020 American election. As a basic rule, protest music works best when it's shared and experienced communally, where it can percolate and manifest in new, exciting disruptions. But 2020 wasn’t exactly a great year for gathering together.

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Reader: Federico Novelli
Hometown: Genoa, Italy
Guitar: The Italian Hybrid

Reader Federico Novelli constructed this hybrid guitar from three layers of pine, courtesy of some old shelves he had laying around.

Through a momentary flash, an amateur Italian luthier envisioned a hybrid design that borrowed elements from his favorite models.

A few years ago, at the beginning of Covid, an idea for a new guitar flashed through my mind. It was a semi-acoustic model with both magnetic and piezo pickups that were mounted on a soundboard that could resonate. It was a nice idea, but I also had to think about how to make it in my tiny cellar without many power tools and using old solid-wood shelves I had available.

I have been playing guitar for 50 years, and I also dabble in luthiery for fun. I have owned a classical guitar, an acoustic guitar, and a Stratocaster, but a jazz guitar was missing from the list. I wanted something that would have more versatility, so the idea of a hybrid semi-acoustic guitar was born.

I started to sketch something on computer-aided design (CAD) software, thinking of a hollowbody design without a center block or sides that needed to be hot-worked with a bending machine. I thought of a construction made of three layers of solid pine wood, individually worked and then glued together in layers, with a single-cutaway body and a glued-in neck.

For the soundboard and back, I used a piece of ash and hand-cut it with a Japanese saw to the proper thickness, so I had two sheets to fit together. Next, I sanded the soundboard and bottom using two striker profiles as sleds and an aluminum box covered in sandpaper to achieve a uniform 3 mm thickness. A huge amount of work, but it didn't cost anything.

“It was a nice idea, but I also had to think about how to make it in my tiny cellar without many electric tools and out of old solid-wood shelves I had available.”

The soundboard has simplified X-bracing, a soundhole with a rosewood edge profile, and an acoustic-style rosewood bridge. For the neck, I used a piece of old furniture with straight grain, shaped it to a Les Paul profile, and added a single-action truss rod. The only new purchase: a cheap Chinese rosewood fretboard.

Then, there was lots of sanding. I worked up to 400-grit, added filler, primer, and transparent nitro varnish, worked the sandpaper up to 1,500-grit, and finally polished.

Our reader and his “Italian job.”

For electronics, I used a Tonerider alnico 2 humbucker pickup and a piezo undersaddle pickup, combined with a modified Shadow preamp that also includes a magnetic pickup input, so you can mix the two sources on a single output. I also installed a bypass switch for power on/off and a direct passive output.

I have to say that I am proud and moderately satisfied both aesthetically and with the sounds it produces, which range from jazz to acoustic and even gypsy jazz. However, I think I will replace the electronics and piezo with Fishman hardware in the future.

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