What amps does Dan Auerbach use?
Auerbach uses a three-amp setup where all three are on all the time. The amps are a reissue Marshall JTM-45 (cabinet with Jensen speakers), Fender Quad Reverb (with two Celestion Greenbacks and two Vintage 30s), and Victoria Dual Deluxe (with Eminence Red Coats).
What amps does Adam Jones use?
“Adam mainly runs three amps,” he said. “He has a Marshall that he loves, a Diezel, and then he was using a Mesa Boogie at one point. I brought in a Bogner Uberschall head and a Rivera Knucklehead Reverb, and several other things.
What equipment does Adam Jones use?
Adam Jones has been synonymous with Gibson Les Paul Custom guitars throughout his career with Tool – specifically Silverburst-finished models. Although Jones owns several Silverbursts, his number one guitar has always been his ’79 Les Paul Custom; made in Gibson’s ‘Norlin’ era.
What distortion does Adam Jones use?
Seymour Duncan SH-6b Duncan Distortion A comment in this video from someone who saw adam on tour stated “Adam’s pickup is also NOT a SH-4. It’s a custom from SD. I talked to them a few years ago and ordered a Custom SH5 pickup, it’s as close as they could get me, they obviously cannot release his specs on his pickup…
What AMP does Gary Clark Jr use?
Fender Vibro-King
Gary Clark Jr has used Fender amps ever since he started playing small blues bars in Texas. In his own words, everyone in the Texas blues scene was using Fender, and ‘if you didn’t have a Fender amp, you weren’t really doing it’. His first amp of choice is the Fender Vibro-King.
What amp does Justin Chancellor use?
Justin Chancellor’s Amplifier has been Mesa Boogie cabinets and he’s done some major boogie experimentation along the way. Justin’s first amplifiers when he joined TOOL in 1996 he was seen on stage with; Mesa Boogie Road Ready 4X10″ (x2)
What kind of Epiphone does Gary Clark Jr play?
Epiphone Blak & Blu Casino
on Why His Signature Epiphone Blak & Blu Casino Is His Guitar of Choice.
What tuning does Black Keys use?
I did a search here, and was surprised that it turned up no mention of Curtis Mayfield’s “Black Keys”-tuning. That is, tuning a guitar to F#-A#-C#-F#-A#-F# (each a “black key” on the piano, low to high, or any tuning relative to that.