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“Glory to God in the highest heaven, and on earth peace to those on whom his favor rests.”  - Luke 2:14

General Interest

Former Mastodon guitarist Brent Hinds dies in Atlanta motorcycle crash

Guitar.com - Thu, 08/21/2025 - 09:25

Brent Hinds

Brent Hinds, the former guitarist of Atlanta metal band Mastodon, has died aged 51 in a motorcycle crash.

A police report details how the driver of an SUV failed to yield while making a turn at an Atlanta intersection. Hinds’ death was confirmed to Atlanta News First by the Fulton County medical examiner’s office.

Brent Hinds founded Mastodon alongside Bill Kelliher, Troy Sanders and Brann Dailor in 2000, and this lineup remained unchanged until his exit this year.

With Hinds, Mastodon have released eight studio albums, and been nominated for several Grammy awards, winning one for Best Metal Performance in 2018 for Sultan’s Curse.

Hinds was also a member of several other bands, including the surfabilly band Fiend Without A Face and the supergroup Giraffe Tongue Orchestra.

Hinds’ relationship with Mastodon has been heavily strained in the past year, following his exit from the band in March.

While the split initially looked amicable – with his former bandmates wishing him “nothing but the best” – Hinds would later make disparaging comments about the other members of the band three months after his departure, and claim that he had been kicked out rather than the split

More recently, this month, Hinds claimed he was “kicked out” for “embarrassing the band”, accusing its members of being “incapable of singing in key”, and adding: “I’ve never met three people that were so full of themselves.”

This is a developing story.

The post Former Mastodon guitarist Brent Hinds dies in Atlanta motorcycle crash appeared first on Guitar.com | All Things Guitar.

Categories: General Interest

Guitarists always talk about down-picking, but have you worked on your up-picking lately? Here's why it could be a game-changer for your playing

Guitar World - Thu, 08/21/2025 - 09:13
Mastering confident upstrokes can take your playing to the next level, whatever style you play
Categories: General Interest

How Martin’s Oʻahu HG-28 sheds light on the hidden history of the Dreadnought

Guitar.com - Thu, 08/21/2025 - 08:42

Ad feature with Martin Guitar

The dreadnought acoustic guitar has long been associated with country and folk music. But did you know that the first dreadnoughts made by Martin under the Ditson brand name were originally intended for music from Hawaii?

In fact, there is a strong argument that modern society owes a significant cultural debt to this tiny group of islands, and should be celebrated. This is certainly a position held by C.F. Martin IV – former Martin guitar CEO, current Executive Chairman of the iconic guitar brand, and the man with a name that should indicate that he very much knows what he’s talking about.

Chris Martin has been heavily involved in the new Martin Oʻahu sub-brand – and its debut instrument, the HG-28. The HG-28 is the sort of guitar to make dreadnought fans sit up and take notice – a 14-fret instrument with a shorter 24.9-inch scale length, a Sitka spruce top, and Hawaiian koa on the back and sides.

You can see a fair bit of of Dread DNA in here, and that’s by design – as Chris himself explained in the latest Martin Journal, that is by design. Modern guitar in general would be a very different place without the impact of Hawaiian music.

After all, how many times have we read that resonators, lap steels, and electric guitars were originally invented for Hawaiian music? It’s a fact that many players tend to gloss over, but it remains a fact.

Unconventional Origins

The specs listed above are rather unusual for a Martin guitar, but that’s because the whole concept for this instrument actually came from a vintage Gibson – and one that you’ve almost certainly never heard of.

The HG-20 is a superbly improbable guitar – it sports both an internal resonating chamber and no less than two sets of f-holes in its top. The guitar was, like the original Ditson Dreadnought, designed for Hawaiian music.

When browsing an auction one day, Chris Martin IV spotted the guitar and instantly recognised that this bizarre guitar’s outline was remarkably similar to a slope-shouldered dreadnought.

This revelation led to an intense period of research in the company’s archives and ultimately led to the creation of the HG-28 – a guitar that imagines itself as the Hawaiian ‘missing link’ in the evolution of the Dreadnought between the commercial failure of the Ditson Dread to the all-conquering 14-fret Martin-branded beast that would come along 17 years later.

Uke Can Do It

Another instrument that had a massive influence on the Martin Company is the ukulele. In fact, during the dark financial times of the 1920s, the Martin Company survived thanks to the thousands of ukuleles they were able to make and sell.

Koa was a common wood choice for the ukulele – an instrument which saw a huge spike in popularity following the Panama Pacific International Exposition of 1915. This was arguably the point at which the world fell in love with Hawaiian culture and it would not be the last time that the tiny ukulele would have a significant effect on popular music around the world.

Martin pioneered the use of koa for steel string guitars in the 1920s and the wood, which only grows on the Hawaiian islands. In recent years, koa has again become very popular with players looking for something different to mahogany or rosewood – but the HG-28 is another way to demonstrate the brand’s early engagement with what feels like a very modern concept.

The gently slope-shouldered body of the Oʻahu HG-28 is slightly slimmer than a regulation dreadnought. In fact, it’s the same depth as a Martin 000, making it very comfortable indeed for the seated player. The neck features Martin’s low oval High Performance taper with 14 frets to the body, while the 13/4-inch nut width means there’s plenty of space for the fingerstyle player, too

There are plenty of other nice little touches on the HG-28 that make it feel a little different to the regular line Martin – the herringbone purfling, the colourful palm-adorned internal label, and of course the word ​​ʻOʻahu’ – note the correctly oriented apostrophe! – sitting proudly on the headstock beneath the iconic Martin logo.

Because the HG-28 is not just one guitar – it’s the start of a range. Already, the Oʻahu sub-brand has absorbed an existing Martin tribute to the huge impact of Hawaiian guitar culture – the Custom K-1 Major Kealakai

Kealakai was a giant of Hawaiian music, who was the conductor for the Royal Hawaiian Band. The custom guitar made for him by Martin in 1916 – recreated in the K-1 – was itself a direct forebear of what became the dreadnought we now know and love.

The Oʻahu HG-28 is a fitting tribute to the influence of Hawaiian culture on modern music, and a great and interesting addition to the Martin line. If you’ve ever been tempted by the sound of a classic dread but have been put off by the size, this could very well be the perfect guitar for you.

Find out more about the Oʻahu range at martinguitar.com.

 

The post How Martin’s Oʻahu HG-28 sheds light on the hidden history of the Dreadnought appeared first on Guitar.com | All Things Guitar.

Categories: General Interest

“I think I probably have another five years in show business”: Pete Townshend looks to the future as The Who’s farewell tour gets underway

Guitar World - Thu, 08/21/2025 - 08:26
The guitar hero says he and Daltrey may work together in the future, but he’s also got his eye on some solo shows
Categories: General Interest

How Martin’s Oʻahu HG-28 sheds light on the hidden history of the Dreadnought

Guitar.com - Thu, 08/21/2025 - 08:21

Ad feature with Martin Guitar

The dreadnought acoustic guitar has long been associated with country and folk music. But did you know that the first dreadnoughts made by Martin under the Ditson brand name were originally intended for music from Hawaii?

In fact, there is a strong argument that modern society owes a significant cultural debt to this tiny group of islands, and should be celebrated. This is certainly a position held by C.F. Martin IV – former Martin guitar CEO, current Executive Chairman of the iconic guitar brand, and the man with a name that should indicate that he very much knows what he’s talking about.

Chris Martin has been heavily involved in the new Martin Oʻahu sub-brand – and its debut instrument, the HG-28. The HG-28 is the sort of guitar to make dreadnought fans sit up and take notice – a 14-fret instrument with a shorter 24.9-inch scale length, a Sitka spruce top, and Hawaiian koa on the back and sides.

You can see a fair bit of of Dread DNA in here, and that’s by design – as Chris himself explained in the latest Martin Journal, that is by design. Modern guitar in general would be a very different place without the impact of Hawaiian music.

After all, how many times have we read that resonators, lap steels, and electric guitars were originally invented for Hawaiian music? It’s a fact that many players tend to gloss over, but it remains a fact.

Unconventional Origins

The specs listed above are rather unusual for a Martin guitar, but that’s because the whole concept for this instrument actually came from a vintage Gibson – and one that you’ve almost certainly never heard of.

The HG-20 is a superbly improbable guitar – it sports both an internal resonating chamber and no less than two sets of f-holes in its top. The guitar was, like the original Ditson Dreadnought, designed for Hawaiian music.

When browsing an auction one day, Chris Martin IV spotted the guitar and instantly recognised that this bizarre guitar’s outline was remarkably similar to a slope-shouldered dreadnought.

This revelation led to an intense period of research in the company’s archives and ultimately led to the creation of the HG-28 – a guitar that imagines itself as the Hawaiian ‘missing link’ in the evolution of the Dreadnought between the commercial failure of the Ditson Dread to the all-conquering 14-fret Martin-branded beast that would come along 17 years later.

Uke Can Do It

Another instrument that had a massive influence on the Martin Company is the ukulele. In fact, during the dark financial times of the 1920s, the Martin Company survived thanks to the thousands of ukuleles they were able to make and sell.

Koa was a common wood choice for the ukulele – an instrument which saw a huge spike in popularity following the Panama Pacific International Exposition of 1915. This was arguably the point at which the world fell in love with Hawaiian culture and it would not be the last time that the tiny ukulele would have a significant effect on popular music around the world.

Martin pioneered the use of koa for steel string guitars in the 1920s and the wood, which only grows on the Hawaiian islands. In recent years, koa has again become very popular with players looking for something different to mahogany or rosewood – but the HG-28 is another way to demonstrate the brand’s early engagement with what feels like a very modern concept.

The gently slope-shouldered body of the Oʻahu HG-28 is slightly slimmer than a regulation dreadnought. In fact, it’s the same depth as a Martin 000, making it very comfortable indeed for the seated player. The neck features Martin’s low oval High Performance taper with 14 frets to the body, while the 13/4-inch nut width means there’s plenty of space for the fingerstyle player, too

There are plenty of other nice little touches on the HG-28 that make it feel a little different to the regular line Martin – the herringbone purfling, the colourful palm-adorned internal label, and of course the word ​​ʻOʻahu’ – note the correctly oriented apostrophe! – sitting proudly on the headstock beneath the iconic Martin logo.

Because the HG-28 is not just one guitar – it’s the start of a range. Already, the Oʻahu sub-brand has absorbed an existing Martin tribute to the huge impact of Hawaiian guitar culture – the Custom K-1 Major Kealakai

Kealakai was a giant of Hawaiian music, who was the conductor for the Royal Hawaiian Band. The custom guitar made for him by Martin in 1916 – recreated in the K-1 – was itself a direct forebear of what became the dreadnought we now know and love.

The Oʻahu HG-28 is a fitting tribute to the influence of Hawaiian culture on modern music, and a great and interesting addition to the Martin line. If you’ve ever been tempted by the sound of a classic dread but have been put off by the size, this could very well be the perfect guitar for you.

Find out more about the Oʻahu range at martinguitar.com

 

The post How Martin’s Oʻahu HG-28 sheds light on the hidden history of the Dreadnought appeared first on Guitar.com | All Things Guitar.

Categories: General Interest

Nashville’s Modern Honky-Tonk (Guitar) Hero

Premier Guitar - Thu, 08/21/2025 - 08:21

John Bohlinger spends some quality time with the Telecaster powerhouse keeping Don Kelley’s legacy burning bright at Robert’s Western World. McQueary shares some subtle tone tips, recounts memories of performing alongside his heroes (and Kelley alumni), explains his constant pursuit of nuance in tone—often finding more magic in playing softly than turning up, and details the journey that took him from bystander to Nashville Broadway showman.

Categories: General Interest

Digitech HammerOn Review

Premier Guitar - Thu, 08/21/2025 - 08:14


Digitech says its latest creation, the HammerOn pitch-shifting pedal, is “seven pedals in one.” That left me pondering what constitutes a “pedal” in this scheme. I think the more accurate and descriptive term may be “modes.” But those seven pitch-shifting modes deliver in really fun ways.


Operationally speaking, the HammerOn is fairly straightforward. When you step on either of the sturdy-feeling footswitches, whatever note(s) you play morph instantly to a different pitch of your choice. But this simple premise still makes the HammerOn a compelling addition to the Wham’ Fam’.

Mode Mentality


Hammer-on mode, which I essentially described above, is the most straightforward application of the pedal’s potential. But there is also an Impossible mode, which alternates between two different pitches, making once “impossible” fretboard maneuvers much more possible. Sequence mode strings together multiple pitch changes in different ways. And with any of these modes, you can add in your unaffected signal using the dry+ button or force the HammerOn to alternate pitches on its own with the trill button. According to the manual, these three modes, combined with the dry+ and trill buttons, account for the seven different “pedals” mashed together here.

“I even came up with a pretty strange-sounding chorus so odd that I giggled out loud.”

HammerOn’s modes, if not exactly independent pedals, are nevertheless capable of cool tricks. Certain pitch shift moves can work like a harmonizer, others like an alien 12-string emulator, and some like a capo that extends your guitar’s scale. In hammer-on mode, you hear plenty of the digital-icious glitchiness from the Whammy algorithm. You can also build sequences that evoke synthesizers, and it’s great, perverse fun to set the HammerOn to an odd interval like a flat 5th and smear otherwise pedestrian licks with a footswitch. I even came up with a pretty strange-sounding chorus so odd that I giggled out loud.

The HammerOn has plenty of practical uses, but its real magic lies in how it nudges you into unconventional musical territory, encouraging you to loosen your grip on habits and familiar fretboard patterns—much like the original Whammy. Ultimately, it’s a great tool for shaking creativity loose.

Categories: General Interest

“If he does have an answer, it’d be great if one day he would share it”: Chino Moreno doesn’t know why Stephen Carpenter isn’t touring internationally with Deftones

Guitar.com - Thu, 08/21/2025 - 08:04

Stephen Carpenter captured playing his ESP guitar.

Deftones’ Chino Moreno has shared his sadness regarding guitarist Stephen Carpenter’s decision to step down from international touring, though he’s still not sure as to his reasons why.

Deftones are due to release a brand new record, titled Private Music, this Friday 22 August. They’re due to kick off a tour in support of the new record that same day in Vancouver, with dates across Europe, the UK, and Ireland set for early 2026. Guitarist Lance Jackman has been known to fill in for Carpenter overseas.

Back in 2022, Carpenter announced his decision to step away from playing shows with the band outside of North America. Many believed this was down to his anti-vax views, which he shared via the Tin Foil Hat podcast back in 2020, surrounding the COVID-19 pandemic.

However, Carpenter has also spoken openly about mental health struggles with anxiety. In a 2024 Rock Feed interview, he insisted that he’d already made the decision to step down from international tours prior to the pandemic, but said that it had worsened his anxiety.

Now, speaking to Metal Hammer, Moreno has shared support for Carpenter and says the band accept his decision to do things his own way: “I don’t want to speak for him. And even if I could, I still don’t have an answer,” he says.

“Really I don’t. It’s still something that I think he is figuring out. And if he does have an answer, I think it’d be great if one day he would share it. But yeah, we support him. We have to. He’s our friend. And his health, be it physically or mentally, always takes the forefront of anything.

“It’s sad, I want him onstage with us at every show. If you ask me what I prefer, I want him there every day, every time we do anything, with the band. But it literally comes down to: there’s two ways to deal with it. We accept what he can and will do, or we just don’t play. And we want to play,” concludes Moreno.

Deftones’ new album Private Music is available to pre-order now. View their full list of tour dates via the band’s official website.

The post “If he does have an answer, it’d be great if one day he would share it”: Chino Moreno doesn’t know why Stephen Carpenter isn’t touring internationally with Deftones appeared first on Guitar.com | All Things Guitar.

Categories: General Interest

RATs and RAT-alikes explained – our guide to the best affordable, classic and boutique RAT-style pedals

Guitar.com - Thu, 08/21/2025 - 08:04

JHS PackRat

They say that in New York, you’re never more than six feet away from a rat. This isn’t true. What is true, is that on guitar pedal forums, you’re never more than six seconds away from being told to buy a ProCo RAT, potentially by me personally. Have you thought about buying a RAT today?

But why? What makes the RAT so bloody good? Why does everyone – including yours truly – go on about the virtues of this unassuming, affordable distortion pedal? And how can you sift through the many versions of the circuit, boutique or otherwise, to find the right one for you? Today we’re unpacking the many different versions of the circuit, from the classic ProCo models to boutique oddities to affordable alternatives.

What makes a RAT a RAT?

I won’t be doing a full deep-dive into the history of the original here – you can see my review of the modern RAT for that – but I do want to establish what’s going on in the circuit, and what boutique versions might be giving you more control over.

Simplified RAT SchematicThis schematic shows the essentials of a stock RAT circuit

In the above schematic, you can see that the RAT is a relatively simple circuit. Let’s go over it in stages – first, the power supply up in the top right. This part of the circuit has a few purposes – the diode here is a polarity protection diode, which will try to block current if you accidentally connect the wrong polarity power supply. There’s also a few resistors and capacitors here – these form a filter that gets rid of high-frequency power supply noise.

The power supply stage also has something called a voltage divider. Here, two resistors of the same value are connected between the 9V supply and ground. In the middle of these two resistors, the voltage is halved from 9V to 4.5V for use in the circuit. The final thing to note in terms of power is that pins 7 and 4 of the opamp are connected straight to power and ground respectively.

The reason for all of these relatively complex power connections, at least when compared to a more basic circuit like a Fuzz Face, is that the RAT’s main gain stage uses an opamp – an 8-pin chip that’s represented here by a triangle. The opamp’s internal circuit needs a reference voltage of where to swing your audio signal up and down from – with the most headroom on either side being provided by a point slap-bang in the middle of the available nine volts. Hence, the 4.5V part of the supply.

How much the opamp, er, operationally amplifies your signal, is controlled by the gain pot. This goes all the way from “not very much at all” to “far more than the opamp can technically handle” – and so while the RAT also introduces distortion with some clipping diodes, on higher gain settings your signal is also hitting the opamp’s headroom.

Moving onto those clipping diodes, this is where variations of the RAT – official or otherwise – make a lot of their changes. On the stock RAT, these are basic silicon 1N1418 diodes or similar, connected in a hard-clipping configuration. Hard-clipping means that the diodes chop off the top and bottom of your signal and bleed it to ground, creating a sharper edge in the waveform. Soft-clipping, on the other hand, uses a feedback loop to create a gentler curve between the unclipped and clipped parts of the signal.

What diodes are used here is massively important to the final sound – different diodes mean different frequency responses, and different amounts of clipping, and so swapping them out is a great way to modify the sound.

From here we hit the RAT’s tone control – this is a basic low-pass filter that goes from letting basically all of the audio signals through to rolling off a whole load of high-end. This is what lets the sound go from sharp and cutting to smooth and fuzzy, although it does mean limited control over the low-end. The final stage is just a simple unity-gain buffer that sets the output impedance, with the volume control just cleanly lowering the level of the whole pedal’s signal.

What RAT should I buy?

So, that’s the basics of a RAT structure – but there are many variations thereof, complex and subtle. ProCo’s own lineup includes some modified versions, most notably You Dirty RAT! And the Turbo RAT. These replace the clipping diodes with Germanium and red LEDs respectively. In the case of germanium diodes, these clip a lot earlier, and have a much more compressed, squishy sound. Red LEDs, on the other hand, clip later – and therefore a good deal louder, open and uncompressed.

[products ids=”5aeAHvPmEygdBVSaKIHCmb,4giI93HX3atAbq2xQ4tzoL,10bvCj2cvtjNrTJvcENnOC”]

Affordable alternatives

Arguably the RAT itself is already pretty affordable, however there are some more budget takes on the circuit out there for the distortion-inclined who want to save a bit of cash.

Mooer Black Secret

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This is an ultra-affordable mini-pedal from Mooer that’s a pretty faithful take on the standard RAT circuit. There’s also a clipping switch to boot, going between a standard vintage mode and the LED-driven Turbo mode. Its small size and affordable price make it pretty appealing if you’re on a budget in terms of either cash or space, but keep in mind that two of the three knobs are rather fiddly mini affairs.

TC Electronic Magus Pro

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The TC Electronic Magus Pro is another faithful, affordable take on the RAT. As well as changing the clipping diodes, the toggle switch here also affords access to a Fat mode, which is bassier and punchier in the mids – good for bassists or down-tuning!

Boutique options

There are many, many boutique takes on this circuit, doing everything from totally reshaping the sound, adding many weird and wonderful clipping options to integrating boosts and extra fuzzes. Let’s take a look at a few.

Black Mass Electronics 1312

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My personal favourite RAT-inspired distortion, the Black Mass 1312 does three main things to stand out. Firstly, it packs a voltage doubler for extra headroom and oomph. Secondly, it features the mother of all clipping selectors, allowing for a load of different levels of grit and compression. And thirdly it looks cool as hell. It all leads to a great sound for everything from lower-gain overdrive to ultra-bright, piercing distortion to dark, doomy sludge.

JHS Packrat

[products ids=”wMqgoeUTnGbPjKkt1Q8z3″]

Option pa-rat-asis? That doesn’t work at all, but what does work is the JHS Packrat. Rather than just a clipping selector, this nine-mode pedal also adjusts various circuit values on each mode with some clever switching trickery. This meticulously recreates different versions of the pedal in full, all within one circuit. Would you expect any less from such a vintage pedal historian as Josh Scott?

1981 Inventions DRV

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The 1981 Inventions DRV is one of the more drastically modified circuits in the world of boutique RAT-alikes. Like the 1312, it features a voltage doubler for extra headroom, but has a bit more of a subtle tonal approach. Some extra input and output gain stages give it a bit more control than a regular RAT when it comes to the gain and volume sweeps, and there’s a bit more focus on clarity rather than fuzz when you crank the distortion up.

Walrus Iron Horse V3

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The Walrus Audio Iron Horse doesn’t reinvent the wheel, however V3 does add a pretty cool blend knob to go between silicon and LED clipping. While the LED clipping somewhat dominates the dial thanks to the extra volume if offers, the rest of the circuit adds some clarifying tonal tweaks – making the Iron Horse a good option if you like the texture of a RAT, but the harmonic practicality of something a little more transparent.

EarthQuaker Devices x Sunn O))) Life Pedal V3

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No list of cool boutique RATs would be complete without one. The EarthQuaker Devices Life Pedal is inspired by the crushing tones conjured on the Sunn O))) albums Life Metal and Pyroclasts – achieved by running vintage Shin Ei fuzzes into RATs for massive walls of fuzzy sustain, essential to the band’s sound. A vintage-style analogue octave-up can be blended into the RAT portion of the pedal, and for version three is also footswitchable on or off. After this your signal hits a switchable clean boost, making sure your amp’s front end also brings something to the party

In terms of the RAT portion of the circuit, the voicing can get surprisingly bright for such a doom-inspired pedal – there are three clipping modes, too – either no clipping at all other than the opamp distortion, asymmetrical LED/Silicon clipping or the classic silicon diode pair.

The post RATs and RAT-alikes explained – our guide to the best affordable, classic and boutique RAT-style pedals appeared first on Guitar.com | All Things Guitar.

Categories: General Interest

Is MONO’s M80 Classic Ultra the ultimate guitar case? Expanded storage, superior protection – and even attachable wheels

Guitar.com - Thu, 08/21/2025 - 07:56

MONO M80 Classic Ultra

[Editor’s note: MONO is part of Vista Musical Instruments, which like Guitar.com, is part of the Caldecott Music Group.]

Instrument accessory brand MONO has unveiled the M80 Classic Ultra, a new evolution of its classic M80 gig bag. 

Now with greater emphasis on smarter storage, effortless mobility and more robust protection, the M80 Classic Ultra might just be the perfect solution to keep your guitar safe as houses.

Chief among the features of the M80 Classic Ultra is its patented Freeride Wheel System, which enables musicians to attach wheels – perfect for moving around airports, venues, or anywhere else that carrying your guitar for long periods of time might prove inconvenient.

MONO M80 Classic UltraCredit: MONO

The M80 Classic Ultra comes both as a standard single-instrument case, or as a Dual case able to carry two guitars or basses, so the Freeride Wheel System makes carrying two instruments easier than ever.

Elsewhere, the M80 Classic Ultra features a “supercharged” approach to storage, with a newly designed expandable front pocket offering more room for tools, accessories and other gigging essentials, and a series of built-in compartments.

Additionally, the M80 Classic Ultra is “Tick-ready”, and compatible with MONO’s Tick 2.0 and Tick+ 2.0 accessory cases.

MONO M80 Classic UltraCredit: MONO

Obviously, protection is one of the key selling points of the M80 Classic Ultra, and your instrument is kept safe via its Headlock neck suspension system, which keeps it securely in place and shielded from impact. The case’s exterior is built using water-resistant 1680D ballistic nylon, with a waterproof zipper tape and reflective strips for added safety.

The case also features a discreet pouch designed to hold a tracker tag, so you can have that piece of mind in case it ever goes missing.

Price-wise, the M80 Classic Ultra is available now at $359.99 for a single guitar/bass case, and $459.99 for a dual guitar/bass case.

For more information, you can head to MONO.

The post Is MONO’s M80 Classic Ultra the ultimate guitar case? Expanded storage, superior protection – and even attachable wheels appeared first on Guitar.com | All Things Guitar.

Categories: General Interest

Birmingham University economists say Black Sabbath’s final show made £33.8 million from physical ticket sales

Guitar.com - Thu, 08/21/2025 - 05:30

Ozzy Osbourne performing live

After Sharon Osbourne recently called out the “ridiculous” £140 million figure some media outlets claimed Black Sabbath’s final show brought in, a group of economists at the University of Birmingham reckon they’ve got a better estimate of the actual numbers – from actual ticket sales, that is.

According to BBC News, approximately 42,000 physical tickets were sold for the concert itself, with 20% bought by international fans, and with prices ranging from £197.50 to £834.

According to Dr. Matt Lyons of the University of Birmingham – who conducted the new research – tickets for the monumental Villa Park show brought in a total of £33.8 million, with £27.6 million being retained in the West Midlands region, which consists of seven boroughs, one being the city of Birmingham, Sabbath’s hometown.

“As regional economists from the University of Birmingham, we thought we would do our bit to honour Ozzy’s legacy by estimating the economic impact of his last gig,” says Lyons.

“The impact of the Prince of Darkness obviously goes far beyond the financial impact his gigs and TV shows have netted.

“Ozzy is a global legend, and his gift of incredible music, and now his final economic impact, will go on to benefit his home city far into the future.”

No mention is made in the BBC News article, though, of the revenue accrued from pay-per-view stream sales.

According to a Billboard article published last month, “5.8 million individuals online” paid to watch the livestream of the concert as it happened. And priced at £24.99, we work that out to be over £140 million (24.99 x 5.8 million) in additional revenue, if Billboard’s numbers are accurate.

While we don’t have official numbers from the event yet, it is true that with an event of this magnitude and with this many moving parts, overheads including band fees, logistics, crew wages and online processing fees were likely substantial, and would have made a hefty dent into the final figure that was ultimately donated to charity.

Proceeds from the event were pledged to Cure Parkinson’s, the Birmingham Children’s Hospital, and Acorns Children’s Hospice.

Ozzy Obsourne sadly died at the age of 76 just two weeks after Black Sabbath’s final show, prompting a widespread outpouring of grief and tributes from the rock world, and indeed the wider music world, too.

The post Birmingham University economists say Black Sabbath’s final show made £33.8 million from physical ticket sales appeared first on Guitar.com | All Things Guitar.

Categories: General Interest

“Great Scott!” Gibson teases Back to the Future ES-345 replica – and an Epiphone version may not be far behind

Guitar World - Thu, 08/21/2025 - 04:15
The hunt for the original goes on, but Gibson Custom Shop is making headway on what looks like plans for a fully fledged Back to the Future guitar line
Categories: General Interest

“This is the first real olive-branch moment Dave and I have had in 100 years”: Sammy Hagar insists that David Lee Roth wasn’t mocking him about being visited by Eddie Van Halen’s ghost

Guitar.com - Thu, 08/21/2025 - 03:27

Sammy Hagar (L) and David Lee Roth (R) shaking hands while promoting their 2002 tour.

Sammy Hagar has taken a stand against a social media frenzy claiming that David Lee Roth recently mocked him during a concert over his spiritual visitation from the late Eddie Van Halen.

Former Van Halen frontman Hagar claimed that Eddie had visited him in a dream and that they’d written a song together, which he went on to release as Encore, Thank You, Goodnight back in April. However, in a recent video of Roth – who served as vocalist in Van Halen until Hagar replaced his position in 1985 – he seemingly poked fun at Hagar’s story, though Hagar himself begs to differ.

In the video, taken during his concert at the Hampton Beach Casino Ballroom last week, Roth said, “You all know Sammy Hagar, right? He’s got a great voice. Sammy described to the media about six weeks ago that the ghost of Eddie Van Halen visited him and graced him with a song that he memorised and then went home and recorded.

“I don’t know what the odds are, but last night the ghost of Eddie Van Halen visited me at the fucking hotel room,” he said. “I was watching the weather report and he came in and he was laughing. His fucking ghost was laughing.

“I said, ‘What did you do now?’ He said, ‘Dave, Dave… Dave, you know that song I gave Hagar?’ I said, ‘What now?’ He said, ‘It’s actually [1968 Iron Butterfly proto-metal hit] In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida backwards. Don’t fucking tell him.’”

The video of course went on to make headlines, which caught the attention of Hagar. Replying to a comment under an Instagram post on the matter from Metal Addicts, he responds: “I can’t believe social media is trying to make something out of this. This is the first compliment and real olive branch moment Dave and I have had in 100 years. Listen closely and you will see that this is not negative whatsoever.”

He adds, “I believe Dave had the dream as well. Dave’s a good storyteller, but there’s some truth in between the showmanship. All good with me – keep it up Dave. These songs we both wrote with Eddie need to be carried on forever.”

 

A live version of Sammy Hagar’s Encore, Thank You, Goodnight is out now, recorded with his Best Of All Worlds Band. David Lee Roth is touring until mid-September. You can get tickets via his website.

The post “This is the first real olive-branch moment Dave and I have had in 100 years”: Sammy Hagar insists that David Lee Roth wasn’t mocking him about being visited by Eddie Van Halen’s ghost appeared first on Guitar.com | All Things Guitar.

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“What’s the point of even being there, if you’re a band?”: Bruce Dickinson hates the idea of Iron Maiden playing the Las Vegas Sphere

Guitar.com - Thu, 08/21/2025 - 03:26

Bruce Dickinson of Iron Maiden performing live

Reports suggest Metallica are currently eyeing up a residency at the immersive Las Vegas Sphere, but it seems not every legendary metal band is keen.

To clue you in, the MSG Sphere is a spherical $2.3 billion venue that opened in Las Vegas in 2023, and features around 1.2 million LED lights covering the interior which can be configured to display any light or graphical show an artist wishes.

But according to Bruce Dickinson, Iron Maiden has no interest in joining the growing list of bands to perform at the venue, suggesting that he wants Maiden shows to remain performances with focus on the band members, rather than on a light show that might be going on around them.

“No. It’s not Maiden,” Dickinson tells Eddie Trunk in a new interview. “Maiden’s about the relationship between the band and the audience, and the show, whilst it’s a show, is an enhancement to what we do. 

“The Sphere, as far as I can gather… I mean, I appreciate what you’re saying about it – it’s all encompassing, it’s this and that, it’s the other – but I think the band would be very uncomfortable with the idea.”

He continues: “I mean, we just do a lot of stuff: we run around, we go around, and at the Sphere, what’s the point? What’s the point? In fact, what’s the point of even being there, if you’re a band?”

While Bruce Dickinson asserts that an Iron Maiden show should be about the performance from the band members, first and foremost, one can’t help but imagine how spectacular it would be to have Eddie (the band’s mascot) in various scenarios on the Sphere’s gigantic dome roof.

While he sounds pretty adamant that Maiden won’t sign up to play there any time soon, for what it’s worth, Bruce, we’d love to see it…

So far, the Sphere has hosted the likes of U2, Dead & Company and Eagles, as well as electronic artists including Anyma and Kaskade.

While the venue has generally attracted overwhelmingly positive reviews from those who have attended, it has, as Bruce Dickinson suggests, called into question whether the intensity of the experience detracts from the artists who play there.

Naturally, though, for bands and artists with a strongly defined visual theme, the Sphere perhaps presents the best opportunity yet to bring their artistic world to life.

View all of Iron Maiden’s upcoming tour dates via their official website.

The post “What’s the point of even being there, if you’re a band?”: Bruce Dickinson hates the idea of Iron Maiden playing the Las Vegas Sphere appeared first on Guitar.com | All Things Guitar.

Categories: General Interest

“He triple-tracked his solos. Ozzy told him, ‘Nobody can do that!’ Well, he could. That was just his genius”: Randy Rhoads’ sister Kathy is keeping his legacy alive with a new pedal and old memories

Guitar World - Thu, 08/21/2025 - 02:43
Kathy Rhoads recalls the young guitarist’s diary entry about the Prince of Darkness, his thoughts on the Eddie Van Halen comparisons, and touches on moments so painful she still can’t discuss them
Categories: General Interest

“I had a really famous guitar player tell me, ‘Don’t do it!’ The next day he phoned me and said, ‘What did you find?’”: Paul Reed Smith admits he takes razor blades to pickups to find out how they work

Guitar.com - Thu, 08/21/2025 - 02:36

PRS Charcoal Phoenix Limited Edition Guitar

Paul Reed Smith is continuing to take fans behind the curtain at PRS Guitars, and in a new video he’s confessed to taking a razor blade to pickups to find out how they’re waxed.

Given his eccentric leadership – from intentionally pitching ideas he knows his team won’t like, to championing tonewood like no other CEO – it’s not all that surprising that Reed Smith will quite literally butcher a pickup to understand it better, even when a famous pro advises him not to.

In the latest episode of PRS’ Rules Of Tone YouTube series, Reed Smith chats with Chuck Lenderking, who works as part of the new products engineering team at PRS, and collaborates closely with the boss on all things pickups.

“How many experiments do you think we’re running a day?” Reed Smith asks him.

“Oh, five to 10 probably,” replies Lenderking. The pair stand before a dissected electric model with a large chunk missing from its body and empty pickup slots, which is used as the company’s test guitar.

“You can take the electronics out of it and snap on the pickups any way you want. And I know it looks ridiculous, but it has worked so well for us to be able to slide the treble pickup in and listen, slide the bass pickup in and listen,” explains Reed Smith.

“We keep using it. It gets the job done… It actually is not that great sounding, which makes the pickup have to do its job even more,” he adds.

“You have seen me take a razor blade to [pickups] to find out how they were waxed, right? I had a really famous guitar player say, ‘Don’t do it, don’t do it, don’t do it!’ I said, ‘Why not? I need to know.’ He goes, ‘Don’t do it!’ The next day the phone rings. He goes, ‘What’d you find?’”

You can watch the full episode below:

In another Rules Of Tone episode, Reed Smith also explained why neck making is the most important part of building guitars. “Neck making in my mind is fundamental to guitar making. You’re a guitar maker, you’re a neck maker – there’s nothing more important on the guitar,” he said.

PRS celebrates its 40th anniversary this year. You can view the brand’s full product range over at PRS Guitars.

The post “I had a really famous guitar player tell me, ‘Don’t do it!’ The next day he phoned me and said, ‘What did you find?’”: Paul Reed Smith admits he takes razor blades to pickups to find out how they work appeared first on Guitar.com | All Things Guitar.

Categories: General Interest

“They’re hard to sell, particularly when they have issues. The only models that fetch a premium are the White Falcon and Penguin, and the 6120”: Buying a vintage Gretsch guitar can be a gamble – but every pro should have one

Guitar World - Thu, 08/21/2025 - 02:18
We take a closer look at a pristine 1955 Gretsch Streamliner – a guitar that’s indicative of the attention to detail of the era and a reminder that everyone needs a Gretsch
Categories: General Interest

Fleetwood Mac lyric sheet handwritten by Peter Green hits the auction block – and could fetch up to £15,000

Guitar.com - Thu, 08/21/2025 - 02:03

Fleetwood Mac guitarist Peter Green

A Fleetwood Mac lyric and chord sheet handwritten by guitarist Peter Green is set to hit the auction block, and could reportedly fetch up to £15,000.

The sheet depicts lyrics for 1969 single Man of the World, which hit Number 2 in the UK later that year. It subsequently stayed in the charts for 14 weeks.

The lyric sheet – written in blue ballpoint pen, with corrections made in black ink – shows Green changed three lyric lines, adding a complete line to the final verse, while finalising each finished line with a tick at the end.

Ewbank’s auction house in Woking, Surrey, is selling the sheet, and hopes it will reach a bid of up to £15,000. At present, there are no bids, and the starting bid is £6,000.

“Green himself said that he wrote the song when he was at his saddest,” says a spokesperson for Ewbank’s.

“The song is particularly significant as band member Mick Fleetwood said it reflected Green’s mental state at the time and helped explain why he quit the band and tragically descended into mental illness.”

“Few musicians can claim to have been as talented and as important to the development of rock music from the blues and folk movements as Peter Green,” adds John Silke, Ewbank’s music specialist.

Peter Green died in 2020 at the age of 73, after leaving an indelible mark on the blues and rock worlds. Once a member of John Mayall & The Bluesbreakers and the original founder and leader of Fleetwood Mac, Green’s unique guitar playing earned him nods from guitar legends Eric Clapton and BB King, as well as adoration from the wider guitar world.

Green – born Peter Allen Greenbaum in 1946 – suffered a series of issues with his mental health in the 1970s, and was eventually diagnosed with schizophrenia and spent time in psychiatric hospitals in the mid ‘70s.

He later re-emerged professional at the end of the ‘70s and early ‘80s, and in the late ‘80s attributed his breakdown to his previous abuse of drugs including LSD.

Green’s name is also attached to one of the most famous and iconic guitars in the world, Greeny. The 1959 Gibson Les Paul Standard was used by Peter Green throughout his time with John Mayall and Fleetwood Mac, and was later acquired by Gary Moore in the early ‘70s. Now, the guitar is under the custodianship of Metallica guitarist Kirk Hammett.

Learn more at Ewbank’s.

The post Fleetwood Mac lyric sheet handwritten by Peter Green hits the auction block – and could fetch up to £15,000 appeared first on Guitar.com | All Things Guitar.

Categories: General Interest

Meet Boko Yout: Sweden’s most interesting new band who approach guitar chaos with the mindset of a cinematographer

Guitar.com - Thu, 08/21/2025 - 01:00

Boko Yout, photo by Mira & Thilda Berglind

Boko Yout’s debut album needs all of three minutes to start falling apart in thrilling fashion. As the opener Volleyball Tournament strolls to its conclusion – one part Seal, another Ghostpoet, vocalist Paul Adamah’s melodies coiled and patient – there’s a sudden burst of noise, a blast of distortion and thudding, relentless percussion. Then it’s something else entirely. “When I first saw them they were very tight as a band, very in the pocket,” guitarist Lionel Turner says. “It felt like the right thing to do to add some chaos into that.”

Circling Adamah’s shapeshifting, concept-driven writing, Gusto makes good on this promise. Underpinned by a loose narrative that finds a fictionalised version of the vocalist in therapy sessions with the titular doctor, one moment it might be discussing identity or gig work, the next it might train its sights on perceptions of art from both inside and outside institutions or the push-pull between openness and self-destruction. It’s pointed and ambitious, reaching for what Adamah has described as “a sonic manifesto for living with love and intention.”

The accompanying sounds are a melange of motorik drums, needling bass and guitars that whirr and bite against verses with roots that run all the way back to lo-fi bedroom hip hop experiments and the joyous collaborative music that emanated from jams between local African musicians at Adamah’s childhood home in Örebro, where he was brought up by a Togolese father and Mozambican mother. Turner initially met Adamah through his day job as a cinematographer, but their parallel interests in music soon drew them closer together.

“He was rapping at the time,” Turner recalls. “One day he told me he was done with that and he wanted to start a band. He didn’t recruit me – we just had some sessions and we wrote some songs together, and that was that. We kept on living our lives. I thought he had this band, but it turns out that he had just created it in his head. It was something he was projecting towards the future.”

A musician since his teens, Turner grew up with a guitar in the house and his South American father’s love of 60s rock ‘n’ roll and cumbia ringing in his ears before stretching out into his own esoteric interests. Learning the ropes on bass first, he then tapped into the psychedelic wandering of Dungen’s Raine Fiske, the pedal manipulation of Stereolab’s Tim Gane and the searching ambient work of Tatsuhiko Asano.

Paul Adamah, photo by Mira & Thilda BerglindPaul Adamah. Image: Mira & Thilda Berglind

From time to time Adamah would send demos his way, asking if he heard a guitar part. “I would try something out at home, and then maybe send him a video,” Turner says. In 2023, Adamah bit the bullet and asked him to be a part of Boko Yout. “He had already recruited some members but they just had one guitar player,” Turner says. “They were going to play in a big venue with Viagra Boys. That’s when I joined.”

Quickly, he fell into a collaborative process that put the songs at the heart of everything. There are multiple voices at play, with each of them bouncing back in a new form once they’ve reached someone else’s ear. Drummer Joel Kiviaho, who produced Gusto, plays some guitar on the record, including a section on 9-2-5 that was lifted straight from an iPhone note and dropped into the finished track, while Adamah’s writing has pushed Turner into spaces he might not have discovered on his own.

“Paul always has ideas,” he says. “He can come up with riffs that sound mad to me, at first, like they don’t make sense. I love that about his mind. We have a song called Teleprompter, which is a really strange riff to me. It doesn’t sit right in my hand, with the way I play. But it’s just fun. He’ll ask me, ‘Shit, should I study music theory?’ And I’m like, ‘Please don’t. Just keep doing what you’re doing.’”

In many ways, Gusto comes to life in the details. It’s about shifts in tempo and melody, with Turner particularly interested in how texture, noise and distortion might alter the way something is perceived by the listener. He’s a keen follower of Arto Lindsay, particularly the manner in which the no wave pioneer finds ways to thread something gnarly between elements that, outwardly at least, appear more conventional.

Here, that comes to the fore in moments such as the choppy, barbed accents on Boyfriend’s riff, or a string of outro solos that drag songs towards unexpected, feverish endings without losing a self-contained sense of directness.

“Texture is a key word to me,” he says. “That’s part of what makes music interesting, it’s tactile, you know? I’ve been going through so many different types of distortions and fuzzes – it’s like a never-ending exploration because there are so many combinations. I discovered so many things recording this album, from just changing cabs and guitars to changing the order things are in.

“I tried to have a clear idea of what I can contribute, and asked what the sound could benefit from. For me, it was texture, grit, and distortion. But it’s also a slippery slope. Once you start cranking up the volume, everyone wants to crank up the volume. I think that’s consumed us in a way. We let that consume us. I think this album has turned into a heavier sound than the first EP.”

Working largely at Kiviaho’s place, which has an “almost extended bedroom studio” feel, Boko Yout had time to delve deeper and deeper into this world. Completed on the album by bassist Kevin Stierne (Damien Kabran plays second guitar live) they spent time finding the right layers of grime to drive home Adamah’s messages. “As excited as I get, I think they all really like to experiment with distortion, too,” Turner says. “Especially Joel, he’s always asking me to put some fuzz on a song.”

Boko Yout, photo by Mira & Thilda BerglindBoko Yout. Image: Mira & Thilda Berglind

Turner started out with an interesting guitar in hand: a Victor SG-18, which was only manufactured for a short time by JVC in Japan during the 1960s. “But we started playing louder and more distorted, it started feeding back a lot live,” Turner laments. He turned instead to a Danelectro Dead-On ‘67. “That worked very well,” he adds. “It didn’t have a whammy bar, which I quite like to use, so I modded it and put one on. But I kept everything else original.”

Amps-wise, it was a case of adapting to their surroundings. When he needed to, while recording on tour or darting between studios away from home, Turner turned to sims such as the Universal Audio Dream ‘65, but the sound he hears in his head is often coming from another characterful piece of kit dating back to the time when the Beatles walked the Earth: a small-but-powerful Hagström 26. “That’s the sound that we prefer,” he says. “It’s like a typewriter, really portable.”

On his live board, he’s been racing through pedals, finding different things to love about equipment that forces him to learn on the fly. “I’ve been going through a lot of distortions but one keeper has been the Basic Audio Zippy,” he says. “That’s been great. Lately on tour I have been using a Fairfield Circuitry Roger That, which has been interesting, too. At times I’ve been trying out something called [Mattoverse] AirTrash – it’s very hard to control. I feel like my research is going towards those kinds of uncontrollable fuzzes. I love to be surprised by gear, to not always be on top of it, and sometimes have something that goes somewhere where I’m not ready for.”

Paul Adamah, photo by Mira & Thilda BerglindPaul Adamah. Image: Mira & Thilda Berglind

In a project such as Boko Yout, where the music is largely propelled by the vision of one songwriter, the task for their bandmates is to find a way in. Turner takes that job seriously, almost leaning on the interpretive nature of his career in film to challenge and reconstitute concepts that carry great personal weight. That dynamic is one of Gusto’s greatest strengths. “When you get a script or a treatment, you need to find a way to tell that story in effective ways,” Turner says. “The fun part of cinematography is that you get to choose the texture, the media, the format.”

“It is pretty similar, playing guitar, because you have this palette of sounds,” he continues. “I don’t have a go-to way [of doing things]. I’m always thinking, ‘Okay, what should I use now?’

“I try to mix it up as well. I seldom use the same stuff on every song. We talk about the ideas that we want to bring to life to see if it makes us excited. That’s pretty much how you make films as well.”

Boko Yout’s Gusto is out on September 5 through Hoopdiggas Recordings.

The post Meet Boko Yout: Sweden’s most interesting new band who approach guitar chaos with the mindset of a cinematographer appeared first on Guitar.com | All Things Guitar.

Categories: General Interest

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