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“Oh Papa, this venue is so dark and stinky!”: Mac De Marco savages the music industry for being full of coddled “nepo babies”

Mac DeMarco has had plenty of things to say about musicians complaining about how difficult their job is, and now the guitarist has doubled down on his belief that the next generation are too entitled to appreciate their privileged position.
DeMarco is due to release a new album titled Guitar on 22 August, marking his first record since 2023’s One Wayne G. Earlier this month in an interview with The New Yorker surrounding its release, he spoke of the unconventional ways he releases his art, and shared how he doesn’t view music as a “job”.
On the same note, DeMarco said that he views touring as a “rock ‘n’ roll adventure”, and doesn’t quite understand it when musicians complain about the hardships they endure when out on the road.
While many artists may disagree as touring costs rise, DeMarco has again reiterated his thoughts on the matter. He tells The Independent, “It’s frustrating for me when I meet these young musicians who are like: ‘Oh, touring is so hard and exhausting,’” he says.
“Maybe there are just too many nepo babies now that are used to sunning themselves in the south of France every summer going: ‘Oh Papa, this venue is so dark and stinky. I’d rather be on the shores of Marseille…’
“I tell those young musicians: ‘Don’t you see? This is why!’” he adds. “You get to go on vacation with your friends indefinitely, hang out with new people every night and you’re getting paid to do it! It’s the ultimate adventure!”
Not one to shy away from controversial takes, DeMarco has previously shared a strong dislike of guitar pedals, and made comments that may make some of you wince. Speaking to MusicTech in 2023, he said, “They’re stupid. They’re cheap pieces of shit with crappy electronics. It’s just crap in the path. I don’t like crap. I don’t care if it makes you sound like Jimi Hendrix or whatever. I don’t want it. I don’t want it! It just stresses me out thinking about it.”
Mac DeMarco heads out on tour on 29 August. You can view the full list of his scheduled live shows via his website.
The post “Oh Papa, this venue is so dark and stinky!”: Mac De Marco savages the music industry for being full of coddled “nepo babies” appeared first on Guitar.com | All Things Guitar.
Want to buy your first guitar? Thomann’s back to school sale is a great opportunity to save

Whether you’re a student heading back to school this September, or a parent who’ll be waving them on their way, Thomann has rounded up a whole bunch of back to school deals to help you kick off the new academic year.
Featuring a range of brands and including a number of varying guitar starter bundles with all you’ll need to get going, the back to school sale offers up to 20 percent off on gear ideal for beginners or intermediate players looking for something new.
There are 11 bundles up for grabs, featuring electric, acoustic, or bass guitars from brands such as Harley Benton, Yamaha, Startone, and Thomann’s own branded instruments. For those looking to get started with an electric model, there’s a range of sets that are suited to either rock or pop guitarists.
For young players with small hands, the Harley Benton RG-Junior BK Set offers a short-scale, sleek black electric model, perfect for rock players. It hosts two humbuckers, and is comfortable in lower tunings. This set also includes the Harley Benton HB-10G combo amplifier, a gig bag, clip-on tuner, a strap, and instrument cable for £119.
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For those in need of a super budget-friendly guitar to learn with, then Startone’s £50 CG 851 set hosts a 4/4 sized classical guitar, and is accompanied by a gig bag, clip-on tuner, and some plectrums for £50.
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For older or more intermediate players who don’t need all the bells and whistles, the Harley Benton CLG-70SR CE NAT model might be more apt. It also comes with a gig bag, and is fitted with Fishman Sonicore pickups, ideal for those wanting to play live shows.
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To find out more and view the full list of deals, head over to Thomann.
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“Are you crazy? You’re a rock star”: Ozzy Osbourne’s baffled reaction when Randy Rhoads told him he was going to quit his band shortly before his death

Ozzy Osbourne might not have been a guitarist, but he was a remarkable judge of guitar talent. His knack for picking sidemen is legendary, and none of his solo axemen are as feted as Randy Rhoads. But now it appears that not only was Randy ready to call time on his rock star career before his death, his choice of alternative was shocking. nearly took a step back from life on the road to get a master’s degree instead.
According to his sister Kathy Rhoads, Randy was planning to leave Ozzy’s solo band and head back to college to complete his master’s degree in classical music instead. It’s a remarkable claim, and Kathy remembers that one person in particular was flabbergasted by his plans to step away from rockstardom: Ozzy himself.
Kathy explains in a forthcoming interview with Guitar World, “He had told Ozzy just a few short days before he passed that he was done with touring and wanted to come back home,” she shares.
“My mom went to UCLA, my dad too, so my mom was at the beginning of the process to get him into the school and get his master’s degree in classical music. She was starting the process and contacting the school. And he was really looking forward to that.
“Ozzy said to him, ‘Are you crazy? You’re a rock star.’ Randy said, ‘That’s just not what I want right now. This is what I want to do.’ Ozzy said, and I’ll quote him, ‘Okay, you could buy your own fucking college by the time you’re done if you keep doing this!’ But for Randy, the biggest key [thing] was that he was a true musician. It was always about the music for him,” she concludes.
Rhoads was part of the original lineup of Osbourne’s solo band, which formed in 1979. He played with them until his death in 1982 due to a plane crash. Osbourne passed away just recently on 22 July, just a matter of weeks after Black Sabbath’s reunion and farewell show.
Black Sabbath’s Geezer Butler recently reflected on the experience in an interview with Uncut. He told the outlet, “I am so grateful that we were able to play one final show together, the original four of us, back in our home town,” he says. “[Ozzy] held on so he could do that gig, to say farewell to the fans.”
The post “Are you crazy? You’re a rock star”: Ozzy Osbourne’s baffled reaction when Randy Rhoads told him he was going to quit his band shortly before his death appeared first on Guitar.com | All Things Guitar.
Joe Bonamassa says he no longer cares if you use too many pedals: “Players can do whatever the f*** they want. How about that?”

Joe Bonamassa has clarified that he doesn’t actually care what other players do with their rigs, saying instead that there’s room for every kind of guitar player. This is in somewhat stark contrast to an opinion he expressed a few years ago, where he bemoaned the existence of ambient players with complicated boards.
- READ MORE: The best pedals for ambient music, from space-warping reverbs to experimental micro-loopers
In a new interview with GuitarWorld, he offers a strongly-worded rebuke to a question about players hiding the “natural” tone of a guitar with lots of effects. “We’ve been down that road before, us and the media,” he says. “Players can do whatever the fuck they want, I don’t care. How about that? [Laughs] You do you, I do me, and we’ll see how it works out. I don’t give a shit what anybody else does.”
Bonamassa has previously been a little less open-minded on the subject of pedals. In a 2017 interview with MusicRadar, he called guitarists who use lots of pedals “fucking lazy” for focusing on non-traditional guitar sounds, and challenged them to make compelling music on an acoustic guitar.
“I know I’ll get shit for saying this,” he said, correctly. “But it’s fucking lazy. It’s insulting to people who spent 35 years playing and learning, like a lot of players. And we continue to work at it! These guys can barely play a chord but call themselves soundscapists. Get the fuck outta here! It’s bullshit.”
Many players took issue with Bonamassa’s comments, stating that he was misunderstanding tonal preferences and the musical goals of non-blues players. Joe’s aversion to complex pedalboards was also a bit of a point of contention when his own rather involved board, stacked with vintage fuzzes and complex switchers, was revealed in a rig rundown.
However for 2025 he seems to have revised his opinion that players should avoid shoegaze-ready monoliths stacked to the nines with delays. “I’m not gonna comment on other players’ business; they can do whatever they want,” he tells GuitarWorld. Although he does add in a little jab at the practicality of a larger pedal-based rig: “If you want to lug a tabletop full of shit around to a club, God bless you. Mazel tov. And if you want to plug straight into the amp, it’s all good. It’s just guitar, man. It doesn’t matter.”
The post Joe Bonamassa says he no longer cares if you use too many pedals: “Players can do whatever the f*** they want. How about that?” appeared first on Guitar.com | All Things Guitar.
JHS founder Josh Scott seriously injured in cycling accident: “You won’t be seeing my face for a bit (trust me you don’t want to”

JHS Pedals founder Josh Scott has revealed that he’s been seriously injured in a cycling accident, taking to Instagram to share the alarming news with his followers, but assuring them that “I’m fine”.
- READ MORE: Klon Centaur designer says you should NEVER use a multi-tap PSU to power the legendary pedal
“Hey y’all, I’m a private guy, but I do want you to know that I was in a pretty bad cycling accident,” Scott posted on Instagram on 15 August. “Lots of broken things and lots of stitches. I’m fine and will pull through like I have in the past.”
https://www.instagram.com/joshuaheathscott/p/DNYlgCURvKb/
Scott went on to pay tribute to his wife Alice, who he described as “THE GOAT when it comes to caring for me. She deserves a medal.” but revealed that he’s likely to have to take some time away from his hugely popular JHS Show on YouTube while he recovers. “You won’t be seeing my face for a bit (trust me- you don’t want to), and if I haven’t returned your email, DM, or text, this is why. If you’re the praying type, say a few for the swelling, the breaks, and the overall mental weight of it all.”
A popular and influential figure in the guitar world, the comment section of the post featured an outpouring of support and well wishes from the great and good of guitar, including Paul Gilbert, Lari Basilio, ‘Danish Pete’ Honore, Ella Feingold, Dave Hill, Pendulum’s Peredur ap Gwynedd and plenty more besides.
https://www.instagram.com/joshuaheathscott/p/DNeDHtWPZoX/
Scott followed up with a second post on 17 October expressing his thanks for the support and providing an update on his current condition, “Thanks to everyone for the countless messages and real help you’ve given our family since the crash,” he began. “I’ve had several moments of overwhelming gratitude thinking about you all. Today’s been tough – lots of soreness setting in, tightness around all the stitches, and plenty of pain. Tomorrow I see some doctors about the breaks. Grateful for you all.”
Only last week, JHS launched the 424 Gain Stage – a lo-fi pedal inspired by the sound of a Tascam portastudio – but it seems Scott will have to take a back seat on product launches for the time being. Everyone at Guitar.com wishes Josh a speedy recovery.
The post JHS founder Josh Scott seriously injured in cycling accident: “You won’t be seeing my face for a bit (trust me you don’t want to” appeared first on Guitar.com | All Things Guitar.
“Don’t f**king tell him!” David Lee Roth mocks Sammy Hagar by claiming Eddie Van Halen’s ghost has visited him too

When former Van Halen frontman Sammy Hagar claimed that the late, great Eddie Van Halen had visited him in a dream and they’d written a song together, it certainly led to a lot of raised eyebrows around the music world. And it seems that David Lee Roth was similarly unimpressed.
Hagar released the song, Encore, Thank You, Goodnight, back in April, having first claimed back in 2022 that he’d been visited by Van Halen in a dream during which they composed the song together, “I remembered it. I got up in the morning and I wrote the song,” he told Ultimate Classic Rock. “I used the fuckin’ lick that he showed me in the song.”
Now it seems that Hagar’s precursor in Van Halen, David Lee Roth, is not entirely buying the Red Rocker’s story however – certainly if his remarks to the audience at concert at the Hampton Beach Casino Ballroom last week was anything to go by.
“One of my esteemed colleagues, he’s a contemporary, he’s got a great voice, he’s got a great catalogue,” Hagar told the crowd in a video posted by a fan on YouTube. “You all know Sammy Hagar, right? He’s got a great voice. And Sammy, aloud, he 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. It’s on the internet.”
There’s few things more reliable than Van Halen members throwing shade at one another, and Hagar described Roth as “fake” during an interview earlier this year. DLR’s clapback, however, was pretty withering.
“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 joked. “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.'”
Hagar claims that Encore, Thank You, Goodnight is a tribute to his relationship with Van Halen – it features Joe Satriani on guitar, Jason Bonham on drums and fellow ex-Van Halen man Michael Anthony on bass.
“It’s not meant to be anything more than a thank-you – with love, with respect, and with one hell of a guitar solo,” he said – but it’s not the only surprising claim he’s made about Van Halen recently.
Back in June, Hagar claimed that the last time he spoke to Eddie before his passing, the guitarist claimed that he’d primarily been playing cello – though in this case he does have EVH’s backing, who posted in 2017 that the instrument was his favourite after guitar and piano.
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Walrus Audio Mako Series MkII ACS1 review: “this is as good as digital amp and cab simulators get”

$449/£419, walrusaudio.com
The great thing about amp simulators is that they offer three different ways to fall out with someone in a raging, expletive-strewn argument. First up, there’s the straightforward debate about which one is best. Then there’s the wider philosophical dichotomy between digital and analogue types. And finally, the question with real brawling-in-the-street potential: are any of these products actually up to the job, or are they just soulless imitations of the real thing?
- READ MORE: Walrus Audio Mako Series MkII D1 review – the do-it-all high-fidelity delay pedal gets glitchy
None of these arguments will ever end. But the Walrus Audio Mako Series MkII ACS1 surely makes the most persuasive case yet for using a digital pedal to replace real amps and cabs when it comes to gigging, recording and even bedroom practice with headphones.
Image: Adam Gasson
What is the Walrus Audio Mako Series MkII ACS1?
The main point of a pedal like this one is to cut a whole load of bulk (and noise) out of your rig: plug a guitar in at one end, and what comes out of the other is a digital simulation of what you’d get from putting a microphone in front of a real-life amp and speaker cabinet. Send that straight to an audio interface or live PA, and hey presto: all that heavy hardware in your spare room is suddenly ready to be converted into novelty coffee tables.
The original ACS1 offered three amp types and six cabinet IRs, with full stereo capability, onboard room reverb and the ability to store three presets (or 128 with MIDI). MkII brings revised versions of the old unit’s Fender Deluxe Reverb, Marshall Bluesbreaker and Vox AC30 models, and adds an Orange Rockerverb, a Mesa Boogie Dual Rectifier and a Peavey 5150 – while expanding the cab offering to 12. You also get a choice between room, hall and spring reverbs, and no less than nine preset slots.
How is all of this possible? As discussed in my review of the MkII D1 delay, the whole Mako Series has had an interface revamp, with an LED display replacing the three toggle switches across the middle. Here’s where, with the help of the three encoder knobs above it, you get access to those extra settings and a few more besides (including an option to bypass the IRs). It might not feel super-intuitive at first, but the whole system is clear and logical.
Image: Adam Gasson
What does the Walrus Audio Mako Series MkII ACS1 sound like?
I don’t have a lot to say about the clean tones. They were already lusciously lifelike and three-dimensional, and now they’re still lusciously lifelike and three-dimensional but with a bit more headroom – the main effect of which is that, when you hit the boost switch, it actually makes things bigger and louder rather than just getting thick and congested. You can also adjust the boost level for each preset, which is very handy.
The Vox crunch still lacks midrange punch out of the box, but you can fix this quite satisfyingly by cranking the mids to maximum in the three-band EQ. And if you really want to rock like a mudskipper? The overdriven Orange, Boogie and Peavey models all sound impressively large when used one at a time – and simply colossal in stereo pairs.
To experience that colossalness to the full, you might be inclined to leave at least some of the factory presets unchanged (aside from dialling back the reverb and maybe turning off the annoying noise gate). While the first two batches of three presets cover the six single models, the last set offers absolutely killer left/right pairings: Fender and Vox, Marshall and Orange, then Peavey and Boogie. This last setup, fully panned, is probably the biggest guitar sound my home studio monitors have ever spewed out.
Image: Adam Gasson
Should I buy the Walrus Audio Mako Series MkII ACS1?
Here’s one more argument to enjoy: Are the MkII ACS1’s Vox tones as convincing as those of the Strymon Iridium? For me that’s too close to call, but in every other respect there’s no contest, because this is as good as digital amp and cab simulators get – and the step up to MkII has turned an already great pedal into an utterly compelling one.
Walrus Audio Mako Series MkII ACS1 alternatives
The aforementioned Strymon Iridium (£379) is now six years old and surely due some kind of update. A newer rival with cab models galore is the Boss IR-200 (£329), while analogue purists might prefer the DSM & Humboldt Simplifier X (£449).
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“He was much quieter than I’d ever known him”: Geezer Butler thinks Ozzy Osbourne “knew he wasn’t long for this world” at final Black Sabbath concert

While fans didn’t know it at the time, Black Sabbath’s final show on 5 July would also prove to be the late Ozzy Osbourne’s final ever live performance – and Geezer Butler believes that the Prince Of Darkness knew the show was his last chance to say goodbye.
Speaking in the latest issue of Uncut, the Sabbath bassist explains that Ozzy seemed to sense his hourglass was running out. Ozzy was a notorious hellraiser throughout his life, chomping down bat heads and snorting lines of ants, but he was relatively quiet at the final show. “At the final show, he was much quieter than I’d ever known him,” he reflects. “Looking back now, I think he knew he wasn’t long for this world.”
Ozzy would eventually pass on 22 July – just over two weeks after Back To The Beginning took place. While Butler believes that the frontman knew his clock was ticking, Ozzy apparently didn’t seem to sense that “he’d leave [this world] so soon” after the performance. The Sabbath frontman had only just moved back to the UK after years in the US, and Butler explains how “Ozzy was looking forward to spending his days back in England”.
Elsewhere in his tribute to Ozzy, Butler reflects on how thankful he is to have been able to perform with his Sabbath bandmates one final time. “I am so grateful that we were able to play one final show together, the original four of us, back in our home town,” he says. “[Ozzy] held on so he could do that gig, to say farewell to the fans.”
“He was emotional, it was so important to him to say goodbye after illness had prevented him from touring for the past six or seven years,” he continues. “He wanted to see his fans one final time, play with his own band and with Sabbath one last time.”
Butler closes off with a heartfelt farewell: “Ozzy was larger than life and his legacy will live forever… He may have been The Prince Of Darkness, but for me he was a family-loving, soft-hearted, and the best friend anyone could ever have.”
Sabbath’s Tony Iommi has also gone on record stating that he believes Ozzy knew that Back To The Beginning would be his grand send-off. “I think he really just held out to do that show,” he told ITV News last month. “Me and Geezer were talking about it last night – we think he held out to do it. Just after [the show], he’d done it and said goodbye to the fans. And that was the end of it, really.”
“He’s built up for it for a while now,” Iommi continued. “He’d been training and trying to do what he can, so he could do this gig… I think he must have had something in his head that said, ‘Well, this is gonna be it, the last thing I’m ever gonna do.’ Whether he thought he was gonna die or what, I don’t know. But he really wanted to do it and he was determined to do it.”
The post “He was much quieter than I’d ever known him”: Geezer Butler thinks Ozzy Osbourne “knew he wasn’t long for this world” at final Black Sabbath concert appeared first on Guitar.com | All Things Guitar.
“He would have to be forced to go back on stage!”: Deep Purple’s Glenn Hughes reveals why Ritchie Blackmore would refuse to do encores

During his time in Deep Purple, guitarist Ritchie Blackmore lived by his own rules – even if it meant denying fans an encore.
Speaking in the latest issue of Classic Rock, Glenn Hughes reflects on his experience working with Blackmore. According to the ex-vocalist and bassist, his former bandmate was sometimes a tough nut to crack. “When we were going down really well at shows, he would refuse to do an encore,” Hughes recalls. “He would have to be forced to go back on stage!”
Even if Blackmore was coerced out for an encore, he would do so rather unwillingly. “He’d play behind his equipment,” Hughes explains. “It was so ridiculous. You couldn’t make him do anything.”
This stubborn behaviour wasn’t strictly limited to encores, either. Hughes recalls the guitarist as an “isolator” and lone wolf. “He had his own dressing room, his own car,” he says. “It wasn’t a band, it was us and it was Ritchie. That’s been his thing for ever. It was uncomfortable for me. I missed the family aspect of all of us together. It was a strange situation.”
This isn’t the first time Hughes has spoken out about how “strange” it was working with Blackmore. Last June, Hughes described his relationship with Blackmore as “difficult” in an interview with Guitar Interactive Magazine.
“When I joined the band, he flew me to Hamburg for a ‘boy’s night’ weekend,” he recalled. “We didn’t sleep… drinking coffee and alcohol. We were great together. [I had a] great time with him – alone. As soon as he was around other men, he wasn’t personal. It was difficult.”
“[He was] difficult, but very intelligent,” he concluded. “Smart, but a difficult person to know and play with.”
Following the release of Nature’s Light back in 2021 under his Blackmore’s Night project, the guitarist has unfortunately been facing a number of health issues. Over the past few months, Blackmore’s wife, Candice Night, has revealed that he is suffering with a slew of problems, ranging from a heart attack to gout.
Her most recent update came last week. “There are three main issues with him that are going on,” Night tells the Iron City Rocks podcast [via Rayo]. “He has a heart issue – he had a heart attack a couple of years ago, so we stay on top of that.
“He’s got gout, so that’s difficult,” she adds. “It’s affecting his feet really badly. And it’s starting in his forefinger, so it’s hurting the mobility in that. He just had an injection for that. And his back, of course, which has always been an issue.”
Despite his health issues, Blackmore seems to be keen on performing some shows down the line. Fans will be glad to know that the classic Blackmore stubbornness persists. “With Ritchie, if you try to pressure him to do something, he instantly says no,” she says. “He’s like a teenager… So I wait for him to come to the realisation, or I drop little seeds, wait for him to be ready to talk about it. But he did just say, ‘What about doing some Blackmore’s Night dates in the fall?’”
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John Fogerty says this thing is more important to musical success than being a good guitar player: “Even if your playing is kind of average, you can go far”

Refining your chops isn’t necessarily the key to attaining musical success. According to Creedence Clearwater Revival’s John Fogerty, the path to success actually lies in something a lot more obvious, but a lot harder to woodshed – strong songwriting.
Speaking to The Guardian, Fogerty reveals how Creedence became one of the defining rock acts of the 60s – they had a rock-solid catalogue of great tracks. “I’m a great believer in songs,” the guitarist says. “If you have enough songs, even if your playing is kind of average, you can go far.”
In Fogerty’s opinion, artists should always focus on writing, writing, writing – even if that means 90% of your work is left on the cutting room floor. “For every song I wrote I threw 10 away,” he admits. “When you heard one of my songs, I wanted there to be no doubt it was a really good song. It sounds grandiose to say it, but I was trying to have that as my career goal.”
Considering Creedence are the second most streamed act of the 60s, just behind The Beatles, there’s certainly proof that Fogerty is on to something; cuts like Bad Moon Rising, Proud Mary and Have You Ever Seen The Sun continue to rake in listeners even six decades on.
But don’t just take Fogerty’s word for it. Other artists have also asserted the importance of songwriting over technical ability, with Aerosmith’s Joe Perry stating as such just last year. “If you spend all your time learning technique, scales and all that, you’re not going to write something new and interesting!” he told Guitarist magazine in October.
Avenged Sevenfold’s Synyster Gates has also gone on record preaching the importance of songwriting over flashy guitar playing. Speaking to 93XRadio, he pointed out the band’s 2007 track A Little Piece of Heaven: “That’s a fan favorite, that has hardly any guitar in it… That’s probably our best song. And it’s very, very little guitar work. So to me, it’s songwriting first” [via Metal Injection].
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“If I was a betting man, which I am, I would say, at some point something’s gonna happen”: Joe Perry drops another hint at Aerosmith reunion

Aerosmith may have officially retired from touring last summer, but Joe Perry is once again teasing the possibility of the band sharing a stage. In a new interview, the guitarist hints that despite the logistical hurdles, a reunion – at least in some form – could still happen.
The Boston rockers called it quits on touring last year after it became clear that frontman Steven Tyler’s long-standing vocal injury wouldn’t allow him to sustain a full farewell run.
Still, Tyler hasn’t been completely offstage: earlier this year, he jammed with Aerosmith bassist Tom Hamilton and Extreme guitarist Nuno Bettencourt at his annual Jam for Janie Grammy Awards Viewing Party. He also appeared in a supergroup at the Black Sabbath Back to the Beginning event in Birmingham, alongside Bettencourt and Rage Against the Machine’s Tom Morello.
Now, Perry has added more fuel to the reunion speculation.
Speaking with WZXL’s Kenny Young, he says, “We’re actually talking quite a bit. I know our touring days are over, but I don’t know. We’re all flesh and blood. I don’t know, man.”
“I would say, at some point we will all be together on the same stage…If I was a betting man, which I am, I would say, at some point something’s gonna happen. But we’ll see.”
Perry has hinted at a reunion before, noting that another Aerosmith performance is “just a matter of getting there,” though he’s also been candid about the challenges of organising a full tour.
Just last month, he told SiriusXM, “I know there’s gotta be at least another Aerosmith gig, and I’m not looking forward to putting the set list together for that one.”
“I’m always hoping, but going on the road, it’s a big deal pulling that together. It’s one thing to sit there and look online and see who’s touring and stuff, and there’s dates that show up, but there’s so much planning, and what it takes out of you physically, it’s a lot more than people realise.”
In the meantime, Perry isn’t staying idle. His solo band, The Joe Perry Project, has already kicked off their 2025 North American tour, starting at Tampa, Florida’s Hard Rock Event Center.
Head over to Joe Perry’s website for the full list of dates.
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“I know we’d be screaming together in the stands watching him on stage”: Eddie Van Halen’s ex-wife says he’d be “so proud” of his son Wolfgang in touching tribute

Even five years after his passing, Eddie Van Halen’s influence is still felt across the music world, but for those nearest and dearest to him, the anniversary of his death is a moment to reflect on everything that’s happened in the years since.
In a touching Instagram post, the guitarist’s ex-wife Valerie Bertinelli reflects on the sad anniversary, the bond they shared over their son, Wolfgang, and the pride Eddie would have felt watching him carve out his own path in music since his dad’s passing.
Sharing a portrait of a young Edward and herself, Bertinelli writes: “Some days I really do miss you. There will always be a loud absence in these gratifying sideline years. Who do I yap to when there was really only one person I could talk to about Wolfie the way that we did? The pride we both felt. Still feel. I’m grateful for where we landed. Through the ups and the downs to still alight where we did is a blessing.”
She continues: “You’d be so proud of Wolf. I know we’d be screaming together in the stands watching him on stage. Seeing who could whistle the loudest. I will never not miss being able to experience that with you.”
Eddie Van Halen passed away on 6 October 2020 at the age of 65 after a long battle with throat cancer. Wolfgang, who played in Van Halen as a teenager and now leads his own band Mammoth, has admitted that dealing with his father’s death does not get “any easier”.
“I believe Zelda Williams, Robin [Williams]’ daughter, said it the best way that I could ever imagine, which is, even a truckload full of roses still weigh a ton,” Wolfgang told Billy Corgan on The Magnificent Others podcast. “There’s so much that I can’t share with him.”
The musician also unpacked why he chooses not to play any Van Halen material on the regular even though he could “probably make a decent living at it”.
“It’s very hollow and astoundingly creatively unfulfilling,” Wolfgang said. “I feel like it’s kind of selling out, and I could never do that, that’s not satisfying to me. I would rather bomb on my own than succeed with what my dad laid before me.”
Speaking of legacies, Eddie Van Halen’s legendary custom-built 1982 Kramer electric will head to auction for the very first time at Sotheby’s this October, where it’s expected to fetch between $2 million and $3 million.
The post “I know we’d be screaming together in the stands watching him on stage”: Eddie Van Halen’s ex-wife says he’d be “so proud” of his son Wolfgang in touching tribute appeared first on Guitar.com | All Things Guitar.
Klon Centaur designer says you should NEVER use a multi-tap PSU to power the legendary pedal – but his recommended way to ensure you don’t “blow it out” is incredibly fiddly

If you own an original Klon Centaur – the gold-plated unicorn of the overdrive world, now worth thousands on retailers like Reverb.com – you’d think keeping it powered would be as simple as plugging it in. But according to its creator Bill Finnegan, doing it wrong could “fry” your beloved investment in an instant. And his correct method? Let’s just say it’s less ‘plug-and-play’ and more ‘plug, snip, solder, and pray.’
In a new Instagram video, Finnegan addresses what he says is one of the most common questions he still gets: how best to power an original Centaur unit. His first rule: do not – under any circumstances – use a multi-tap power supply with switchable voltages.
“For a simple reason: the Centaur absolutely requires no more than 9 Volts DC coming in,” he explains. Anything more will “fry” the unit, which is why “using any type of multi-tap power supply with switchable voltage is just asking for trouble”.
Instead, he strongly recommends using a dedicated 9V supply like the trusty Truetone 1 SPOT.
Sounds simple enough? Well, wait for it. Finnegan wants you to clip the barrel connector off that nice, safe PSU and solder on a Switchcraft 780 plug – a slightly odd-sized .14” connector – because it gives a “much more positive snapping connection” to the Centaur than a regular 1/8” plug.
Sure, he admits a regular 1/8” adapter “could work in a pinch,” but we’re talking about a pedal worth more than some people’s rigs over here…
As you might guess, this is not a job for the casual tinkerer. Finnegan suggests having “somebody who’s completely qualified” (like a good guitar or amp tech) do the work.
The process generally involves clipping the barrel jack off the PSU cable, stripping the two conductors, and testing for polarity (you need +9 Volts to the tip of the plug). Only then should the Switchcraft 780 be soldered on, the polarity re-tested, the parts reassembled, and everything checked again.
Once that’s done, he says, you’ll have “a completely reliable, goof-proof way to power your Centaur over the long haul.” Which, to be fair, is probably worth the hassle – because nothing says ‘peace of mind’ quite like preventing a puff of magic smoke from a pedal worth more than your amp, your guitar, and possibly your car.
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EVH Wolfgang Standard TOM review: “are you going to regret not picking the Floyd Rose model?”

$629.99/£579, evhgear.com
Eddie Van Halen’s Wolfgang design is nearly 30 years old now – beginning life in 1996 when Ed was with Peavey, and then being redesigned from the ground up a decade later when he moved over to his own Fender-backed EVH brand.
In that time, the Wolfgang has become something of a modern classic, as Eddie’s “last attempt” to design a guitar, it holds even more significance for the Van Halen faithful after his sad passing in 2020.
Over the last decade, the Wolfgang has also become one of the more accessible hard-rocking guitars out there, with the Standard line’s Asian manufacture bringing entry-level prices to the line.
Now we have the most affordable Wolfgang yet, but is it one that veers to far from the recipe that Eddie laid down with Fender’s Chip Ellis nearly 20 years ago?
Image: Adam Gasson
EVH Wolfgang Standard TOM – what is it?
Ed might have named the Wolfgang for his son, long before he was an accomplished musician in his own right, but the ‘TOM’ in the name of this guitar isn’t another nod to someone in EVH’s life, it reflects what is a pretty significant change to the Wolfgang recipe – a tune-o-matic bridge and tailpiece.
The TOM isn’t the first Wolfgang to shed the Floyd Rose locking vibrato that Van Halen made famous – you can get a US-made version that also rocks a tune-o-matic, but this is the first affordable version to do so.
Like the other Wolfgang Standard guitars, the latest addition to the Wolfgang line is made in Indonesia – where Fender has also started making its own Standard series guitars in the last 12 months.
The good news is that the lack of a Floyd means that it’s also the most affordable Wolfgang out there, but the rest of the spec sheet reads like an instrument priced significantly higher, with a number of features tailored to comfort and speed.
Such features include a special “comfort cut” forearm contour in its basswood body – which is instantly noticeable and certainly aids long practice sessions – and EVH-branded humbucking pickups mounted directly into the body in the time-honoured Van Halen manner. Direct mounting them like this was, in Ed’s view, to increase vibration transfer, resulting in “sustain for days on end”.
Image: Adam Gasson
EVH Wolfgang Standard TOM – feel and sounds
Days might be a bit much, but the first unplugged strum certainly reflects a resonant and lightweight guitar with plenty to recommend it.
You do have to check yourself and remember this is a $600 guitar at times, because it’s very easy to forget that it’s not a much pricier guitar. You can attribute this primarily to two things: the feel of the neck and fretboard, and the palette of rock-ready tones courtesy of its EVH Wolfgang humbuckers.
Chief in my list of requirements for a comfortable playing experience is a low action, and the Wolfgang delivers here spectacularly. This action – set up exquisitely straight out of the box, it must be said – is complemented very well by the smooth oiled finish of the maple neck, meaning playing is effortless the length of the fretboard, whether riffing in the lower registers or doing your best at some Eddie Van Halen-style two-handed tapping.
Of course, the subtraction of a Floyd Rose means you have slightly fewer tools to play with when crafting solos. But what you lose in divebomb potential you gain in the ability to make quick tuning adjustments, and the setup still provides rock-solid stability even when you’re dropping things down.
In fact, after I tuned this guitar up, I barely needed to make any tuning adjustments in two hours of non-stop playing (including some pretty rigorous and ambitious bends that would knock most guitars out of whack).
Image: Adam Gasson
The humbuckers are proprietary EVH models, and while you’re never really sure what you’re going to get with own-brand units, these hit the mark on high-gain, crunch and clean tones alike.
The Wolfgang is obviously a guitar aimed primarily at modern rock and metal players, and with that in mind I thought it best to test it both through an amp and going direct into amp software.
Naturally, I went straight for a high-gain sound with both, and both through my Blackstar and Positive Grid’s BIAS modelling software, the pickups serve up that raw hard rock power, with a gnarly biting quality to the bridge humbucker and classic warm smoothness to the neck.
In a pleasant surprise, there’s still plenty of character and depth to these pickups played clean – the neck ‘bucker has a beautiful crystalline quality that, when paired with a touch of chorus and delay, is just *chef’s kiss*.
A disappointment, however, is the volume control – there’s really not a lot of the linearity you’d expect. I found that I essentially got full signal at about three on the knob, and everything after was giving you more treble but not a lot else.
It’s not a deal-breaker, but it does make volume swells or using the volume to control your gain a fair bit trickier.
Image: Adam Gasson
EVH Wolfgang Standard TOM – should I buy one?
It’s easy for those of us in the reviewing chairs to call something ‘entry level’ and make a bunch of excuses for it, but just over $600 is still a lot of money for a lot of people to spend on a guitar – especially if you’re starting out. You could buy a PS5 instead.
There’s also a lot of competition at this end of the market for budding rock and metal players, and so it’s all the more impressive that this steps into the market as such a well-sorted and reliable instrument. You could make this your main guitar for years to come – it feels and sounds like a much more expensive instrument.
That said, there’s an argument that if technical metal and shred is your bag, you might be better off saving another $150 and buying the Floyd Rose-equipped version instead. Yes, a Floyd can be idiosyncratic for some, to put it mildly, when it comes to string changes, but it opens up a whole world of playing possibilities for the technically inclined.
But if you’re dead set on keeping it as simple and hassle-free as possible, this Wolfgang certainly won’t let you down.
EVH Wolfgang Standard TOM – alternatives
The Floyd Rose-loaded Wolfgang WG Standard obviously presents itself as a contender here – certainly if the ability to divebomb is a non-negotiable for you. This comes in a little pricier, though, at a still-reasonable $789. Of course, if budget isn’t a concern in your case, you could spring for the US-made Wolfgang USA; however this will set you back a cool $4,099. Don’t say I didn’t warn you…
If a Floyd Rose isn’t a must-have, there are plenty more rock-ready guitars built for speed at this price point. The Jackson JS Series Surfcaster JS22 HT, for example, is similarly set up, with a bolt-on neck, single volume and tone controls, high-output humbuckers and a hardtail bridge. This is at the uber-affordable end of the spectrum, too, at just $299/£279.
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“I’ve got nothing against it. It’s just I found these other places that are so rich”: Robert Plant turned down an invite from Tony Iommi to attend Black Sabbath’s final gig because he knows nothing about rock music nowadays

When Black Sabbath’s final show at Villa Park was announced, the metal world erupted in panic. Everyone was desperate for a ticket… well, everyone except for Led Zeppelin’s Robert Plant.
Despite being personally invited by Sabbath’s very own Tony Iommi, Plant admits he turned down the opportunity to attend the biggest show in heavy metal history, which would also double as the late Ozzy Osbourne’s final ever live performance. “I said, Tony, I’d love to come, but I can’t come,” the Led Zeppelin frontman tells MOJO.
- READ MORE: “Did you guys make a mistake?”: MGK admits he’s baffled as to why Bob Dylan is a fan of his
Why? While it isn’t fully clear, it seems like Plant didn’t want to hear Aerosmith’s Steven Tyler sounding worse for wear; the Aerosmith frontman’s fractured larynx caused Aerosmith to officially call it quits back in 2024. “I know how it will be for me to see Steven Tyler, who I had loved many times as Steven Tyler…” he reflects. “I just can’t.”
Despite Plant’s concerns, Tyler smashed his performance at Back To The Beginning back in July. Backed by band consisting of Nuno Bettencourt, Tom Morello, Andrew Watt and Ronnie Wood, Tyler powered his way through Aerosmith’s version of The Train Kept A-Rollin’, the iconic Walk This Way and Led Zeppelin’s Whole Lotta Love. The Zeppelin cover in particular is a real shame, considering the frontman decided not to attend.
Regardless, Plant adds that he also had another reason for declining. Plant just doesn’t really feel as involved in the rock world anymore. “I’m not saying that I’d rather hang out with Peter Gabriel or Youssou N’Dour, but I don’t know anything about what’s going on in that world now, at all,” he admits.
That being said, he’s not moaning about being feeling ‘left out’. He just has other musical interests nowadays. “I don’t decry it, I’ve got nothing against it,” he says. “It’s just I found these other places are so rich.”
He goes on to namedrop 20-year-old folk musician Nora Brown. “If you don’t know Nora Brown, your world is about to change,” he says. “She’s got a wooden-bodies fretless banjo that was used a lot by the black musicians. And I can’t tell you how plaintive her voice is.”
Plant explains that he even kicks off his live shows with a Nora Brown track: Wedding Dress. The young musician was only 16 when she first recorded the track back in 2021. If you’re keen to hear it in action, Plant is sure to knock the track out on his autumn tour, kicking off on 30 October in West Virginia and running through til a final show at California’s Valley Centre on 23 November.
Saving Grace, Plant’s twelfth solo record, is also due to drop 26 September. As it stands, only two singles have been released, and you can really feel that the record was recorded partially in a barn and partially outdoors; Everybody’s Song and Gospel Plough showcase an almost spiritual take on country, roots rock and Americana.
For more information on Plant’s upcoming tour and record, head to his website.
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Don’t be mad, don’t be sad – we changed the world”: Dave Mustaine makes emotional statement as Megadeth announce final album

Megadeth have announced that their 17th studio album, which will arrive next year, will be their final record.
The reveal was preceded on social media by a post yesterday which read “The end is near,” leading many fans to speculate as to what was coming.
Now, in a new post on the band’s social media pages, usually voiceless mascot Vic Rattlehead makes the monumental announcement heralding the end of the band’s 40-year-plus career.
- READ MORE: “Did you guys make a mistake?”: MGK admits he’s baffled as to why Bob Dylan is a fan of his
“For over four decades, I’ve been chained in silence, but the end demands my voice,” Rattlehead says. “It is confirmed, the next Megadeth studio album will be the last 40 years of metal, forged in steel, ending in fire, and when the New Year rises, the global farewell tour.
“You’ve heard the warning, now prepare yourself, cyber arm. Stay loud, stay tuned and meet me on the front lines.”
The album will be followed by a huge worldwide farewell tour, Dave Mustaine and Megadeth reveal.
“There’s so many musicians that have come to the end of their career, whether accidental or intentional,” Mustaine says in a statement. “Most of them don’t get to go out on their own terms on top, and that’s where I’m at in my life right now. I have traveled the world and have made millions upon millions of fans and the hardest part of all of this is saying goodbye to them.
“We can’t wait for you to hear this album and see us on tour. If there was ever a perfect time for us to put out a new album, it’s now. If there was ever a perfect time to tour the world, it’s now.
“This is also a perfect time for us to tell you that it’s our last studio album. We’ve made a lot of friends over the years and I hope to see all of you on our global farewell tour.
“Don’t be mad, don’t be sad, be happy for us all, come celebrate with me these next few years. We have done something together that’s truly wonderful and will probably never happen again. We started a musical style, we started a revolution, we changed the guitar world and how it’s played, and we changed the world.
“The bands I played in have influenced the world. I love you all for it. Thank you for everything.”
Preorders for the new album begin 42 days from now on 23 September. For more info, head to Megadeth’s official website.
The post Don’t be mad, don’t be sad – we changed the world”: Dave Mustaine makes emotional statement as Megadeth announce final album appeared first on Guitar.com | All Things Guitar.
“We’ve been down that road before, us and the media”: Joe Bonamassa and the tone debate he refuses to partake in

The internet is a swirling vortex of tone debates, and Joe Bonamassa is tapping out.
The Blues artist, who released his 17th studio album Breakthrough this July, is no longer commenting on what’s wrong or right when it comes to pedals and how you want to use them. In the era of social media, he’s pretty much had enough of a new trend or being dished out every week.
In an interview with Guitar World, he’s asked if players rely too heavily on pedals to mask their natural tone. “We’ve been down that road before, us and the media,” he replies. “Players can do whatever the fuck they want, I don’t care. How about that? [Laughs] You do you, I do me… I don’t give a shit what anybody else does.
“I’m not gonna comment on other players’ business; they can do whatever they want. Have at it. I’m happy for you. If you want to lug a tabletop full of shit around to a club, God bless you. Mazel tov. And if you want to plug straight into the amp, it’s all good. It’s just guitar, man. It doesn’t matter.”
He goes on to add that everyone has their own way of doing things, which is more than okay. Ultimately, your choice of gear should probably come down to what you’re playing: “It depends on what song you’re playing. If you’re playing AC/DC, you don’t need a lot of pedals. If you’re playing Coldplay, yeah, you may need a delay and a reverb.”
He continues, “Everybody has room. There’s no right or wrong. We live in a world of influencers going, ‘Well, here’s the ultimate way to do X.’ The next thing you know, someone comes up with some oddball approach that changes the game again. But everybody is dealing with the same wood and wire as everybody else.”
Breakthrough by Joe Bonamassa is out now. He is also playing five shows this September, two of which are in support of The Who – find out more via his website.
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This massive Fender sale sees $630 off the American Ultra Luxe Stratocaster HSS, as well as huge deals on American Professional II, Performer and Acoustasonic models

In the wake of the launch of its new top-spec American Ultra Luxe Vintage range – which pairs aged lacquer finishes with a selection of modern player-friendly specs – Fender has launched a massive new sale, with up to 20% off some models in its lineup.
And while we’re on the topic, certain models in the American Ultra Luxe range – which the new Ultra Luxe Vintage collection is an evolution of – have seen considerable price drops.
The American Ultra Luxe Telecaster, Stratocaster and Stratocaster Floyd Rose HSS are all now priced at just $2,119, down from $2,649, $2,649 and $2,749, respectively.
Sitting as some of the most high-end instruments in Fender’s current catalogue, the American Ultra Luxe range offers stainless steel frets, augmented D-shaped necks and Ultra Noiseless pickups, infusing Fender’s classic guitar designs with a number of modern features.
Elsewhere, a number of American Professional II models are available at hefty discounts, including the American Professional II Stratocaster, Jazzmaster, and Telecaster Deluxe, with up to $200 off in some cases.
Launched in 2020, Fender’s American Professional II series takes some of the most iconic electric guitar and bass designs in history, and offers C-shaped neck profiles, V-Mod II pickups, a range of fresh colourways and loads more.
And if Fender’s groundbreaking Acoustasonic models have ever piqued your interest, here’s your chance to get an American-made one at a significant discount. There’s Stratocaster, Telecaster and Jazzmaster models available – each now priced at $1,779 down from $2,099 – each offering the Acoustasonic’s unique acoustic-electric blueprint, with a Fender/Fishman designed Acoustic Engine for an array of different tonal options.
This is just a small selection of the guitars on offer in the new sale, so make sure you head to Fender via the link below to browse the full range of deals.
[deals ids=”587FRLEe043slXeKUmow0M”]
The post This massive Fender sale sees $630 off the American Ultra Luxe Stratocaster HSS, as well as huge deals on American Professional II, Performer and Acoustasonic models appeared first on Guitar.com | All Things Guitar.
“Did you guys make a mistake?”: MGK admits he’s baffled as to why Bob Dylan is a fan of his

MGK has spoken of his unlikely connection with Bob Dylan, sharing how the legendary singer-songwriter supported his new album launch.
MGK, formerly Machine Gun Kelly, released Lost Americana on 8 August. It marks his seventh studio album, and at its launch, a voice note from Bob Dylan was used in a teaser trailer.
In a new interview with The Times, MGK shares just how Dylan’s contribution came to be. The unlikely friendship sprung in late February earlier this year, when Dylan posted a video of MGK performing in a record store in 2016 to his Instagram page.
“I reached out to him and was like, ‘Did you guys make a mistake?’” MGK says. “[Dylan’s] manager was like, ‘Apparently he likes you …’”
He continues, “I wrote him this big letter about the Lost Americana album I was doing: ‘It would be amazing to have the great American voice be the narration to the announcement of this album.’”
The letter of course worked its magic, and Dylan’s voice can be heard on the trailer noting how MGK’s “music celebrates the beauty found in the in-between spaces”.
MGK attended the Outlaw Music Festival in Hollywood back in May, where he had a face-to-face encounter with Dylan himself before the trailer dropped this summer. At the event, he says he was approached by “a dude all in black”.
“He’s like, ‘Let’s go meet Bob.’ I get on his bus and [Dylan] has a hoodie on, white cowboy boots and this energy that feels like you’re in the midst of Peter Pan or something, while also in the midst of Homer (Ancient Greek poet) writing the Iliad – this prolific, young, spirited guy,” he shares.
According to MGK, Dylan said to him, “You really rip it, man.”: “One thing I know for sure is that he can’t figure me out, which I think is interesting to him,” he adds. “And I can’t figure him out, which is very interesting to me.”
Lost Americana by MGK is out now. Bob Dylan will be touring from September-November, and you can view the full list of shows via his website.
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Jackson expands its Pro Plus Pure Metal range – and it even introduces first Pure Metal Bass

Back in January, Jackson unveiled a metallic twist on its Pro Plus Series. Drenched in glossy black, the Limited Edition Pro Plus Pure Metal range was designed with gritty metal in mind – now, it’s time for things to get even heavier. Phase two of the Pure Metal agenda introduces two new guitars and a killer bass.
All three models boast the Pure Metal range’s signature blacker-than-night gloss, while each comes in its own distinctive body shape. The Pure Metal Warrior WR1A comes in a shape similar to the Jackson Kelly Star, while the Pure Metal King V KV1A is a timeless V.
On the bass side of things, the Pure Metal Concert Bass CB1A is the very first bass in the series so far. It opts for the classic Jackson Concert bass shape – if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it, ey?
Beyond the aesthetics, the Pro Plus Limited Edition Pure Metal Warrior WR1A and Pure Metal King V KV1A boast exactly the same bells and whistles. The pair feature 24 jumbo stainless steel frets, Floyd Rose 1000 Series double-locking tremolo and a Fishman Fluence Modern bridge pickup. The pair cost £1,399.
Credit: Jackson
The Pro Plus Limited Edition Pure Metal Concert Bass CB1A has all it needs to deliver a hard-hitting, full-bodied bass performance. It boasts a Fishman Fluence Modern bass humbucker to meet all your low-end needs, with a Jackson Hi-Mass hardtail bridge to anchor tone to slicken up your intonation and sustain. The bass costs a little less than the guitars, going for £1,349
Credit: Jackson
Its a range metal guitarists are sure to relish – and don’t just take our word for it. Metalcore unit Heriot have given the fresh Pure Metal range their seal of approval, with guitarists Erhan Alman and Debbie Gough, and bassist Jake Packer, all giving them a spin in Jackson’s announcement video.
Credit: Jackson
Right now, only the Pure Metal Warrior WR1A remains available, with the Pure Metal King KV1A and Pure Metal Concert Bass CB1A already sold out.
The trio of guitars joins the Pro Plus Pure Metal Limited Edition Rhoads RR1A, Soloist SL1A and Kelly KE1A guitars. Jackson explains that the series is “built for speed and engineered for domination”, perfect for any shredders out there hoping to capture “bone-crushing tones”.
Head to Jackson to find out more.
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