Table of Contents
What amp did Billie Joe Armstrong use on Kerplunk?
The American Idiot singer also shed light on the amp he used prior to the Marshall: a Gallien-Krueger 250RL. This amp featured on Green Day’s first two records: 39/Smooth and Kerplunk.
What wireless system does Green Day use?
The Shure R4D+ wireless units go into a RJM iS-8 White’s tech Chris Schleyer to switch between eight guitar inputs, which then splits off into either the CAE 3+ SE preamp or Marshall heads and the RJM RG-16 switcher and MasterMind MIDI controller that engage the four main presets that Jason uses.
What are the amp settings for Holiday Green Day?
Green Day’s tone is fairly balanced, so having all your controls at midway is a great place to start for most amplifiers. So set your bass, mids and treble to 6 o’clock, or your EQ or tone control to 6 o’clock if that’s what your amp has instead. Bass gives the tone a “boomier” sound.
What amplifier does Green Day use?
Billie Joe Armstrong’s rig is primarily Marshall amps and Gibson guitars.
What AMP does Dookie use?
Can you tell us about the amplifiers that the Dookie Drive Pedal is based on? Bryan Kehoe: The Dookie Drive Pedal is based on Billie Joe’s two trusty amplifiers, which he’s christened Pete and Meat. They’re both Marshall 100 Watt Super Lead heads, and each has been heavily modified to have its own voice.
What amp is MCR?
My Chemical Romance use Epiphone/Gibson guitars through Marshall amps. However, Ray Toro also has a Bogner combo he likes to use. Use your bridge pickup (That means your switch is down) and try these settings on your amp, don’t forget the overdrive/distortion.
What string gauge does Billie Joe use?
Billie Joe Armstrong’s Guitar Strings: – Billie uses Ernie Ball Super Slinky . 010 – . 046 strings in his most recent setup.
What distortion pedal does Billie Joe Armstrong use?
To coincide with the release of Billie Joe Armstrong’s signature MXR overdrive pedal, Jim Dunlop USA has shot a video with the Green Day frontman in which he explains how he got his gnarly guitar tone on the pop-punk trio’s seminal 1994 album, Dookie.