What type of guitars do metallica use




















It is reported that the guitar was bought from a school friend who played in the high school jazz band with James. This guitar remained with all of its stock parts and was never modified. Unfortunately the whereabouts of this guitar is unknown because by the time James started Metallica he was already playing on a flying V shape guitar. This is unfortunate as this guitar must hold a certain amount of sentimental value as his mother passed away a year after she bought him the guitar.

It would be quite interesting to know where this guitar ended up. Hetfield kept using this guitar through the next year until he broke the neck of the guitar twice and would start to go out of tune quite quickly.

This guitar was purchased after the Electra flying V broke in The guitar was mainly used during to and most importantly before Hetfield switched over to ESP Guitars. The Jackson King V custom is the first guitar we will look at when James broke away from his tradition of using Gibson guitars. Another interesting fact about this guitar is that Hetfield actually owned it before the guitar brand was made popular by Dave Mustaine who played guitar for Metallica at some point as well.

The body and neck of the guitar consisted of Mahogany with a Rosewood fingerboard. The fret inlays had more of a personal touch and featured middle finger inlays.

Not much is different between the first three ESP guitars owned by Hetfield besides the fact that the model was all black. Everything from the hardware to the paint of the guitar was black. It is thought that this guitar was some prototype crossover between the MX and MX models partly because of the shorter headstock. It features the normal Mahogany body with the rosewood fret board.

The one neck features six strings while the other neck has twelve strings. Some parts of the song were also recorded using the Gretsch White Flacon.

The next guitar sees James Hetfield return to Gibson after quite a few years. The guitar features mostly stock parts and the typical one neck with six strings and another neck with twelve strings. It was probably used due to making the sound much fuller than what a six string could achieve. The instrument features six normal guitar strings plus thirteen drone strings on the bass side of the guitar body. It also featured two pickups for the normal six strings and then another pickup under the drone strings.

It seemed that Hetfield continued with the tradition of the Mahogany body as well as using the 81 EMG pickups. It still had the Gotoh tuners as well as the Tune-O-Matic bridge. What was different from this guitar and the stock release was that Hetfield had Dino Muradian paint an Elk skull surrounded with barbed wire on the guitar body. The guitar was used from onwards but not a lot of information is available on which specific songs the guitar was used in studio.

The next guitar is a Ken Lawrence Explorer. The guitar was custom made by Ken Lawrence and is made up out of Mahogany in the body and neck. The guitar has a granadillo fret board and Aztec inspired fret inlays. During Hetfield broke away from his traditional Explorer shaped guitars and started using two flying V guitars.

Matt Masciandaro built this guitar. The structural specifications are basically the same as that of the Explorer guitars as it features a mahogany body and neck with a Rosewood fret board.

The guitar is also listed on Metallica's official website. The guitar is a mid 90s reissue of the Fender Telecaster, featuring ash body and maple neck.

It is custom fitted with a B-Bender system, wh An earlier stillshot of the Guitar can be seen here. Phaser Effects Pedals. The guitar appears to have an uncovered Maestro-Style Tremolo Bridge and the Pickups are most likely the stock Humbuckers however this is unclear. James had a king v a year before Dave did, and used it throughout most of the master of puppets album and tour, but snapped the neck in later years and never had it repaired.

Semi-Hollowbody Electric Guitars. The guitar was James' first ESP guitar. He bought the guitar around c.

James added the EET FUK logo in while finishing up the master recording for the album it also sports middle finger inlays. This was his main axe through out the dama Anger released in , both in studio and for the tour. It was most likely brand new. The guitar features matte black finish and tarnish metal pickguard. Rest of the specs were transferred over from his earlier guitars, In this Guitar Center video, Metallica's James Hetfield discusses how he became a musician, and his rise to fame.

Back in the early 80's James Hetfield used a modified Marshall JMP the amp which later became the JCM he used this amplifier up until because it got stolen. After the amp got stolen, James bought a JCM and had it modified. These amplifiers can be seen on a lot In this photo taken from an Ultimate-Guitar article, James Hetfield can be seen playing the little seen Gibson Moderne.

The Top 11 Overdrive Pedals - Edition. After signing the deal with ESP in , James added a Jagermeister sticker over the original Gibson logo on the headstock, and added another larger Jagermeister sticker just behind the bridge. This obviously annoyed Hetfield, which resulted in the iconic sticker being added to the guitar.

The guitar has mahogany body with a set neck with rosewood fretboard featuring custom middle finger inlays. This guitar in contrast to the previously mentioned MX styles quite an amount of stickers on it. The headstock on it does resemble that headstock on the later MX model, which is somewhat shorter in length. The guitar was built by ESP and painted by Dino Muradian to feature an elk skull surrounded by barbed wire.

Dino used a technique called pyrography — a process of burning a design on the surface with a heated metallic point. The barbed wire extended on the fretboard as well, serving as inlay. James used this guitar extensively from as one of his main live guitars. James has at least two of these guitars. The first one was made in , and has chechen wood top and granadillo fretboard with aztec-inspired inlays. The second one was made in and features quilted bubinga top and flame sun inlays.

Rest of the specs are identical. James also has a double neck version of this guitar, with two 6-string neck, one of them being baritone scale. Both of the guitars have mahogany bodies, and maple necks with rosewood fingerboards. Instead of mahogany, the neck was built using maple with rosewood being used for the fretboard, and the body featured somewhat more aggressive design — similar to ESP EXP model.

The guitar is a mid 90s reissue of the Fender Telecaster, featuring ash body and maple neck. It is custom fitted with a B-Bender system, which allows you to mechanically bend the B-string up a whole tone to C-sharp.

The guitar is finished in black and features custom tribal artwork designed by James himself. All the hardware is gold-plated, including the pickup covers which were custom made by EMG to feature a metal top piece. The body is alder, while the neck is built from maple with rosewood fretboard. He still uses it live occasionally. The guitar features matte black finish and tarnish metal pickguard. Rest of the specs were transferred over from his earlier guitars, including EMG pickups and Tune-o-Matic bridge.

The guitar also has few unique visual features on it. First one is the Maltese cross behind the bridge, which added sometime in The second one is the gold stripe above the pickups which was added sometime later, and was present on the guitar during the St. Anger studio sessions. The guitar features see-thru black cherry finish on a mahogany body with figured maple top, and the neck is a 7-string featuring rosewood fingerboard.

The body is painted black, with green flames on it. The guitar features mahogany body and neck with rosewood fingerboard, and matte black finish with artificial wear added to it. In a white version with black hardware was also released, featuring identical specs.



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