Australian Guitar

Slash’s New Stash

SLASH AND GIBSON’S CESAR GUEIKIAN TALK US THROUGH THE COMPANY’S UNPRECEDEN­TED NEW SLASHCOLLE­CTION OF SIGNATURE GUITARS, FEATURING LES PAULS IN APPETITE BURST, NOVEMBER BURST, VERMILLION BURST AND ANACONDA BURST – PLUS (FOR THE FIRST TIME EVER) TWO SLASH J

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It’s a sunny afternoon in

California, and Slash is holed up in a hotel room near the Anaheim Convention Center, where the NAMM Show – the massive music industry trade event that gathers upwards of 100,000 profession­als and fans under one roof – is currently underway.

Note that the operative word in this sentence is “near”. Because, as Slash points out, the last time he actually stepped foot inside the Convention Center during NAMM, the experience was, to put it mildly, “overwhelmi­ng”.

And how could it not be, given that Slash is – and this is hardly hyperbole – maybe the most iconic and instantly recognisab­le guitarist of the past

30 or more years? For him to walk that convention floor amongst tens of thousands of devoted players and fans would be to create an outright frenzy of near-riot proportion­s, which he seems to be humbly acknowledg­ing.

But even while Slash himself does not make an appearance at this year’s NAMM (although he does still headline a killer Gibson party later in the evening; see page 36), the guitarist – and, more to the point, his guitars – are still the talk of the show. The reason? The unveiling of Gibson’s new Slash Collection.

It’s worth recognisin­g here that, while a new Slash signature guitar from Gibson is always welcomed – and, given that they’re generally offered in limited runs, also quickly snatched up – the Slash Collection is something entirely different for both artist and company. Because unlike other one-off collaborat­ions with the man who, with Guns N’ Roses, went a long way toward single-handedly putting the Les Paul back on the map for rock guitarists in the late Eighties, Gibson’s Slash Collection encompasse­s a full line of instrument­s. What’s more, it represents the first time Gibson has undertaken an endeavour of this sort with one of its signature artists.

Moreover, the Slash Collection consists of more than just the requisite Les Pauls. At launch, the range offers four new electrics – the Slash Les Paul Standard in November Burst and Appetite Burst, as well as limited-edition Anaconda Burst and Vermillion Burst – alongside two

Slash J-45 Standard signature models (in November Burst and Vermillion Burst), which represent the guitarist’s debut acoustic guitar collaborat­ion with the company.

As for how the idea for the Slash Collection came about? “It started with a discussion between us and Slash about, ‘Where do we go from here?,’” says Gibson Chief Merchant Officer Cesar Gueikian. “Slash has such a wide variety of instrument­s that he’s played and that have become famous at different points in his career – across different albums and different tours, with Guns N’ Roses or on his own or with the Conspirato­rs. With that in mind, the concept became, How do we now create something that is representa­tive of all those moments in music history that Slash has been at the forefront of developing? And the answer was, ‘Let’s not just work on one more guitar – let’s work on a collection.’”

For Slash, one of the key selling points of collaborat­ing with Gibson on a project of this scope was that the Slash Collection guitars would be part of the Gibson USA production line, and therefore more readily available and affordably priced than limited-edition Custom Shop models.

“It was really a revelation,” Slash says. “For the last year-and-a-half or so I’ve been using a couple of Custom Shop Les Pauls that I sort of designed, but that I basically did just for myself. And they’re great guitars. So when Cesar said he wanted to do a core Slash line, which was basically those guitars plus other things that I wanted to do, like bringing the Appetite guitar [the limited-edition Gibson Custom Slash “Appetite for Destructio­n” Les Paul] back as a USA guitar, I said,

‘F*** yeah, that’d be great.’”

The new Slash Collection Les

Paul Standards use classic ’59 Les

Paul design and specs as their foundation, with AAA maple tops, solid mahogany bodies, mahogany necks and rosewood fingerboar­ds with trapezoid inlays. From there, Slash and Gibson added a few personal artist touches: a C-shape neck profile, new “SlashBucke­r” pickups, color-coordinate­d hardware appointmen­ts and hand-wired electronic­s with orange drop capacitors (the electrics and acoustics also feature personalis­ed accents like a Slash “Scully” signature drawing on the back of the headstock and his signature on the truss rod cover).

Some of the Slash-specific specs, the guitarist points out, “are Custom

Shop specs that I have on all my guitars. So that’s what I think is so cool – in a way this is a USA guitar with pretty much every Custom Shop spec on it.”

One component that Slash has not had on his previous Les Pauls – and that’s because they didn’t exist until now – are the brand-new “SlashBucke­r” pickups. Of the new design, Slash explains, “It’s sort of a medium-output pickup. We wanted to focus on doing something similar to the Alnico II [humbuckers] that

I’ve done in the past with Seymour Duncan, and since Gibson makes great pickups it seemed like the right thing for us to do it together.”

Explains Gueikian, “We started with a [Gibson] Burstbucke­r and then we modified it to carry an Alnico II magnet, which is what Slash loves playing. And the winding of the coils is offset – it’s not the exact same number of rounds per bobbin. So you get that vintage PAF feel, but with the addition of the Alnico IIs. Which is the Slash sound.”

The pickups in all four Les Paul models are uncovered (“I just like the way they look,” Slash explains), but the Appetite Burst adds another nice visual touch – a “Zebra” color scheme reminiscen­t of the coils on his famous Eighties-era guitar.

As for the finishes themselves, Slash has been using custom Vermillion Burst Les Pauls onstage with the Conspirato­rs over the past few years, and took such a liking to the color that he wanted to incorporat­e it into the Collection.

“It took a long time to develop that Vermillion color,” Slash says.

“It was something that Gibson did that I then said, ‘Okay, let’s take this, and then do this and this and that to it.’ I went through five or six different prototypes during the last Conspirato­rs tour before we got to what you see.”

As for the other models, the Anaconda Burst finish was briefly available on a Slash Custom Shop model, whereas the Appetite Burst, as Gueikian informs us, “needs no introducti­on.” The November Burst, meanwhile, is a lighter take on a traditiona­l Tobacco Burst finish and references the ’59 Les Paul that that once belonged to Aerosmith’s Joe Perry (and which, thanks to Slash, does once again) and that the guitarist famously wields in Guns N’ Roses’ “November Rain” video.

“The original Les Paul that Slash played in the video, which was Joe Perry’s guitar, had faded, but it’s still a Tobacco Burst,” Gueikian explains. “So I threw the idea out one day when Slash was with us at Gibson – why don’t we do this and call it the November Burst? He said, ‘Let me think about it.’ And a couple of weeks later he came back and said, ‘I like it.’”

In general, Slash says, the process of working with Gibson to craft the Collection was easy from beginning to end. “Since Cesar and everybody came onboard at Gibson it’s a completely different vision,” he proudly says. “There’s far more of a conscienti­ous attitude about the history and the heritage of Gibson, and also what it is that Gibson represents and where it should go in the future.”

This balance between past, present and future can be seen in the second component of the Slash Collection – his new signature J-45 acoustics.

The J-45 has been in production at Gibson since the 1940s, and is regarded as the brand’s best-selling and most iconic acoustic design. “It’s my favourite acoustic model,” Slash says. “It’s very straightfo­rward, very simple. I take J-45s out on the road all the time, but I never actually thought to do an actual line of acoustics…,” he laughs, “…because Gibson would just give them to me. But when they said to me, ‘Why don’t we do an acoustic collection, because you have your acoustic set up to your own specs as well?,’ it made perfect sense.”

“If anybody were to draw Slash they’d probably draw him with a

Les Paul,” Gueikian acknowledg­es. “But he’s also an amazing acoustic guitar player and he plays quite a bit of acoustic guitar. So he had this J-45 that he loves at home, and we said, ‘If that’s the guitar you love, that’s what we should be working on and we should make it just the way you like it.”

In Slash’s case, making his signature J-45 just the way he likes it meant retaining the cornerston­e design elements – dreadnough­t-style body, Sitka spruce top, mahogany

back and sides, mahogany neck and rosewood fingerboar­d – that have made the model a classic, while adding a few key modificati­ons, such as a reimagined fingerboar­d radius.

“Slash’s vintage J-45 has a 12-inch radius, but in our discussion­s we said, ‘Why don’t we also consider a flatter 16-inch radius?,’” Gueikian says. “I told him it was worth trying because with his style of playing and how much he bends, it might actually be something that he would end up liking. He was a little doubtful at the beginning, but we ended up making two guitars, one with a 12-inch radius and one with a 16. And he ended up loving the 16-inch radius.”

Another slight but important design adjustment came with the electronic­s. “The whole time I was out with Guns we were working on it and developing it,” Slash says of the improved system. “We spent a lot of time listening to different piezos and discussing the shortcomin­gs.”

“We started with an LR Baggs VTC,” Gueikian says. “And then we began tweaking the output to try to find the right balance of preserving that vintage J-45 sound but with a higher output, which is what Slash is looking for when he’s playing live.”

The result is an instrument that offers classic acoustic tone while also meeting the needs of the modern rock player. “It’s really a guitar that was designed to be played loud onstage, and then when you take it home and play it unplugged it’s the sound that everybody loves about a J-45,” Gueikian says.

Slash, for his part, has been using a signature J-45 on the current Guns N’ Roses tour – “I play it on ‘Patience’ and [the band’s cover of] ‘Wichita Lineman,’” he says. At home, meanwhile, he’s been putting a Slash Collection Les Paul to work on new music he’s composing for future projects.

Beyond his own use, however, one of his favourite things about the new Slash Collection guitars is that they’re not just for him. Rather, these are premium instrument­s that are also aimed at the typical working player.

“There used to be a time when the only way you could get a really good signature Les Paul was through the Custom Shop,” Slash says. “Which meant sending people to a place where 90 percent of them couldn’t really afford to buy the thing. So it’s really exciting to me to do this through [Gibson] USA.”

And, promises Gueikian, there are more exciting things to come. “With Slash, the vast majority of his sound is always going to be made with a Les Paul. But the great thing about him is he has an intellectu­al and musical curiosity to try new things. He’s always in pursuit of… I don’t know if I’d call it pursuit of the perfect sound, but pursuit of the sound that perfectly represents him. So he gets really involved in what we do together – the look, the finish, the top, the feel of the neck, the pickups – he’s into everything. It’s an amazing experience to work with someone like that.

“So while the concept of the

Slash Collection was to start with the six guitars, we also know that we can go into new and different places with him. The idea is to amplif y the Slash Collection over time, and to continue to create something that is relevant and inspiring both to his longtime fans and to newer generation­s of players.”

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