Shred With Shifty

Double Elvis

  • 59 minutes 40 seconds
    Def Leppard and Dive Bombs: Phil Collen on His Bombastic “Photograph” Solo

    The influential British shredder talks about how he formed his playing style and demonstrates how to rip one of his most iconic leads.


    To hear Phil Collen tell it, he joined Def Leppard almost by accident. He had loaned the band one of his amps, and when they asked him to play some leads on their upcoming record Pyromania, Collen thought he was just doing his friends a solid. The rest is history.


    He and Shifty talk through Collen’s formative years on guitar, where he soaked up the scorching playing of classic guitar heroes: Jimmy Page, Ritchie Blackmore, Mick Ronson, Michael Schenker, and Gary Moore all played a hand in Collen’s high-flying fretwork. 


    Collen’s solo on “Photograph” is a perfect example of the sort of “ear candy” that producer Mutt Lange encouraged the band to chase in the studio—and yes, he did record individual notes to build a single guitar chord on Pyromania. But there weren’t many tricks to Collen’s sound on the solo. His Ibanez Destroyer and a 50-watt Marshall were all he needed to get the job done for the slick, Blackmore-inspired solo. Tune in to see how he worked that two-piece setup to record one of the most influential guitar solos of the ’80s.



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    Follow Chris Shiflett:

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    Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/artist/5tv5SsSRqR7uLtpKZgcRrg?si=26kWS1v2RYaE4sS7KnHpag


    Producer: Jason Shadrick

    Executive Producers: Brady Sadler and Jake Brennan for Double Elvis

    Engineering support by Matt Tahaney and Matt Beaudoin

    Video Editors: Dan Destefano and Addison Sauvan


    Special thanks to Chris Peterson, Greg Nacron, and the entire Volume.com crew.

    25 April 2024, 7:00 am
  • 1 hour 7 seconds
    Wolf Van Halen’s Tornado of Tapping on “Take a Bow”

    Being born into rock royalty doesn’t make you a rock star—you’ve gotta earn it with your own chops. And whether it’s the classical pedigree of his first name or the hard-rock infamy of his surname, Wolfgang Van Halen has a long lineage to live up to. As he displays on this episode of Shred With Shifty, he’s more than up to the task.

    Wolf joins Shifty to teach the blistering, tap-heavy solo for his song “Take a Bow,” from 2023’s Mammoth II. It follows in his dad’s footsteps, sure, but it also shows Wolf has a voice and vision of his own—both of which are just as potent and theatrical as his father’s. 


    Wolf treats us to a tour of his new signature semi-hollowbody EVH model, the SA126, with details from EVH managing director Matt Bruck. But he doesn’t hold out on the family jewels: Wolf shares the story of his father’s iconic Frankenstein Strat and brings it on the show, with some extra dirt on his dad’s journey from Marshalls to his signature Peavey 5150 amps. When Shifty asks who’s stewarding his father’s invaluable gear, Wolf eases our concerns: “If the world ended, they would still be okay,” he grins.


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    Full Video Episodes: http://volume.com/shifty 


    Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/podcast/id1690423642

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    Follow Chris Shiflett:

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    Website: http://www.chrisshiflettmusic.com

    Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/artist/5tv5SsSRqR7uLtpKZgcRrg?si=26kWS1v2RYaE4sS7KnHpag


    Producer: Jason Shadrick

    Executive Producers: Brady Sadler and Jake Brennan for Double Elvis

    Engineering support by Matt Tahaney and Matt Beaudion

    Video Editors: Dan Destefano and Addison Sauvan


    Special thanks to Chris Peterson, Greg Nacron, and the entire Volume.com crew.

    28 March 2024, 4:00 am
  • 1 hour 36 minutes
    Joe Bonamassa: Bursts, Dumbles, and the Blues

    If you can’t figure out how to play Joe Bonamassa’s solo from “Blues Deluxe,” don’t worry. It all changes when Shifty sits down with Bonamassa for this special episode of Shred With Shifty. No surprise that both of them reach for their Les Pauls, and Bonamassa even reveals why he switched from Strats to Gibsons in the early 2000s.


    Bonamassa is known for his dazzling collection of vintage guitars—which he says has become a target for haters—but he explains that you don’t need a ’58 Les Paul to get the goods. “It’s also the mystique,” he says. “If Jimmy Page played a Tokai, everyone would want a Tokai.” A guitar made two weeks ago, he says, is just as good as a classic.


    Bonamassa’s lightning-quick soloing style, which conjures a hurricane of major and minor pentatonic notes with some phrygian flair, is the stuff of legend, and his tricks on “Blues Deluxe” are plenty. Even though he tries to adhere to a “divide by two” rule to simplify his phrasings, he still stumps Shiflett with a volume swell trick he learned from Roy Buchanan and Danny Gatton.


    This solo is no walk in the park. Any brave takers up for giving it a shot? Share it and tag us so Shifty can have a look! Most importantly, remember to have fun. “Do whatever you want with the damn thing,” says Bonamassa. “It’s just a guitar.”


    Click below to subscribe to the podcast!


    Full Video Episodes: http://volume.com/shifty 


    Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/podcast/id1690423642

    Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4B8BSR0l78qwUKJ5gOGIWb

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    Follow Chris Shiflett:

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/chrisshiflettmusic

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    Twitter: https://twitter.com/chrisshiflett71

    Website: http://www.chrisshiflettmusic.com

    Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/artist/5tv5SsSRqR7uLtpKZgcRrg?si=26kWS1v2RYaE4sS7KnHpag


    Producer: Jason Shadrick

    Executive Producers: Brady Sadler and Jake Brennan for Double Elvis

    Engineering support by Matt Tahaney and Matt Beaudion

    Video Editors: Dan Destefano and Addison Sauvan


    Special thanks to Chris Peterson, Greg Nacron, and the entire Volume.com crew.

    20 March 2024, 5:30 pm
  • 34 minutes 12 seconds
    “KISS” Shiflett Takes on Fan Solos and Issues a Challenge

    It’s time for Chris Shiflett to rip another solo—solo episode, that is. During this first season of Shred With Shifty, our host has been keeping an eye on fan submissions of the lead parts explained in each episode, hand-picking sharp renditions to share. This time, he spotlights takes on the guitar theatrics from “Alive” by Pearl Jam, “Stay a Little Longer” by Brothers Osborne, and “The Waiting” by Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, plus a snippet of a Hendrix classic that inspired a listener to pursue lead guitar. The question on everyone’s mind: Will anyone be brave enough to tackle Brent Mason’s brain-melting shred on “Southbound Train?” Step right up, brave soul. It’s your moment.


    Stick around for some choice cuts from this season’s interviews, including Mason laying out his signature pickup arrangement, Ace Frehley sharing how his bodyguard helped him recharge after days of partying, and Mike Campbell running down his old studio rig.


    Stay tuned for the next episodes of Shred With Shifty featuring Joe Bonamassa and Wolf Van Halen.


    Click below to subscribe to the podcast!


    Full Video Episodes: http://volume.com/shifty 


    Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/podcast/id1690423642

    Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4B8BSR0l78qwUKJ5gOGIWb

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    Follow Chris Shiflett:

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/chrisshiflettmusic

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    Twitter: https://twitter.com/chrisshiflett71

    Website: http://www.chrisshiflettmusic.com

    Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/artist/5tv5SsSRqR7uLtpKZgcRrg?si=26kWS1v2RYaE4sS7KnHpag


    Producer: Jason Shadrick

    Executive Producers: Brady Sadler and Jake Brennan for Double Elvis

    Engineering support by Matt Tahaney and Matt Beaudoin

    Video Editors: Dan Destefano and Addison Sauvan

    29 February 2024, 4:00 pm
  • 1 hour 21 minutes
    Brent Mason’s Furious Fingerstyle Shred

    Brent Mason has picked for the biggest and best names in country music: Alan Jackson, Willie Nelson, Shania Twain, Brooks & Dunn, Blake Shelton, and George Strait are just a few of the country stars on whose records you can hear Mason’s Fender-on-Fender fretwork. But his solo on “Southbound Train,” the closing track on Travis Tritt’s 2000 record Down the Road I Go, might be his hottest work of all.


    As Mason explains, the song scoots along at his favorite country tempo—a Cajun two-step, Mason says—which provides the rhythmic framework for his face-melter lead. Mason says the melodic and structural components came in part from his familiarity with jazz, and the mixing of jazz and blues with his usual twangy conventions. In fact, Mason’s furious note barrages occasionally earned him some raised eyebrows (and some choice words from Conway Twitty) in the more traditionalist Nashville studio system.


    This might be the toughest solo our host has taken on so far on Shred With Shifty. The key to wrestling it? “You gotta keep playing [it] til you wanna pull out all your teeth and hair,” says Mason. Which Nashville producers and stars would let Mason off-leash in the studio? How does a session ace deal with hand injuries? Listen on, shredders. And if you’re brave enough, send in your take on Mason’s solo.


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    Full Video Episodes: http://volume.com/shifty 


    Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/podcast/id1690423642

    Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4B8BSR0l78qwUKJ5gOGIWb

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    Follow Chris Shiflett:

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/chrisshiflettmusic

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/shifty71

    TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@chris.shiflett

    Twitter: https://twitter.com/chrisshiflett71

    Website: http://www.chrisshiflettmusic.com

    Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/artist/5tv5SsSRqR7uLtpKZgcRrg?si=26kWS1v2RYaE4sS7KnHpag


    Producer: Jason Shadrick

    Executive Producers: Brady Sadler and Jake Brennan for Double Elvis

    Engineering support by Matt Tahaney and Matt Beaudoin

    Video Editors: Dan Destefano and Addison Sauvan


    Special thanks to Chris Peterson, Greg Nacron, and the entire Volume.com crew.

    15 February 2024, 4:00 pm
  • 1 hour 6 minutes
    Free-Wheelin’ Ace Frehley Fires Up His “Shock Me” Solo

    Shifty’s biggest guitar hero joins the podcast to run down his unique lead picking on the 1977 Love Gun hit.


    Ace Frehley is the reason Chris Shiflett picked up a guitar in the first place, so it’s only natural that Shifty invites his original tone teacher onto the pod to recap one his iconic solos. Frehley, saddled with a classic black-and-cream triple-humbucker Les Paul, shares that “Shock Me” was the first KISS track on which he took lead vocal duty. The first time he sang it live, he remembers, was in front of 18,000 screaming fans at Madison Square Garden. As Frehley explains, that was quite a step up from how he recorded the vocals in the studio for Love Gun: lying flat on the floor on his back, racked with stage fright.


    Frehley recalls that he ripped most of his solos through a dimed Marshall stack, and always on the bridge pickup. Turns out, he never went for pedals or boards because he’d trip over them onstage. “Wearing those boots?” he snorts. “Forget about it. It’s like a minefield!” His signature sauce, he says, is in the way he picks the strings: He holds his picks loose, but plucks in such a way that his thumb often hits the string at the same time, producing a sound just shy of a pinched squeal, but more spunky than a regular strike.


    Frehley drops tons of golden bits of KISS history: the engineering behind his famous “smoke bomb” effect, the time he woke up in Paris with his eyes swollen shut from makeup, how he accidentally roadied for Hendrix, the shared genealogy between his technique and Eddie Van Halen’s, and which KISS member smelled the worst after shows.


    Click below to subscribe to the podcast!


    Full Video Episodes: http://volume.com/shifty 


    Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/podcast/id1690423642

    Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4B8BSR0l78qwUKJ5gOGIWb

    iHeart: https://www.iheart.com/podcast/269-shred-with-shifty-116270551/

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    Follow Chris Shiflett:

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/chrisshiflettmusic

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/shifty71

    TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@chris.shiflett

    Twitter: https://twitter.com/chrisshiflett71

    Website: http://www.chrisshiflettmusic.com

    Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/artist/5tv5SsSRqR7uLtpKZgcRrg?si=26kWS1v2RYaE4sS7KnHpag


    Producer: Jason Shadrick

    Executive Producers: Brady Sadler and Jake Brennan for Double Elvis

    Engineering support by Matt Tahaney and Matt Beaudoin

    Video Editors: Dan Destefano and Addison Sauvan


    Special thanks to Chris Peterson, Greg Nacron, and the entire Volume.com crew.





    1 February 2024, 8:14 am
  • 52 minutes 42 seconds
    Mike Campbell’s Electric Spontaneity

    Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers’ lead guitarist shows Shifty how he bottled an electric reaction to “The Waiting” on the song’s simple, iconic solo.

    Mike Campbell knows how to write the perfect parts to a song, and records them with the perfect guitar, amp, and tone to match. That’s why Shifty has the Heartbreakers’ lead man on this episode to get a look under the hood at what drives Campbell’s solo on “The Waiting.”

    The song, from 1981’s Hard Promises, was tracked at Sound City, where Campbell recalls the band had “every amp in the world lined up across the room, every amp you can imagine.” After miking and testing each, Campbell says they settled on a Fender Twin, which he brought to life with a white Les Paul he got from a pawn shop. Shifty notes the song’s music video led him to believe the solo was tracked with a Rickenbacker, but Campbell snickers that it was just for show: “I did that different just to fuck people up,” he grins. (“I hate that video, I think I look like a total idiot,” he adds.)

    Campbell, who started playing guitar by ear at 16 on an “unplayable” Harmony acoustic, says he didn’t labor over the solo for “The Waiting,” favoring spontaneity and instinct instead. “I like to come in fresh and capture as I’m discovering what it is, there’s some electricity in that moment,” he explains. “The listener can hear that you’re discovering it as they’re discovering it at the same time.” That approach applies to his songwriting experience in general, too: “I don't even wanna talk about it too much, because its mysterious,” he says. “It comes to you when it wants to.”

    Later, Campbell lays out how he and Petty balanced their guitar parts, and why Campbell favored “droning” open notes over complexity for many of his leads. And stick around to hear how he figured out Lindsay Buckingham’s guitar parts for Fleetwood Mac’s 2018 tour, the difficulty of backing Bob Dylan, and why original Heartbreakers drummer Stan Lynch almost got in a fight with Johnny Rotten.


    Click below to subscribe to the podcast!


    Full Video Episodes: http://volume.com/shifty 

    Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/podcast/id1690423642

    Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4B8BSR0l78qwUKJ5gOGIWb

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    Follow Chris Shiflett:

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/chrisshiflettmusic

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/shifty71

    TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@chris.shiflett

    Twitter: https://twitter.com/chrisshiflett71

    Website: http://www.chrisshiflettmusic.com

    Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/artist/5tv5SsSRqR7uLtpKZgcRrg?si=26kWS1v2RYaE4sS7KnHpag


    Producer: Jason Shadrick

    Executive Producers: Brady Sadler and Jake Brennan for Double Elvis

    Engineering support by Matt Tahaney and Matt Beaudoin

    Video Editors: Dan Destefano and Addison Sauvan


    Special thanks to Chris Peterson, Greg Nacron, and the entire Volume.com crew.

    19 January 2024, 8:00 am
  • 1 hour 24 minutes
    John Osborne’s Tele-Style Spank on “Stay a Little Longer”

    “I think it’s safe to say John Osborne is a fuckin’ beast!”


    That’s how Chris Shiflett kicks off this episode of Shred With Shifty, featuring bearded Brothers Osborne shredder-in-chief John Osborne. Osborne joins Shifty to dissect his blistering country-rock ripping on the band’s breakout single, “Stay A Little Longer.”


    Osborne tells Shifty about failing miserably at guitar in college, where he learned to read and play bass clef but never got the hang of the treble clef. It’s no surprise when Osborne admits he’s taken notes from players like Stevie Ray Vaughan, Dickey Betts, Eric Johnson, and Skynyrd shredders Allan Collins and Gary Rossington, but his very first guitar influence? Kurt Cobain, and the Nirvana frontman’s anxious energy. “I’m a little bit awkward, and I have social anxiety, but I can talk to people through music,” says Osborne. As far as technicality, though, he and Shifty agree that bluegrass guitar playing is “the Usain Bolt of musicianship.”


    To recap the “Stay A Little Longer” leads, Osborne plays a stock blackguard 1953 Fender Telecaster that he scooped from Carter Vintage Guitars. (Listen in to learn why it and some other Fenders from that era have an abnormally thick “Friday neck.”) He explains that he wanted the solo to have the same philosophy as legendary solos like those in “Free Bird” and “Hotel California”: hooky, repetitive, accented, and not too shreddy. Plus, he reveals the “un-Photoshopped” blips in the solo that stayed on the record.


    Click below to subscribe to the podcast!


    Full Video Episodes: http://volume.com/shifty 


    Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/podcast/id1690423642


    Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4B8BSR0l78qwUKJ5gOGIWb


    iHeart: https://www.iheart.com/podcast/269-shred-with-shifty-116270551/


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    Follow Chris Shiflett:

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/chrisshiflettmusic

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/shifty71

    TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@chris.shiflett

    Twitter: https://twitter.com/chrisshiflett71

    Website: http://www.chrisshiflettmusic.com

    Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/artist/5tv5SsSRqR7uLtpKZgcRrg?si=26kWS1v2RYaE4sS7KnHpag


    Producer: Jason Shadrick

    Executive Producers: Brady Sadler and Jake Brennan for Double Elvis

    Engineering support by Matt Tahaney and Matt Beaudoin

    Video Editors: Dan Destefano and Addison Sauvan


    Special thanks to Chris Peterson, Greg Nacron, and the entire Volume.com crew.

    21 December 2023, 8:12 am
  • 50 minutes 38 seconds
    Odds & Ends and Q&A Vol. 2

    This time on Shred With Shifty, Chris Shiflett steps out on his own. Shiflett starts up with a video montage of fan-submitted solo takes on leads from Charlie Starr, Rivers Cuomo, Mike McCready, and others. Some are more faithful than others, and Shifty celebrates the originality. “Learn it kinda, and then put your own twist on it,” he encourages. Next, he’s cued up clips from his sit-downs with Paisley, Starr, McCready, and one of his favorite guitarists, Jawbreaker’s Blake Schwarzenbach.


    Then it’s time for a round of questions from the listeners. Fans probe Shifty about anything and everything: his favorite Van Halen deep cut, whether he still woodsheds scales, his opinion on modelers, and what makes him nervous during his biggest shows. When someone asks the secret to band-life longevity, Shiflett answers earnestly. “I always say the trick to being in a band isn’t always necessarily how you play whatever instrument it is,” he explains. “It’s how well can you sit in tight quarters with a bunch of other people and not annoy the fuck out of them.”


    Later, he talks about why cowboy chords are actually his go-to “guitar-store lick,” and has a hilarious miscommunication with a listener asking if they should “top-wrap” their Les Paul. “What the fuck is top-wrapping a Les Paul?” Shifty responds incredulously. “I’m just gonna say no. Leave your Les Paul how it is.”


    Be sure to stick around to hear about Shiflett’s worst onstage guitar-tone debacle. Hint: it happened during a late-night television performance with the Foos.


    Click below to subscribe to the podcast!


    Full Video Episodes: http://volume.com/shifty 


    Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/podcast/id1690423642


    Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4B8BSR0l78qwUKJ5gOGIWb


    iHeart: https://www.iheart.com/podcast/269-shred-with-shifty-116270551/


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    Follow Chris Shiflett:

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/chrisshiflettmusic

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/shifty71

    TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@chris.shiflett

    Twitter: https://twitter.com/chrisshiflett71

    Website: http://www.chrisshiflettmusic.com

    Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/artist/5tv5SsSRqR7uLtpKZgcRrg?si=26kWS1v2RYaE4sS7KnHpag


    Producer: Jason Shadrick

    Executive Producers: Brady Sadler and Jake Brennan for Double Elvis

    Engineering support by Matt Tahaney and Matt Beaudion

    Video Editors: Dan Destefano and Addison Sauvan


    Special thanks to Chris Peterson, Greg Nacron, and the entire Volume.com crew.


    7 December 2023, 8:11 am
  • 1 hour 9 minutes
    Pearl Jam’s Mike McCready Comes “Alive”

    Host Chris Shiflett starts things off with a discussion on the musical context McCready emerged from. “If you didn’t have this punk rock background, then you were looked down upon,” remembers McCready. As he explains, his upbringing was less punk rock and more Cub Scouts until he picked up the guitar. He and PJ rhythm guitarist Stone Gossard preferred the likes of Iron Maiden and Judas Priest, and after Gossard caught McCready shredding Stevie Ray Vaughan licks at a party, he phoned him up to start a two-guitar band. “I could only do what I knew how to do, which was play leads,” says McCready.

    A major turning point came for McCready when he witnessed Muddy Waters’ performance in The Last Waltz. “It seemed like he could do more in one note than I was doing with all these thousands of notes,” he says. The observation led him to give up shredding and move in an emotion-driven, blues-rooted direction.

    That spirit drives the soaring solo on “Alive,” which McCready cut with a 1962 Japanese Reissue Stratocaster, a Tubescreamer, and a Marshall JCM800. McCready reveals how Jimi Hendrix’s sounds on “Machine Gun” influenced his own performance. After the lesson, McCready answers questions about how “Alive” has changed over the years, Eddie Vedder’s punk-ish rhythm playing, and why he smashed a Strat onstage last year.

    Best of all? Shifty finally gets a proper “guitar store lick” from his guest.


    Click below to subscribe to the podcast!


    Full Video Episodes: http://volume.com/shifty 

    Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/podcast/id1690423642

    Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4B8BSR0l78qwUKJ5gOGIWb

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    9 November 2023, 8:10 am
  • 1 hour 19 minutes
    Jawbreaker’s Blake Schwarzenbach on the Emo-Meets-Zeppelin Magic of “Accident Prone”

    On this week’s Shred With Shifty, Chris Shiflett is joined by one of his all-time favorite players: Blake Schwarzenbach, the 6-string architect behind California punk band Jawbreaker’s simple, noisy, orchestral rippers. But before things really get rolling, Shifty gets his heartbroken as Schwarzenbach squashes rumors that Jawbreaker might have a new record in the works: “There’s no truth to it,” he says.


    Shifty and Schwarzenbach talk about the band’s trajectory up to and after Dear You, their major-label breakout record which ditched their indie punk-rock production style for a slicker sound. But the band’s fans didn’t approve of the perceived sell-out—a concern Schwarzenbach thinks isn’t so present nowadays. “Selling out is not a concern I think for younger people in a way that it was in our time,” he says. “Selling out seems to be this weird virtue.” Schwarzenbach remembers recording at the same studio as fellow Bay Area punks Rancid and realizing Jawbreaker would be left in the dust: “It was clear to me who was gonna win,” he grins.


    Schwarzenbach admits he’s not a virtuoso lead player, but over the years, the augmented, melodic chording of Jimmy Page blended with the elemental intensity of ’80s D.C. hardcore to create his unique style, which uses octaves and drone notes to build melody and discord at the same time. He recalls the original recording rig on “Accident Prone,” including a Sovtek Big Muff, a white Les Paul, and a hot-rodded Marshall JMP. Then, playing a Gretsch Tennessee Rose Chet Atkins 1963 reissue, he guides Shifty through the tense riffing on the track. When Shiflett suggests there’s an element of complexity to the part, Schwarzenbach corrects him: “Chris, I’m afraid what you’re going to find out in your podcast here is that what you think is finesse is just sloth.”


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    Producer: Jason Shadrick

    Executive Producers: Brady Sadler and Jake Brennan for Double Elvis

    Engineering support by Matt Tahaney and Matt Beaudion

    Video Editors: Dan Destefano and Addison Sauvan


    Special thanks to Chris Peterson, Greg Nacron, and the entire Volume.com crew.





    26 October 2023, 7:09 am
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