James Bay Guitar Rig

James Bay Guitar Rig

ALL 66 Guitars 30 Amplifiers 8 Effects Pedals 16 Microphones 3 Strings 5 Bass Guitars 1 Studio Equipment 1 Music Accessories 2

In this video of James Bay performing the song 'Let It Go' for Burberry Acoustic, he can be seen playing an Epiphone EJ-200CE Acoustic-Electric Guitar in a Natural finish. Close-ups and details of the guitar can be seen throughout the video.

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In this video, James Bay talks about picking up a guitar when he first heard Layla by Eric Clapton at age 11. He describes some of the characteristics of his ...

Hooked: James Bay On Derek And The Dominos'

James Bay, Incredible singer songwriter from the UK playing a cover of Bruce Springsteen I'm on fire. In an interview with Acoustic Magazines, talking about the SJ-200 I don't know, it's really great! It seems that the Jumbo body guitars are apart of the iconic James Bay sound, noted by his E...

In the interview James mentioned when recording his single 'Let it Go', he mentions the song was recorded with a Blues Junior..

In this Instagram, James Bay can be seen holding/hugging his new guitar, a 1964 Gibson ES-330. He captions the photo, I finally got it!! The guitar of my dreams! We're going to run away together.. #thanksbye

I Love The Blues, But My Reality Is Not 'since My Baby Left Me…'” James Bay On Why He's Embracing The Positives On New Album, Leap

At 10:40 James Bay switches from his Epiphone Century to the Gibson Memphis Luther Dickinson ES-335. He shows off some of his lead work, demoing how his pedals affect his lead sound.

At 1:28 into this video of James Bay's pedalboard rundown, his Strymon BigSky reverb pedal can be seen. James Bay says, The Flint covers sort of the initial... the sort of core reverb. [I'm a] massive fan of reverb. An...

In this interview with James Bay, it is mentioned that Buzzfeed invited the Hitchin-born singer (and his beautiful D'Angelico EX-59) to stop by our offices[...]. It can also be clearly seen in the photos and GIFs that accompany ...

Tales From The Rhodes Archives

I've gone up to 13s recently, because I dropped down, I was on 12s, cause I’d go down a whole tone. I’ve been using some Ernie Ball strings recently, they’ve got a range called ...

Starting around 1:28 into this video of James Bay's pedalboard rundown, his Strymon Flint Tremolo & Reverb pedal can be seen. The signal chain starts with the Flint, then goes into his Strymon BigSky. James Bay says, The Flint covers sort...

Around 5:07 into this video interview with James Bay, James Bay on Gibson Guitars, he mentions he switches between Ernie Ball Earthwounds, Ernie Ball Everlasts, and D'Addario strings, but has fallen in love with the Ernie Ball ones.

Biggest 2020 Pedal Board! Goodwood Audio Custom Setups

James Bay's first ever guitar. He captions his Instagram photo, #Tbt to the first guitar I ever bought. Hand painted when I was 14 and still hanging in my room at my parents house

In this Instagram video, James Bay plays a riff through his Yamaha THR10C Classic Combo Modeling Combo Amp (he is using an Epiphone guitar, judging by the headstock). He says, Plugged into my new Yamaha THR10C So many tasty tones coming out of this little beaut

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Photos taken on July 25, 2010 at the Rythms Of The World festival in Hitchin, Hertfordshire, UK. Playing with the James Bay Band. Photos taken by James Boardman, who was the bass player in an earlier band James played guitar in...

James Bay Partners Up With Fender To Offer Fans The Chance To Win An In Person Guitar Lesson

In an interview about James Bay's album Chaos And The Calm and the gear he uses live and in the studio, James Bay talks a bit about his amps of choice.

While recording Chaos And The Calm in the studio, he used a late-60s 'silverface' Twin and loved the sound he got through it, particul...

In this Instagram photo, James Bay says, First ever pedal board ... Plank of wood painted black. Proud to call it mine x

When He Was On Fire: James Bay At Hollywood Palladium

The amp appears at 2:19 in this video, the video is from That Pedal Show, where it is explained the complete rig.

In this screenshot of a James Bay Instagram story, he can be seen playing a Fender Custom Shop Bob Bain Son of the Gunn Telecaster in Butterscotch Blonde. In the caption he says:British singer-songwriter James Bay has enjoyed a meteoric rise to fame, with his debut album entering the UK charts at Number One and going double platinum. He tells G&B how he did it, where he’s going next, and how his 1966 Epiphone Century was nearly the one that got away…

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Paul McCartney and his Höfner Violin bass. Eddie Van Halen and his masking-taped ‘Frankenstrat’. Jack White and his Montgomery Ward Airline. Neil Young and his ‘Old Black’ Les Paul… James Bay and his red Epiphone Century?

Epiphone E422t Century 1966

Every era has its own inseparable duo of star and , and while 25-year-old Bay is some way yet from the stellar company listed above, he’s undoubtedly looking up. Three years ago, few people knew who James Bay was. Quite a few players had never even heard of an Epiphone Century. It’s now a very different story.

James Bay’s talent is the key to such matters, of course. His debut album, Chaos And The Calm, is now so ubiquitous you’d be forgiven for thinking every track has been a single; in fact, it’s ‘only’ six out of 12. Sales and praise have become constant companions: three Grammy nominations, Brit Awards, an Ivor Novello, mentoring from The Rolling Stones, the on-message charity single (Running)… and so it continues.

Today, Bay is playing Portugal’s Festival Marés Vivas, in the same late-night slot played the day before by Elton John. It’s a “fly-in” show, explains Bay, meaning he and his band don’t have their own backline. Instead of his favourite Hamstead head and cab, he must ‘settle’ for Fenders (“That’s fine!” he chirps. “It’ll be a good challenge”). But you can be sure Bay disembarked the plane with his must-have companion: his red 1966 Epiphone Century hollowbody electric. Bay understands these things are important.

St. James 50 El34 Head

“I really believe in aesthetics, imagery, iconography, branding if you want to call it that, ” he explains. “From the Stones’ lips logo, to Michael Jackson’s sparkly glove, to Bruce Springsteen’s Born In The USA cover… so once I had the physical connection with my instrument, in playing and sound terms, I was always going to make it the forefront of what you see onstage.”

“Between that and the hat, ” he smiles, “it’s worked out. I can’t lie – in the back of my mind, I thought these things might help me achieve what I want to achieve. It’d be naïve to say, ‘Ohh, it all just happened’. I knew I was going to have to do a shit-load of work to even get a bit to happen for me, and I have… but it seems to be working.”

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Bay is clearly adept at learning the art of a career in music, yet it’s equally obvious he’s no cynic. He simply loves music. Born in the small market town of Hitchin – population 33, 000, “famous” for pioneering the use of black bin bags – he started playing , aged 11, on an old nylon-string classical of his father’s. “He couldn’t play it, though. He’d got it off my uncle… he didn’t play either.” Inspired by hearing his dad’s Derek And The Dominos Layla album – not exactly the zenith of cool at the turn of the century – young James discovered he had some talent.

Used Epiphone E44 James Bay 1966 Limited Solid Body Electric Guitar Red

“I still think a lot of even really experienced players appreciate that an acoustic is a good thing to learn on. It was unwieldy, not easy to play… it sets you in good stead for whatever comes after that.”

What came next was a Yamaha Pacifica electric – but “I wasn’t feeling anything remotely ‘Strat’ in me, so I sold it” – and then an Epiphone Les Paul Special II: “from the money for the Pacifica and pennies I’d saved from working down the market. I suddenly felt a little more like Slash or Aerosmith! Aged 14, that’s what floated my boat.

“But I painted it. Dunno why! It wasn’t very good…” his voice tails off, diplomatically. “Later, I had an Epiphone EJ-200…” By his late teens, Bay was playing live and was a student at the Brighton Institute Of Modern Music (see also, Tom Odell, George Ezra, The Kooks). BIMM is justifiably proud of its student, but Bay is at pains to point out he’s no production-line popstar: “I left early. I only did two years.

Gp Presents The Waybacks Feat. James Nash In Berkeley, Ca

“I do appreciate the time I spent there and all the people who helped me, but… rules, lessons, I just don’t think they should really exist when it comes to music, y’know? It depends what you want out of playing, what you want from the outset, I know that. But I feel that when I’m learning music ‘by the book’, as it were, I start to get worried. It stifles my creativity.

“My basic point is, when you don’t know what you’re doing, that’s when people can come up with truly brilliant things. Sorry, tangent there! I just wanted to say it.” Gigging in and around London followed, supported by money from bar work: “Hated it. Mainly because I was working in the hours when

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