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Epiphone TONY IOMMI G-400 User Manual

Epiphone tony iommi g-400, Gear epiphone tony iommi g-400

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134 | TOTAL GUITAR | MARCH 2005

GEAR

EPIPHONE TONY IOMMI G-400

EPIPHONE TONY IOMMI G-400

£595

HAS EPIPHONE JUST RELEASED ITS GREATEST ROCK GUITAR YET? TG THINKS SO…

WORDS: ED MITCHELL

You call this a rock guitar? There’s

no locking trem!

Wash your mouth out with soap, foolish

young whippersnapper! Your tart’s handbag,

lollipop stick-necked, sad little widdle plank

is no match for this mighty beast. This guitar

sounds like a truck load of whup-ass and will

keep on delivering its evil-hearted goods

for years to come. Can you really say all that

about your guitar? In fact, this Epiphone

Tony Iommi G-400 is like every Rocky fi lm

ever made compared to your guitar’s Karate

Kid III. Locking trem, indeed…

Er, OK. So who’s this Tony Iommi geezer

supposed to be then?

He’s only the bleedin’ Godfather of metal

riffery. Look, years before he began

shuffling around his Los Angeles mansion,

dodging dog shit and shouting at the

kids for his reality TV show, renowned bat

muncher and self-styled Prince of Darkness

Ozzy Osbourne was in a rather important

band. We’re talking about the mighty

Black Sabbath, of course. We say important

because these guys pioneered that particular

brand of grumpy metal – all doom-laden

riffs and ‘you’re all gonna die’ lyrics – that

keeps guys like Slayer’s Kerry King in protein

bars and Bic razors to this day.

The engine of Black Sabbath was guitarist

Tony Iommi, a genius with a heavy riff and

pretty nifty lead playing ability to boot. Tony

always liked to keep his riffs simple; just a

few notes played with blinding intensity. You

must’ve heard the blistering opening salvo

from Paranoid? And surely all you metal

guitarists out there are familiar with the

awesome sludge-fest that is Sweet Leaf? If

not, go to the back of the class and write ‘Nu-

metal has rotted my brain’ 1000 times on the

blackboard. The rest of you, walk this way…

OK, I’m now up to speed with Sabbath,

what’s the deal with Tony’s new axe?

Sabbath’s line-up may have changed over

the last 30-odd years but two things

have always remained the same: the man

himself, Tony Iommi, and his ever faithful

SG. Although he occasionally played

SG-style guitars from the likes of Patrick

Eggle, Jaydee and John Birch, Gibson’s

classic twin cutaway weapon of rock has

always been his favourite. It’s now as

much an Iommi trademark as the man’s

fearsome facial hair and false fi ngertips.

Sorry, his false fi ngertips?

Tony lost the tips of his middle and ring

fingers on his right hand in an industrial

accident in the 1960s. But before you accuse

us of being sick-ass gore-hounds, there is a

very good reason why we’re dredging up this

gruesome nugget of trivia. Put simply, that

unfortunate injury greatly infl uenced Tony’s

choice of guitar, his set-up and his unique

‘dungeons of hell’ tone.

Go on, I’m listening…

Tony needed a guitar with a slim neck

and an easy string tension – it had to be

comfortable for his digits. Anyone who has

played a Gibson or Epiphone SG will know

that the strings are pretty easy to bend;

even a set of 10s presents little trouble. Tony

lowered the string tension on his guitars

even more by fitting an unusual mix of light

gauge strings (9, 9, 12, 22, 28 and 38) and

tuning down to C#. Tuning low gives his

guitar the booming voice that has become

synonymous with Sabbath songs. Only thing

was, such a low tuning and light strings

had to be coupled with a meaty pickup

to boost the signal to his Laney amp. A

few years ago Gibson came to the rescue

with the Tony Iommi humbucker – its fi rst

ever signature pickup.

His new Epiphone has that pickup

fi tted, right?

Yep, for your £595 you’re getting a kick-

ass SG loaded with two of Tony’s US-made

Gibson humbuckers. Now that’s what we call

value for money, and no doubt great news

for Black Sabbath fans on a budget.

What’s the guitar like?

Probably the best Epiphone electric we’ve

ever tried. The quality of finish is top class

and the guitar has all the classic elements

that we’ve come to expect from the SG.

Underneath that glorious ebony finish – it

should be called Sabbath Black, of course

– is a mahogany body: a nice thick slab with

those iconic devilish contours and sexy

curves. The neck is glued to the body, as

it should be, and is also fashioned from

mahogany. The fingerboard is rosewood with

funky crucifix inlays and 24 frets. Yes, that’s

right folks, this is a full two octave SG! Every

other SG has 22 frets, natch.

This guitar comes fully-

loaded with a pair of

US-made Tony Iommi

humbuckers – and they

sound awesome

It’s classic SG all the

way with a tune-o-

matic bridge and a

stop tail-piece

We love the headstock

on this guitar. It

finishes the Iommi off

beautifully and looks

almost as good as the

Gibson version

TGR133.gear_dps 134

TGR133.gear_dps 134

19/1/05 6:04:51 pm

19/1/05 6:04:51 pm