Joe Perry Controversy

jrockbridge

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Joe Perry reveals he used Fender Strats to record most of Aerosmith’s ’70s material

-By Matt Parker( Total Guitar )

The Aerosmith legend explains why he considers Strats to be superior studio guitars, while Gibson Les Pauls make better live instruments.

There are only a handful of players more closely associated with the Gibson Les Paul than Aerosmith’s Joe Perry. Yet, as he reveals in a new interview, much of his classic recorded material was recorded using Fender Strats.

In his interview in the new issue of Total Guitar, Perry discusses his longstanding love of the LP, but reveals he saw the Strat as a superior studio tool.

“I played Les Pauls pretty much throughout the ’70s,” says Perry. “But I recorded most of my stuff with Strats. I always loved having the vibrato arm, and it seemed easier to get different tones out of a Strat.”

Nonetheless, it wasn’t a straightforward live/studio divide.

“I was more concerned about writing songs than I was about the particulars of which amp I used or whatever,” says Perry.

“That said, I would say with a fair amount of confidence I used a Les Paul on Eat The Rich [from 1993’s Get A Grip], Toys In The Attic [1975], Pandora’s Box [from 1974’s Get Your Wings] and Nine Lives [1997]. I would bet that at least one of my [guitar] tracks on Walk This Way [also from 1975’s Toys In The Attic] is a Les Paul, and then everything I did after that was with the Strat.”

By process of elimination, that means the famous Perry lines on the likes of Aerosmith hits Sweet Emotion, Dream On, Crazy and much of Walk This Way were recorded using Strats. Which all makes absolute sense when you listen to them.

Live, though, Perry maintains he felt the LP was superior.

“The tone you could get out of a Les Paul was heavier,” reflects the Aerosmith man. “And it was easier to get to get distortion with less noise. I think a lot of the reason that guitar plays so well in general is because it has its roots in Spanish guitar.”

Perry is not alone when it comes to iconic Gibson players who leaned on Fender in the studio. Jimmy Page preferred his Tele in many of Led Zeppelin’s early sessions, while in 2021, Carlos Santana told Guitarist he’d switched to Strats in the studio throughout a big chunk of the 2010s.

Elsewhere in the same Total Guitar interview, the Aerosmith icon cautions that although on his famous ’59 Les Paul “they just got it right”, guitarists should always trust their ears first, particularly as Perry notes that even some of ’59 Les Pauls he’s played “did not feel that good or sound that good.”
 
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Makes sense … I hardly play Strats anymore but the Strat bridge p/u is underrated especially in the studio, and when using a wide gain spectrum.
It cuts so well, it doesn’t have bottom end bloat that you need to run a high pass filter on and one can really EQ it in all sorts of ways, and it has an inherent clarity and top end that you can tame more easily than trying to add clarity and top end that you don’t have to begin with when using more meaty pickups.

Having said that my favorite recording guitar these days is a Jazzmaster, it does it all for me :D.
 

PB+J

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Joe Perry reveals he used Fender Strats to record most of Aerosmith’s ’70s material

-By Matt Parker( Total Guitar )

The Aerosmith legend explains why he considers Strats to be superior studio guitars, while Gibson Les Pauls make better live instruments.

There are only a handful of players more closely associated with the Gibson Les Paul than Aerosmith’s Joe Perry. Yet, as he reveals in a new interview, much of his classic recorded material was recorded using Fender Strats.

In his interview in the new issue of Total Guitar, Perry discusses his longstanding love of the LP, but reveals he saw the Strat as a superior studio tool.

“I played Les Pauls pretty much throughout the ’70s,” says Perry. “But I recorded most of my stuff with Strats. I always loved having the vibrato arm, and it seemed easier to get different tones out of a Strat.”

Nonetheless, it wasn’t a straightforward live/studio divide.

“I was more concerned about writing songs than I was about the particulars of which amp I used or whatever,” says Perry.

“That said, I would say with a fair amount of confidence I used a Les Paul on Eat The Rich [from 1993’s Get A Grip], Toys In The Attic [1975], Pandora’s Box [from 1974’s Get Your Wings] and Nine Lives [1997]. I would bet that at least one of my [guitar] tracks on Walk This Way [also from 1975’s Toys In The Attic] is a Les Paul, and then everything I did after that was with the Strat.”

By process of elimination, that means the famous Perry lines on the likes of Aerosmith hits Sweet Emotion, Dream On, Crazy and much of Walk This Way were recorded using Strats. Which all makes absolute sense when you listen to them.

Live, though, Perry maintains he felt the LP was superior.

“The tone you could get out of a Les Paul was heavier,” reflects the Aerosmith man. “And it was easier to get to get distortion with less noise. I think a lot of the reason that guitar plays so well in general is because it has its roots in Spanish guitar.”

Perry is not alone when it comes to iconic Gibson players who leaned on Fender in the studio. Jimmy Page preferred his Tele in many of Led Zeppelin’s early sessions, while in 2021, Carlos Santana told Guitarist he’d switched to Strats in the studio throughout a big chunk of the 2010s.

Elsewhere in the same Total Guitar interview, the Aerosmith icon cautions that although on his famous ’59 Les Paul “they just got it right”, guitarists should always trust their ears first, particularly as Perry notes that even some of ’59 Les Pauls he’s played “did not feel that good or sound that good.”
Pretty sure Chat GPT wrote that, or somebody paid by the word. The first four paragraphs say the same thing and then the substance is different from the headline.

I'm probably not going to be able to sleep tonight, worrying about which guitar Joe perry used forty years ago
 

Guitarworks

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Yeah I read that somewhere else too, where he admitted to using strats for everything in the studio, and that the Strat pretty much constitutes the 70's and 80's Aerosmith guitar sound. I'm not shocked. I always had my suspicions that a vast majority of those tracks had to have been Strats. They were just too clear and well-defined, and they blended so beautifully in the mix.
 
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