Dan Auerbach
Blues-RockGarage Rock2000s–present

Dan Auerbach£500 · Sweet Spot Rig

Harmony or Silvertone hollow-body guitar through a vintage Fender or National amp, often intentionally overloaded for a blown-out quality. The tone is raw and compressed — everything sounds like it might fall apart but doesn't. Slide guitar in open D or standard tuning adds additional texture.

Total: ~£4873 pieces

Signal Chain

Full signal path

ODBoss SD-1
FuzzThorpy FX
AmpKatana 50

£500 · Sweet Spot — Complete Rig

Boss Katana 50 MkII — Amp
Estimated total~£487

Getting the Sound Right

  • Lo-fi is deliberate, not accidental — Auerbach chose the Harmony and Silvertone specifically because of their limitations, not despite them
  • Budget guitar + overdriven amp is the formula — do not spend money on an expensive guitar. A cheap hollow-body into a pushed amp will capture the essence
  • Slide in standard tuning rather than open tuning — Auerbach often plays slide in standard, which requires a different approach to chord tones. The slide frets notes rather than playing full open chords
  • The amp is pushed past its clean headroom — if it sounds "too clean," turn the volume up until it starts to crack and distort naturally
  • Simple blues chord progressions — I-IV-V, 12-bar blues. The sophistication is in the execution and feel, not the harmonic complexity
  • Double-stop thirds and sixths are signature phrases — Auerbach frequently plays two strings simultaneously in parallel thirds or sixths
  • Raw, imprecise vibrato is part of the character — unlike precise classical vibrato, Black Keys vibrato is rough and variable
  • White Stripes and Black Keys both prove that less gear equals more tone — the absence of a bass guitar forces the guitar to cover more sonic territory

Common Mistakes When Chasing This Tone

  • Running the Big Muff into an already-driven amp channel — fuzz into a driven amp creates uncontrolled intermodulation that sounds chaotic rather than musical. The Big Muff works best into a clean or barely-clean amp
  • Setting the Big Muff tone control at noon or above — this position is where the Big Muff's scooped mid character becomes harsh and cutting. The musical range is 9 o'clock to 11 o'clock on most units
  • Using the same amp EQ as for a solid-body guitar — semi-hollow guitars have natural warmth that makes amp bass and treble settings behave differently. Start flat and adjust from there.
  • Playing a vintage-voiced amp at low volume — the warmth and bloom of these amps comes from the power tubes working. At low volume the tone is flat and uninspiring compared to the amp's potential.
  • Playing at bedroom volume expecting amp-driven tone — the power-tube saturation that defines this gain structure only occurs when the amp is working at substantial output. This is not replicable at low volumes.
  • Expecting consistent performance from a germanium fuzz in cold conditions — germanium transistors are temperature sensitive. The bias point shifts significantly in cold weather.
  • Setting gain too high on the overdrive pedal — most overdrive pedals are most useful at gain settings of 2-5, where they add character without dominating the tone. High gain settings on an OD pedal become a distortion, not an overdrive.
  • Adding a compressor before the amp "for more tone" — it kills the natural attack variation that defines the style. Blues tone is uncompressed and dynamic.

Dan Auerbach's Sound

Harmony or Silvertone hollow-body guitar through a vintage Fender or National amp, often intentionally overloaded for a blown-out quality. The tone is raw and compressed — everything sounds like it might fall apart but doesn't. Slide guitar in open D or standard tuning adds additional texture.