Johnny Marr
IndiePost-Punk1980s–present

Johnny Marr£500 · Sweet Spot Rig

Rickenbacker 330 or Gibson ES-335 into a Roland JC-120 Jazz Chorus, the cleanest amp available, with a Korg SDD-3000 delay for shimmer. No overdrive — Marr's tone is always pristine clean. The Rickenbacker's jangly character through the JC-120's crystalline solid-state preamp is the foundation of every Smiths record.

Total: ~£4773 pieces

Signal Chain

Full signal path

ODJoyo Vintage
ChorusStrymon Ola
AmpKatana 50

£500 · Sweet Spot — Complete Rig

Boss Katana 50 MkII — Amp
Estimated total~£477

Getting the Sound Right

  • Clean amp — always. No overdrive or distortion in The Smiths. The complexity comes from arpeggiation and chord choice, not gain
  • Capo at fret 2, 4, or 5 is used extensively — arpeggiated open chord shapes with capo produce the bright, ringing character of "This Charming Man"
  • Arpeggiate rather than strum — right-hand technique picks individual strings in sequence rather than sweeping across them
  • The Rickenbacker's jangle requires light picks (0.50mm) — heavier picks dull the high-end sparkle essential to the sound
  • Two-guitar layering in studio recordings — many Smiths tracks have a rhythm guitar and a lead fill guitar running simultaneously. Live, Marr played both parts simultaneously
  • Delay adds shimmer, not echo — the Korg SDD-3000 is set to very short delay times (80-150ms) at low feedback. It widens the sound without creating obvious echoes
  • Open chord shapes with the capo provide the ringing open-string quality — bar chords are almost never used
  • The Roland JC-120's built-in chorus is often used at subtle settings — the dual speaker stereo spread adds width

Common Mistakes When Chasing This Tone

  • 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.
  • Using a high-gain distortion pedal instead of amp gain — British crunch amps have a specific harmonic character when driven from their own gain stage. A pedal changes this character.
  • Clean amp at too low a volume — even a clean amp provides warmth and tonal character that the pedal sits in. An amp at minimum volume has no character for the pedal to interact with.
  • Too many repeats at high mix — more than 3 repeats makes the delay effect accumulate and overwhelm the dry guitar signal. Keep it to 2-3 repeats at a subtle mix level.
  • Over-warming the tone — punk guitar benefits from brightness. Too much warmth (low treble, high bass) makes the tone muddy and slow-sounding.
  • Complex pedal rigs — punk is deliberately simple. A rack of effects and a complex setup contradicts the genre's philosophy and requires attention that should go on the performance.

Johnny Marr's Sound

Rickenbacker 330 or Gibson ES-335 into a Roland JC-120 Jazz Chorus, the cleanest amp available, with a Korg SDD-3000 delay for shimmer. No overdrive — Marr's tone is always pristine clean. The Rickenbacker's jangly character through the JC-120's crystalline solid-state preamp is the foundation of every Smiths record.