
JazzBlues Jazz1950s
Kenny Burrell — £500 · Sweet Spot Rig
Gibson ES-335 through a clean amp — Burrell's warm, blues-rooted jazz phrasing and elegant chord voicings made him one of the most recorded jazz guitarists of the Blue Note era.
Signal Path
Signal Chain
Full signal path
AmpBlues Jr
Full Gear List
£500 · Sweet Spot — Complete Rig
Tone Tips
Getting the Sound Right
- Pluck closer to the neck for maximum warmth; closer to the bridge for more definition — the range is wider than on a solid body
- Boutique clean amps (Two-Rock, Dumble-style) are the most touch-sensitive amps available — your picking dynamics control the entire tone more than any knob
- Compression pedal at low ratio (2:1 or 3:1) adds sustain and evenness without audible pumping — the effect should be felt, not heard
- Treble on the amp should sit at 5-6, not higher — brightness comes from pick attack and string choice, not the EQ.
- String bends must land exactly in pitch — an approximate blues bend is recognisably out of tune. Train to nail the exact half-step or whole-step.
- Amp volume above bedroom levels changes the tone fundamentally — power-tube saturation only happens when the amp is moving air. Use an attenuator if your room demands it.
Avoid These Pitfalls
Common Mistakes When Chasing This Tone
- Playing at high volume without managing feedback — hollow-body guitars are acoustically live and will feedback freely at stage volumes. Amp positioning and pickup height affect this dramatically.
- Running multiple pedals into the input — boutique amps are designed for the natural guitar signal. Too many pedals before the input changes the input impedance and alters the amp's response.
- Adding compression to fix flat clean tone — a flat, lifeless clean tone usually means the amp gain or presence is wrong, not that compression is needed. Compression on a flat tone just makes it louder.
- Choosing a pick that is too heavy — thin to medium picks give edge noise and articulation that heavier picks smooth away. That edge is part of the sound.
- Setting amp gain at 5 or higher — blues tone lives at the edge of breakup (gain 3-4), not in full saturation. High gain compresses away all the dynamic feel.
Tone Profile
Kenny Burrell's Sound
Gibson ES-335 through a clean amp — Burrell's warm, blues-rooted jazz phrasing and elegant chord voicings made him one of the most recorded jazz guitarists of the Blue Note era.
