
BluesSlide Guitar1970s–present
Sonny Landreth — £500 · Sweet Spot Rig
Fender Stratocaster into a clean Fender amp — the clean headroom is necessary for the slide to ring clearly across all strings. A glass slide on the middle or ring finger. The tone is bright and open — Louisiana Zydeco and New Orleans bayou music underlies the vocabulary.
Signal Path
Signal Chain
Full signal path
GuitarCV Strat
ODJoyo Vintage
AmpKatana 50
Full Gear List
£500 · Sweet Spot — Complete Rig

££ Mid-Range£299

£ Budget£29
Tone Tips
Getting the Sound Right
- Standard tuning is Landreth's default — learn slide in standard tuning (not open G or open D). This requires understanding which fret positions produce chord tones in standard
- Fret notes behind the slide simultaneously — the left-hand fingers behind the slide can fret specific strings while the slide plays the top strings. This enables chord/slide combinations impossible in open tuning
- Right-hand dampening controls which strings ring — by touching specific strings with the right-hand palm or fingers, only the desired strings sound when the slide crosses them
- Glass slide rather than metal — glass produces a smoother, less clangy quality. Landreth uses a glass slide specifically for its tone character
- Slide on the middle finger — unlike many players who use the pinky or ring finger, Landreth's middle-finger position enables the simultaneous fretting technique
- Louisiana bayou music is the rhythmic foundation — the Zydeco and New Orleans groove requires a relaxed, slightly behind-the-beat feel
- Standard tuning harmony knowledge is essential before attempting the style — you must know where chord tones fall across all positions before the simultaneous fretting technique makes musical sense
- Light touch with the slide — the slide should barely touch the strings, not press them. Heavy pressure creates buzzing and flat intonation
Avoid These Pitfalls
Common Mistakes When Chasing This Tone
- Setting the compressor ratio too high with single coils — above 4:1, the compressor eliminates the natural pick attack dynamics that give single-coil playing its expressiveness. The compressor should even out the extremes, not remove all variation
- Running the tone knob at 10 the entire time — the tone control on a Strat is an expressive tool. Rolling it back changes the character of the sound in ways that affect how you phrase.
- Setting bass too high on a Fender spring reverb amp — at high bass settings the reverb tank produces a "booming" quality that muddies the tone. Start with bass at 4-5.
- 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.
- Setting compression ratio too high — a 6:1 or higher compression ratio completely homogenises the playing dynamics. The effect should be subtle and felt, not obviously audible on individual notes.
- Using the bridge pickup as the default — the bridge is an accent position, not where the warmth and expressiveness of blues lead tone lives.
- 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.
Tone Profile
Sonny Landreth's Sound
Fender Stratocaster into a clean Fender amp — the clean headroom is necessary for the slide to ring clearly across all strings. A glass slide on the middle or ring finger. The tone is bright and open — Louisiana Zydeco and New Orleans bayou music underlies the vocabulary.
