He got covered in turtleđ
(Gotta go save Snippy's kids guys)
Hannibal (2013-2015) Killing Eve (2018-2022)
Frank's writing will always have its special place in my heart :)
Alle tage ist kein Sonntag
He's got a man bun đ„ș
Creditsđž: @/specki_td_official on Instagram
I may be crying... like... a lot.
Thank you for everything đ€
For a variety of reasons, I got into a bit of a rabbit hole about Richard's guitars, and my brain went "oh I know someone who will probably have opinions on this" so essentially, if you feel like it, pretty please talk RZK guitars to me? Favourite? Retired one that needs to come back? (Though I probably already know the answer, that fancy black one?)
Allrighty, buckle up because this is gonna be long. After much consideration I have decided to split it up in two parts because I donât think I can make it fit into one post that is still vaguely tumblr appropriate, and I really wanted to do it some sort of justice. I still feel like I donât. But oh well. Full disclaimer, I am NOT a guitarist, but I lived with a few, two of my best friends are pro players and Iâm a sponge so I kind of soaked some bits and pieces up over the last 15 years. But in case any lost guitar hero finds this and disagrees with me over the finer points of tone wood: I know honey, I oversimplified, and I am wrong. I tried? đ for easier read I formatted everything specific to Richardâs guitars normally and anything general about electric guitars in cursive.
My main sources besides watching about a 100 a month of guitar tube videos (that is youtube for guitarists) with my ex, my main sources will be this interview and this.
Richard Z. Kruspe (of Rammstein and Emigrate)âs Guitars - In Order of Appearance, Part 1/2
Diamant (Les Paul Style)
âI traded the acoustic for a guitar called Diamant, which was like a Les Paul version in East Germany.â - RZK
Now Iâm skipping the acoustic he started out with, because itâs basically impossible to know what that was, and go straight into the electric. Now presumably, it would have been something like this, a soviet build Les Paul rip off. The irony is that these still go for several thousands up on reverb today for being historical and collectors pieces. The thing is, that while anything east build might have used cheaper materials, I would assume this thing isnât worse than any of the beginner/intermediate models sold today, if not better, and kids all over the world do decent stiff with those.
Something general about electric guitars is that you donât really so much play the guitar, you play an entire system. The instrument doesnât make the sound, it only influences it. You play a guitar - but you even more so play the amp. Which makes this a bit tricky, because an e-guitar is a slab of wood and a copper coil, and amps are way more complex. You can make the exact same guitar sound so many ways. Still - there are tendencies. The fact how and why and to which degree the shape and wood of a solid body (a guitar without a hollow wood piece) influences the sound is highly debated and can get a bit esoteric sounding to sane people non-guitarists, but there are some differences in how the general set up and build of the guitar changes things, and tendencies how they are traditionally outfitted. Les Paul style guitars are normally humbucker guitars, Stratocasters and Telecasters normally are outfitted with single coils. Usually a guitarist can switch - between using the bridge, the neck, or both (or more) pick ups and depending on where the pick up is located they pick up different frequencies, different aspects of the sound. Humbuckers produce a richer, deeper or fuller sound than single coils. Very roughly speaking, think the Stones vs. Metallica.
Fender Stratocaster
âThen in East Germany, we had this imagination to get one of the great guitars, to me it was always the Fender Stratocaster because it was the Jimi Hendrix guitar. I didnât know anything about pickups or humbuckers or whatever. So there was this guy that I met in a cafĂ© in my old hometown and he was buying all these books because he could get all the books out through customs and he would store them in my apartment. So we became kind of acquainted. He would come over and pick up the books. So one time he came over and I asked him if he could get me a guitar and bring it over. In East Germany, if you exchange money from East to West it would be like 1 East mark and 20 West mark. SO everything I had, I changed it to West Mark and I gave him the money and I gave him the money and asked him to please buy me a Fender Stratocaster. I gave him the money and I didnât hear anything for like three months, nothing. I wasnât able to call because we didnât have phones and stuff like that â it was a different time. So I thought fuck, I gave him 1400 west mark and now heâs gone and never coming back. [...] Then my imagination was so high, I thought the guitar would just play by itself and I wouldnât really have to do anything, which I found out was bullshit. I was really happy that I had the guitar but it wasnât really the sound that I had in mind.â - RZK
The first time I heard that story, I literally went âno, no, no, donât be stupid, donât give him your money, you wonât even like that guitar, stupid, lost dumbass.â I can not, for the life of me, imagine him play anything other than humbuckers. He apparently does use single coils for some things today again in the studio, but still, itâs so obviously wrong. He did play one again sometime during the late 90s, but I couldnât find anything on the pick ups he used with that, but can hardly imagine he kept the original, unless he needed it for a specific sound maybe in one or two songs. I get it though. For many, many people the Fender Stratocaster is THE guitar. Jimi Hendrix is the main reason for that, but itâs also the countless idols that picked it up after him for the same reason, people who ended up plastered on the walls of angsty teenagers in their own right. This totally has to do with the whole amp thing aswell. You see your idol play that type of guitar ... but itâs not even half of the sound, and it wonât sound the same. Maybe probably they changed the pick ups, they have an effect rig, the spend hours fiddling with the knobs on an amp you can never afford. Itâs never the same. Which is why ...
Fender Telecaster Black Gold
Then I had a guitar that I was very fond of. It was an older black and gold telecaster â there werenât very many of them made at that point. I put a Seymour Duncan Jeff Beck SH-4 in there, like a humbucker. I remember it was like my beauty guitar and I needed someone to put that pickup in and I was with Paul and he had more experience with that stuff than me so he would get out a hammer and a chisel and he start banging away on it and I was like âFuck! Fuck! Donât do that!â but we put the thing in there and it was one of my favorite guitarsâ - RZK
... this one first didnât really make sense for me for him. Itâs even more a classic single coil guitar than the Strat is, and it only really started making sense for me when I learned he Paul indeed put a Humbucker in there. Itâs a stunningly beautiful guitar, and weirdly non-modern for him. I donât know why and this is completely instinctual on my part, but I find it fitting he played it during that time after the wall came down, which seems to have been a rough time for him generally, it seems like a somehow super emotional guitar, this relic. Telecasters were some of the first electrics ever build, itâs such a pioneer, but itâs also one that alot of punk bands used, possibly because they were old and cheap in the 70s and noisy and people customized it and put other pick ups in. The whole putting a chisel to it and adding a humbucker into it is such a âIâm gonna make whatever I have fit for me, and Iâll love itâ move. If you look at it, a double coil pick up is really something you have to force to go in there, you really have to break it open. There is also this:
â... and then I think I had to sell it because I needed drugs or something. I was really sad that I sold it because I was at a very low point in my life.â - RZK
If I would get the chance to do one thing only for him to thank him for his music, I would go back in time to that Richard who is just sad about selling that guitar and hug him, and tell him he doesnât need to worry, because they will name guitars after him in the future. It breaks my heart so fucking much. But of course, itâs what opens the doors to what happens next, which is ...
ESP 901
âThat led me to my very first convention in Frankfurt. With guitars, it is like with women, you have to fall in love. Sometimes you get a guitar and you fall in love later but there has to be some sort of connection with it. So I was walking around that convention and I saw that guitar hanging at the ESP stand. It was a 901 ESP Sunburst and I was looking at it because it was such a beauty. And I was walking around for hours â they probably thought I was some weird guy who wants to steal the guitar. I bought that guitar and thatâs how I got connected with ESP.â -RZK
He might have fallen for it because it is pretty, but it did come with a ESP double humbucker set up, with an added condensator to muffle up the sound, although not yet an active one (more on that later). It was a 90s metal guitar, one of those things marketed to the Metallica generation, something loud and heavy and full. Also, and this is where I will put in another general insert, there is something else about the choice of electric guitars that we havenât talked about yet.
Now, Iâve discussed that you can push or pull the sound of a electric quite far in one or the other direction with what pick ups you use, what effects, what amps. But what this ignores is that especially standing up a guitar is a really shitty asymmetrical piece of equipment. And what that does to your body is that it needs to fit you, your hands, and your playing style. Some people prefer it chunky, others like sender. Guitarists, especially the 80s shredders, like to talk about a âfast neckâ, which is another one of those things that get slightly esoteric, but which usually means a slimmer neck and slightly bigger frets, that need less way for your fingers to press until the string gets stopped. Someone who plays very bendy blues might dislike that and prefer something to dig in their fingers more down to the fretboard to get more control over how they bend the string. There are different neck profiles, there are different neck lengths, and all of it contributes to how comfortable someone might find their guitar.
I am mentioning this, because until today, Richardâs guitars are build very similarly to that ESP 901. His Eclipse Model is a tad different (again, more on that later), but the one he uses the most, the RZK I, has the same neck scale, similar frets, and that comfortable ESP slender neck. Even the shape seems to be inspired by turning it upside down. He has said in interviews that he hasnât got very strong hands, and it makes perfect sense to me. I bought my own electric (again, more on that later) purely because I wanted to own one and not even so much because I ever had any real ambitions of learning to play it, but my friends at the time (10 years ago now) forced me to try out alot (!) of models (despite me knowing what I wanted), and the only guitars that I tried that had slimmer necks were Ibanez guitars, which in turn were wider. Ironically Frankfurt is my hometown, so the place to try a lot of different models is That exact convention Richard went to, and I havenât skipped a Musikmesse in the last 15 years. I was at atleast one were Richard was too (I just didnât care at the time, yikes), and it somehow greatly pleases me he found âhisâ guitar at that particular convention. Things have changed in recent years, but electric guitars always were in Hall 4.01, with ESP being left of center in the middle, and I donât know, I can just see him walking in circles around it, and it makes me so emotional for him because itâs what musicians do at that place. Itâs really loud, everyone is playing, there is someone better noodling around at every corner, and it can be quite an intimidating setting I think. And every year you see that one kid coming back and back again to that same stand, staring at that one guitar until they finally work up the nerve and ask to try it (or the staff takes pity on them and offer). And itâs the same everytime, they think âoh god they must think I am crazyâ but really, nobody does. Everyone in that hall who owns a heart knows what those dreams are made of, and all it maybe does inspire is a âoh god, I hope that one makes itâ. I digress. I think itâs more common now to look for different neck styles and companies started caring about it, but especially coming from Fender and Gibson guitars, that neck is honestly just very, very nice for weaker hands.
This is where I will stop, because it makes a good moment for a break and this post is honestly getting too out of hand otherwise. There will be a part 2 - where Richard starts using active pick ups, starts playing my favorite guitar in the whole wide world (and stops playing it), and finally, set up his own signature.
This is him with that 901 though: when he must have had it pretty much brandnew, while he used it, and right before he sold it.
EXCUSE ME MY CHEMICAL ROMANCE, SIRS, I THINK YOU SHOULDN'T BE ALLOWED TO POST THINGS LIKE THIS UNLESS YOU GIVE US SOME MORE SONGS OFF BULLETS IN THE GODDAMN SETLIST.
Thank you.
Source: Altpress
My Chemical Romance killed off the Killjoys in spectacular fashion on their Danger Days album. But death didnât stop co-writers Gerard Way and Shaun Simon from returning to Battery City in 2013. The comic book sequel miniseries, The True Lives Of The Fabulous Killjoys, picked up where the MCR record left off. Now, Way and Simon promise to challenge everything you think you know about their beloved band of renegades in an all-new story.
The Killjoys will, once again, make some noise in a six-part comic book series, The True Lives Of The Fabulous Killjoys: National Anthem. The first issue will be released on Oct. 14 through Dark Horse Comics. Based on the original idea that inspired the Danger Days album, it will focus on former Killjoy leader, Mike Milligram.
âIn 2010, MCR released a concept record, Danger Days: The True Lives Of The Fabulous Killjoys,â Way and Simon revealed, exclusively to Alternative Press. âThe record was inspired by a story that only existed in our minds. In 2013, we wrote a comic book series based on that concept record while the original story lay dormant. Now, in 2020, the story that inspired it all will be told: The True Lives Of The Fabulous Killjoys: National Anthem.
âThere is no dystopian futureâno wasteland to hide out in. Set in the 1990s and 2000s, National Anthem is a completely different story with a whole different set of rules. Mike Milligram and his gang of teenage exterminators operate in the Unseen where they bend reality to keep the real worldâs status quo safe. But everything is about to change when the doors of the Unseen are closed and Mike and his Killjoys are thrust into the real world and forced to grow up and get real jobs. Screens, phones and a stagnant malaise become the new normal. When Mikeâs TV breaks and his Ramones records seem to have been erased, he starts to wake up. Mike Milligram sets off on a journey to pull the curtains down on a cover-up that could change the course of history, past, present and future.âÂ
Way and Simon wrote National Anthem alongside illustrator Leonardo Romero, colorist Jordie Bellaire, and letterer Nate Piekos (The Umbrella Academy).Â
The first issue will feature a cover by Romero, as seen above, along with two variant covers. One variant will feature an illustration from former Killjoys artist, and longtime Way collaborator, Becky Cloonan. The other alternate cover is by Paul Rentler, whose lo-fi photocopy design work has been previously featured through Wayâs DC Comics imprint, DCâs Young Animal. You can see both variants below with Cloonanâs on the left and Rentlerâs on the right.
Letâs face it, 2020 has been bleak. But if thereâs one thing that can cure our quarantine blues, itâs most certainly a return of the Killjoys. Earlier this year, Dark Horse announced the reissue of the original series in a hardcover edition freshly titled Killjoys: California.
Adorned with a stark, blood-dripping Draculoid cover, this forthcoming reissue was everything we thought our little bulletproof hearts needed. But Way and Simonâs return to the original concept that inspired MCRâs 2010 record promises a fresh take on the material that we have yet to see or can begin to imagine.
The idea of Killjoys sans dystopia, working day jobs and watching their morale decay in the realm of the working stiff as they attempt to unveil a hidden truth feels like The Matrix by way of Descendents lyrics. This is definitely new territory for the Killjoysâand you better believe that weâre down for the ride.Â
Inside Out 2 if it was filmed inside my head