Skip to main content
MusicRadar MusicRadar The No.1 website for musicians
UK EditionUK US EditionUS AU EditionAustralia SG EditionSingapore
Sign in
  • View Profile
  • Sign out
  • Artist news
  • Music Gear Reviews
  • Synths
  • Guitars
  • Controllers
  • Drums
  • Keyboards & Pianos
  • Guitar Amps
  • Software & Apps
  • More
    • Recording
    • DJ Gear
    • Acoustic Guitars
    • Bass Guitars
    • Tech
    • Tutorials
    • Reviews
    • Buying Guides
    • About us
Don't miss these
George Harrison wears all white and plays an acoustic guitar during his 1974 Dark Horse tour.
Artists “When I first met George I was speechless”: Robben Ford on what it was like working with a Beatle at the age of 22
Mark Morton with his signature Les Paul Modern
Artists How Mark Morton and Gibson reinvented the Les Paul for modern metal – and why passive beats active humbuckers hands down
asg
Artists “I use it on absolutely everything": Art School Girlfriend on the second-hand mic that shaped the "intimate" sound of new album Lean In
Blue May home studio
Artists We visit the LA house where Lily Allen made West End Girl, and explore the home studio of Blue May
Rusty Anderson and Paul McCartney
Artists “Maybe I’m Amazed is always a fun song to play and sing”: How a Beatles fan ended up playing guitar for Paul McCartney
My Bloody Valentine
Artists My Bloody Valentine’s sound engineer on wrangling the shoegaze pioneers’ huge live setup
Pink Floyd
Artists “In terms of the guitar solo, he just keeps going!”: The genius of David Gilmour – by Matt Bellamy, Kirk Hammett and more
Joe Satriani and Steve Vai perform onstage during the Satch/Vai Tour.
Artists “I’m watching this genius develop right in front of me”: Joe Satriani on what it was like to teach a teenage Steve Vai
Robben Ford [left] wears a dark suit jacket and v-neck t-shirt as he plays a blonde Telecaster onstage. Photographed in 1975, Joni Mitchell [right] plays her Martin dreadnought live onstage at Wembley Stadium.
Artists Robben Ford reveals the Joni Mitchell tone tricks that helped him nail his guitar sound in the studio
John Mayer [left] plays his signature PRS Silver Sky live onstage in 2025. George Harrison plays a Les Paul during a 1975 live performance.
Artists Don Was on how John Mayer “might” be even better than George Harrison – but they definitely have one thing in common
Deals of the week logo
Tech MusicRadar deals of the week: Score $390 off a divisive Fender Stratocaster, $180 off a stunning Gretsch and hundreds off PA and live gear
Gretsch Synchromatic Flacon close up of pickguard
Electric Guitars Best Gretsch guitars 2026: Nail that Gretsch sound at any price point
Geddy Lee and Alex Lifeson of Rush perform live in 2015.
Artists Geddy Lee on honouring Neil Peart and why he and Alex Lifeson are getting back together as Rush
A Spark Link receiver in a Spark Mini practice amp
Guitars Best guitar wireless systems 2026: Cut the cord and liberate your playing today
Headphones next to electric guitar
Headphones Best guitar amp headphones 2026: My top picks for practicing your guitar quietly
More
  • Sly and Survivor
  • In My Life
  • 95k+ free music samples
  • One chord Diamond
  1. Artists
  2. Guitarists

Warpaint talk essential gear, inspirational players and borrowing guitars from John Frusciante

News
By Rod Brakes ( Guitarist ) published 17 August 2017

In-depth guitar and bass chat with the LA art-rockers

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works.

Introduction

Introduction

We get the lowdown as LA’s primo four-piece, firmly on their feet and with a tour underway, reach for musical highs and break new ground following the release of their essential third album, Heads Up.

Warpaint have steadily evolved and distilled their aesthetic of ethereal guitar-driven, beat-laden art-rock

Conceived on Valentine’s Day 2004, Warpaint as a band is now in its teenage years. For the most part, the first four years were spent carefully defining and redefining their sound through persistent hours of boundless jamming - a practice that naturally allowed them the collective freedom to originate and articulate an expansive yet distinctive song-scape.

Radiantly dark, graceful and broodingly intense, their debut EP, Exquisite Corpse, initially surfaced from the LA underground in 2008 with additional teamwork from Red Hot Chili Peppers guitarists John Frusciante and Josh Klinghoffer, and the band rapidly gained attention over the pond from UK-based label Rough Trade, releasing their first studio album, The Fool, in autumn 2010.

Since then, Warpaint have steadily evolved and distilled their aesthetic of ethereal guitar-driven, beat-laden art-rock and have subsequently released a further two studio albums, the eponymous Warpaint (2014) and most recently, last year’s Heads Up. 

Guitarist catches up with the band at their Oxford O2 Academy gig for a backstage chat with founding members, guitarists Emily Kokal and Theresa Wayman, along with bass guitarist Jenny Lee Lindberg.

Page 1 of 5
Page 1 of 5
Jags vs Strats

Jags vs Strats

Emily, you play some really interesting vintage guitars - what are they?

Emily Kokal: “I’ve got a ’66 Fender Jaguar fitted with a Mastery Bridge. There is something cool about the original sound, but you really have to work with it. There would be places on the neck where it was like a rodeo; I was always trying to wrangle this guitar and it would just change all over the place. 

I didn’t actually record with the Jaguar on Exquisite Corpse and The Fool; I recorded all of that on a ’55 Strat

“I got these extra overtones and it had this kind of ping-y quality to it. We were opening for Sonic Youth and I was telling Thurston Moore about my problem and he was like, ‘I dunno, man - that sounds pretty cool to me!’”

Have you recorded with the Jaguar, as well as using it to play live?

Emily: “I didn’t actually record with the Jaguar on Exquisite Corpse and The Fool; I recorded all of that on a ’55 Strat. It’s the same year as one of John Frusciante’s Strats. He got me that guitar and the ’66 Jaguar. He’s a very generous guitar-giver! Some people think the Jag is his because he used it on the cover of a magazine. He borrowed it, then we borrowed it back!

“He also gave me an old Martin acoustic of his. It’s really beautiful. I was always more of an acoustic guitar player and I didn’t have an electric guitar until I met John. When I first started playing electric guitar live, he always thought that I was reminding him of Bernard Sumner or Robert Smith. 

“I still really love the Strat, but I’ve just gotten really used to the Jaguar. I love the warmth of the Jag and I feel that it’s a little bit harder to detect. That’s kind of my vibe a little bit more. I’m not quite as top-end or as loud as Theresa, and I also play it almost more like a melodic six-string bass or something - it works to sit somewhere kinda deep.”

Page 2 of 5
Page 2 of 5
No tone left unturned

No tone left unturned

Theresa, what can you tell us about your main Warpaint guitar?

Theresa Wayman: “It’s a ’66 Fender Mustang with Seymour Duncan pickups. Everything I played on the EP [Exquisite Corpse] was done using the Jaguar that Emily normally plays on stage.

“My own guitar, a Fender Musicmaster, that I’d always been playing before, got stolen. I actually bought the Mustang online because of the price point and the fact that it’s a decent guitar. I got really lucky and it’s just been great.

I use two distortions so I can have one that’s always on, that’s a bit more mellow, and then one that’s for harsher moments

“Mustangs can have issues, like they’re notorious for going out of tune a lot, although mine doesn’t do that and it’s been set up well. I love the small neck, the low action - it really works for me. I didn’t realise until I got it how much I love the feel of a Mustang. 

“They’re really smooth and somewhat easy to play. They feel buttery, but they don’t necessarily sound buttery. I’ve had to get a little bit creative; the tone isn’t easy and it can be hard to get them to sustain. I have to be somewhat melodic as well, so using modulation has helped a lot for making the less distorted tones sound a bit nicer and rounder.”

What effects pedals do you like to use?

Theresa: “For modulation, I have a Catalinbread Adineko. I use it like a chorus, but with a bit more vibe. It’s got a ‘Viscosity’ control - you feel like you’re taking the sound and really pulling at it. I really love that pedal a lot. 

“I use two distortions so I can have one that’s always on, that’s a bit more mellow, and then one that’s for harsher moments. Using reverb is important, too. I just don’t like pokey guitar; pokey, dry guitar is not my thing.

I’ve got a Tube Screamer and it’s the best thing ever that I’ve found. I keep it on the whole set

“I kind of mess with the amounts of the Adineko that I put on in different songs so that there’s variation during the show, but I like to keep it pretty simple. I like how our band stays pretty organic and simple - just plug in and play.”

Emily: “Sometimes with pedals it’s really hard to just dial in a subtle amount of overdrive and still feel like it gives you body. I’ve got a Tube Screamer and it’s the best thing ever that I’ve found. I keep it on the whole set. It thickens the guitar sound, but you can still hear it - tightens it up.”

Jenny, you’ve become synonymous with your Rickenbacker bass - do you also like to use any other guitars?

Jenny Lee Lindberg: “It’s a ’78 Rickenbacker 4001 and I mainly play that, but there’s definitely other basses that I play. When we record I like to change it up a little bit; it’s nice to explore. When we’re touring, it’s easier to just take one backup bass if I need it. 

“On this run, I’ve taken a late-'50s Kay bass. It’s a hollowbody - it’s really nice. It has a different tone to the Rickenbacker. It has flatwound strings on it and it’s also very sub-y, which is why I brought it. I play it on a few songs on the new record [Heads Up].”

Page 3 of 5
Page 3 of 5
Multiple personalities

Multiple personalities

You have a distinctive sound and style of playing bass - how did that come about?

Jenny Lee: “Movement is the connection that I have to my instrument. That’s why I was drawn to playing bass in the first place. I feel like its always been that: to make myself move somehow, even if it’s a sad or slow song. I think that’s where I’ve found my thing. Bass isn’t the hardest - it’s a pretty easy instrument to learn how to play - but I think it’s very hard to get really good at.

In some ways it’s hard to get your own identity established within a band that’s as collaborative as we are

“My two favourite bass players are Jah Wobble and Bernard Edwards. They’re so different from each other, but it’s just a dream to be able to combine them somehow. Jah was dirty and kind of repetitive, but still kind of funky and punchy - I love it! Just doing one bassline the whole time and never changing it. Bernard Edwards is the complete opposite of that and it’s so rhythmic; it’s almost like he’s playing percussion - it’s so sexy!”

Has being in Warpaint enabled you to strengthen your identity as guitarists and musicians, personally and/or collectively?

Theresa: “Yes, but in some ways it’s hard to get your own identity established within a band that’s as collaborative as we are. Each of our roles is ambiguous in a way and it’s taken us time. There’s no lead guitarist and there’s no lead singer, so to act like a lead guitarist or singer would feel weird. 

People ask, ‘Who are your biggest influences?’ but I’ve never approached music being like, ‘I wanna sound like this!’

“I want to carry on practising guitar a lot more, because I want to feel more fluid on the guitar. I’m always pushing myself to be more productive with my time and be more diligent - just because I do want to be more prolific and I do want to get into a groove where I’m making things and finishing them and moving on and creating things all the time.”

Jenny Lee: “At the same time as being limited, it’s also limitless. Everything kind of feels new, and it’s exciting. It’s nice to feel that - anything that feels different than what you’re used to playing. People ask, ‘Who are your biggest influences?’ but I’ve never approached music being like, ‘I wanna sound like this!’ 

“If anything, if it does sound like anything and it’s too obvious then it’s kind of like, ‘Okay, that’s too close - let’s try and change it up.’ When I listen to other music, when I’m inspired by it, I just wanna evoke the same feelings - when I write a song I want to feel the same way. That’s what the inspiration is.”

Page 4 of 5
Page 4 of 5
Electronic sound

Electronic sound

How do you like to approach writing when you’re on tour?

Jenny Lee: “We all have recording devices or we have little baby amps where we warm up and we’re just kinda jamming around. We’ve actually written a few jams in soundchecks where we’ve turned them into songs.”

Emily: “On tour, we have those little Vox amPlugs that we use. Sometimes, on days off, we’ll take those to our rooms and just enjoy playing - it’s nice to be able to play the things that we want to. It’s always fun, when you’ve been on tour for a while, to take a break from writing so you start to fill up the well of inspiration and ideas.

I like writing in the same way that hip-hop and trip-hop producers might - finding loops and repeating those

“Usually, the thing that makes me write music is silence! Just being quiet for a long amount of time and then I’ll hear a melody. I find myself not listening to music a lot and then hearing music.”

Theresa: “I’ll bring my Apogee Duet on tour so that I can record guitar ideas. We’re making a lot of music in the box while we’re on tour. Like, ‘What do you have to work with?’ Well, you can program drum beats and you can easily plug your guitar in through a Duet and use that. 

“Our music can be very drone-y and repetitive in the same way that a lot of hip-hop music and electronic music is, in a sense. We’ll kind of meditate on one thing and then we’ll change. I like writing in the same way that hip-hop and trip-hop producers might - finding loops and repeating those and then finding what the next layer is.”

Has trip-hop or electronic music been a major inspiration for you, musically?

I love how Portishead and Massive Attack have used guitars and strings and beats and electronics

Emily: “I love how Portishead and Massive Attack have used guitars and strings and beats and electronics. That music had a huge impact on me and was a revelation ’cos I was raised in the Bay Area on Joni Mitchell, Neil Young and Grateful Dead. Bristol is my music! I love it.”

Jenny Lee: “Those bands are still really great. They still hold up - they never get old. It’s still just as rich, if not richer, after so many years. Dummy [1994 Portishead debut album] still sounds fucking amazing. And nothing is beating it.”

Theresa: “I would consider those bands electronic, but they’re still organic in nature. They were big influences on all of us growing up, so I guess it’s engrained in us, but we don’t want to ditch our instruments. By the end of my life, I want to be an incredible guitar player and play all types of guitar. I just want to be able to express myself musically all-round.”

Heads Up is available now on Rough Trade.

Page 5 of 5
Page 5 of 5
CATEGORIES
Guitars
Rod Brakes
Rod Brakes
Social Links Navigation

Rod Brakes is a music journalist with an expertise in guitars. Having spent many years at the coalface as a guitar dealer and tech, Rod's more recent work as a writer covering artists, industry pros and gear includes contributions for leading publications and websites such as Guitarist, Total Guitar, Guitar World, Guitar Player and MusicRadar in addition to specialist music books, blogs and social media. He is also a lifelong musician.

The magazine for serious players image
The magazine for serious players
Subscribe and save today!
More Info
Read more
Mark Tremonti throws the horns and points to something during a live performance with Creed. His signature PRS singlecut is strapped on his shoulder.
“I had no idea that he was that good”: Mark Tremonti on Alter Bridge’s “secret weapon” and his soloing strategies
 
 
All the best guitar gear from this year's NAMM Show
The best new guitar gear of NAMM 2026: More effects, more amps, more guitars and more tech than ever
 
 
MusicRadar author Matt McCracken plays a Manson 007 electric guitar at The Guitar Show in Birmingham, UK
Here's 7 of the hottest guitar gear releases I tried at The Guitar Show this weekend that are available to buy right now
 
 
GLASTONBURY, ENGLAND - JUNE 28: (EDITORIAL USE ONLY) Danielle Haim of Haim performs on the Park stage during day four of Glastonbury festival 2025 at Worthy Farm, Pilton on June 28, 2025 in Glastonbury, England. Established by Michael Eavis in 1970, Glastonbury has grown into the UK's largest music festival, drawing over 200,000 fans to enjoy performances across more than 100 stages. In 2026, the festival will take a fallow year, a planned pause to allow the Worthy Farm site time to rest and recover. (Photo by Jim Dyson/Redferns)
Danielle Haim names her biggest guitar influences, including the player she calls “the most underrated”
 
 
Cory Wong
“My advice is play the song. Can you find a part that is tailored to the music”: Cory Wong’s tips for better rhythm guitar
 
 
Vernon Reid cups his hands to his ears to the crowd has he performs live at the at the Fremont Street Experience on April 18, 2025.
Living Colour’s Vernon Reid on NYC epiphanies, unsung heroes and the emotional power of a sample
 
 
Latest in Guitarists
Joe Satriani wears dark shades and performs with his Ibanez "Chrome Boy" signature guitar.
Joe Satriani on what he told David Lee Roth and Alex Van Halen when they called about EVH tribute tour
 
 
David Byrne and Adrian Belew of Talking Heads perform at Agora Ballroom in Atlanta Georgia. November 18, 1980
“I was caught in the middle of all of that band drama": When Adrian Belew was asked to replace David Byrne in Talking Heads
 
 
The Fender John Osborne Telecaster comes factory modded with a B-Bender and has an extended black pickguard on a Road Worn Olympic White body.
Country star John Osborne’s signature Tele comes factory modded with a distressed nitro finish, custom pickups – and it’s even got a B-bender too
 
 
DALLAS - JULY 1984:  Guitarist Eddie Van Halen joins pop star Michael Jackson on stage to perform his hit song "Beat It" during The Jacksons Victory Tour on July 14, 1984 at Texas Stadium in Dallas, Texas. (Photo by Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images)
Eddie Van Halen’s guitar solo didn't overheat a speaker during the making of Michael Jackson’s Beat It, but an AC/DC issue did
 
 
Cory Wong
Why Cory Wong needed the signature wah pedal that could do it all
 
 
George Harrison wears all white and plays an acoustic guitar during his 1974 Dark Horse tour.
“When I first met George I was speechless”: Robben Ford on what it was like working with a Beatle at the age of 22
 
 
Latest in News
Nick Jonas as Danny and Paul Rudd as Rick in Power Ballad. Photo Credit: David Cleary
Watch Paul Rudd and Joe Jonas going from friends to foes in the trailer for songwriting drama Power Ballad
 
 
Untypical car accident on the street
Always crashing in the same car: Major album releases lead to increased traffic fatalities
 
 
Joe Satriani wears dark shades and performs with his Ibanez "Chrome Boy" signature guitar.
Joe Satriani on what he told David Lee Roth and Alex Van Halen when they called about EVH tribute tour
 
 
Michael Steele, Debbi Peterson, Susanna Hoffs and Vicki Peterson of The Bangles on 8/19/86 in Chicago, Il.  (Photo by Paul Natkin/WireImage)
When Prince gave the Bangles Manic Monday he assumed they would just sing over his demo, but the band had other ideas
 
 
bitwig
Bitwig Studio 6 is here with improved automation, Clip Aliases and tons of workflow enhancements
 
 
Alex James of Blur performs at the Coachella Stage during the 2024 Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival
“Who knows what’s next?”: Alex James on Britpop Classical, Blur and prospect of returning to Coachella
 
 

MusicRadar is part of Future plc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site.

Add as a preferred source on Google Add as a preferred source on Google
  • About Us
  • Contact Future's experts
  • Terms and conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Cookies policy
  • Advertise with us
  • Accessibility Statement
  • Careers

© Future Publishing Limited Quay House, The Ambury, Bath BA1 1UA. All rights reserved. England and Wales company registration number 2008885.

Please login or signup to comment

Please wait...