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LAMB OF GOD's MARK MORTON partners with STRINGJOY on signature string set

04-03-2024

Stringjoy has announced the Mark Morton signature string set. the strings are designed in close collaboration with LAMB OF GOD guitarist Mark Morton.

With this product, Mark explored several different combinations of string material and gauges before settling on this Nickel Wound 9.5-50 signature set, which proved to be the perfect combination of tonality and playability for Mark‘s style.

Stringjoy president Scott Marquart said: “We couldn’t be more excited to work with Mark to launch our first artist signature guitar string set. I think players that give this set a try will immediately see what Mark loves so much about it — excellent playability on the top end, coupled with plenty of power on the bottom end and a consistent balanced tone that’s at home for blues solos as it is for metal riffs.”

Watch the launch video below.

Marking 10 years in business in 2024, Stringjoy is a guitar string manufacturer based in Nashville, Tennessee. Through innovative designs, first rate materials, and labor-intensive winding techniques, they make it their mission to craft the finest strings in the world, bar none.

LAMB OF GOD released their last album “Omens” on October 2022, through Nuclear Blast. “Omens” was the follow-up to LAMB OF GOD‘s self-titled album, which arrived in June 2020. That effort marked LAMB OF GOD‘s first recordings with drummer Art Cruz, who joined the band in July 2019 as the replacement for the group’s founding drummer, Chris Adler.

In August 2022, LAMB OF GOD bassist John Campbell told Germany’s EMP that “Omens” is “a fairly dynamic record. There’s a few other little surprises and tweaks,” he said. “But we recorded it differently this time. We went to Los Angeles and all of us in the same room and same time recording, which gave us some leeway to make changes as things happened and just kind of feel it out in a different way than we’ve done in the past, which would be everybody kind of going in their corner recording and it gets assembled later. So it was a real team effort on this one, in the recording — all the way through it’s been a team effort — and in the recording especially, when we were all in the same room doing that stuff, it was great. I got to spend three and a half weeks working on a record instead of four or five days — working on the recording of the record.”

Also in August of last year, Campbell was asked by Knotfest what led to the decision to record “Omens” live in the studio. John responded: “Well, we’ve been doing this so fucking long, we had to do something different. I believe that was producer Josh Wilbur‘s idea to do that. I know he had a great place worked out to do that in. And we had just kind of been doing it the same way over and over and over again, and we were looking to get a little more excitement into it and maybe see if that couldn’t produce a different feel on the record.”

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