Laufey – Bewitched: The Goddess Edition
The music gear and equipment used by the artists, producers, engineers, and more involved in the making of the 2024 album Bewitched: The Goddess Edition.
Music from Bewitched: The Goddess Edition
Gear Used On Bewitched: The Goddess Edition
Explore the instruments, equipment, software, and production tools used in the making of Laufey – Bewitched: The Goddess Edition (2024). Click more on each item to see exactly how it was used.
Laufey
Roles:
Guitars used by Laufey on Bewitched: The Goddess Edition
Avg price: $1,689.00
In the official audio video for "Let You Break My Heart Again" by Laufey and the Philharmonia Orchestra, Laufey is seen playing an Eastman E100SS-LTD guitar, featuring antique varnish, a solid headstock, and a round pickguard. Although this specific model isn't listed on Equipboard, its sister model, the Eastman E10SS/v, is available. Notably, only 130 units of the E100SS-LTD were produced, making it a rare and potentially valuable instrument.
Semi-Hollowbody Electric Guitars
Avg price: $3,499.00
Laufey can be seen using a new Gibson ES-335 in Vintage Ebony. Different than her red ES-335 she typically uses.
Semi-Hollowbody Electric Guitars
In this video of Laufey playing in Manila, you can see her playing a Cherry Gibson ES-355. You can tell it's an ES-355, based on the gold hardware, waffle tuners, block fretboard inlays, and diamond headstock inlay.
From the photos of the live performance i can find, it seems to be a vintage model, based on the fact that the binding and inlays are yellowing, and the finish is sinking into the wood. The bridge on this guitar is a TP-6, Gibson's fine-tune bridge. This bridge was apparently first released in 1978, so it seems to be a 1978 at the latest. The tune-o-matic bridge, however, does seem to not match the rest of the gold hardware, so it may have been replaced at some point. The pickguard also seems to be replaced, as it's a 3-ply, rather than the standard pickguard with 5-ply binding. The unusual feature on this guitar is that it seems to have been ordered without a Varitone, which was standard on the model. It does seem that non-Varitone models exist, but weren't common.