ERNIE BALL Celebrates 55 Years Of Strings With “The Colors Of Rock ‘N’ Roll”

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Ernie Ball is a string company best known as the first company to offer light gauge strings for electric guitar, and their brightly colored packages of Slinky strings have been a staple for guitar players for over 50 years.

This year the company has launched a new campaign called “The Colors of Rock ‘N’ Roll“, celebrating their long history of artists using their strings, with a series of posters designed for each of the most popular string packs and their colors.

Here’s all the info from the official press release:

Los Angeles, CA (March 15, 2018) –  Guns N’ Roses guitarist Slash is a “Purple” man. Led Zeppelin’s Jimmy Page has been playing “Pinks” for years. The Rolling Stones’ Keith Richards always goes for the “Green.”

We’re talking about the iconic and exhilaratingly colorful packaging of Ernie Ball’s Slinky guitar strings – each vibrantly designed pack representing a different string recipe/gauge. For more than 55 years, the biggest names in music have used Ernie Ball Slinky Pinks, Purples, Greens, Reds, Oranges and Blues to write, record and perform some of the most important songs in rock history.

Ernie Ball’s pioneering packaging and revolutionary string recipes have become the best-selling and most popular guitar strings in the world. Today the company celebrates its history with “The Colors of Rock ‘N’ Roll,” a campaign featuring limited edition artwork created in collaboration with Ernie Ball’s award winning in-house creative team and acclaimed designer Aaron Draplin of Draplin Design Co. (Nike, Esquire, Ford Motor Co, Red Wing). Click HERE to see.

The Southern California-based Ernie Ball has a history of collaborating with notable artists, including Luke Cheuh and The Pizz. The original Ernie Ball font and design elements were created by the legendary Roland (Rolly) Crump, a high school classmate of Ernie’s who went on to work on classic Disney films, then later designed some of Disneyland’s biggest attractions.

“It was a bit intimidating to find that out,” laughs Draplin. “We talked about me adding something to the Ernie Ball legacy – delicately. The idea behind the design is that you open a pack and the color explodes from it. We wanted it to speak to the players who use those specific colors. I remember my uncle taking me to buy my first guitar. He said, ‘you need to get strings,’ and I’ll never forget how I felt looking at the colors and the typeface of the Ernie Ball packs. They screamed rock and roll at me. And the design feels as visceral now as it did that day in the store. In an attempt to get a competitive edge, brands are always forced to change and update and Ernie Ball has always stuck to its guns. It’s like, ‘this is who we are and these are our colors.’ That’s pretty cool.” Click HERE to see a short film about Draplin and Ernie Ball.

“My father was a pioneer,” says Ernie Ball CEO Sterling Ball. “He invented the famous Slinky string recipes and gauges that have been the standard for guitarists worldwide for more than 55 years, and his vision for the iconic illustration and neon packaging has been the cornerstone of our brand ever since. They remain the colors of rock & roll and Ernie would be proud to know that his legacy endures and that the most influential guitar players in the world continue to play his strings to create their own enduring art.”

An equally important part of the celebration is the announcement of the 2018 Slinky “Back of the Pack list – one of the most sought-after achievements of guitar players worldwide, spotlighting a who’s who list of rock &’ roll. The lineup is updated annually and today Ernie Ball has revealed a new list featuring 162 of the company’s most influential guitarists, multi-platinum artists, Grammy winners and exciting new voices ranging from Paul McCartney, Pete Townshend, Steve Vai, John Mayer, Metallica’s James Hetfield and Kirk Hammett and Slash, to St. Vincent, Mac Demarco, Courtney Barnett, Ryan Adams, and The War On Drugs, among many others. This all-star lineup is featured on the flip side of each pack, which now comes in a brand-new metallic packaging.

“Our family of artists are as important as our industry-leading innovation,” says Ernie Ball President Brian Ball. “We’re backed by the best and excited to announce our 2018 back of the pack list, which can be seen HERE.”

ABOUT ERNIE BALL

The Southern California-based Ernie Ball is a third generation, family-run business. They employ a “techie artisan” approach that combines cutting-edge technology with handcrafted techniques and as pointed out by Adweek and Inc., they’ve also become a high-quality content creator securing brand loyalty on the level of a major media organization. Ernie Ball was the first to offer rock strings with the creation of Slinkys®, the iconic light-gauge electric guitar strings that are widely revered by hundreds of guitar greats, including Jimi Hendrix, Eric Clapton, Keith Richards, Jimmy Page, The Edge and John Mayer. Ernie Ball further revolutionized the market by offering guitarists Custom-Gauge single strings. With its founder’s dedication to preserving the musician’s playing experience and delivering superior sound quality through the development of new products, the family-run company has been on a continued pursuit of innovation. Throughout the last decade, Ernie Ball has built on this foundation to develop strings that are uniquely superior and different, and as a result created Cobalt and M-Steel Strings. Last year Ernie Ball changed the game once again by creating the world’s strongest, most durable and technologically advanced guitar strings. They’re called PARADIGM and they’re the first-ever strings to come with a fully-backed guarantee: if PARADIGM strings break or rust within 90 days of purchase, Ernie Ball will replace them free of charge (which is unheard of in the industry).

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As Editor-in-Chief of Gear Gods, I've been feeding your sick instrument fetishism and trying unsuccessfully to hide my own since 2013. I studied music on both coasts (Berklee and SSU) and now I'm just trying to put my degree to some use. That's a music degree, not an English one. I'm sure you noticed.

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