Description

Emily Wolfe, a triple-threat rock & roll singer-songwriter-guitarist from Austin, Texas, is breathing new life into classic rock & roll with her incendiary guitar chops and original songwriting. Wolfe also lent her creativity to the development of her new signature Sheraton Stealth. The Indian laurel fingerboard has 22 medium jumbo frets, and mother of pearl block inlays with abalone lightning bolts. The headstock features the popular 60s Kalamazoo shape; it has a mother of pearl tree of life inlay on the front, Emily’s Wolfe logo, and a black gloss Emily Wolfe “stealth” signature on the rear, and it is outfitted with Grover® Rotomatic® tuning machines and a Graph Tech® nut. An Epiphone LockTone™ Tune-O-Matic™ bridge and Stop Bar tailpiece hold down the other end of the strings and contribute to the impressive sustain of the instrument. The electronics include full-sized Epiphone Alnico Classic PRO™ humbucker™ pickups that are paired with CTS® potentiometers for smooth control over individual pickup volume and overall tone. Finished in Black Aged Gloss that is paired with lightly aged gold hardware. An EpiLite™ case is included.



EMILY WOLFE
Emily Wolfe is an American rock musician based out of Austin, TX. Her debut EP, Roulette, self-released in 2014, was produced by Mike McCarthy. In 2017, she began production for her first full-length album, with Alabama Shakes keyboardist Ben Tanner producing. The album was recorded at Portside Sound in Muscle Shoals, Alabama, and Arlyn Studios in Austin, TX, and features Evan Nicholson on bass and Clellan Hyatt on drums. In attempting to bring to life Wolfe’s dream of mixing Demi Lovato and Queens of the Stone Age.

ABOUT EPIPHONE:
Epiphone is one of American’s oldest and most revered instrument makers. Since 1873, Epiphone has made instruments for every style of popular music and celebrated its 140th anniversary in 2013. The story of Epiphone begins in the mountains of Greece and threads its way to Turkey, across the Atlantic to the immigrant gateway of Ellis Island, and into the nightclubs, recording studios, and coast-to-coast radio broadcasts of Manhattan in the 1920s and 30s. www.epiphone.com