Joe Pass

Solo — Jazz guitar virtuoso

Jazz Bebop Solo Guitar

Quick Facts

🎸 Signature Guitar Ibanez JP20 / Gibson ES-175
📅 Years Active 1952–1994
🎵 Notable Songs Virtuoso (album), Night and Day, All the Things You Are

Signature Pick

Ernie Ball Heavy

Ernie Ball Heavy

Joe Pass primarily used heavy gauge picks and often played fingerstyle. When using a pick, he preferred thick celluloid picks that provided warmth and control for his complex chord-melody arrangements.

Thickness1.5mm
MaterialCelluloid
ShapeStandard
TipRounded
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Why This Pick?

Pass preferred heavy celluloid picks for the control and warmth they offered on jazz standards. A thicker pick produces a rounder, fuller tone from the hollow-body guitars he favored — essential for his trademark solo-guitar style where bass, chords, and melody had to ring clearly at once. The heavy gauge gave him the stiffness to articulate rapid bebop lines without the pick flexing away from the string, while celluloid's natural warmth kept his sound smooth and never harsh — perfectly suited for intimate jazz club settings.

About Joe Pass

Joe Pass is widely considered one of the greatest jazz guitarists of all time. His "Virtuoso" solo album series demonstrated that a single guitarist could create complete, satisfying performances without accompaniment.

His technique combined walking bass lines, chord voicings, and melodic improvisation simultaneously—a feat that few guitarists have replicated. Pass could make his guitar sound like an entire band.

The heavy picks he used provided the control needed for his intricate fingerings and gave his tone the warmth characteristic of traditional jazz guitar. Many jazz players continue to emulate his approach to pick selection.