Mikey Way: βI was borderline terrified a lot of the time My Chemical Romance was active. I was learning the bass in front of 20,000 people every night!β
By Gregory Adams ( Bass Player ) published June 9th 2023
The reunited emo kingsβ low-end ranger reveals why he swapped out his signature Fender Mustang for a sparkling new signature Jazz Bass, learning bass in arenas, and how he overcame insecurity about his chops
The reunited emo kingsβ low-end ranger reveals why he swapped out his signature Fender Mustang for a sparkling new signature Jazz Bass, lear
Full interview under cut:
My Chemical Romanceβs reunion has seen bassist Mikey Way thrumming through the high pomp punk ofΒ The Black ParadeΒ andΒ Three Cheers for Sweet RevengeΒ favorites with a familiar rhythmic fortitude, but keen-eyed band obsessives have probably noticed the musician is no longer sporting the snazzy, silver-flake Squier Mustang signature model Fender built for him back in 2012.Β
The good news is thatβs because, as Fender have just formally announced,Β Way has a brand-new β but just as glammy β Jazz Bass out now. Thereβs a good reason why Wayβs made the switch: the Jazz Bass is his first love.
Though he started out on guitar, Way got the hang of a four-string in the mid β90s while playing a loaned-out Jazz Bass in his pre-My Chemical Romance project, Ray Gun Jones. He upgraded to a silver-finish Jazz of his own by the time MCR started touring in the early β00s, but a trailer mishap led to that instrument getting smashed to pieces on a highway.
Way tellsΒ Guitar WorldΒ that he eventually became obsessed with the short-scale sturdiness of a MustangΒ bass guitarΒ as My Chemical Romance were writing their 2010 full-length,Β Danger Days: The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys, after fooling around with a model Duff McKagan had left at North Hollywoodβs Mates Rehearsal Studio. By 2012, Way had his Squier model in stores.
It was during the downtime after My Chemical Romance went on hiatus in 2013, though, that the stubbiness of his Mustang became a little hard to handle.
βI stayed away from playing bass for a little while, which is natural β I was just decompressing,β Way explains. βThen, sometime in 2014, I picked up the bass again, to get my chops back, [but] I noticed that the Mustang felt strange to me.βΒ
After reaching out to the folks at Fender, Way got a grip on his playing by stretching out on the longer-necked Jazzes they sent him. Wayβs take on the Jazz Bass is outfitted with β70s-style single-coil pickups, and a thinline βCβ-shaped maple neck the bassist says is super-speedy.
The finish is silver, of course, but Way also wantedΒ an aesthetically inkier black pickguard. The headstock, likewise, pops with its matching gloss-black finish.
Speaking withΒ Guitar World, Way gets into the glam and grunge gods who inspired his love of a good sparkle coat, overcoming performance anxiety, and why a steady attack wins the bass race every time.
What were some of the musts when it came to designing this latest signature?
βIβve been obsessed with the sparkle finish as far back as I can remember. Growing up in the β90s, the silver-flake [finish] was big in alternative music. Chris Cornell had the Gretsch Silver Jet, [Daniel Johns] from Silverchair had one β [with] the imagery the Smashing Pumpkins used, they liked sparkles.
βAce Frehley, of course, was big into flake finishes, and as a kid, you love the larger-than-life, comic book world of Kiss. [And thereβs] David Bowie β the glam rock stuff. That flake finish makes me think of so many different things, but thatβs why I love it so much.
βI remember being younger and going into stores and seeing a flake finish and being like, 'Oh my god, thatβs an expensive [looking guitar] β I canβt afford that, let alone play it.' It was almost intimidating.β
One aesthetic difference between your Mustang model and this Jazz is that you didnβt throw a racing stripe on this one.
βI thought about bringing it back and keeping the continuity. Maybe somewhere down the line weβll throw a racing stripe on this. The thing with [seeing a] racing stripe was always like, 'This player is a badass!'β
Is there a psychology behind removing the racing stripe, then?
βThe psychology behind it is that I forgot about it. When My Chemical Romance was talking about doing reunion shows [in 2019], Iβd contacted Michael Schulz from Fender and was like, 'Is it OK if I make a new bass for this [next] era of My Chemical Romance?' I wanted to take my past and bring it to the future β taking my Mustang and melding it with the Jazz Basses that I loved so much.Β
βI tried to have my cake and eat it, too. I wanted the thinner neck, and I wanted the silver-flake, but I wanted it on a Jazz Bass. They knocked it out of the park immediately.β
Getting back to how you used to admire those silver-flake guitars in the shops, you actually started out as a guitarist, right?
βSo, the story goes that my brother [My Chemical Romance vocalist Gerard Way] had a SearsΒ acoustic guitarΒ when he was 10 years old. We would take a shoelace and make a strap, and we would stand on the couch pretending we were in Iron Maiden. And then it got real around β93-β94, which lines up with the rise of alternative music. You started to see people that looked exactly like you, and they were playing guitar. They were playing Fender Strats!Β
βMy brother got a MexicanΒ Stratocaster, Lake Placid Blue. I found it not too long ago, and Michael from Fender hot-rodded it. Thatβs how I cut my teeth β that Mexican Stratocaster [was] my first foray into really trying to learn how to play guitar. I would watch bootlegs of concerts, and watch [guitaristsβ] hands and fingers β Thom Yorke, Billy Corgan, Noel Gallagher, Jonny Greenwood. I would watch what they were doing. It all started from that.
βBass came out of necessity, twice. Me and my brother had a band called Ray Gun Jones, I guess in β95-β96. It was kind of Weezer-ish, or us doing a surf-punk thing [with] a little bit of pre-mid-west emo. At the time we were really into Weezer, Jawbreaker, Promise Ring, Smashing Pumpkins, Nirvana, Sunny Day Real Estate.Β
β[Ray Gun Jones] needed a bass player, so my brother was like 'Hey, do you want to play bass for my band?' I was already a huge fan β Iβd always tag along to practices. The ex-bass player let me borrow their bass. We had 4-5 songs, and I got the rudimentary from that. In that era, everyone was like, 'I want to be a guitar hero,' but I realized I had a natural knack for [bass]. I picked it up right away.Β
βThen, with My Chemical Romance, it was the same thing. My brother was like, 'We need a bass player,' and I was like, 'Well, this is familiar' [laughs]. 'Hereβs the demo; learn these songs.' They werenβt terribly difficult.β
Was that bass you had borrowed a Fender Jazz?
βYup, Iβve only ever played Fender. Iβve tried tons of other basses from other companies, but it always feels alien to me.β
You mentioned studying the playing of Thom Yorke or Billy Corgan through those bootleg vids. Were there any bassists that you treated similarly, to understand the mechanics of bass?
βMatt Sharp from Weezer. I tried to ape him in the beginning, but my attack sounds vaguely reminiscent of a Smashing Pumpkins recording. I would learnΒ Siamese DreamΒ andΒ Melon Collie and the Infinite Sadness, and the Blue Album [the bandβs 1994 self-titled debut] by Weezer. Those were the three albums that I put the most time into learning. Thatβs in my DNA.β
How about from a hyper-local perspective. If My Chemical Romance started out playing New Jersey basements and VFW halls, where there any bassists from that scene that inspired you, or that you appreciated?
βYes! We shared a rehearsal space with this band called Pencey Prep β that was [MCR guitarist] Frank Ieroβs original band. John McGuire was their bassist, and he let me borrow his equipment all the time. He taught me fundamentals, and gave me pointers β he taught me a whole heck of a lot.Β
βI always respected Tim Payne from Thursday, I loved his attack and stage presence. And when Iβd watch Gabe Saporta from Midtown, I thought 'This dude is the coolest guy in the room.' Heβs got this calm, cool, and collected [presence] that you canβt fake or learn. And then Eben Dβamico from Saves the Day β brilliant!Β
βI would try to learn Saves the Day basslines. They were pretty complex [compared to] what most bands were doing in that scene. Most bands in the post-hardcore scene had simplistic basslines, but Saves the Day did not.
βThereβs also Ray Toro, the guitar player of My Chemical Romance. Not only is he truly gifted at guitar, but heβs truly gifted at bass and drums β Ray can do everything. He was instrumental, early on, with showing me the ropes. Ray gave me lessons when I was a novice. I canβt thank him enough for that.β
What kind of pointers was he giving you?
βHe showed me proper fretting, or [how to maintain] a steady attack. I got a really great compliment from our front-of-house guy, Jay Rigby. He told me that Iβm one of the very few bass players that he doesnβt have to go in and tweak the volume [for]. 'Youβre steady, throughout.' I think thatβs something that Ray Toro instilled in me: the consistency of attack.Β
βItβs funny thinking about it, but I was such a novice going into My Chemical Romance that I would bring myself into an anxiety-ridden state of, 'Oh my god, we have a show tonight; I have to start practicing right now.' I would be practicing four to five hours before we played β Iβd play the set [in the green room], and then Iβd play it again. Other bands would be like, 'What are you doing?' I was so neurotic at that point, because there were so many people around me that were beyond gifted.Β
βI got pushed into the deep end; youβve got no choice but to figure it out. Ray and Frank are so gifted that I had to keep up. I didnβt want to ever do the music a disservice.
βThat brings me back to the simplicity of the early My Chem basslines. The first album [2002βsΒ I Brought You Bullets, You Brought Me Your Love] was me learning the bass, and somehow [producer] John Naclerio recorded me and said, 'You did a great job,' which I did not expect.Β
βI thought I was going to go in there and they were going to have to do some studio magic, or someone would come in and play [my] part. I thought of the worst-case scenario, but I went in and did it. I played the bass seriously [enough] by that point.β
What are you generally looking for in a My Chemical Romance bassline?Β
βWhat makes it for me is if I do a fill, Iβll only do it once. If you listen to [the band's 2022 comeback single]Β The Foundations of Decay, any fill on there I only do one time. Whatβs interesting aboutΒ The Foundations of DecayΒ is that itβs very loose and run-and-gun. We went in and punched things in for timing, which everyone in the world does, but the meat of that is first-or-second take. Which brings me to someone else who was very instrumental to my bass playing: Doug McKean.
βHeβs no longer with us, unfortunately, but he was our engineer fromΒ The Black ParadeΒ [until his passing in 2022]. He was always a huge cheerleader for me β he instilled confidence in me. He was always good at getting a killer performance out of me.β
What are some of the biggest My Chemical Romance bass moments for you?
βIβll say that fill in onΒ Foundations. No-one saw that coming.β
ThereβsΒ a YouTube video out there of someone playing their favorite Mikey Way basslines, some while using your signature Squier Mustang, but one standout in particular isΒ The Black ParadeβsΒ The Sharpest Lives.
βWhatβs funny isΒ Sharpest LivesΒ has a bass solo, and I was terrified of it. I had performance anxiety [through] the 12 years before we broke up β I donβt have it anymore. Somehow when the band got back together, a switch in my brain [got] flipped. [But] while My Chem was active, I was borderline terrified a lot of the time.
βIβm playing with people far above my skill level, Iβm playing [on bills] with bands where their bass players are way better than me, [and] our shows were getting massive. We were playing arenas! So not only are you learning the bass, but youβre learning the bass in front of 20,000 people every night. It made me tweak a little, but I think it shaped me into what I became.
βThat solo gave me anxiety. It was when we were playing the biggest venues of our career, and it would break for the solo [WayΒ starts singing his ascending bass lick]. I practiced it relentlessly, then it [became] second nature. Later on, it [became my favorite part of the show.β
Youβre already playing the Jazz signature in your live show, yeah?
βItβs what I use for the live show. Basically, Fender built [it] for the reunion, and then we made a couple tweaks for when we release it.β
Was there a learning curve at all towards transferring My Chemical Romance songs youβd written on a Mustang onto the Jazz?
βThere wasΒ Planetary (GO!), a song offΒ Danger Days. Iβd guess youβd say the whole thing is a disco beat. Itβs dance-y β [Mikey starts singing an octave-popping bassline], I do that for the entirety of the song. I was very happy that I only had to do that on a Mustang, initially [because of the shorter scale]. But going back to what I said, [after] I took a little break, [I] went back to a Jazz Bass.Β
βI missed the room, or the way my hand went up and down the neck. I wanted to go back to that, so I jumped back in and felt right at home again.β
How many Jazzes are you bringing on the road?
βI bring two basses out, [but] I stopped even switching [during the set]. This is a testament to Fender craftsmanship β that thing stays in tune. Itβs got the four-saddle bridge, and it stays in tune so well. Iβm a little neurotic so Iβll tune every few songs, but if I went five to six songs you probably wouldnβt even notice.β
What does it mean to you to now have a fully-formed Fender signature model β as opposed to the Squier β and with the body shape you began your career with?
βItβs really a dream come true. Itβs funny, in 2002-3 we started touring across the country. I had a Mexican Jazz Bass, but [the band] were like, 'You have to use something with better electronics; better wood. Step it up!' So, I went into the Guitar Center on Route 46 in New Jersey, and at the time Fender had released a special Guitar Center edition that was silver-flake.Β
βIt always bugged me that the pickguard was white β it threw me off, aesthetically, and I was like, 'Iβm going to change that pickguard one day.' So, I got that, and I was using that for a while.Β
βWe were out with [Boston emo quartet] Piebald β it was one of our first cross-country tours ever β and one night someone forgot to close the trailer door. Weβre driving on the highway, and half the contents spilled out β unfortunately, my bass was a casualty of that.
βBut Frank Iero, and his heart of gold, jumped out on the highway in the middle of the night and tried to recover [the bass]. He was like, 'Maybe we can fix it!' Iβll never forget him doing that. He got a chunk of it β itβs in one of our storage units.β
For more information on the Limited Edition Mikey Way Jazz Bass, head toΒ Fender.com.










