I believe ceramic pads are factory spec. At least that is what comes up when the parts shop(Pepboys and Kragen) pulls up pads on the computer.
Aftermarket ceramic pads are hit and miss. Some don't squeel, others sound like a freight train screeching to a halt.
Brake caliper lubricant sometimes works, depends on whether the pads re just noisy or where the vibration is coming from.
Usually brake pads squeel because they are either vibrating on the backing or because the pad itself is noisy, least in my opinion.
I have used the blue goo pad glue that is put on the back of the pads to kind of glue the pad to the piston or backing plate. Supposedly this keeps the pad from vibrating against the piston and making a squeel. But my experience is usually the goo burns off after a few hundred or thousand miles, could be my driving style heating the pads more than granny does. After doing this for something like 20 years I am beginning to think blue goo is a waste of effort.
The other possible cause is that sometimes the caliper is not sliding back and forth smoothly which causes the pad to vibrate against the rotor. This requires you to grease the caliper sliding points and maybe the back of the pad with some high temperature brake grease. This actually should be done periodically, not just when you change pads. Supposedly we should grease the sliding points every oil change or two. Most of us don't know this and never do it.
My experience at least with 2 sets of pads on the LS is that the blue goo and caliper grease on the back of the pads only works a day or two. In my case switching brand of pad made a WORLD of difference. I had some Pepboys performance pads and they sqeeled like heck, I greased, blue gooed and cleaned the backing, sanded the pads etc, no help. Replaced them with Raybestos and not a peep in several thousand miles. This has happened for me on 2 or three others cars I owned. I am convinced, will buy Raybestos if I can get them from now on.
So as a start , clean the calipers and back of the pad and the piston surface. No rust, grease or burned on blue goo. Use high temp brake grease to grease the back of the pad(lightly, don't gob it on) and the sliding points of the caliper. The sliding points are the smooth metal machined surfaces where it is obvious the caliper slides back and forth. Also grease the retaining bolts but only the smooth sliding surface, not the threads. If your pads are fine, this should fix it. If they still squeel, then either the pads are noisy or something else in the caliper assembly may be cocking the pads a bit out of line.
Good Luck,
Jim Henderson