
ProgressiveMetal1990s–present
John Petrucci — £1,000 · Pro-Level Rig
Music Man JP signature guitar (high-output DiMarzio pickups) into a Mesa Boogie JP-2C head. The JP-2C is effectively a Mark V customised for Petrucci — the clean channel is crystal clear with scooped mids, the lead channel delivers liquid high gain with extraordinary note separation at speed.
Signal Path
Signal Chain
Full signal path
GuitarJackson JS22
ModPhase 90
AmpKatana 100
DelayStrymon Timeline
Full Gear List
£1,000 · Pro-Level — Complete Rig

££ Mid-Range£219

£ Budget£79

££ Mid-Range£249
Tone Tips
Getting the Sound Right
- Alternate pick every run — Petrucci's picking discipline is his defining technical characteristic. Legato is used sparingly and intentionally
- The clean-to-heavy dynamic contrast is a Dream Theater signature — the clean tone must be genuinely clean, not slightly dirty
- Use seven-string guitar for the low chugging sections — Petrucci switched to 7-strings partly for the extended low range in rhythm parts
- Sweep picking arpeggios are used throughout his solos — practise three-string arpeggios before attempting five-string sweeps
- The Mesa JP-2C runs the lead channel at high gain but mid-forward — do not scoop the mids, the note clarity comes from keeping the midrange present
- Tone knob on the guitar at full — Petrucci never rolls back the tone. All brightness is used
- Practise with a metronome at 60% of target tempo — if the picking mechanics are sloppy at slow tempos, they will be sloppy at speed
- The neck pickup is used for clean passages and some solos — the warmer character suits the melodic sustained lead tones
Avoid These Pitfalls
Common Mistakes When Chasing This Tone
- Not using a gate on the Peavey 6505's high-gain channel — self-noise at this gain level is continuous and audible between notes. A noise gate is not a style choice; it is functional equipment for this gain level
- Forgetting to adjust technique for the different neck profile — thinner, faster necks require less grip pressure. Playing with the same pressure as on a thicker neck causes note choke.
- Running amp gain at 10 — above 8 on most high-gain channels, the signal becomes a compressed, indistinct wall. Moderate-high gain with a boost pedal in front gives better results.
- Skipping the Tube Screamer-style boost — this pedal before the amp's high-gain channel is not optional for many players. It tightens the low end, not adds gain. Gain on the pedal at 0.
- Too many repeats at high mix — more than 3 repeats makes the delay effect accumulate and overwhelm the dry guitar signal. Keep it to 2-3 repeats at a subtle mix level.
- Scooping mids to "sound heavier" — a guitar with mids removed disappears under bass and drums. Metal tone cuts through a mix, and that requires midrange.
- Using single-coil pickups — the lack of output and mid-frequency push makes it impossible to achieve the tightness needed for high-gain rhythm playing.
Tone Profile
John Petrucci's Sound
Music Man JP signature guitar (high-output DiMarzio pickups) into a Mesa Boogie JP-2C head. The JP-2C is effectively a Mark V customised for Petrucci — the clean channel is crystal clear with scooped mids, the lead channel delivers liquid high gain with extraordinary note separation at speed.
