
RockBlues-Rock1970s–present
Mark Knopfler — £2,500 · Premium Rig
Fender Stratocaster (various, often with a Schecter neck and DiMarzio FS-1 bridge pickup) into a clean Marshall or Music Man HD-130. Neck or middle pickup, moderate volume, no gain pedals. The fingerstyle attack produces a soft transient that lets the amp stay clean while the guitar breathes with dynamics.
Signal Path
Signal Chain
Full signal path
GuitarPlayer Strat
ODKing Tone
AmpFender Blues
DelayWalrus Audio
Full Gear List
£2,500 · Premium — Complete Rig

£££ Pro-Level$824

££ Mid-Range$443

£££ Pro-Level$1,650
Tone Tips
Getting the Sound Right
- Play with your bare fingers — no pick; index, middle and ring fingers alternate
- Fingerstyle attack produces a softer initial hit that lets clean amps stay cleaner
- Middle pickup position is ideal — warmer than bridge, more articulate than neck
- Neck pickup with tone rolled to 7 for the creamy "Sultans of Swing" solo tone
- Keep amp completely clean — Knopfler's dynamics come entirely from his fingers
- The slight "nail click" in the attack is part of the sound — don't try to eliminate it
- Practise picking the strings from below (upward motion) for the characteristic brightness
- Open chord voicings with fingerpicked arpeggios underpin most of the rhythm work
Avoid These Pitfalls
Common Mistakes When Chasing This Tone
- Stacking a second overdrive after the TS9 with single coils — the combined mid emphasis of two stacked ODs into single-coil pickups produces a congested, nasal sound that struggles to sit in a mix
- Setting the compressor ratio too high with single coils — above 4:1, the compressor eliminates the natural pick attack dynamics that give single-coil playing its expressiveness. The compressor should even out the extremes, not remove all variation
- Running the tone knob at 10 the entire time — the tone control on a Strat is an expressive tool. Rolling it back changes the character of the sound in ways that affect how you phrase.
- Adding a high-gain distortion pedal to a Fender clean amp — the character of Fender tone is the headroom and sparkle. A high-gain pedal into a Fender sounds like a wrong-matched combination.
- Using a coloured overdrive as a boost where a transparent boost is needed — a TS-style OD adds midrange colour. A Klon-style or clean boost is more neutral and suitable for clean boost applications.
- Setting gain too high on the overdrive pedal — most overdrive pedals are most useful at gain settings of 2-5, where they add character without dominating the tone. High gain settings on an OD pedal become a distortion, not an overdrive.
- Not setting delay to song tempo — a delay that doesn't match the song tempo creates a rhythmic clash that builds and becomes increasingly obvious. Tap the tempo every time.
- Playing at bedroom volume and expecting full blues tone — tube amps need to push air to bloom correctly. A cold amp at low volume sounds flat and lifeless.
Tone Profile
Mark Knopfler's Sound
Fender Stratocaster (various, often with a Schecter neck and DiMarzio FS-1 bridge pickup) into a clean Marshall or Music Man HD-130. Neck or middle pickup, moderate volume, no gain pedals. The fingerstyle attack produces a soft transient that lets the amp stay clean while the guitar breathes with dynamics.