Paul Gilbert
MetalHard Rock1980s–present

Paul Gilbert£1,000 · Pro-Level Rig

Ibanez PGM signature (DiMarzio pickups) into a Mesa Boogie Mark series or Laney amp. The tone is full and mid-present, not scooped. A noise gate keeps the signal clean during rests. DigiTech Whammy for the extreme pitch effects. The overall sound is warm and singing, not harsh.

Total: ~£9464 pieces

Signal Chain

Full signal path

GuitarJackson JS22
ODFulltone OCD
AmpKatana 100
DelayStrymon El

£1,000 · Pro-Level — Complete Rig

Boss Katana 100 MkII — Amp
Estimated total~£946

Getting the Sound Right

  • Start every technique at 50% of your target speed — if the mechanics are clean at slow tempos, speed comes automatically. Speed practice at tempo is wasted practice
  • Alternate picking is the foundation — every note is picked with strict down-up-down-up unless an open string or position shift makes economy picking necessary
  • The pick barely protrudes from the fingers — Gilbert holds the pick so that only 2-3mm of pick tip is exposed, reducing wasted motion
  • Use a thin string set (.09s) — lighter strings allow greater speed and the bend range needed for his phrasing without excessive hand fatigue
  • The tone is warm and mid-forward — do not scoop the EQ. The warmth comes from the amp's natural midrange, not treble boost
  • Rhythmic precision matters more than fast notes — Gilbert counts subdivisions (sixteenth notes at 120bpm is 8 notes per second, know exactly where each one lands)
  • The Whammy is used for dive-bomb effects on specific, composed points in solos — not as a constant effect
  • Economy picking bridges alternate picking and sweep picking — on three-note-per-string descending runs, use the extra pick motion efficiently

Common Mistakes When Chasing This Tone

  • Running the Marshall DSL's gain channel at maximum — above 8 on most high-gain channels, palm mutes lose note separation and become an indistinct wall. The target is the minimum gain for the target saturation, not maximum
  • Setting amp gain to maximum — superstrats with high-output humbuckers already drive the amp aggressively. Gain at 8-9 into a high-gain channel gives muddy intermodulation, not more power.
  • Not using a noise gate — self-noise at metal gain levels is continuous between notes. A gate is not stylistic; it is required for professional-sounding silence between riffs.
  • Using a distortion pedal to replace amp saturation — amp-driven tone has a specific feel (dynamics, touch sensitivity, natural compression) that pedal distortion cannot replicate. The source of gain matters.
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • Running gain at maximum — above 8 on most high-gain channels, palm mutes become indistinct and individual notes blur. The right amount of gain is the minimum for the target saturation.
  • 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.

Paul Gilbert's Sound

Ibanez PGM signature (DiMarzio pickups) into a Mesa Boogie Mark series or Laney amp. The tone is full and mid-present, not scooped. A noise gate keeps the signal clean during rests. DigiTech Whammy for the extreme pitch effects. The overall sound is warm and singing, not harsh.