
MetalHard Rock1980s–present
Paul Gilbert — £2,500 · Premium 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.
Signal Path
Signal Chain
Full signal path
GuitarIbanez RG550
EQBoss GE-7
ODKing Tone
AmpMarshall DSL40CR
DelayStrymon Timeline
Full Gear List
£2,500 · Premium — Complete Rig

£££ Pro-Level$888

£ Budget$100

££ Mid-Range$443

£££ Pro-Level$1,142
Tone Tips
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
Avoid These Pitfalls
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.
Tone Profile
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.