
Gothic RockPost-Punk1980s–present
Robert Smith — £200 · Beginner Rig
Gibson ES-345 or Fender Jazzmaster into a Roland JC-120 or Fender clean amp, with an Electro-Harmonix Electric Mistress flanger and heavy chorus. The tone is always clean — never overdriven. The Electric Mistress flanger is almost always engaged, creating the slightly detuned, ethereal quality.
Signal Path
Signal Chain
Full signal path
ModTC Electronic
AmpFrontman 15
Full Gear List
£200 · Beginner — Complete Rig
Tone Tips
Getting the Sound Right
- The Electric Mistress flanger is the signature effect — always on, set to subtle flanging rather than jet-plane whoosh. It detuned the sound slightly for the cold, eerie quality
- Clean amp — no overdrive. The gothic rock texture comes from the effects chain, not from gain
- Minor arpeggios using open chord shapes — Smith often uses simple minor chord arpeggios played on all six strings separately
- Neck pickup always — the warm, dark pickup position suits the melancholic character. Bridge pickup is too bright
- Heavy delay at moderate feedback — "Lovesong," "Pictures of You" — delay is used to fill space and create a dreamy, floating quality
- Semi-hollow guitar body contributes to the slightly hollow, resonant quality — a solid-body guitar through the same chain sounds more clinical
- Downstroke-only arpeggios at slow tempo — Smith picks individual strings downward rather than alternating up and down
- Chorus at moderate depth and slow rate — obvious but musical. Faster rates sound more like vibrato; slower rates are more diffuse
Avoid These Pitfalls
Common Mistakes When Chasing This Tone
- Running high-gain settings on a semi-hollow — the resonant body cavity feeds back uncontrollably at high gain levels. These guitars require lower gain and benefit from the natural resonance.
- Running multiple pedals into the input — boutique amps are designed for the natural guitar signal. Too many pedals before the input changes the input impedance and alters the amp's response.
- Using too much gain on the drive pedal — pedal-driven tone works best with the amp providing some character and the pedal adding focus and saturation, not replacing the amp entirely.
- 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.
- Maximum gain — at very high gain settings, fast chord changes smear together. Moderate gain keeps the riff punchy and readable even at high speed.
- Over-warming the tone — punk guitar benefits from brightness. Too much warmth (low treble, high bass) makes the tone muddy and slow-sounding.
Tone Profile
Robert Smith's Sound
Gibson ES-345 or Fender Jazzmaster into a Roland JC-120 or Fender clean amp, with an Electro-Harmonix Electric Mistress flanger and heavy chorus. The tone is always clean — never overdriven. The Electric Mistress flanger is almost always engaged, creating the slightly detuned, ethereal quality.

