Dave Navarro
Alternative RockHard Rock1990s–present

Dave Navarro£1,000 · Pro-Level Tone

Dave Navarro's heavy and assertive tone took shape during a defining era for electric guitar and remains one of the most sought-after sounds on guitar. Dave Navarro of Jane's Addiction and Red Hot Chili Peppers blends funk-influenced rhythm playing with heavy reverb-soaked lead tones — a unique combination that is neither conventional metal nor conventional funk. At the £1,000 · Pro-Level mark — a serious investment that brings you within touching distance of the real thing — the build centres on a Epiphone Les Paul Standard running through a Marshall DSL20CR, with Boss RV-6 Reverb and Dunlop GCB95 Cry Baby Wah completing the signal chain, totalling ~£1,086.

Total: ~£1,0865 pieces

What guitar does Dave Navarro use?

Dave Navarro is primarily associated with lp style guitars. At a £1,000 budget, Epiphone Les Paul Standard delivers the essential tonal character.

£1,000 · Pro-Level — Complete Gear List

Estimated total~£1,086

Why This Rig Works

How Dave Navarro's gear choices create the signature tone

AggressivePsychedelicCleanHigh Gain
Guitar Foundation

Epiphone Les Paul Standard

The set-neck construction and ProBucker humbuckers deliver the sustain, thickness and mid-forward push of the genuine article. Bridge pickup into a crunch amp is the authentic hard rock formula.

Pedal Chain · 3 stages
  • ReverbBoss RV-6 Reverb
  • Expression Filtervocal mid-sweep with Fasel resonance
  • Lead Fuzzenormous four-transistor sustain wall
The Amplifier

Marshall DSL20CR

The DSL's crunch channel captures the classic JCM800-era Marshall sound that Slash and Frusciante are built on. At 20 watts you can push the power amp hard enough to get natural tube saturation without needing ear protection.

The Combined Tone

PRS Custom or Schecter into a Marshall head, with heavy reverb (Boss RV-6 or similar) on both rhythm and lead tones. A wah pedal is used as a filter on funk-influenced rhythm parts. The tone is dark and reverberant on cleans, saturated on leads. Like a Pink Floyd/Hendrix hybrid filtered through 1990s LA rock.

Getting the Sound Right

  • Reverb is always on — unlike most rock players who keep reverb subtle, Navarro uses reverb as a significant part of the tone, not just ambience
  • The wah is used as a fixed filter on rhythm parts — park it mid-sweep and leave it for a nasal, vocal quality rather than sweeping it
  • Funk-influenced right-hand muting on rhythm parts — dead-string "ch" strokes between chord stabs, similar to Nile Rodgers's technique
  • Clean → heavily reverbed is a Navarro signature — the combination of a very dry rhythm guitar suddenly going to a washy reverb lead is compositionally striking
  • PRS neck pickup for lead solos — the wide-range humbucker at the neck produces the dark, sustained quality
  • A light touch produces the clean dynamics; heavy attack produces breakup on the same amp settings — Navarro exploits this range
  • Study "Three Days" from Jane's Addiction — the guitar arpeggio demonstrates his ability to build tension over a long repeated pattern
  • Fuzz before reverb creates the singing lead character of his Jane's solos — try Big Muff into a large spring reverb

Common Mistakes When Chasing This Tone

  • Not exploring the JCM800 alone before adding pedals — a Les Paul or humbucker guitar into a British amp is already a near-complete overdrive system. Adding drive pedals on top is often unnecessary and muddies the amp's natural character
  • Running the fuzz pedal into an already-driven amp channel — fuzz into a driven amp creates uncontrolled intermodulation that sounds chaotic rather than musical. The fuzz pedal works best into a clean or barely-clean amp
  • Setting the amp bass too high — the inherent warmth of mahogany means you need less bass EQ than with a Strat. Starting at 5 rather than 7 prevents low-end mud.
  • Scooping the mids on a Marshall-style amp — the upper midrange emphasis is what makes British amps cut through. Mid-scoop EQ sounds good alone but disappears in a band mix.
  • 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.
  • Leaving the wah in a fixed position (cocked) between uses — a cocked wah acts as a midrange filter and changes the tone. If not using the wah expressively, take it out of the chain.
  • Homogenising the tone — playing at the same volume and gain level throughout removes the compositional impact of the loud-quiet dynamic.
  • Over-compressing the clean tone — alt-rock clean guitar has natural dynamic variation. Heavy compression turns it into a flat, featureless sound.

Same Tone, Different Budget

Dave Navarro Tone — Common Questions

Dave Navarro is primarily associated with lp style guitars. At a £1,000 budget, Epiphone Les Paul Standard delivers the essential tonal character.

Dave Navarro's amp is british crunch voiced — clean to moderate gain. At the £1,000 level, Marshall DSL20CR is the closest match.

The £1,000 tier adds noticeably better build quality and tonal nuance over the £500 rig. This build totals £965 with Epiphone Les Paul Standard, Marshall DSL20CR, 3 effects. This is the tier where the tone becomes genuinely convincing for gigging and recording.

Dave Navarro's essential pedals include Distortion, Wah. At the £1,000 tier: Boss RV-6 Reverb, Dunlop GCB95 Cry Baby Wah, Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi. Distortion is the most important pedal — the others add nuance.

Dave Navarro's tone is defined by gothic-atmosphere, cinematic, melodic-lead. The combination of lp guitar and british crunch amp creates a sound that is immediately recognisable.

Dave Navarro's gain approach is pedal-driven — distortion pedals into a relatively clean amp. The pedal defines the distortion character. At £1,000, this is replicated through Marshall DSL20CR paired with Boss RV-6 Reverb.

Dave Navarro£1,000 · Pro-Level Complete Rig

~£1,086

Guitar

Epiphone Les Paul Standard

$507

Amp

Marshall DSL20CR

$418

Reverb

Boss RV-6 Reverb

$126

Wah

Dunlop GCB95 Cry Baby Wah

$88

Fuzz

Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi

$88
Total~£1,086

Closest Real-World Tone Match

If you like Dave Navarro's tone, these players use a similar approach — same gear philosophy, comparable sound characteristics.

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