After Dark (2015 Remaster) — Tito & Tarantula1 / 2
Original RigYour Adaptation
GuitarDistortedSolo80% confidence

After Dark (2015 Remaster) Guitar Tone Settings

Tito & Tarantula · 2010s+ · rock

studio

Original Recording

Guitar
Gibson Les Paul Standard (likely, based on era and band photos; exact model for solo unconfirmed)
Pickups
Humbucker (likely Gibson stock, model unknown)
Amp
Marshall JCM800 (likely, based on genre, era, and typical band setup; not explicitly confirmed for this recording)
Pickup Position
Bridge pickup

Studio recording, 2015 remaster of original 1996 track. No direct confirmation of exact gear for solo section; inferred from genre, era, and band context.

Amp Settings

Mids
7
Bass
6.5
Gain
6
Reverb
3.5
Treble
6.5
Presence
5.5

Effects Chain

  • Wah pedal (model unknown) · wah
  • Tremolo pedal (model unknown) · tremolo

Guitar → Wah pedal → Tremolo pedal → Marshall JCM800 (with spring reverb)

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Tone Character

  • singing sustain
  • midrange bite
  • smooth lead lines
  • dynamic response
  • touch-sensitive
  • slightly saturated
  • expressive phrasing
  • classic rock lead
  • wah-inflected phrasing
  • subtle tremolo movement

Notes & Caveats

  • ⚠️No direct source confirms exact guitar, amp, or pedal models for the solo section of 'After Dark (2015 Remaster)'; gear inferred from genre, era, and typical band setup.
  • ⚠️Amp and pedal settings estimated based on classic rock/alternative rock tones and Marshall amp conventions.
  • ⚠️Pedal models for wah and tremolo are not specified in any source; categories included based on clear audibility and forum discussion.
  • ⚠️No explicit pickup selector position found; bridge pickup inferred from tone and genre.
  • ⚠️Settings cross-referenced with genre and era conventions for accuracy. The solo tone on 'After Dark' is classic blues-rock: warm, mid-forward, and crunchy but not overly saturated, with a touch of spring reverb for space. Tito Larriva typically favors vintage Fender or Mesa/Boogie amps set for expressive, dynamic leads, matching these settings for the genre and era.

Sources