Broken Window Serenade — Whiskey Myers1 / 2
Original RigYour Adaptation
GuitarDistortedSolo80% confidence

Broken Window Serenade Solo Guitar Tone Settings — Whiskey Myers

Whiskey Myers · 2010s+ · rock

studio

Original Recording

Guitar
Gibson Les Paul
Pickups
Humbucker (likely Gibson Burstbucker or similar, exact model unknown)
Amp
Orange TH30
Pickup Position
Bridge pickup

Studio recording, 2011 (from the album 'Firewater'). Gear inferred from Equipboard and general Whiskey Myers studio rig for this era. No explicit confirmation for this exact solo, but Les Paul and Orange TH30 are repeatedly cited as core studio gear for the band.

Amp Settings

Mids
7
Bass
6.5
Gain
5
Reverb
4
Treble
7
Presence
6

Effects Chain

  • Fulltone OCD Overdrive · overdrive

Guitar → Fulltone OCD Overdrive → Orange TH30 (with spring reverb)

Tone Matcher

Match This Tone to Your Gear

Tell us your guitar and amp — we’ll calculate the exact settings translated to your specific rig.

Adapt to MY Gear →

7-day free trial · Cancel anytime.

Tone Character

  • gritty and raw
  • warm and saturated
  • singing sustain
  • dynamic and expressive
  • slightly compressed
  • dirty but melodic
  • touch-sensitive
  • Southern rock lead
  • articulate note separation
  • not overly bright

Notes & Caveats

  • ⚠️No direct source confirms the exact guitar, amp, or pedal settings for the solo section of 'Broken Window Serenade'.
  • ⚠️Gear and settings are estimated based on Equipboard's summary of Whiskey Myers' studio rig for the 'Firewater' era and typical Southern rock lead tones.
  • ⚠️No explicit mention of pedals or effects used on this specific solo; overdrive is likely from amp and/or Fulltone OCD pedal as per Equipboard.
  • ⚠️No numeric amp settings found; values estimated based on typical Orange TH30 usage for this genre and era.
  • ⚠️No evidence of modulation or time-based effects (delay, chorus, etc.) in the solo; only mild amp reverb is inferred.
  • ⚠️Settings cross-referenced with genre and era conventions for accuracy. The solo tone on 'Broken Window Serenade' is warm, dynamic, and just at the edge of breakup, typical of southern rock/blues. Whiskey Myers often uses Fender or Marshall-style amps with mids and bass pushed for fullness, moderate treble for clarity, and a touch of reverb for space, matching genre and era conventions.

Sources