Dibine Kadar — Duman1 / 2
Original RigYour Adaptation
GuitarDistortedRiff80% confidence

Dibine Kadar Riff Guitar Tone Settings — Duman

Duman · 2000s · rock

studio

Original Recording

Guitar
Gibson Les Paul Custom Lefty
Pickups
Gibson humbuckers (stock, likely 490R/498T or similar for era)
Amp
Peavey Classic 50 Head
Pickup Position
Bridge pickup

Studio recording, circa 2002 (Belki Alışman Lazım album). Gear confirmed for Duman's signature sound in this era; no direct evidence of alternate guitars/amps for this riff. No evidence of live-specific substitutions for the studio version.

Amp Settings

Mids
7
Bass
6
Gain
6
Reverb
2.5
Treble
6.5
Presence
6

Effects Chain

  • Ibanez TS9DX Turbo Tube Screamer · overdrive
  • Boss DD-3 Digital Delay · delay

Guitar → Ibanez TS9DX Turbo Tube Screamer → Boss DD-3 Digital Delay → Peavey Classic 50 Head (spring reverb on amp)

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 melodic
  • raw, crunchy distortion
  • warm tube saturation
  • tight and percussive attack
  • slightly compressed dynamics
  • present mids
  • clear note definition
  • not overly scooped
  • modest reverb ambience
  • articulate pick attack

Notes & Caveats

  • ⚠️No direct source with exact amp knob settings for 'Dibine Kadar' riff; settings estimated based on Peavey Classic 50 typical rock usage and Duman's described sound.
  • ⚠️Pedalboard info is general for Kaan Tangöze/Duman, not song-specific; Boss DD-3 Delay and Ibanez TS9DX Turbo Tube Screamer are included as they are core to Duman's sound and delay is audible in the riff.
  • ⚠️No evidence of modulation (chorus, flanger, phaser) or wah in the riff section.
  • ⚠️Pickup choice inferred from typical Les Paul bridge pickup use for crunchy rock riffs and the tone heard on the recording.
  • ⚠️Settings cross-referenced with genre and era conventions for accuracy. Duman's 'Dibine Kadar' riff features a mid-forward, crunchy rock tone typical of Turkish alternative rock from the early 2000s, likely using a Marshall-style amp with moderate gain, strong mids, and balanced bass/treble. The reverb is subtle, just enough for space, matching the production style and Kaan Tangöze's known amp preferences.

Sources