Paphal (feat. Preeti Yumnam) — Life In Limbo1 / 2
Original RigYour Adaptation
GuitarDistortedSolo80% confidence

Paphal (feat. Preeti Yumnam) Guitar Tone Settings — Life In Limbo

Life In Limbo · 2010s+ · rock

studio

Original Recording

Guitar
Unknown (no source confirms exact model for this recording)
Pickups
Unknown (no source confirms exact type/model for this recording)
Amp
Unknown (no source confirms exact amp model for this recording)
Pickup Position
Bridge pickup (estimated; typical for solo lead work in modern rock)

No sources confirm the exact guitar, pickups, or amp used for the solo section of 'Paphal (feat. Preeti Yumnam)' by Life In Limbo. No studio or live rig details found. Year of recording is 2010s+ based on release era.

Amp Settings

Mids
6.5
Bass
5.5
Gain
6
Reverb
4.5
Treble
6.5
Presence
6

Effects Chain

  • Delay pedal (model unknown) · delay
  • Reverb pedal (model unknown) · reverb

Guitar → Delay pedal → Reverb pedal → Amp

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Tone Character

  • singing sustain
  • clear note separation
  • slightly compressed lead tone
  • moderate gain with clarity
  • articulate phrasing
  • smooth attack
  • touch-sensitive response
  • melodic lead focus
  • present upper mids

Notes & Caveats

  • ⚠️No sources confirm the exact guitar, pickups, amp, or pedal models used on the solo section of 'Paphal (feat. Preeti Yumnam)' by Life In Limbo.
  • ⚠️All settings and gear are estimated based on typical modern rock tones and era; no direct evidence for this specific recording.
  • ⚠️No pedalboard photos, interviews, or official rig rundowns found for this song or artist.
  • ⚠️No evidence of effects loop usage or specific amp effects; all effects are inferred from genre conventions and audible cues.
  • ⚠️If more specific information becomes available, this data should be updated.
  • ⚠️Settings cross-referenced with genre and era conventions for accuracy. The solo tone in 'Paphal' is classic rock/modern indie with a smooth, singing lead—moderate gain for sustain without fizz, balanced EQ with slightly forward mids for presence in the mix, and a touch of reverb for space. These settings reflect genre conventions and the artist’s tendency toward articulate, expressive lead tones.

Sources