Vultures of North — Orbit Culture1 / 2
Original RigYour Adaptation
GuitarDistortedRiff80% confidence

Vultures of North Riff Guitar Tone Settings — Orbit Culture

Orbit Culture · 2010s+ · metal

studio

Original Recording

Guitar
Solar Guitars V1.6 CANIBALISMO
Pickups
Solar Duncan Solar (active humbuckers)
Amp
Unknown high-gain amp (likely digital or modern tube head, model not confirmed for this recording)
Pickup Position
Bridge pickup

Studio recording, 2024. Guitar and pickup model inferred from Equipboard and band gear guides for Orbit Culture's recent era. No explicit amp model or pedalboard for this specific song/recording found in sources.

Amp Settings

Mids
4.5
Bass
6
Gain
9
Reverb
1
Treble
7
Presence
6.5

Effects Chain

  • Noise gate pedal (model unknown) · noise_gate

Guitar → Noise gate → High-gain amp (minimal digital reverb)

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Tone Character

  • tight and percussive
  • scooped mids
  • aggressive palm muting
  • high-gain saturation
  • articulate note definition
  • dense and powerful
  • modern metal clarity
  • saturated but controlled
  • precise attack
  • minimal ambience

Notes & Caveats

  • ⚠️No explicit amp model or pedalboard for 'Vultures of North' riff section found in sources; guitar and pickup model inferred from Equipboard and band gear guides.
  • ⚠️Amp settings estimated based on modern metal genre, typical high-gain setup, and Orbit Culture's described sound.
  • ⚠️No specific pedal models or settings confirmed for this recording; effects chain inferred from genre norms and audible characteristics.
  • ⚠️No evidence of time-based or modulation effects in the riff section; only high-gain, noise gate, and minimal reverb likely.
  • ⚠️Settings cross-referenced with genre and era conventions for accuracy. Orbit Culture's 'Vultures of North' features a modern, ultra-tight, high-gain tone with controlled low end, slightly scooped but not hollow mids, and pronounced clarity—typical of their use of boosted 5150/6505-style amps and genre conventions. The tone is dry and aggressive, with no audible reverb, matching modern Swedish metal production.

Sources