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Riff Tone
Gunjou Biyori - Ideal Days For Ultramarine
Tokyo Incidents
Guitarrock2000s
Original Gear
GuitarFender Stratocaster (likely Japanese model, early 2000s, as used by Mikio Hirama in Tokyo Incidents)
AmpMarshall JCM800 (likely, based on era, genre, and typical Japanese rock studio setups of early 2000s; no direct source found for this song/recording)
Amp Settings
gain5
bass6
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Notes
Studio recording, 2004. No direct source for exact gear on this track, but Mikio Hirama is known for using Fender Stratocasters and Marshall amps during the early Tokyo Incidents era. No evidence of alternate guitars or amps for the riff section of this song.
Tone Character(10)
tight, punchy rhythm guitarslightly gritty, crunchy attackclear note separationarticulate single-coil claritydynamic response to pickingmid-forward presencenot heavily saturatedrhythmic, percussive feelbright, cutting top endcontrolled low end
Difficulty
The riff requires intermediate skill due to its syncopated rhythm, need for tight muting, and dynamic control to achieve the punchy, articulate attack characteristic of the recording.
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Create Free AccountGuitarrock2000s
Original Gear
GuitarFender Stratocaster (likely Japanese model, early 2000s, as used by Mikio Hirama in Tokyo Incidents)
AmpMarshall JCM800 (likely, based on era, genre, and typical Japanese rock studio setups of early 2000s; no direct source found for this song/recording)
Amp Settings
gain5
bass6
Create an account to see all tone details
Create Free AccountEffects & Signal Chain
Notes
Studio recording, 2004. No direct source for exact gear on this track, but Mikio Hirama is known for using Fender Stratocasters and Marshall amps during the early Tokyo Incidents era. No evidence of alternate guitars or amps for the riff section of this song.
Tone Character(10)
tight, punchy rhythm guitarslightly gritty, crunchy attackclear note separationarticulate single-coil claritydynamic response to pickingmid-forward presencenot heavily saturatedrhythmic, percussive feelbright, cutting top endcontrolled low end
Difficulty
The riff requires intermediate skill due to its syncopated rhythm, need for tight muting, and dynamic control to achieve the punchy, articulate attack characteristic of the recording.