Stories & Culture: David Gilmour and the tone that changed guitar
David Gilmour’s story and sound: Stratocaster, Hiwatt, Big Muff and iconic delays that changed guitar. Verified videos, albums and trivia.
Introduction
When you talk about immortal solos, you end up with David Gilmour – melodic precision, endless sustain and a sense of space that rewrote guitar language. His tone blends a well-set Fender Stratocaster, Hiwatt DR103 amps, and drives/fuzz like the Big Muff. The rest is delay and modulation—from the magnetic Binson Echorec to modern chorus and flanger. This story of sound and music culture explains why his tone shaped generations and how each gear block serves the musical idea: fewer notes, wider dynamics, expressive touch.
Gear types / key models with short notes
- Guitars: Fender Stratocaster (single-coils for clarity and snap).
- Amps: Hiwatt DR103 (huge clean headroom, dynamic response).
- Fuzz/Drive: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Ram’s Head, Tube Driver.
- Delay/Mod: Binson Echorec, analog delays, chorus/flanger.
Discography
- The Dark Side of the Moon (1973)
- Wish You Were Here (1975)
- The Wall (1979)
- The Division Bell (1994)
- On an Island (2006)
Videos
- Comfortably Numb – PULSE (1994) YouTube
- High Hopes – Live at Pompeii YouTube
- Shine On You Crazy Diamond – Official YouTube
- Echoes – Live in Gdańsk YouTube
- Wish You Were Here – Live in Gdańsk (official audio) YouTube
Trivia
- His 1969 Black Strat set auction records at Christie’s in 2019, with proceeds to charity.
- The Ram’s Head Big Muff from the 1970s is a cornerstone of his lead tone.
- The Binson Echorec shaped early Pink Floyd echo textures.
- Hiwatt heads provide massive clean headroom; saturation mostly comes from pedals.
- Pete Cornish pedalboards made his rigs robust and tour-ready.
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