Practice Studio

Faith No More - Epic - Guitar Lesson

Sections · Loop · Speed · Metronome

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Speed Control

Speed
100%

Tools

BPM
Key C# minor
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Amp Settings

Classic Rock

Gain6
Bass6
Mid7
Treble6
Presence5
Master7
AI tone preset

AI-selected preset based on genre and era — adjust the knobs to taste.

Roll back the gain slightly and pick near the neck for a warmer, more open crunch.

Capo Advisor 0 C# minor · Original key

About Epic


The central guitar hook in "Epic" is deceptively simple but surprisingly tricky to lock in cleanly. Jim Martin plays a tight, angular riff built around C# minor that sits right in the pocket at 100 BPM, so any sloppiness in your pick attack is immediately exposed. The challenge is not speed but precision: keeping those chunky, palm-muted chugs consistent while the rhythm around you shifts between the rap-rock verses and the heavier, more open chorus sections. E Standard tuning means no retuning headaches, but the riff does ask you to be deliberate about where you mute and where you let notes ring. If the transition between the verse riff and the chorus feels rushed, pull it up on the Practice Toolbar and loop it slowed down until the timing feels natural. Faith No More sit at the harder end of Alternative Metal, and this track is a solid introduction to the controlled aggression that genre demands from a rhythm player.

  • The main riff runs in C# minor in E Standard tuning, relying on precise palm muting and controlled note separation rather than speed.
  • At 100 BPM the rhythm guitar part sits in a mid-tempo groove where timing and consistency of pick attack are more demanding than any individual technique.
  • Practise the shift between the palm-muted verse riff and the more open chorus chords separately before joining them up at full tempo.

How to Play Epic

Tuning: E Standard · Key: C# minor · Tempo: 100 BPM

Use the section loop to isolate a passage, drop the speed below 100%, and set the metronome to 100 BPM to build it up to tempo.

Fender Telecaster
Guitar

Fender Telecaster

Jon Hudson deployed the Telecaster's bright, articulate single-coils to cut through Faith No More's dense arrangements with clarity and definition. Its twangy character provided tonal contrast to Jim Martin's thick Les Paul, allowing Hudson to voice atmospheric textures and rhythmic accents without getting lost in the mix.

Gibson Les Paul Standard
Guitar

Gibson Les Paul Standard

The Les Paul Standard's warm humbuckers and mahogany body deliver the thick, sustaining tone that Faith No More needed for both crushing rhythm riffs and smooth blues-influenced leads. Its moderate output maintains dynamic range for clean passages while pushing the amp hard enough for the band's heavy, scooped-midrange distortion.

Gibson Les Paul Custom
Guitar

Gibson Les Paul Custom

Jim Martin's signature black Les Paul Custom became the backbone of Faith No More's heavy sound, with its thick mahogany body and set neck providing maximum sustain and warmth. The stock Gibson humbuckers perfectly paired with his Mesa amps to produce the scooped, aggressive low-end that defined the band's rhythmic foundation.

Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier
Amp

Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier

The Dual Rectifier gave Jim Martin the tight, aggressive low-end and scooped midrange essential to Faith No More's crushing rhythm tone while offering smooth lead channels for bluesy solos. This amp's gain staging and responsiveness to input dynamics made it ideal for Martin's relatively simple signal chain, letting the amp do the heavy lifting.

Dunlop Cry Baby Wah
Pedal

Dunlop Cry Baby Wah

Jim Martin's Cry Baby wah became a signature element of Faith No More's sound, used extensively for solos and occasional rhythm accents to add expression and movement. The wah's dynamic response to his playing made it the perfect complement to his minimalist effects approach, serving as his primary tone-shaping tool beyond the amp.

Play with Backing Track

Play with Backing Track

Solo (Backing Track)

Solo (Backing Track)