Practice Studio

Iron Maiden - The Duellists Dave Murray's - Guitar Solo Tab

Sections · Loop · Speed · Metronome

Not in tune?

Select a Loop

Start of your loop
End of your loop

Speed Control

Speed
100%

Tools

BPM
PLAY WITH BACKING TRACK
·
–50¢ 0 +50¢
· Tap to start

Your browser will ask for microphone permission.

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.

About The Duellists Dave Murray's


Twin-guitar interplay is at the heart of this Iron Maiden track, and Dave Murray's contribution in particular rewards close study. The piece sits in E Standard tuning at 120 BPM, a tempo that feels comfortable until you try to lock in the precise rhythmic phrasing and keep your picking clean under pressure. Much of the work here demands tight alternate picking and an ear for how two guitar parts weave around each other without colliding. Getting that interplay right is where most players will need the most patience. Use the Practice Toolbar to isolate the trickier melodic runs and loop them slowed down until your pick attack and fretting are synchronized. The heavy metal feel relies on controlled palm muting in the rhythm sections balanced against singing lead lines, so switching confidently between those two textures is a key skill this song builds.

  • Running at 120 BPM in E Standard tuning, the song demands clean alternate picking to keep the melodic runs articulate at full speed.
  • Dave Murray's guitar parts feature twin-guitar harmony lines that require careful attention to timing and pitch matching if you are playing both parts.
  • Practising the transitions between palm-muted rhythm sections and open lead lines will build the dynamic control this song asks for.

How to Play The Duellists Dave Murray's

Tuning: E Standard · Tempo: 164 BPM

Loop the hardest passage and creep the speed up from around 70 percent until it holds at 164 BPM.

Fender Stratocaster
Guitar

Fender Stratocaster

Iron Maiden's signature choice for heavy metal, the Strat's bright single-coils in neck and middle positions deliver the glassy, articulate tone that defines their melodic passages. Dave Murray and Adrian Smith pair bridge humbuckers with this platform to preserve pick dynamics and note definition rather than drowning in compressed gain.

Marshall JCM800
Amp

Marshall JCM800

The backbone of Maiden's iconic sound, the JCM800's moderate gain structure lets the power tubes sing without preamp saturation, preserving the punch and harmonic clarity that makes their riffs cut through a mix. Murray and Smith set gain moderately to maintain definition while pushing the amp into natural tube breakup.

Seymour Duncan JB
Pickup

Seymour Duncan JB

Adrian Smith's weapon of choice, the JB's balanced output drives Marshall amps into singing sustain without over-compressing dynamics, allowing his lead lines to breathe with clarity and snap. This moderate-output humbucker maintains the attack and articulation essential to Maiden's punchy, defined metal tone.

DiMarzio Super Distortion
Pickup

DiMarzio Super Distortion

Dave Murray's bridge pickup at 13k output strikes the perfect balance, hitting the Marshall hard enough for thick sustain yet retaining enough dynamics for expressive bending and harmonic control. It's hot enough to sing but not so overwound that it flattens the natural Strat character underneath.

Boss SD-1 Super Overdrive
Pedal

Boss SD-1 Super Overdrive

Murray and Smith use this clean boost to push their Marshalls harder during solos, adding aggression without relying on pedal distortion, keeping the tube amp saturation as the true tone source. The SD-1 preserves their natural playing dynamics while giving leads extra presence and cut.

ISP Decimator Noise Gate
Pedal

ISP Decimator Noise Gate

Smith occasionally employs this noise gate to manage feedback and hum from his high-output rig without sacrificing sustain, staying true to Maiden's philosophy of minimal pedal intervention. It's a practical tool for live performance that doesn't color the natural tube amp tone.

Play with Backing Track

Play with Backing Track

Solo (Backing Track)

Solo (Backing Track)