Practice Studio

Metallica - High Plains Drifter - Guitar Solo Tab

Sections · Loop · Speed · Metronome

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Speed Control

Speed
100%

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BPM
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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.

About High Plains Drifter


At 120 BPM in E Standard, "High Plains Drifter" sits in a comfortable mid-tempo range for Metallica, but comfortable does not mean easy. The track is a live B-side-style piece from 1987, and it leans heavily on the tight, percussive rhythm guitar work that defines Thrash Metal: palm-muted low-string chugging that demands right-hand consistency and clean string separation. Getting those muted passages to lock in with the kick drum is the real challenge here, not pure speed. The picking hand needs to stay relaxed and even, otherwise the chug loses its punch and starts to blur. Use the Practice Toolbar to isolate any transition where the muting pattern shifts, and loop it slowed down until your pick attack is uniform every single time. Focus on keeping the fretting hand pressure consistent too, since inconsistent pressure is what usually turns clean chugs into muddy ones.

  • The track sits at 120 BPM in E Standard, making right-hand palm-muting consistency the main technical focus rather than sheer picking speed.
  • Tight low-string chugging anchors the rhythm guitar part, so practise with a metronome to lock your pick attack precisely to the beat.
  • Looping the muting transitions slowed down with the Practice Toolbar will help expose any inconsistency in your right-hand pressure and timing.

How to Play High Plains Drifter

Tuning: E Standard · Tempo: 120 BPM

Use the section loop to isolate a passage, drop the speed below 100%, and set the metronome to 120 BPM to build it up to tempo.

Gibson Les Paul Standard
Guitar

Gibson Les Paul Standard

Kirk Hammett's vintage 1959 'Greeny' Les Paul Standard delivers warmer, more dynamic PAF-style tones that contrast his EMG-equipped ESP guitars, adding organic sustain to his lead work. This guitar's traditional construction gives his solos a thicker, less compressed character than his signature models.

Gibson Les Paul Custom
Guitar

Gibson Les Paul Custom

While not Hammett's primary choice, the Les Paul Custom shares the Les Paul's warm PAF pickup character and thick body resonance, offering heavier players an alternative to Strat-style designs for achieving Metallica's crushing rhythm tones.

Gibson Explorer
Guitar

Gibson Explorer

James Hetfield's early Gibson Explorer established his signature angular shape and thick body tone, delivering the aggressive midrange attack essential to Metallica's crushing rhythm style before his ESP signature models became his primary tool.

Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier
Amp

Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier

Kirk Hammett's Dual Rectifier heads provide the high-gain, midrange-forward aggression that lets his solos cut through Hetfield's scooped rhythm tone, creating definition and clarity in Metallica's dense wall of distortion.

EMG 81
Pickup

EMG 81

Hetfield's bridge EMG 81 delivers the hot, compressed output with tight low-end that defines Metallica's palm-muted riffs, the ceramic magnet and active preamp cutting through heavy arrangements with focused, aggressive attack.

EMG 60
Pickup

EMG 60

Both guitarists use the neck EMG 60 for warmer, more articulate rhythm tones and smoother lead voicings, balancing the 81's aggression with clearer note definition across Metallica's dense arrangements.

Play with Backing Track

Play with Backing Track

Solo (Backing Track)

Solo (Backing Track)