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How to get cocteau twins guitar tone in 10 minutes!

Josh Scott breaks down exactly how to recreate one of rock's most distinctive guitar tones—the shimmer-drenched sound of Cocteau Twins—using nothing but JHS Pedals. This is the kind of deep gear dissection you'd pay for in a clinic, delivered free on YouTube.

The Gear Breakdown

Cocteau Twins relied on some unusual equipment to get their signature chorus tone. For the song "Heaven or Las Vegas" from their 1990 record, they used a Roland Dimension D for chorus—a vintage analog chorus known for its glittery, three-dimensional quality. Scott substitutes the Emperor (JHS's three-series chorus) as an excellent alternative.

How to get cocteau twins guitar tone in 10 minutes!

The opening riff includes pitch shifting from a Lexicon unit. Since JHS doesn't have a standalone pitch effect, Scott uses the Octave Reverb instead, which adds shimmer and shine—a solid replacement for that elusive octave tone.

For delay, they used a TC 2290 digital delay—subtle but present on the record. The Flight Delay in digital mode handles this perfectly.

The amp was a Marshall 9000 tube preamp: rack gear plugged directly into the board, producing ridiculously clean guitar tones compressed to tape. For this ultra-clean sound, Scott uses the Pulp and Peel with XLR output as an amp replacement, plus adds compression at the end of the chain.

Signal Chain Options

The core setup places the Pulp and Peel (as DI) at the heart of the tone. Compression is cranked, blend set just under noon at around 11, EQ cranked—and Scott loves the tilt EQ that boosts highs while cutting lows when turned up, or boosts lows while cutting highs when turned down.

The Octave Reverb goes at the front of the chain—unorthodox but Scott believes pitch effects work better early in the chain where they affect fundamental frequencies less. Decay is turned down almost to an octave room, creating ambient shimmer ideal for live environments.

The Emperor Chorus runs in chorus mode with triangle waveform—the triangle produces shimmery highs compared to sine waves—and pairs with the Pulp and Peel tone.

Flight Delay sits last, adding subtle space and length.

For a more traditional approach, put compression at the beginning where it belongs, Octave Reverb after delay where it belongs, and use Clover as the DI preamp. This gives more EQ options: treble boosted slightly, middle boosted a tad, bass dialed to taste. The three-series compressor at the front with bright toggle adds even more shimmer.

Switching Between Tones

For those who don't want to replace their amp entirely, an AB switcher lets you toggle between DI and amp. Simply take the output of your last pedal, send it to the input of the AB, then run one output to DI and the other to your amp—switching instantly between them.

For simultaneous use, an ABY mixer sends both signals at once: DI on one side, amp on the other, creating a massive stereo blend that sounds incredible through the PA system.

Taking It Stereo

The Emperor's stereo feature moves the entire sound concept to another level. Place it at the very end of the chain before your amps. Plug the left channel into Clover and the right into Dream—creating more three-dimensional movement than ever.

"This is a great way to get the best of both worlds."

Critics might note that recreating vintage gear tones exactly may not translate perfectly to every live environment—the room acoustics, PA system, and monitoring all affect how closely you can match the studio sound. The original analog chorus units (Roland Dimension D) remain discontinued and increasingly hard to source, meaning exact replication depends entirely on what equipment you already own.

Bottom Line

Scott's deep knowledge of both the original Cocteau Twins gear and JHS equivalents makes this guide genuinely useful for players chasing that ethereal tone. His strongest insight: using modern digital pedals as replacements for vintage analog units isn't about matching the past perfectly—it's about finding the same emotional quality (shimmer, space, clean headroom) with available equipment. The biggest vulnerability is that some of these sounds are inherently tied to specific discontinued gear; you can get close but never identical. If you're starting a Cocteau Twins cover band or just love that tone, this gives you an actual roadmap worth following.

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How to get cocteau twins guitar tone in 10 minutes!

by Josh Scott · JHS Pedals · Watch video

Do you like glittery chorus drenched guitar? Well, the Cocku twins have some of the best examples of that. So, today I'm going to take a look at the song Heaven or Las Vegas from their 1990 record Heaven or Las Vegas. And I'm going to spend the next 37 days deep diving and dissecting Nick.

Nick, we do not have time for that type of episode today. But I want to. Your how to sound like the edge episode took forever. But I just feel like this could be a 10-minute episode and you can only use JHS pedals.

But I was just feeling like Please get it done. Fine. Okay. Sorry I threw a little baby tantrum, but I've got some stuff that we can work with.

Let's get started. The Cocku twins actually have a page on their website that's dedicated to archiving a lot of the gear that they use. So if you are interested in looking deeper into it, you can go check out that website. Based on the gear that they use on this song, I have picked some JHS pedals that will be good substitutes, kind of like Splenda.

That's funny. For chorus, they'd use the Roland Dimension D. For that, I'm going to use the Emperor, but the 3 series chorus is an excellent alternative. There is a little bit of pitch shifting happening on this opening riff, and that is coming from a Lexicon pitch shifter.

we have a problem because we don't have a pitch effect, unfortunately, Josh. So, to replace that, I'm going to use the octave reverb. I'm going to essentially let this be my octave sound. Yes, it's not a standalone octave effect, but it adds a lot of shimmer and shine, and that's what this sound needs.

For delay, they use the TC 2290, which is a digital delay. So, I'm going to use the flight delay in digital mode to replace that. On the record, the delay is very subtle. You can barely hear it, but I feel like it does actually add a lot.

For the amp, they use a Marshall 9000 tube preamp. This was a piece of rack gear that they plugged directly into the board and they would compress their guitars to tape. It is ridiculously clean. So, to simulate that super clean sound, I'm going to use the pulp and ...