Guitars, Pedals, Amps: Ism!

Thursday 9 April 2009

A Distortion Dilemma


Now when it comes to overdrive and distortion I think it's safe to say that I'm an obsessive. I've been searching for THAT sound in my head ever since I first flicked the channel switch on my first ever practice amp and made sweet (well not so sweet if I am being honest) distortion for the first time.

I've owned several overdrive and distortion pedals over the years and the first one that I bought was an Ibanez DS-7 which was recommended to me by an assistant in a guitar shop when I didn't really know what I was looking for. I was pretty content with it when I tried it in store but the more I played with it the more disappointed I got with it. To be honest I still use it occasionally when I am after a horrible filthy bass distortion but if you are looking for Ibanez pedals stick with their much better reissue series.

The second pedal I bought was an Electro Harmonix Big Muff Pi (The made in NYC version) purely because I wanted to sound like I was in Smashing Pumpkins. This is still one of my favourite all time pedals, it generates a harmonically rich, creamy distortion that is superb for single note lines and power chords but lacks a little clarity with normal chord work. When I started gigging I paired it with a trusty Boss SD-1 which provided me with a cleaner, more natural and dynamic sounding overdrive and allowed me to cut through the mix when playing rhythm parts. My bands Sound Engineer Joe tells me at the end of every gig to get rid of the SD-1 because he is sick of the sound of Boss pedals (and who can blame him when over 10 million of them have been sold since they were first released!)

After a few gigs though I soon realised the great flaw of my beloved big muff, the rich, deep sound might have sounded great on its own but I'm not in a three piece grunge band, I'm in an 8 piece where my guitar needs to be relatively low in the mix a lot of the time and the muff just wasn't cutting the mustard. While looking for a solution I saw a guitar player using a Pro Co Rat reissue and thought it sounded great and there was soon one winging its way to me in the post.

Here I learned a valuable lesson... I ordered the pedal online without even trying one first based purely on the assumption that it would work with my set up. Yes I'm young, foolish and above all too lazy to take a 20 minute train ride into the centre of London where a PLETHORA of albeit quite average (vintage and rare and Macari's excused) guitar stores are waiting for me to come and test their wares. Although the Rat cut through the mix, it just wasn't the sound I was after. Never mind, maybe one day I'll get it modified by Robert Keeley and maximise it's true face melting potential.

I've been working in guitar shops for a few years now and I'll admit that I've become a bit of a gear snob. Anything labelled as 'boutique' or 'hand wired' gets me all excited and high price tags seem insignificant when all you can focus on is pure, unadulterated TONE. I've decided that my setup requires a twin distortion pedal so that I can have my rhythm channel and a lead channel and easily switch between the two. I found that trying to use two separate pedals to achieve the same effect just causes one pedal to compress the hell out of the other which is just no good at all.

As previously mentioned I had already pretty much made my mind up on the superb sounding Fulltone Full Drive 2 Mosfet but then this time I decided that I wasn't going to be made a fool of and started researching the market. I found a great article on the Gibson Website where they compare some of the most respected boutique pedals on the market to the new range of Visual Sound pedals and this turned me on to the potential of their Jekyll and Hyde (as used by the Strokes but don't let that put you off...) Following this I started talking to a few of the many sales reps that visit my shop and was turned on to the new Bones series by Tonebone (none of the three really cut it for me after trying them all in series) and now I've been told to check out T-Rex pedals (the distributor is kindly lending me a few next week!) and after checking out their superb website and listening to some demos I have high hopes that their Dr. Swamp pedal may just take the title of being my go to overdrive.

What I have discovered is that almost every guitar company and its mum and churning out overdrive and distortion pedals like it's nobodies business... None of them seem content with just making ONE damn good overdrive and ONE damn good distortion and then maybe putting both of them in the same box for folks like me! Be warned that if you are looking to upgrade your pedal board that it's not going to be an easy ride.

4 comments:

  1. What amp are you using? Is there any reason you need your overdrive sound in a pedal rather than using a tube amp with a good crunch sound, and then boosting that for lead?

    As for Boss pedals, they sell well for a reason; they all sound pretty damn good. Also it's good to persue a good sound, but don't get too caught up in it - remember 99% of the audience won't be able to hear the difference between a £20 Behringer distortion and a £200 handwired jobby..

    ReplyDelete
  2. I use an Orange Rocker 30 combo which produces the best overdrive sounds when the front end is pushed by a nice pedal. It also doesn't have an effects loop and I use a lot of delay so using the amps distortion would distort my delay trail in a way I don't want it to.

    Don't get me wrong, I love boss pedals and I swear by my SD-1 (I also have a BF-2) and I know that the audience don't care about my tone but I do! I play a lot of gigs with several bands in the line up and when we all have boss pedals we all end up sounding pretty much the same and I just want something that will set me apart from that.

    ReplyDelete
  3. wow that's a great amp!

    Don't you get to try tons of pedals at work? Yeh understand about wanting to sound unique; keep us all updated on what you eventually go for!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Hi Matt

    Nice to see you have put your combined literary & musical talents to good use!

    I've become somewhat of a FOXROX devotee in recent times & now own:

    * the AQUAVIBE (IMO the only UniVibe clone worth owning due to its "center" control, rate control via either a large foot-tweakable knob [oh missus!] or external expression pedal [you can use an EV-5 in the socket] & balanced CH & VB modes),

    * OCTRON 2 (I will write about this elsewhere)

    * & the uniquely designed, toneful & uber-versatile ZIM (w/ 2 Muff cards: 1 set to a fatter tone via the unique onboard non-swept phase-based tone modifier). Can a man ever get enough Muff? Actually it's more like a Muff going into an overdrive (within each card) & is more mid-focused, losing the very highs & very lows (no bad thing) - very, very tasty!! My version 6 '81 EH Muff (transistor-based, unlike the op-amp abomination that immediately preceded it) is currently off the board, though still will stay in the collection, as it each pedal is it's own thing.

    I intend to get another ZIM (with all cards just to make sure, although I'm thinking that the VT in A & the TAR+ - or possibly the B-9 - in B could be just the ticket).

    The well-made & superbly-designed custom cases (w/ lower step for switching & different coloured lights for each switch, no "Hammond Box" or MXR-style "Bud-Box" type retreads here, nor unnecessary effete paint-jobs), silent switching true bypass & features like a send & return in between the ZIM's A & B units (not "channels" per se) put the Foxrox stuff in a league of its own. Other boutique pedals seem like quaint toys in comparison. Very well priced for the quality too. Dave Fox in New Jersey is a master at his craft & I cannot commend hid work highly enough.

    Also I have to disagree about channels being preferable to cascading. You just need to really experiment with dialing in the optimal tone, gain & volume controls on each dirt box (or of each unit inside a dual overdrive pedal), not to mention choose the right sounds in the first place.

    As a drive-maniac I still think that I'll need to keep a unit with a valve inside on the board too, although I may replace the Vox Big Ben (a brilliant OD, better than my vintage US-made '82 Proco Rat, or a BD-2 - both great pedals IMO - or my Ibanez reissue TS-9, which does not cut it apart from being used as a drive min./volume max. booster) with a Butler Tube Driver w/Bias control & separate bass & treble controls.

    Why use a few words, when a few hundred will do, eh? ;D

    Click on the ZIM link to the left of this page:

    http://www.foxroxelectronics.com/

    Check out the swappable cards here:

    http://www.foxroxelectronics.com/ZIMCardframeset.html

    Forum thread here:

    http://www.thegearpage.net/board/showthread.php?t=192962

    Be well! -

    Troy

    ReplyDelete