My Spookiest Scariest Pedals!
Happy Halloween! Sometimes guitar pedals can be downright terrifying, and here are four of my spookiest. Enjoy!
Happy Halloween! Sometimes guitar pedals can be downright terrifying, and here are four of my spookiest. Enjoy!
The Spaceman Delta II is called a harmonic tremolo, but to leave it at that would be a disservice. It’s actually an effect that can blend between a traditional and an offset, rhythmic harmonic tremolo with a host of unique features to shape your sound, including a three-way toggle to shape sound. #HarmonicTremolo #GuitarPedal #PedalDemo
The Astrolicious Fuzz is a collaboration between Spruce and Dirge, is based on the Sam Ash Astrotone, and sold out in like ten minutes. But can this thing really be worth the hype? Did I set an alarm to buy this for nothing?
Well let’s just say I’m not listing it on Reverb anytime soon.
The Speed Tripper is the second collaboration between @deathbyaudio and @LEVITATION and it doesn’t disappoint. It’s a psychadelic delay with an optical phaser that you can feed into the feedback path of the delay circuit for warped, melting echo tones that can add undulating sweetness or absolute fury.
Man, Squier is making some killer guitars these days, including this fancy pants Contemporary Telecaster RH with surprisingly responsive SQR humbucking pickups and flourishes.
Born out of their absolutely incredible temperature controlled germanium fuzz, the @Benson Amps #Germanium boost is a clean linear boost that promises the good stuff without the “weird artifacts” you used to just kinda have to live with, like that temperature sensitivity, drift, not-so-great input impedance and headroom.
Basically, it’s your tone but with more spunk and punch, and yes, it’ll drive your amp (or amp in a box). Even at its mid-to-low settings it helps more of your instrument’s character shine through.
Earlier this summer, Squier announced new colors for their much-loved Paranormal series, including this hot-hot-hot sparkly Super-Sonic!
What you could once only do with MIDI or your foot you can now do with the power of the Old Blood Noise Endeavors Expression Ramper! Seen here with the Chase Bliss Audio and Benson Amps Automatone Preamp MKII.
If the name wasn’t a tip-off, this ain’t no polite-type fuzz. It’s a gnarly beast that blends in two-octaves down, has a low-pass filter, and can get some truly wild and fun tones. Oh, and it’s a collaboration with King Buzzo from The Melvins.
Because why not?