In the fuzz realm, there’s an allure to the
circuits of the ’70s that attracts a very
obsessive crowd. They prowl for that perfect,
sinewy, buzz-saw sustain that’s graced
the work of everyone from Pink Floyd to
the Isley Brothers—the tones of silicon Fuzz
Faces and the legendary “triangle” and “ram’s
head” versions of the Electro-Harmonix Big
Muff. These pedals and their counterparts
regained popularity in the ’90s when a new
breed of guitar misfits from Mudhoney to
Sonic Youth and Dinosaur Jr. reclaimed the
tone for their own, and the resurgence in
popularity sent price tags for what were once
junk-shop relics sky high. Given the hundreds
of dollars those originals now fetch,
many fuzz-cult devotees have given up the
Craigslist and eBay runaround and turned
to boutique gear for their fuzz fixes.
For some such characters, the Caroline
Guitar Company may have the answer.
After achieving success with its homage
to op-amp excellence, the Wave Cannon
OD/Fuzz, the Columbia, South Carolina,
company set its sights on a classic transistorbased
fuzz. And as the name suggests to
fans of the Melvins, Nirvana, and other
fuzz-freak bands, the Olympia traces a line
back through the Pacific Northwest of the
’90s with filthy grace. With some help from
the Kickstarter.com fundraising platform,
Caroline Guitar Co. far exceeded their
monetary goal to push the Olympia into the
testing and production phases. Now available
internationally, this stompbox touts a
wide breadth of color that’s certain to please
the pickiest old-school fuzz fans.
Blues for the Sun
The Olympia’s fuzzed-out chaos is managed
through manipulation of volume (indicated
by a speaker symbol) and gain (a bolt from
Zeus, of course). The knobs are placed perfectly
for quick foot-control during a gig—
tight, but not too tight, and right up at the
top of the pedal.
Within the blueberry-colored enclosure
you’ll find a lesson in compact design. No
space is wasted in accommodating the 9V
battery, 3DPT true-bypass setup, jacks, and
circuit board. Shielded jacks protect 1/4"
input and output cables from interference,
and should you choose to go with a battery
over an adapter, it will rest securely below
the footswitch with little to no movement.
On the whole, the Olympia feels tough and
ready for real gigging and a lifetime on a
working player’s pedalboard.
Amber Waves of Gain
With both knobs at high noon, a
Stratocaster plugged into its input, and
a 50-watt Bassman stocked with four
Celestion Vintage 30s at the other end of the
line, the Olympia growls with grungy lead
tones. Background noise, however, is virtually—
and most impressively—nonexistent.
Power chords at these settings had the
Bassman positively booming and burning
(figuratively, of course). If you’re looking for
a more aggressive J. Mascis or Mudhoney
tone, you’ll want to kick gain up to 2 or 3
o’clock. At this level, the Olympia delivers
whiplash lead tones with a heap of bass
presence, a sweet, sharp high end, and a
responsiveness that coaxed nuances from
both sides of the spectrum, depending on
picking intensity. It’s clearer—more transparent
even—than the suffocated, almost
synth-like output that Big Muff-based pedals
sometimes have.
With a Les Paul driving the works, you
can delve further into woolly regions like
those on Sabbath Bloody Sabbath. Maxing
the gain gives you those aggressive Iommi
tones without sacrificing picking dynamics,
while backing off the gain increases the
detail in note-to-note interplay and gives
you the bark and bite you associate with
Jimmy Page’s more stinging moments form
the first four Zep LPs. You may want to
kick up the volume a tad if you’re sticking
with humbuckers, as the difference between
a clean signal from a hot humbucker and
the Olympia with everything at noon is less
than pronounced. Even so, there’s more than
enough headroom to help you rise to bombastic
levels when you kick the pedal on.
If you’re yearning for a more ethereal
lead tone, the Olympia also works great
with a high-headroom, open-back amp like
a Fender Twin Reverb. In these airier environs,
the Olympia’s lower frequencies blend
exceptionally well with the brighter tones—
especially in loud, live settings. Against a
fuzz-saturated bass and a second overdriven
guitar, the Olympia cut without the aid of a
separate overdrive. And with the gain raised
near full mast, you can achieve the opulent,
round, and raging sound of a Sovtek-built
Big Muff without giving up any clarity.
Stack some reverb on top of this roar, and
you’ll be deep in shoegazing bliss—teetering
on the edge of outlandish feedback and
squealing harmonic overtones, especially
with single-coil in the blend.
The Verdict
Searching for the right fuzz can lead to a lot
of pedals that do one thing really well. But
the Olympia provides both authentic Muff
and Fuzz Face tones. Even better, it actually
has more clarity and broader harmonic content
than what you’ll find in many Muff and
Fuzz Face specimens, which means it can
cover a lot of ground and suit multitudinous
combinations of guitar and amplifier. The
fact that Caroline Guitar Co. has managed
to build a classic-sounding fuzz that excels in
terms of fidelity and versatility at a reasonable
price, suggests the Olympia is bound for
more than a few fuzz freaks’ short lists.