For all the ominousness that the year
2012 portends for some, it’s a wonderland
out there for stompbox nuts—a
veritable land o’ plenty, especially if you dig
fuzz. One of the most beautiful things about
the new fuzz explosion is that the more
enterprising and visionary fuzz builders
are moving way beyond the tried-and-true
templates. Death by Audio has been doing
creative work on this front since the turn of
the century, and the irreverent tribe of pedal
tweakers from Brooklyn, New York, now
maintains a line of pedals from the simple
but effective Interstellar Overdriver to the
Robot 8-bit synthesizer pedal. The latest,
the Apocalypse, is perfect for 2012—both
because of its end-times-approved name,
and its forward-looking and freethinking
approach to fuzz. And with its intuitive,
5-mode control set, it puts copious amounts
of sonic brutality at your fingertips.
Controlled Mayhem
The Apocalypse’s aesthetics reflect a clear
love of late-’60s and early-’70s synth and
consumer-electronics designs without looking
slavishly retro or frivolous. The knobs are the
same type you’d see on an old Minimoog,
and the unit is even labeled with cool waveform-
shape graphics that would be at home
on an old analog synth. The cool blue-green
powder finish and black-and-white sparkle
paint graphics are sharp, bold, and clear.
The control layout itself is simple. But
this relatively easy-to-navigate control
set can lead you down a myriad of tonetweaking
paths. Volume and drive knobs
perform obvious functions. But the larger
sweepable frequency equalizer (SFE) knob,
which determines whether the unit emphasizes
bass or treble frequencies, is the ticket
to opening up the pedal’s potential. The
unit can be powered via a 9V battery or an
optional AC power supply.
Five Means to Furious Fuzz
The Apocalypse’s five modes—scoup,
square wave, wave form shifter, octavious,
and gainiac—are less cryptically named
than they might first appear. As its name
suggests, scoup mode has a mid-scooped,
metal-friendly EQ curve. It’s a great means
of nailing headbanging tones from the ’80s
onward, but it also gives you the spongier
response of a fuzz circuit. Stoner- and
doom-metal guitarists are bound to love
this setting. Rolling SFE back toward the
bass side produces a massive, subwooferpunishing
growl, with just a hint of highend
sizzle. Rolling back drive gets you a bit
more dynamic response on top of the bonecrushing
tones. The relatively low output of
scoup mode reveals that there’s some serious
noise gating at work, but it’s masterfully
implemented and doesn’t adversely affect
the musicality of the signal decay. It can
also effectively massage the noisier output
of single-coils, even with the unit’s volume
and drive knobs dimed.
Square wave mode is adapted from
Death by Audio’s Fuzz War pedal and has
significantly more midrange and much
higher output than scoup mode. It also
exhibits super-strong resonance and sustain,
and, depending on where you set SFE, you
can very specifically focus on the frequency
band for which you want to enhance resonance.
Drive also has a significant impact
on the signal, taking it from a very light
overdrive to a blistering, harmonically rich
wall of sustaining fuzz.
Wave form shifter mode uses two JFET
transistors and is similar to square wave
mode in terms of dynamics and frequency
response. Although it sounds a little less
resonant and harmonically rich than square
wave mode, it has more output and a bit
more distortion, enabling very focused and
cutting sounds that work well for separating
a solo from a busy mix.
Octavious mode serves up a shot of
beautifully balanced, brutal octave-up fuzz.
It’ll hold together for chording without
getting muddy, indistinct, or fractured.
And the octave tone is accompanied by a
blistering, gritty fuzz that hints at the voice
of a Fuzz Face. In typical Death by Audio
form, however, it gives you way more
distortion than a vintage unit. With drive
set high, a humbucker-equipped Gibson
SG sings and sustains at flesh-searing levels
without any ugly decay. In short, the
Apocalypse’s octavious mode is simply one
of the best octave-plus-distortion sounds
I’ve ever heard.
If you’ve moved through all these fuzz
permutations and still haven’t tapped into
enough gain, you might just be a little
twisted. In which case, you’ll love gainiac
mode. Even at low drive settings, it pumps
out full-bore distortion. It also has substantially
higher output than any other mode,
making it great for torturing the front end
of a tube amp and mixing its distortion
with the Apocalypse’s. But when you kick
up the drive, that’s when the truly whacked
fun begins—the unit induces gloriously
musical feedback and overtones. Turning
SFE toward the treble-boost range varies
the intensity of the feedback. Back off
drive slightly, and the feedback is easier to
control, but the Apocalypse still puts out a
thick, compressed distortion that’s hot as a
crackling skillet of bacon grease.
The Verdict
At $270, the Apocalypse’s price can seem a
bit steep for a fuzz with just a few controls.
But that simplicity belies amazing versatility
that yields some of the best fuzz tones
you’ll encounter in any pedal. The octave
fuzz is nothing short of brutally gorgeous.
The Gainiac channel guarantees bleeding ears
if that’s what you crave, but you can access
more conventional, super-thick, and overtone-
rich fuzz tones, too. If you’re a fuzz guru
who needs a multitude of tones in a single,
simple unit, it’s worth giving the Death by
Audio Apocalypse an extended work out.