An example of a first-run FZ-1A Fuzz-Tone.
Photos courtesy of Simon Murphy
1. Keith Richards' Gibson Maestro FZ-1A Fuzz-Tone
“I’ve only ever used foot pedals twice,” Keith
Richards wrote in Life, his 2010 autobiography.
As it turned out, one of those occasions happened
to be the recording of the Rolling Stones’
signature hit “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction”—one of the earliest, if not the first, uses of fuzz
in modern rock. Richards’ guitar line was supposed
to be a scratch track for a horn section,
“so I could give a shape to what the horns were
supposed to do. But the fuzz tone had never
been heard before anywhere, and that’s the
sound that caught everybody’s imagination.”

Nashville studio engineer Glen Snoddy
had stumbled onto the original fuzz sound
in 1960, when an overloaded transformer
shorted-out in one of the Langevin tube
modules he was using to record an electric
6-string “tic-tac” bass. He designed a transistorized
version of the effect and sold it to
Gibson in 1962. “At first I was mortified,”
Richards says, describing how he felt when he
happened to hear “Satisfaction” blaring over
a radio station in Minnesota. “We didn’t even
know Andrew [Loog Oldham, the Stones’
manager] had put the [expletive] thing out!
[But it was] the record of the summer of ’65,
so I’m not arguing.”
YouTube It