One of the things that
sets Akron, Ohio’s
EarthQuaker Devices apart is
a very broad view of what the
guitar can do and the many
shapes that music can take. That
collective mindset among the
EarthQuaker staff, along with a
wealth of engineering wizardry,
makes the EarthQuaker line the
stompbox equivalent of a well-stocked
kitchen—with the goods
to cook up everything from
meat-and-potatoes rock tones to
psychedelic bouillabaisse.
At first listen, the new
Organizer, which (duh) generates
organ-like tones based on your
guitar’s input, probably seems
most suited for the latter category.
But EarthQuaker’s thoughtful
and streamlined design make it
a very tweakable pedal that can
just as easily be used to subtly
color a chord sequence as create
musical melodrama.
Church Architecture
The Organizer has just enough
knobs to induce a reflexive
“uh-oh” as you extract it from
the box. But what you’ll find
not long after plugging it in is
that the Organizer is intuitive
and downright simple. The up
knob controls the level of your
octave-up signal. Down does
the same for the octave-down
signal. And the choir knob adds
a much more complex flavor—a blend of two-octave-up and
two-octave-down voices with a
delayed dry signal that can be
massive sounding.
On the bottom row of knobs
there’s a lag control, which adds
a range of very short, slapback-like
delay to the octave-up and
octave-down signals. The tone
control brightens the signal as
you twist it clockwise, while the
direct signal controls the relative
amount of dry and wet signal.
To the Temple!
EarthQuaker cites the infamous
Guitorgan as a source of inspiration
for the Organizer. And while
the voice of the Organizer is
geared more toward the Baldwin-style
sounds of the Guitorgan
than the Vox Guitar Organ’s
reedier combo-organ sounds, the
DSP-generated Organizer voice
is more akin to the sound of a
church organ. The basic voice is
also colored by a slight oscillation
that’s most pronounced when
there’s a lot of high-end content.
Just about any guitar or
pickup will work well with
the Organizer—even the harmonic
complexities of a 12-string
remain clear through the color
wash of the Organizer. The best
pickup match, however, was a
clean, neck-position humbucker
with a touch of tone roll-off,
which contributes a nice balance
of body and simple sine-wave
content that doesn’t clutter
the rich voice of the Organizer
too much. And though the
Organizer adds a lot of additional
hues, little of your guitar signal’s
character or playing dynamics are
lost in the process, and the pedal
tracks bends and finger vibrato
perfectly—even when wet-signal
content is very high.
When you crank the down,
choir, and lag controls, and add a
touch of up-octave and high-end
content, you can lose track of
entire hours of your life, blissing
out endlessly to simple first-position
chord strumming—especially
with the addition of a little
outboard delay and reverb. The
sounds at these levels are those
of a deep-space cathedral, and a
light, patient touch works best in
this context—heavy strumming is
the one playing approach that will
overwhelm the Organizer a bit.
Bringing in the octave-up content
adds a cool warble that turns
arpeggiated triads into the sounds
of a haunted carousel with a touch
of glockenspiel tones on top—and
this effect is especially effective on
high strings past the 5th fret.
The Organizer isn’t strictly
about over-the-top, spooky atmospheres
though. Rolling back
the lag and octave-up content
entirely gets you a very funky,
cool cross between a very smooth
octave pedal and a Hammond
organ’s pedal tones, which is fantastic
for adding unexpected color
to jazz chords, blues shuffles, and
funky leads, or adding a baritone/
bass voice when your bassist fails
to show for practice.
The Verdict
While it takes a little time and an
open mind to uncover the whole
of the Organizer’s potential, it is
ultimately a pedal of impressive
and varied capabilities. And you
could easily score an ambient,
sci-fi movie soundtrack one night
and rock a juke joint with King
Curtis jams the next with little
more than this stompbox.
There are times that leave
you wishing the Organizer could
do just a touch more. A switch
for an additional voice—a more
combo organ-like or Hammond-like
sound, for instance—would
be cool. And the ability to add
simple harmonies like thirds
and fifths—a capability that
exists in EarthQuaker’s Rainbow
Machine—might make the
Organizer a bit more versatile.
It’s hard to say what these additions
might add to the cost of
the pedal—not to mention
headaches in a live context. But
if you focus on all the things the
Organizer can do, you’re bound
to uncover a trove of textures
and sounds that will expand your
repertoire, spur creative composition,
and approach your playing
in fresh, new ways.