Premier Guitar features affiliate links to help support our content. We may earn a commission on any affiliated purchases.

Tortuga Effects Martini Dual Analog Chorus and Vibrato Pedal Review

A wide range of modulation effects in one pedal


Download Example 1
Run by owner/designer Matt Johnson, Washington-based Tortuga Effects offers an extensive product line for a one-man shop. Johnson’s eight boxes include germanium and silicon fuzzes, Roto-vibe simulators, delays, and phasers. His line also includes the candy-apple green Martini Dual Analog Chorus and Vibrato—a handwired, true bypass, 2-channel pedal built around a bucket-brigade analog chip and brimming with a universe of deep, lush, and subtle textures that can send songs and performances into interstellar or submarine spaces.

Martini Mixology

The Tortuga Martini’s dual channels are devoted to Chorus (Channel 1) and Chorus or Vibrato (Channel 2). The pedal has three knobs: Mix, Single, and Double. The two channels share the Mix knob, which controls the amount of effected signal. The Single and Double knobs control the rate for Channel 1 and 2, respectively.

A toggle switch marked Shaken and Stirred selects either chorus (Stirred) or vibrato (Shaken) on Channel 2. A footswitch marked How Strong alternates between the two channels. This setup allows you to dial in chorus on Channel 1 and vibrato or a second chorus on Channel 2, and shift between the two on the fly.

Straight Up
I took the Martini to band practice and plugged it in between a Fender combo amp and a custom Strat. Moving between light chorus and vibrato sounds gave my clean tones an organic shimmer that made my amp sound more lush and, frankly, more expensive. And even with heavy distortion, the Martini rang through with clarity and expansiveness.

On my own, I experimented with moving between some deeper textures on the two channels—toying with Andy Summers-styled chorus sounds and vibrato colors ranging from deep-sea sonics to gentle surf and spaghetti-Western throb. But the real payoff for the 2-channel setup came during gigs, where I could dial in an understated chorus on Channel 1, set the toggle to Stirred for my thick “Purple Rain” tone on Channel 2, then flick the toggle up to Shaken and get a very drunken vibrato effect. The Martini makes it possible to create dramatic tones that can really enhance an arrangement onstage.

The Verdict
This is a very addictive pedal that will make an amp sound better, no matter what style of music you play. The Martini’s space-lounge graphics look super slick, and though it took me a few minutes to fully digest the cocktail-themed control names, the pedal ultimately proved quite intuitive. It has a richness that eludes many chorus and vibrato devices, and whether you prefer it shaken or stirred, the Martini can make your simplest, most restrained playing sound as luxurious as a Saville Row suit.

Buy if...
you’re seeking spacey modulation effects ranging from subtle to deep.
Skip if...
you want your guitar tones to sound totally down-to-earth.
Rating...


Street $299 - Tortuga Effects - tortugaeffects.com


Tone Games 2010: 30 Stompboxes Reviewed
Next in TIME-BASED: Lightfoot Labs Goatkeeper GK3