
The Sensation Fuzzdrive from Heather Brown Electronicals blends the best of both worlds from its titular pedal classes.
Broad range of vintage and modern sounds, from classic rock to metal to punk to parts unknown. High-gain sounds are full and gooey and versatile. Nice art.
Can get a bit boxy when used as an overdrive. The tone color won’t be everyone’s cup of tea.
$249
Heather Brown Electronicals Sensation Fuzzdrive
godsmom.com
The Heather Brown Electronicals Sensation Fuzzdrive sure does live up to its name. It fuzzes, it drives, it will give you varying sensations.
In her own words, Heather Brown is a mom who makes guitar pedals. She cut her teeth working for Electro-Harmonix’s Mike Matthews and Keeley Electronics namesake Robert Keeley, and now she builds killer pedals of her own original design. The Sensation Fuzzdrive is Brown’s third offering, joining an overdrive unit and a combo fuzz/tremolo pedal already on her roster. It’s marketed as a fuzz-meets-overdrive circuit, with the tight punch of an OD and the earth-rumbling thunder of fuzz.
Braaaaaains!
The Sensation sports some of the coolest art ever committed to a little steel stompbox. The glitchy brain cross-section and circuit board of tendrils crawling out from it announce the Fuzzdrive as a unique pedal with vision and guts. The controls also set the pedal apart from the pack. A 3-stop knob switch called the saturator enables you to select how many gain stages you want to run in series, and a conventional EQ knobs suite is replaced by a toggle-switching system for midrange and bass. A third toggle switches between two gain levels and works in concert with the saturation control to fine-tune the distortion from the pedal’s gain stages to sound hotter or cooler. The master volume control is the only full-sweep pot on board. The on/off blood-red LED is cheekily placed among the spindly neuron threads. Together the controls give the pedal a slick, industrial look. The Fuzzdrive, by the way, is built around a low-input impedance circuit, so Heather Brown suggests situating it before any buffered pedals in a chain.
Instructions for the Fuzzdrive include six control setting suggestions that range from warm overdrive to heavy fuzz. But whether it’s the relative inflexibility of a 3-position toggle switch, or limits in the midrange, I did find the EQ controls a bit challenging to master. When chording on all three midrange settings, I heard a certain boxiness unless I had the bass toggle at maximum level, and when I flipped through the different mid switch options, I felt like I was hearing a wah set at different points. That said, players like Josh Homme have built a career from plumbing the depths of tone-tickle trunks for weirdo guitar sounds, and this aspect of the Fuzzdrive’s performance will likely inspire the same sort of playfulness and adventure. Plus, the boxy compression generated great lead sounds. And at any and all positions, both humbucker and single-coil guitars sounded absolutely scorching and grimy.
Squealin’ In the Years
The Fuzzdrive is a versatile fuzz and distortion. The clipping is ferocious but warm, and the dirt can be tuned to resemble anything from explosive Hendrix fuzz or Sabbath crunch to modern hard rock and metal tones. I even got what I thought were pretty convincing Enema of the State-era Tom DeLonge sounds with the mids down and bass and saturation in middle positions. At full volume, the circuit’s high-end can come on strong. The sweet spot for me was between 12 and 3 o’clock. But, if you want to go off-trail and explore different textures, the Fuzzdrive’s unique midrange voicings offers many paths.
The Verdict
I didn’t get to test the Sensation in a band setting, but it’s clear from its cutting tones that it would manage a mix well. It’s not strictly an overdrive, so it won’t clean up at low drive or reduced guitar volume settings the way some dedicated overdrives might. Then again, you won’t encounter mud or any lack of clarity here.
The Sensation Fuzzdrive doesn’t really sound like most other fuzz and distortion boxes, and that’s a good thing. It has some seriously unique and exciting sounds tucked away in the folds of its brain, and the control layout is funky and invites experimentation. If you’re looking for a mid- to high-gain tool that sounds unique, looks cool, and will give you rich, warm saturation alongside oddball tonal options, you won’t be disappointed.
- Builder Profile: JHS Pedals ›
- Heather Brown Electronicals Launches the Sensation Fuzzdrive ›
- Heather Brown Electronicals Launches Blessed Mother V2 Overdrive Pedal ›
We’re giving away more gear! Enter Stompboxtober Day 24 for your chance to win today’s pedal from Maxon!
Maxon OD-9 Overdrive Pedal
The Maxon OD-9 Overdrive Effects Pedal may look like your old favorite but that's where the similarity ends. Improved circuitry with a new chip yields the ultra-smooth dynamic overdrive guitarists crave. Drive and Level controls tweak the intensity and volume while the Hi-Boost/Hi-Cut tone controls adjust brightness. Features true bypass switching, a die-cast zinc case, and 3-year warranty. From subtle cries to shattering screams, the Maxon OD-9 delivers a huge range of tones.
Features
Improved circuitry with a new chip yields ultra-smooth dynamic overdrive
Drive and Level controls tweak the intensity and volume
Hi Boost/Hi Cut tone controls adjust brightness
True bypass switching
Die-cast zinc case
AC/DC operation (order optional Maxon AC210N adapter)
Product Specs
Input: 1/4" mono jack
Output: 1/4" mono jack
Power: 9V DC, 6 mA, center pin minus (not included)
Dimensions: (WxDxH) 74 mm x 124 mm x 54 mm
Weight: 580g
Vintage-style reverb, tremolo, and vibrato sounds abound in a 3-in-1 stomp that might be the only box you need.
The Keeley ZOMA combines two of iconic amp effects—tremolo and reverb—into one pedal.
Key Features of the ZOMA
● Intuitive Control Layout: Three large knobs give you full control over Reverb Level, Tremolo Rate,and Depth
● Easy Access to Alternate Controls: Adjust Reverb Decay, Reverb Tone, and Tremolo Volume withsimple alt-controls.
● Instant Effect Order Switching: Customize your signal path. Position tremolos after reverb for avintage, black-panel tone or place harmonic tremolo before reverb for a dirty, swampy sound.
● True Bypass or Buffered Trails: Choose the setting that best suits your rig.
Three Reverb and Tremolo Modes:
● SS – Spring Reverb & Sine Tremolo: Classic spring reverb paired with a sine wave tremolo for that timelessblack-panel amp tone.
● PH – Plate Reverb & Harmonic Tremolo: Smooth, bright plate reverb combined with swampy harmonictremolo.
● PV – Plate Reverb & Pitch Vibrato: Achieve a vocal-like vibrato with ethereal plate reverb.
Reverb: Sounds & Controls
● Spring Reverb: Authentic tube amp spring reverb that captures every detail of vintage sound.
● Plate Reverb: Bright and smooth, recreating the lush tones of vibrating metal plates.
● Reverb Decay: Adjust the decay time using the REVERB/ALT SWITCH while turning the Level knob.
● Reverb Tone: Modify the tone of your reverb using the REVERB/ALT SWITCH while turning the Rate knob.
Tremolo: Sounds & Controls
● Sine Wave/Volume Tremolo: Adjusts the volume of the signal up and down with smooth sine wavemodulation.
● Harmonic Tremolo: Replicates classic tube-amp harmonic tremolo, creating a phaser-like effect withphase-split filtering.
● Pitch Vibrato: Delivers pitch bending effects that let you control how far and how fast notes shift.
● Alt-Control Tremolo Boost Volume: Adjust the boost volume by holding the REVERB/ALT footswitch whileturning the Depth knob.
The ZOMA is built with artfully designed circuitry and housed in a proprietary angled aluminum enclosure, ensuring both simplicity and durability. Like all Keeley pedals, it’s proudly designed and manufactured in the USA.
ZOMA Stereo Reverb and Tremolo
The first sound effects built into amplifiers were tremolo and reverb. Keeley’s legendary reverbs are paired with their sultry, vocal-like tremolos to give you an unreal sonic experience.
Your 100 Guitarists hosts are too young to have experienced SRV live. We’ve spent decades with the records, live bootlegs, and videos, but we’ll never know quite how it felt to be in the room with SRV’s guitar sound.
Stevie Ray Vaughan was a force of nature. With his “Number One” Strat, he drove a veritable trove of amps—including vintage Fenders, a rotating Vibratone cab, and a Dumble—to create one of the most compelling tones of all, capable of buttery warmth, percussive pick articulation, and cathartic, screaming excess. As he drew upon an endless well of deeply informed blues guitar vocabulary, his creativity on the instrument seemingly knew no bounds.
Your 100 Guitarists hosts are too young to have experienced SRV live. We’ve spent decades with the records, live bootlegs, and videos, but we’ll never know quite how it felt to be in the room with SRV’s guitar sound. So, we’d like to spend some time imagining: How did it feel when it hit you? How did he command his band, Double Trouble? The audience?
SRV was mythical. His heavy-gauge strings tore up his fingers and made a generation of blues guitarists work a lot harder. And his wall of amps seems finely curated to push as much air in all directions as possible. How far did he take it? Was he fine-tuning his amps to extreme degrees? Or could he get his sound out of anything he plugged into?