
Uni-Vibe sounds and beyond!
Intoxicating, addictive, and ultra-elastic Uni-Vibe, phase, chorus, and tremolo soundsāmany that sound super unique. Great range in controls. High quality.
No capacity for onboard presets.
$259
Strymon UltraViolet
strymon.net
Modulation effects are an enduring source of new hooks and riffs. But while I hear loads of vibrato, tasty tremolo, and chorus in a lot of contemporary guitar music, I donāt encounter much in the way of Uni-Vibe-style tones. I guess I can understand why. Used unimaginatively, Uni-Vibe sounds probably seem a bit loadedāinextricably bound up in the heavy psych swirl of Hendrix and Pink Floyd.
Remove those contexts and preconceptions, though, and a Uni-Vibe-style effect can surpriseāparticularly when it takes advantage of digital processing to stretch the Uni-Vibe envelope. Strymonās new UltraViolet gracefully uses the DSP advantage to expand the Uni-Vibe templateās potentialāconjuring swimming-in-bubblegum swirl that feels authentically analog and can dwell comfortably in sound spheres outside the psych-rock canon.
Streamlined Straight Line to Psycho Swish
Even at their most complex, Strymon pedals are cool studies in approachable digital pedal design. More recently, though, Strymon started dabbling in more compact, streamlined stomps. Used here, that design philosophy gives the UltraViolet a fluid functionality suited to its rich, gooey voice.
There are modulation stars elsewhere in the Strymon line. The multi-modulating Mobius and the yummy harmonic tremolo on the popular Flint tremolo and reverb are each marked by a beautiful, perceptible depth in the modulations. That complexity is very evident in the UltraViolet, and its elegant control array makes it fun to explore those intricacies.
The sensitivity and interactivity in the most basic controlsāspeed, intensity, and volume (which puts up to 4 dB of boost at your disposal)ācreate a rich palette of possible sounds. Strymon made cool tweaks to these controls, too. Specifically, they increased the range of the intensity control relative to a real Uni-Vibe, making it capable of more intense modulations at slow speeds. The tweak may be less than authentic, but it results in thick, super-dreamy slow-phase sounds that lesser Uni-Vibe-style stomps, and the real thing, donāt deliver.The real treats, though, are the blend mode, which offers a 70 percent/30 percent dry/wet mix, and the bias mode switch which shifts frequency emphasis in the modulations. The blend mode is a more articulate and sometimes smoother alternative to the chorus and vibrato channels. The 3-position bias switch, meanwhile, can completely recast the sound, feel, and response of a given modulation setting as well as change the interactive dynamics of the controls. Together, they make the UltraVioletās vocabulary expansive. All those tone variations can leave you longing for presets, which the Ultraviolet accommodates via MIDI (up to 300 presets) or the optional MultiSwitch Plus. Unfortunately, thereās no way to access presets in the absence of these methods. That limitation makes the UltraViolet no less fun, though.
Wiggle Room for Weirder Wobbles
If youāre used to more basic Uni-Vibe style pedals, the range in the Strymonās controls can feel tricky in the courting stage. Theyāre sensitive, and small shifts can reshape a modulation pattern profoundly. But itās also really fun to dive in blindly and not get too surgical. Along the way, youāre likely to discover that the UltraViolet is capable of subtlety at low intensity levels, enabling you to background radical texturesāfast-fluttering modulations, for instanceāthat lend kinetics and mystery to a song without overpowering it. Youāll also find elastic sounds with beautiful vowelly overtones that warp and stretch simple chord patterns into deeply immersive environments.
The very cool bias switch transforms these already alluringly chewy modulations. Low bias mode tends to emphasize throbbinessālending many faster rate settings a delicious harmonic-tremolo-like pulse. At slower, phasey rates, it will coax elongated āwowāovertones from slo-moā waveforms, giving spare phrases weight and soulful character. The low-bias mode can be overpowering. But more unhinged, psychedelically minded players may well relish the extreme pulses found here. The mid-bias mode is, to my ear, the least appealing of the bunch. The mid-forward EQ profile tends to obscure richness and detail in the waveforms. But this could be an advantage for players that want to foreground fuzzy leads or intricate rhythms. The high-bias mode is the most traditional of the bunchāsilky, smooth, with a just-right rubberiness that will please Uni-Vibe traditionalists as well as vintage analog phaser fans.
These same characteristics are apparent in the blend mode, but there is more room for picking dynamics, finger-vibrato nuance, and rhythmic thrust. Itās a cool compromise for Uni-Vibe and phaser skeptics, and it extends the utility and value of the pedal significantly. Some people consider a real Uni-Vibeās vibrato useless. I always found that assessment harsh. Certainly, it doesnāt have the caramel gooiness of the chorus mode. But here it can be made much more interesting and easier to tailor to a specific musical context with help from the bias mode switch.
The Verdict
The quality and variety of sounds, as well as the fun, intuitive means by which you can explore and manipulate them, make the high-quality, U.S.-made UltraViolet look like a relative bargain at $259. For some players, the lack of onboard preset capability might make that price less appealing and make the pedal less practical for the stage. For just about anyone else on the prowl for authentic Uni-Vibe soundsāand that relishes the chance to shape them into more unique texturesāthe UltraViolet has the potential to be a most intoxicating pedalboard asset.
PG Contributor Tom Butwin dives into three standout baritone guitars, each with its own approach to low-end power and playability. From PRS, Reverend, and Airline, these guitars offer different scale lengths, pickup configurations, and unique tonal options. Which one fits your style best? Watch and find out!
Reverend Descent W Baritone Electric Guitar - Transparent White
Descent W Trans WhiteBrickhouse Toneworks BH-90 pickups offer the legendary tone of a classic P-90 in a humbucker-sized package, with zero hum.
Brickhouse Toneworks, a new manufacturer of high-quality and innovative guitar pickups, has announced the release of the BH-90 pickup. This hum-canceling design offers the legendary tone and responsiveness of a classic P-90 in a humbucker-sized package -- with absolutely zero hum.
The BH-90 captures the true personality of the beloved single coil P-90 tone ā its grit, sparkle, and touch sensitivity to playing dynamics ā while eliminating the notorious hum that often limits their use.
Available individually or as matched sets, these pickups effortlessly respond to your playing touch, delivering delicate cleans to aggressive distortion. Youāll get P-90 soul in a humbucker size: the BH-90 seamlessly replaces existing humbuckers with no modifications required. They drop right in where your existing humbuckers live.
āKey Features of the BH-90
- Cast Alnico 5 Magnets; 500k Pots & .022uf Cap recommended.
- Ultra quiet: Hum-canceling design, and lightly potted to minimize squeal.
- Classic design: vintage external braided lead wire, with output comparable to vintage '50s P-90
- Bridge: 19.5k (Average), Neck 17.5k (Average). Note: the BH-90ās DCR reading is much higher than normal single coil P-90s due to the nature of their hum-canceling design. This is a case where DCR should not be considered as a measurement of output because these are equivalent in output to a vintage P-90 that ranged in DCR readings between 7-9k.
- Made in the USA with premium quality materials.
The BH-90 street price starts at $170 each and starts at $340 per set.
For more information, please visit brickhousetone.com.
The BH90 by Brickhouse Toneworks | Pickup Demo - YouTube
Neil Young announces the love earth world tour, kicking off this summer.
Starting on June 18 in RƤttvik, Sweden, the first leg of the tour travels through the EU and UK. The North American leg begins in Charlotte on August 8 before concluding in Los Angeles on September 15.
Tickets are available beginning tomorrow, February 25 via an exclusive, 48-hour presale for Neil Young Archives members. General on-sale begins Friday, February 28. Click HERE for tickets and see the full list of dates below. More dates will be added shortly.
With his band, the chrome heartsāSpooner Oldham (Farfisa organ), Micah Nelson (guitar and vocal), Corey McCormick (bass and vocal), Anthony LoGerfo (drums)āNeil Young (guitar and vocal) is bringing his music and songs, new and old, to you. Their recent single ābig changeā is the first introduction of whatās to come on the love earth tour.
Neil Young is proud to partner with Farm Aid (co-founded by Neil Young in 1985) to bring HOMEGROWN Concessions to this tour, leading the way to change the live music food system. HOMEGROWN Concessions brings family farm food ā produced sustainably with a fair price paid to the farmer and served on compostable serviceware ā to music venues.
love earth world tour dates:
Jun 18 ā RƤttvik, Sweden ā Dalhalla
Jun 20 ā Bergen, Norway ā Bergenhus Fortress
Jun 22 ā Copenhagen, Denmark ā TiĆøren
Jun 26 ā Dublin, Ireland ā Malahide Castle
Jun 30 ā Brussels, Belgium ā Brussels Palace Open Air, Palace Square
Jul 01 ā Groningen, Netherlands ā Drafbaan Stedpark
Jul 03 ā Berlin, Germany ā Waldbühne
Jul 04 ā Mƶnchengladbach, Germany ā Sparkassenpark
Jul 08 ā Stuttgart, Germany ā Cannstatter Wasen
Aug 8 ā Charlotte, NC ā PNC Music Pavilion
Aug 10 ā Richmond, VA ā Allianz Amphitheater at Riverfront
Aug 13 ā Detroit, MI ā Pine Knob Music Theatre
Aug 15 ā Cleveland, OH ā Blossom Music Center
Aug 17 ā Toronto, ON ā Budweiser Stage
Aug 21 ā Gilford, NH ā BankNH Pavilion
Aug 23 ā New York, NY ā Jones Beach
Aug 24 ā Bethel, NY ā Bethel Woods
Aug 27 ā Chicago, IL ā Northerly Island
Sep 01 ā Denver, CO ā Fiddlerās Green Amphitheatre
Sep 05 ā George, WA ā The Gorge
Sep 06 ā Vancouver, BC ā Deer Lake Park
Sep 10 ā Bend, OR ā Hayden Homes Amphitheater
Sep 12 ā Mountain View, CA ā Shoreline Amphitheater
Sep 15 ā Los Angeles, CA ā Hollywood Bowl
A digital pedal designed by Andrew Barta to replicate the dynamics and responsiveness of analog tube amplifiers. This stompbox offers preset clean, dirty, and lead tones, MIDI interface, and rugged all-metal housing.
As a staunch proponent of analog, Andrew Barta has never had the desire to venture into digital designs. The inventor of the SansAmp tube amplifier emulation technology, which debuted in 1989, Barta has remained loyal to the analog domain. That is, until now.
According to Barta, āTo me, the main drawback of a digital modeler is the feel and the sound quality. It lacks dynamics and responsiveness. It sounds one-dimensional and it isnāt touch-sensitive, so the nuances of your playing style get lost. It limits your ability to change the tone by using your volume knob, picking lighter or harder. No matter how hard you hit the strings, the result is mostly the same. Thereās no headroom and it doesnāt breathe. You are forced go to a different patch for a different tone. Ultimately, you have to conform to the device and play in a different way. So your artistic expression suffers. Artists have told me itās like being in a cage. You have to wrestle harder to squeeze out the results and their fingers get really tired.
āWhatever device youāre using, be it an amp or SansAmp or modeler, itās really a part of your instrument. Your instrument actually consists of the entire signal chain, not just the guitar. Digital is just a numeric translation and isnāt capable of preserving the individual personality of the guitar you use. The output is pretty much the same whether itās a Fender or Gibson or Ric.ā
Just as the original SansAmp was a personal mission to encapsulate tube amplifier sounds in a compact, portable pedal, Barta has long been on a quest to do the same in the digital domain. Never one to jump on a bandwagon, Barta wouldnāt āgo digitalā until he found a way to replicate the dynamics, responsiveness, and fluidity of its analog counterpart.
After many years, Barta ācracked the code.ā This happened to coincide with the opportunity to collaborate with Marty Friedman. The result is the Marty Friedman Signature SansAmp.
An iconic guitarist who eloquently serves up enchanting and tearful melodies, as well as complicated notes that make your head spin, Marty Friedman surprisingly likes to keep his arsenal quite simple. The goal for Tech 21 was to embody his tone in a neat, compact, plug-and-play footprint. Martyās focus is always on the music taking the spotlight rather than complex gear with distracting bells and whistles or requiring a cumbersome learning curve.
The Marty Friedman programmable Signature SansAmp comes preset with his main clean, dirty, and lead tones. Operationally similar to the SansAmp PSA 2.0, there are two modes: Performance mode to have your 3 main presets at the ready and Studio mode for up to 128 locations for custom presets.
Says Marty, āThis is it! This pedal has been in the works for a long time and only an exceptional design engineer like Andrew Barta could make something with these beautiful tones so incredibly simple to use. Such bonehead easy-to-use effects havenāt been known to have world class sounds in them until now. Iām proud to put my name on the first one."
Controls include Reverb, 3-band active EQ, Drive, and Level. Thereās also an adjustable Gate that dynamically and smoothly cleans up the signal, rather than cutting it off abruptly. Filteralters the tonality by manipulating the mid-range and is specifically voiced for Martyās unique sound.
Other features include a MIDI interface to control the SansAmp externally, a chromatic tuner, an effect loop, 1/4-inch and XLR Outputs, and rugged all-metal housing and knobs. Utilizes included 9V DC auto-switching power supply with interchangeable international plugs for use anywhere in the world. Measures 7.5āl x 5.25āw x 2.0āh.
For more information, please visit tech21nyc.com.