
Authenticity-minded Warm Audio enters the vacuum left by the departed Fulltone OCD.
Hot, often-Marshall-like drive tones that arenāt burdened by boxiness. Nice dynamic sensitivity. High-quality feel.
Treble tones can be very sizzly, making many amps and guitars a poor match.
$119
Warm Audio ODD Box V1
warmaudio.com
Though, in many respects, you could trace its DNA back to the DOD 250 and MXR Distortion+, the Fulltone OCD hit a sweet spot and felt pretty fresh to a lot of players when it was new. It had the edginess and attitude of those hard-clipping drive/distortion pioneers. But it could also sound more open and natural than some of its fellow hard-clipping circuits when tuned just right. Warm Audioās ODD Box V1, which, as any genius can guess, is an OCD clone at almost every turn, shares those attributes at a very nice $119 price, which is extra attractive given its through-hole construction and the attention that went into its execution.
Sensitive, But Comes on Strong
I came to know the Fulltone OCD via the pedalboard of a studio mate, whose rig was geared toward heavy psychedelic sounds. He used it at a relatively low gain setting and situated it downstream from a germanium Fuzz Face. I tended to experiment with the pedal in that context, and I was always impressed with how it felt aggressive but controlled and not too bossy. Pairing it with the Fuzz Face made for a pretty dangerous combination, too. The ODD Box V1 is capable of all these tricksāthough it often feels a bit bossier than the OCD that lives in my memory.
If you had to classify the ODD Box V1ās essence, āMarshall-yā would be a good place to start. It feels immediate, explosive at times, and brimming with scalding top end if you want it. That tendency toward toppiness can make the ODD Box V1 a tricky fit with some amps. Even at low gain and conservative tone settings, the ODD was a poor fit for a black-panel Vibrolux with a lively treble signature. But a squishier black-panel Tremolux coaxed a thicker, richer tone picture, and a darker silver-panel Bassman (which, to my ears, sounds and behaves much like a mid-scooped Marshall plexi) felt like a near ideal fit.In these more optimal pairings, the ODD Box V1 can shine, particularly in low-to-mid-gain settings. It can coax the midrange hiding in the corners of darker amps, making chords sound thick and vividly detailed. It also lends size to lead tones without sounding fuzzy or obscuring an instrumentās voice. Bridge PAFs growl beautifully in this low-gain zone, and Stratocaster neck pickups take on a tasty edge and satisfying mass. At higher gain settings, the ODD Box V1 fast veers toward tones that, to my surprise, seemed like a good match for thrash and British metal. Itās surprisingly aggressive, and if youāre not careful, treble tones can get a bit sizzly. I had to work the tone controls on my guitar, my amps, and the pedal pretty actively to get it in the right pocket. Itās easy to hear how lightning-fast leads would benefit from these pronounced treble tones. But if you like a more forgiving, compressed touch at these high gain levels, the ODD might feel a bit hot.
āIt can coax the midrange hiding in the corners of darker amps, making chords sound thick and vividly detailed.ā
Though the ODD has a strong personality, its touch sensitivity and responsiveness to varied guitar volume and tone input extends its flexibility and marks another difference between it and pedals with a similar voice, like the Boss SD-1 (which often sounds like a boxier, less complex cousin to the ODD Box V1). Itās pretty easy to summon full-sounding, near-clean tones with a little less guitar volume, and much of that sizzling top end can be rounded off with a quick flick of an instrumentās tone knob.
The Verdict
I love that Warm Audio chases analog authenticity at fair prices. But considering how many rarities and out-of-reach vintage pieces theyāve cloned, itās a little curious that they chose to replicate a pedal as ubiquitous as the OCDāeven in light of Fulltoneās disappearance. The ODD Box V1ās core tonalities tend toward hot, reactive, and distinctly on the Marshall side of the drive spectrum. If thatās a realm where you like to dwell, itās an affordable alternative to pricier amp-in-a-box solutions like the ZVEX Box of Rock, and more dynamic, open, and natural sounding than an SD-1 and its cousins. For all its Marshall-ness, though, with the right ampāusually one on the darker sideāyou can summon some of the personality of an angry Fender tweed or an old Supro running hot and wide open. It looks and feels like itās built for the long haul, inside and out. And if youāre a fan of spot-on aesthetic accuracy, Warm Audio nailed just about every facet of the OCDās look and feel. For players whose style aligns with its bold personality, itās a great value.
Warm Audio ODD and Mutation Phasor Demos | PG Plays
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Just because Phish got shunned by the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame this year doesnāt mean theyāre not one of the most influential bands in rock.
Just because Phish got shunned by the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame this year doesnāt mean theyāre not one of the most influential bands in rock. In fact, more than 329,000 fans voted for their induction! And Phish guitarist Trey Anastasio has led those legions for over four decades.
In this episode, weāre talking Trey and Phish, including how they sound more like Zappa than the Grateful Dead, what itās like to see them live, and whether theyāre a love/hate band or thereās room to be a casual Phan. Plus, at last yearās NAMM Show, both hosts spent some time with a new Languedoc build, so weāre talking about what it feels like to play one of Treyās guitars, and we do an informal rundown of his rig.
The bold English band return with their eighth record, Dreams on Toast. The brotherly guitar duo tell us about their pilgrimage back to Tonehenge.
The experience of locking in with the Hawkins brothers for an hour of conversation is not unlike absorbing their gonzo, wildly effervescent take on classic hard rock. To be sure, Justin, 49, the bandās frontman and de facto lead guitarist, and Dan, 48, who plays guitar, produces, and contributes backing vocals, keep you on your toes.
An instance of deep creative insight will jump-cut to a well-executed crude joke with a set-up involving slide guitar, which Justin taught himself to play during Covid lockdown in standard tuning, ānot the G cheating tuning.ā Passages of admirable self-reflection are interspersed with a freewheeling riff on Kid Rock and a debate about the finer points of crawling up oneās own arse. Itās kind of a blast.
The sad inability of critics and even audiences to reconcile fantastic hard rock with a sense of humor has dogged the Darkness throughout its existence, to the point where Dan believes the āclassic rock communityā only really came around to the band after Justin and drummer Rufus Taylor performed in Taylor Hawkinsā all-star tribute in 2022. āFinally, āOkay, these guys arenāt actually just fucking around,āā says Dan. Fair enough, but what exactly are they doing?
The Darknessā new album, Dreams on Toast, their eighth LP overall and sixth since reforming in 2011, is quite possibly their strongest set yet. In its wide-ranging, often surprising charms, it somehow manages to muddy the waters even further while also firming up an ethosānamely, that the Darkness are smart rock and pop mastercraftsmen who contain multitudes. Or, as Dan describes their M.O.: āWe can do whatever the fuck we want, whenever we want, and we donāt have to worry about it.ā Adds Justin, āThe funny thing is what we actually want to do is just write timeless songs.ā
Dreams on Toast, the British hard-rock bandās eighth full-length, is a testament to their indefatigable belief in the melding of hard-rock riffage with humor.
Justin Hawkinsā Gear
Guitars
- Atkin JH3001
- Atkin Mindhorn JH3000
- Danās red Gibson ES-355
- Danās Epiphone Casino (for slide)
- Atkin acoustic
- Brook Tavy acoustic
- Taylor 12-string
Justin and Danās Amps
- Ampete amp/cab switcher
- Vox AC30 head
- Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier
- 1959 Marshall plexi Super Lead
- Marshall 1987X
- Friedman Smallbox
- Friedman BE-100 Deluxe
- Marshall cab with Celestion Greenbacks
Effects
- Boss SD-1 Super Overdrive
- SoloDallas Schaffer Replica
Strings & Picks
- Rotosound Roto Yellows .010s
- Dunlop Tortex .73 mm
Dreams on Toast boasts moments of quintessential Darknessāin, say, āWalking Through Fire,ā a hooky rock ānā roll behemoth that pays plainspoken tribute to the power of ⦠rock ānā rollāand gets even more meta with a winky line about wasting time āshooting yet another shitty video.ā For those whoāve followed the band from the start, it can evoke the shock of discovering the Darkness on MTV in 2004, when they were an exuberant burst of Queen-inspired virtuosity amidst so much overwrought post-punk and stylized garage rock. (āI fucking hate videos. I donāt even know why we bother,ā shrugs Justin, the centerpiece of several of the most memorable rock vids of the 21st century.)
Elsewhere, Dreams on Toast has a knack for subverting expectations. āThe Longest Kissā leans into the progressive-pop facility of Jeff Lynne, Sparks, or Harry Nilsson. āHot on My Tailā and āCold Hearted Womanā are deft examples of rootsy pop writing, finding a niche between honky tonk and transatlantic folk. āThe Battle for Gadget Landā engages in campy rap-rock, as if satirizing the nu metal that thrived when the Darkness was founded. It also betrays a British punk influenceāa vestige, the brothers ponder, of their fatherās excellent musical tastes and his decision to play his sons Never Mind the Bollocks, Hereās the Sex Pistols. Bewilderingly, āWeekend in Romeā features a voice-over by the actor Stephen Dorff.
But the albumās absolute highlights belong to the signature balance that allows the Darkness to remain instantly identifiable while also being custodians of rockās various traditions. āRock and Roll Party Cowboyā seems to revel in macho rock clichĆ©s, until you notice a reference to Tolstoy in the chorus and realize that the badass at the center of the narrative is in reality a stone-cold loser. āThereās a line in there, which gives it away,ā Justin explains, āwhere he says, āWhere the ladies at?āā The truth hurts: āThe party heās describing is a disaster.āāThe funny thing is what we actually want to do is just write timeless songs.ā āJustin Hawkins
The same savvy defines āI Hate Myself,ā a punked-up barroom-glam throwback that tackles heartbreak and self-contempt. The song also has a buzzed-about video in which Justin appears, unrecognizable, as a man who wears his grief, vanity, and insecurity on his face as questionable plastic surgery. The clip is startling, cinematic, and willfully not very much fun. Consequently itās inspired pushback, even within the band. āI think on this record, from the recording to the videos and everything, I think weāre challenging people,ā Justin says. āWeāre trying to explore genres and visual ideas that we havenāt done before. Like, thereās only two of us on the album cover; me and Dan arenāt even on it.
āItās like weāre doing everything differently, and in ways that make people go, āWell, what the fuck is this?ā I think weāre hopefully positioning ourselves as a band that cares about the art.ā
The brothers Hawkins in action. They wrote the songs for Dreams on Toast on an acoustic guitar, face-to-face.
Photo by Gareth Parker
Fraternal Dynamics Ā
Following 2021ās Motorheart, which was built piecemeal in the throes of the pandemic, Dreams on Toast is a welcome return to (literal) face-to-face collaboration. āPretty much everything on the album was written on an acoustic, me facing Justin,ā Dan says. āHolding my gaze,ā adds Justin, with a straight face.
āWe have quite a lot of success when Iāve just got an acoustic and Iām thrashing away,ā Dan posits, though āthrashing awayā isnāt quite fair. In fact, the through line tying Dreams on Toast to landmark Darkness singles like āI Believe in a Thing Called Love,ā āChristmas Time (Donāt Let the Bells End),ā or āLove Is Only a Feelingā is the precision of the craftāthe sheer perfection of the sonics and the shape of each song, the seamlessness with which an intro becomes a verse and then a bridge before an earworm chorus breaks down the door. Track after track.
āI think weāve always been good at arranging,ā Dan says. āSorry to blow our own trumpets, but I think that comes from Justin and my musical upbringing.ā To wit: Fleetwood Macās pop-rock masterpiece Rumours was on heavy rotation at home. At the outset of his career, after heād been a drummer and a bass player, Dan only āstarted playing guitar properly as a session player,ā he says. āAnd that kind of taught me a lot about placing things, when to do things and when not to.
āThe only reason I can play guitar is because I wanted to work out how songs were written,ā he adds later. At one point during the chat, Justin mentions his experience writing and producing music for commercial clientsāsomething he and his brother continue to partake in, in specific under-the-radar situations. He maintains that work doesnāt inform the Darkness too much, though he does allow that it furthers their understanding of the architecture of songs. āWe learn about how theyāre built,ā he says, āwhatās happening underneath the bonnet.ā
In the end, Dan explains, the band doesnāt chase down a song in the studio until itās been properly worked out. āBecause thereās no point, is there?ā Justin says. A delightful exchange about turds, and the pursuit of polishing them, ensues.
āThe only reason I can play guitar is because I wanted to work out how songs were written.ā āDan Hawkins
Dan Hawkinsā Gear
Guitars
- 2000 Gibson Les Paul Standard
- Gibson ES-355
Effects
- Ibanez TS9 and TS808 Tube Screamers
- SoloDallas Schaffer Replica
- Keeley Caverns
- Keeley Katana Boost
Strings & Picks
- Rotosound Roto Greys .011s
- Dunlop Nylon .73 mm
Dreams on Toast features the bandās current lineup with the rhythm tandem of Rufus Taylor, the son of Queen drummer Roger Taylor, and bassist Frankie Poullain. It was produced by Dan, who helms his well-appointed Hawkland Studios in Sussex, England.
Unprompted, he shows us around via Zoom, and in his lighthearted practicality, you get a sense of the study in contrast that the Hawkins brothers have presented since they were boys in the English seaside town of Lowestoft. (For an intimate look at their relationship and the bandās hard-won return, check out the 2023 documentary, Welcome to the Darkness, which will be available on platforms in the States starting in mid April.) The conventional wisdom dictates that Justin is the YouTube personality, the opinionated fount of charisma, falsetto, and unforgettable guitar leads, and Dan is the engine room, the pragmatist and a rhythm ace in the mold of his hero Malcolm Young. Itās definitely not that cut-and-dried; Dan, despite his modesty, can put together a great solo, too, and theyāre both affable and entertaining, with the pluck to have forged ahead through physical and personal challenges. But itās true enough.
āIāve been in my studio for eight hours a day working on my guitar rig for this next tour,ā Dan says, feigning salty exasperation. āIāve spent so much money.ā Enter Justin: āAnd I learned how to go snowboarding.ā Dan is interested in the guitar for āwhat it is capable of sonically, not necessarily emotionally,ā he says. āI imagine thatās like the opposite of how I see it,ā his brother replies. āThatās why it works!ā says Dan.
āAs soon as the amp question comes up ⦠I donāt even know what my settings are,ā Justin admits. āIām more concerned about guitars, and I think Danās more concerned about amps.ā
Dan the amp man: The younger Hawkins brother manages āTonehenge,ā the wall of amplifiers at his studio which he and his sibling use.
Photo by Gareth Parker
Visiting Tonehenge
Actually, Justinās response to the amp question is terrific: āYou could just send him a picture of the Tonehenge,ā he says to his brother, referring to a mouth-watering monument of heads and cabs in Danās studio. Dan goes on to explain his wall of sound and how he uses an Ampete switcher to explore various combinations. On Dreams on Toast, he says, weāre hearing plenty of Marshall and Friedmanāwhich ātake care of the EL34 stuffāāas well as a Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier and a handwired Vox AC30 head that āplayed a major role.ā Dan doesnāt feel compelled to āpull out loads of weird combos,ā he says, because āweāve got a big sound that we need to portray pretty much straight away.ā Mission complete.
Guitar-wise, the big takeaway on Dreams on Toast is that weāre hearing less Les Paul than we might be used to on a Darkness record. Dan continues to swear by his 2000 Les Paul Standard, whose high-output 498 humbucker has had a huge impact on the consistency of his sound. āItās only in recent years that I realized you could actually pull the volume backā and achieve the tone of āa really nice old Les Paul,ā he says. His strings have thinned out to .011ā.052 after heād bloodied his fingers one too many times using .013ā.054 sets with a wound G.
For his part, Justin has largely moved away from the white Les Paul Customs that became an indelible part of his image long ago, settling into a fruitful partnership with the English brand Atkin, whose esteemed reputation for handcrafted acoustics shouldnāt overwhelm its versatile lineup of electrics. āI know Iāve sort of become synonymous with the white Les Paul, and thatās good; I think every generation should have a white Les Paul player,ā he says cheekily. āBut maybe my time is gone now. Maybe itās somebody elseās turn.ā
Justin enjoys his Atkin signature models: the Frankenstrat-indebted JH3001 and the JH3000 Mindhorn, an offset with two humbuckers and an LP-style bridge. āIāve always loved Strats,ā he says, beginning to describe his concept for the JH3001. āIāve always enjoyed the tonal variety, and the way they play is interesting.ā But signature instruments are opportunities to correct annoyances and combine archetypes, and so it goes with the 3001.
He wanted a floating, Floyd Rose-style bridge, which would allow him to do dive bombs āand all the things Iāve been teaching myself to do,ā he says. (Those shred moves impress as smartly deployed accents to tracks like āRock and Roll Party Cowboy.ā) Justin had long been frustrated with the standard pickup-selector location on Strats and āwanted the electronics to resemble more closely what the Les Pauls do.ā A 3-way toggle for two handwound humbuckers can be found on the upper horn, and the wiring is visible via a transparent Perspex pickguardāan homage, perhaps, to Justinās lovingly remembered Dan Armstrong acrylic guitar (for which he had only the Country Bass pickup). The JH3001, Justin says, is a āFrankenPaul, if you will,ā or, as Dan recommends, a āLesocaster.ā The Mindhorn, whose offset body might strike you as a meld of Firebird and Fender, offers Justin the reliability of a Tune-o-matic-type bridge; on other offsets heās played, like a Jaguar, heād pick so hard the strings would pop out of their saddles. āAlso, the selectorās in the right place for me,ā he says.
He also leans on his brotherās collection. One of his go-to instruments for his flourishing slide skills is Danās old Epiphone Casino. And Justin explains that Danās red Gibson ES-355 was the axe of choice for two of his hardest-hitting solos on the record: the twinned-up lines of āThe Longest Kissā and the breakaway Angus-isms of āI Hate Myself.ā
āWeāve got a big sound that we need to portray pretty much straight away.ā āDan Hawkins
Justinās signature Atkins JH3000 Mindhorn, wielded here, has forced his recognizable white Les Paul into a supporting role.
Photo by Gareth Parker
Solo Break
Which brings us to the choreographed majesty of Justinās solos across the Darkness catalogāmasterpieces in miniature, as hooky and bulletproof as the songs they complement. Justin expounds on his process: āWhen Iām trying to build a solo, we normally just run the track and I have a go. And usually, Iām going 100 miles an hour, finding phrases and trying to modify them so they donāt sound like where Iāve nicked them from. But the most important thing is that you can sing along to it, so it becomes a countermelody.ā He thinks technical dazzle can work beautifully in a solo, but only when itās held in judicious balance among less-showy principles. āThe thing that sets the great guitarists apart from the other ones is the expression,ā he says. āIām talking about dynamics and vibrato.ā
His lodestars of lead playing include Mark Knopfler, whose āTunnel of Loveā solo āshows you an infinite number of harmonic choicesā atop a straightforward chord sequence. āItās full of ideas,ā he says. āNone of itās showing off; itās all logic.ā Other favorites are similarly thoughtful rockers, among them Brian May and Jeff Beck.
He digs EVH too, though those concepts came later. āThere was a guitar teacher in Lowestoft that would teach everybody how to do thatāthe tapping and all the things that Eddie Van Halen invented,ā he recalls. āI didnāt go to that guitar teacher. I was more interested in blues playing, really, and that kind of expression. It wasnāt until later that I thought, āAh, fuck, I kind of wish Iād learned that properly.ā Because now Iām asking my guitar tech how to do it.ā
His brotherās lead playing is an inspiration as well, in its ability to surprise and draw contours that Justin simply would not. āHe makes interesting choices,ā Justin says, āand then I always scratch my head and go, āWow, I would never have thought to play that note.ā So I try and sometimes I think, āWhat would Dan do?āā
YouTube It
Watch the Darkness rip a trio of exuberant rock ānā roll romps to a massive festival audience.
Legendary shredder Joe Satriani was the first ever guest on Wong Notes, so it makes sense that heās the first returning sit-in with Cory Wong.
He teases a new song with Sammy Hagar, plus delves into the intricacies of Eddie Van Halenās playing and why he canāt quite replicate itāevery guitarist has their strengths and deficiencies, claims Satch. And believe it or not, Satriani didnāt figure standing in front of huge crowds to be one of his strengths when he was younger. Fate figured otherwise.
Satriani goes deep on one of his favorite tools, the Sustainiac pickup, and talks about how itās defined his playingājust like his trademark sunglasses, even in dark rooms. (āStupid idea, right?ā he jokes.)
And young guitarists, listen up: Satriani has some wise words on the importance of rigorous practice while youāre budding on the instrument. The big takeaway? Learn. Your. Scales.
Very diverse slate of tones. Capable of great focus and power. Potentially killer studio tool.
Sculpting tones in a reliably reproducible way can be challenging. Midrange emphasis may be a deal breaker for some.
$199 street
Bold-voiced, super-tunable distortion that excels in contexts from filtered boost to total belligerence.
Whitman Audio calls the Wave Collapse a fuzzāand what a very cool fuzz it is. But classifying it strictly as such undersells the breadth of its sounds. The Seattle, Washington-built Wave Collapse has personality at low gain levels and super crunchy ones. Itās responsive and sensitive enough to input and touch dynamics to move from light overdrive to low-gain distortion and degenerate fuzz with a change in picking intensity or guitar volume. And from the pedalās own very interactive controls, one can summon big, ringing, near-clean tones, desert sludge, or snorkel-y wah buzz.
The Wave Collapse speaks many languages, but it has an accentāusually an almost wah-like midrange lilt that shows up as faint or super-pronounced. Itās not everyoneās creamy distortion ideal. But with the right guitar pairings and a dynamic approach, the Wave Collapseās midrange foundation can still span sparkly and savage extremes that stand tall and distinctive in a mix. Thereās much that sounds and feels familiar in the Wave Collapse, but the many surprises it keeps in store are the real fun.
Heavy Surf, Changing Waves
The absence of a single fundamental influence makes it tricky to get your bearings with the Wave Collapse at first. Depending on where you park the controls to start, you might hear traces of RAT in the midrange-forward, growly distortion, or the Boss SD-1 in many heavy overdrive settings. At its fuzziest, it howls and spits like aFuzz Face orTone Bender and can generate compressed, super-focused, direct-to-desk rasp. And in its darker corners, weighty doom tones abound.
The many personalities are intentional. Whitman Dewey-Smithās design brief was, in his own words, āa wide palette ranging from dirty boost to almost square-wave fuzz and textures that could be smooth or sputtery.ā A parallel goal, he says, was to encourage tone discoveries in less-obvious spaces. Many such gems live in the complex interrelationships between the EQ, filter, and bias controls. They also live in the circuit mash-up at the heart of the Wave Collapse. The two most prominent fixtures on the circuit are the BC108 transistor (best known as a go-to in Fuzz Face builds) and twin red LED clipping diodes (associated, in the minds of many, with clipping in the Turbo RAT and Marshall Jubilee amplifier). Thatās not exactly a classic combination of amplifier and clipping section components, but itās a big part of the Wave Collapseās sonic identity.
The BC108 drives one of two core gain stages in the Wave Collapse. The first stage takes inspiration from early, simple fuzz topologies like the Tone Bender and Fuzz Face, but with a focus on what Dewey-Smith calls āexploiting the odd edges and interactivity in a two-transistor gain stage.ā The BC108 contributes significant character to this stage. The second, post-EQ gain stage is JFET-based. Itās set up to interact like a tube guitar amp input stage and is followed by the clipping LEDs. Dewey-Smith says you can think of the whole as a āfairlyā symmetric hard-clipping scheme.
āThe magic of the circuit is that those gain stages are very complimentary. When stage one is running clean, it still passes a large, unclipped signal that hits the second stage, making those classic early distortion sounds. Conversely, when the first stage is running hot, it clips hard and the second stage takes a back seatāmostly smoothing out the rough edges of the first stage.ā Factor in the modified Jack Orman pickup simulator-style section in the front end, and you start to understand the pedalās propensity for surprise and expressive latitude.
Searchinā Safari
The Wave Collapseās many identities arenāt always easy to wrangle at the granular-detail level. The control setāknobs for bias, filter color, input level, and output level, plus switches for āmassā (gain,) ārangeā(bass content at the input), and ācenterā (shifts the filterās mid emphasis from flat)āare interdependent in such a way that small adjustments can shift a toneās character significantly, and it can be challenging to find your way back to a tone that sounded just right five minutes ago. Practice goes a long way toward mastering these sensitivities. One path to reliably reproducible sounds is to establish a ballpark tone focus with the filter first, dial in the input gain to an appropriately energetic zone, then shape the distortion color and response more specifically with the bias.
As you get a feel for these interactions, youāll be knocked out by the sounds and ideas you bump into along the way. In addition to obvious vintage fuzz and distortion touchstones I crafted evocations of blistering, compressed tweed amps, jangly Marshalls, and many shades of recording console preamp overdrive. The Wave Collapse responds in cool ways to just about any instrument you situate out front. But while your results may vary, I preferred the greater headroom and detail that comes with single-coil pickup pairings. Humbuckers, predictably conjure a more compressed and, to my ears, less varied set of sounds. I also found black-panel Fender amps a more adaptable pairing than Vox- and Marshall-style voices. But just about any guitar or pickup type can yield magnificent results.
The Verdict
Though itās hard to avoid its filtered midrange signature entirely, the Wave Collapse is a pedal of many masks. Once you master the twitchy interactivity between its controls, you can tailor the pedal to weave innocuously but energetically into a mix or completely dominate it. These capabilities are invaluable in ensemble performances, but itās super enticing to consider how the Wave Collapse would work in a studio situation, where its focus and potency can fill gaps and nooks in color and vitality or turn a tune on its head. Pedals that stimulate the inner arranger, producer, and punk simultaneously are valuable tools. And while the Wave Collapse wonāt suit every taste, when you factor together the pedalās sub-$200 cost, thoughtful design, high-quality execution, and malleability, it adds up to a lot of utility for a very fair price.