
Gently undulating modulation and hard-choppin' tremolo come together in a harmonic trem with copious control options.
Lush, complex harmonic tremolo. Easy to shape extreme modulations into serviceable textures. Well-integrated gain control generates cool dirt tones and compression. Well built.
Controls can feel overly sensitive.
$259
JAM Pedals Harmonious Monk
jampedals.com
Harmonic tremolo deserves its own effect category—perhaps one without "tremolo" in the name at all. Harmonic tremolo (which modulates bass and treble frequencies separately before recombining them to very wobbly ends) and amplitude tremolo, (which attenuates volume at various rates) sound like siblings in many settings. At low effect levels, casual listeners might have trouble discerning a difference.
In more prominent settings, however, harmonic tremolo is audibly more fluid and full of breath. Because there is no volume attenuation, it colors and fills the spaces between modulation peaks while achieving many of the same animating sensations as tremolo. Its essentially less-choppy voice makes it well suited for complex chord voicings and slide. And it also enables you to color your tone with a light touch of phase—an effect that typically reads as pretty heavy handed.
JAM Pedals' Harmonious Monk delves deep into the possibilities of harmonic tremolo textures, with controls that enable extra-fine tuning of rate, intensity, effect mix, output volume, and even the EQ makeup of the modulation. But it's also equipped with a very fine amplitude tremolo mode, which means you don't have to commit to a single tremolo style—or two tremolo pedals. If you like really digging for unusual or specific tremolo textures, you'll love the Harmonious Monk's power to shape them.
Straight, Many Chasers
JAM designed the Harmonious Monk with input from Dan Steinhardt and Mick Taylor from YouTube's That Pedal Show. Given the collective enthusiasm for pedal minutiae among that crew, it's little wonder that the Monk is built for hyper-precise modulation shaping. The depth, speed, output level, and effects-mix controls each have extensive ranges, are pretty sensitive, and are interactive. When you're just getting to know the pedal—or just into an intuitive, fast-moving workflow—that range and sensitivity can make the controls feel vague and induce option fatigue, particularly when you add in the very cool speed-doubling and LFO intensity switches to the mix. But once you get the feel for a few favorite settings, the extra control can feel as satisfying as a fine-tipped paintbrush.
While the Monk's most classic sounds are luxurious enough to keep you rapt for hours, it can be instructive to explore backwards from its most extreme settings. And many of the sounds that make the Monk extra fun and unique are found there.
The extra control can feel as satisfying as a fine-tipped paintbrush.
Super-low modulation rates mated to the more intense LFO and heavy depth settings yield hypnotic phase variations that strike a perfect balance between presence and mystery at lower mix levels. You can further soften the pulse of these slow modulations by adding gain from the output level, which very seamlessly compresses the peakiest parts of the modulation wave and conjures some of the pedal's most cohesive and swirlingly heavy sounds.
Savory Swell
The Monk's most vintage-hued and user-friendly sounds are generally situated with the depth and speed somewhere between 10 and 2 o'clock. These modulations most effectively realize harmonic tremolo's lovely capacity for bridging the heartbeat pulse of bias and optical tremolo and the doppler-ish swirl of a rotary speaker or phaser. They are silky, complex, and a joy to get lost in. But the mix, output level gain, and LFO intensity switch invite and enable many hip variations on these sounds. Here, too, the gain from the level control has a beautiful compressing effect that makes the modulation waves more elastic and cohesive.
The Monk's amplitude tremolo is beautiful as well. Nuances like finger vibrato and pitch bends shine more clearly through these modulations. And the hard pulses you can create with heavy mix and depth settings can generate thumping rhythm hooks if you have a steady strumming hand. There's also many familiar black-panel Fender-style tremolo textures on tap when a song calls for more straight-ahead and streamlined modulation.
Both tremolos, by the way, benefit enormously from the Monk's three internal trim pots, with which you can regulate treble, mid, and bass EQ settings. Heavy bass settings, in particular, can really change the feel of the modulation—yielding super-deep pulses than can be used creatively in song arrangement and mixing.
The Verdict
The Monk excels at the kind of subtle modulation that can near-subliminally animate and enliven simple and complex guitar phrases alike. But it can also create intense undulating textures that can completely re-cast a dull riff into a song-defining hook. The sensitive controls—and the extent to which they sometimes seem to overlap in function—can lead you down rabbit holes. Generally, though, the pedal's depth of control is an asset that makes the Harmonious Monk a potentially invaluable performance, studio, and songwriting tool.
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PG contributor Tom Butwin reveals his favorite songwriting secret weapon: the partial capo. Watch how the Shubb C7 and C8 can simulate alternate tunings without retuning your guitar—and spark fresh creative ideas instantly.
Shubb C8b Partial Capo for Drop-D Tuning - Brass
The C8 covers five of the six strings, leaving either the low E or high E string open, depending on how it's positioned.
- Standard setup: Placed on the 2nd fret while leaving the low E string open, it simulates Drop D-style sounds—except you're still in standard tuning (key of E). You get that big, droning bass feel without retuning.
- Reverse setup: Flipping the capo allows the high E string to ring, giving you shimmering drones and new melodic options across familiar chord shapes.
- A flexible tool that lets you simulate alternate tunings and create rich sonic textures—all while keeping your guitar in standard tuning.
Shubb C7b Partial Capo for DADGAD Tuning - Brass
The C7 covers three of the six strings—either D, G, and B or A, D, and G—depending on how it's flipped.
- Typical setup (D, G, B): Creates an open A chord shape at the 2nd fret without needing your fingers. This frees you up for new voicings and droning notes in the key of A.
- Reversed setup (A, D, G): Gets you close to a DADGAD-style tuning vibe, but still keeps you in standard tuning—great for modal, spacious textures often found in folk or cinematic guitar parts.
Use it alone or stack it with the C8 for wild, layered effects and truly out-of-the-box inspiration.
The Future Impact V4 is an incredibly versatile pedal with an exceptional range of sounds. In addition to producing synthesizer sounds such as basses, leads and pads, it can function as an octaver, chorus, flanger, phaser, distortion, envelope filter, traditional wah-wah, tremolo, reverb, etc., and even has a built-in tuner. It can potentially replace an entire pedalboard of dedicated single-effect pedals.
The very powerful signal processor of the Future Impact V4 is able to replicate the various oscillator, filter, amplifier and envelope generator blocks found in classic synthesizers. In addition, it contains signal processing blocks more traditionally used for processing the sound of an instrument such as a harmonizer block and audio effects such as chorus, distortion and EQ. These architectures complement each other in a very flexible way.
Setting the standard for the bass guitar synth pedals since 2015, together with an enthusiastic community and long line of great artists, the Future Impact V4 is the guitar synth platform for the next decade.
Belltone Guitars has partnered Brickhouse Toneworks to create a one-of-a-kind, truly noiseless Strat/Tele-tone pickup in a standard Filter’Tron size format: the Single-Bell pickup.
The Single-Bell by Brickhouse Toneworks delivers bonafide single-coil Strat and Tele tones with the power of a P-90 and no 60-cycle hum. Unlike typical stacked hum-cancelling designs, Brickhouse Toneworks uses a proprietary ‘sidewind’ approach that cancels the 60-cycle hum without sacrificing any of the dynamics or top-end sparkle of a Fender-style single coil.
Get the best of both worlds with clear bell-like tones on the neck pickup, signature quack when combining the neck and bridge pickups, and pristine twang in the bridge position backed with the fullness and power of a P-90. Push these into overdrive and experience the hallmark blues tone with plenty of grit and harmonic sustain — all with completely noiseless performance.
Key Features of the Single-Bell:
- Cast Alnico 5 Magnet, designed to be used with 500k pots
- Voiced to capture that signature Fender-style single coil tone without the 60-cycle hum
- Lightly potted to minimize squeal
- Made in the USA with premium quality materials
The retail price for a Bridge and Neck matching set is $340.00 and they’re available directly and exclusively through Belltone® Guitars / Brickhouse Toneworks at belltoneguitars.com.
Designed for players who demand flexibility without sacrificing tone, the Aquanaut fuses the rich warmth of classic analog delay with the extended range and clarity of modern digital designs. Featuring up to 600 milliseconds of delay time, the Aquanaut easily covers everything from tight slapback echoes to lush, ambient textures and rhythmic soundscapes – all with a simple, intuitive control layout.
Unlike many digital delays that can sound sterile and detached, the Aquanaut retains an organic, analog-inspired voice. Repeats are smooth and musical, gently fading into the mix to create depth and dimension without overwhelming your dry signal. Whether you’re chasing vintage tape echo, adding subtle space to your solos, or building massive atmospheric layers, the Aquanaut keeps your tone clear, present, and inspiring.
Berserker Electronics Aquanaut Delay/Echo
Key features include:
- Up to 600ms of delay time for expanded creative possibilities
- Analog-voiced digital architecture for warm, natural-sounding repeats
- Ambient-style echo that enhances, not distracts from, your core tone
- Simple, intuitive controls for delay time, feedback, and blend
The Aquanaut is available direct at www.berserkerpedals.com and Reverb at a $149 street price.