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

Keeley Electronics Announces the Rotten Apple, Mesmer Astral Delay, and Oxblood Germanium

The Rotten Apple offers up some of op-amp fuzz that became the sound of the '90s.

Edmond, OK (May 26, 2017) -- Keeley Electronics is proud to announce the Rotten Apple, a mutilated op-amp fuzz that tastes like the '90s.

With just a whiff of op-amp fuzz left after mutilating this muff, you're left with something that's dreamy in bass and gain range. What's needed for that rotten-to-the-core sound is a thick dose of bass, gain for days, and a perfectly scooped midrange that recalls the 1990's on speed dial.

The gain of the Rotten Apple has an amazing range of gain on tap, and it is sensitive to your guitar and strumming. So even though it pumps and smashes through your speaker cab, you can roll your guitar back to float like a butterfly. The tone control gives you everything from submerged stoner rock sludge to highs that claw at your speakers.

The Keeley Electronics Rotten Apple Fuzz is available at Keeley Electronics and dealers worldwide. Street Price is $149.

Watch the Rotten Apple Fuzz video demo:

Keeley Electronics is proud to announce the Mesmer Astral Delay, an arpeggiated delay with octave up, octave down, and fifth modes.

The Keeley Mesmer Astral Delay has at least three modes we can rap about. There are two delay lines that are like bong hits—blow single notes or chords and the room's lungs expand in 5ths or octaves. Then there is an arpeggiator that sings in smokes rings. It swirls tones into billowing chords from the ember of a single note.

Plug into a compressor so as not to alert the police, or play through a looper for a completely wrecked experience. Add another delay or reverb pedal for some real sticky icky!

The Keeley Electronics Mesmer Astral Delay is available at Keeley Electronics and dealers worldwide. Street Price is $199.

Watch the Mesmer Astral Delay video demo:

Keeley Electronics is proud to announce the Oxblood Germanium, an updated take on our original Oxblood Overdrive

We started with our original Oxblood circuit, took out the compression and added a germanium transistor to the output. The result is a very bold, yet smooth overdrive! With less compression now, the Oxblood Germanium Overdrive flattens out the midrange. Next, we couldn't help adding a touch of another germanium transistor. This takes out any harness from that release of compression. We call it perfection.

The Oxblood Overdrive is 100% hand built. The craftsmen and designers at Keeley wanted this to be our finest and loudest moment, so we made it in the "Thunder" color scheme. AND, this is the first run of cases we powder coated in house! A first for Keeley that we are very proud of!

The Keeley Electronics Oxblood Germanium is available at Keeley Electronics and dealers worldwide. Street Price is $249.

Watch the Oxblood Germanium video demo:

For more information:
Keeley Electronics

Day 12 of Stompboxtober means a chance to win today’s pedal from LR Baggs! Enter now and check back tomorrow for more!

Read MoreShow less

John Mayer Silver Slinky Strings feature a unique 10.5-47 gauge combination, crafted to meet John's standards for tone and tension.

Read MoreShow less

For the first time in the band’s history, the Dawes lineup for Oh Brother consisted of just Griffin and Taylor Goldsmith (left and right).

Photo by Jon Chu

The folk-rock outfit’s frontman Taylor Goldsmith wrote their debut at 23. Now, with the release of their ninth full-length, Oh Brother, he shares his many insights into how he’s grown as a songwriter, and what that says about him as an artist and an individual.

I’ve been following the songwriting of Taylor Goldsmith, the frontman of L.A.-based, folk-rock band Dawes, since early 2011. At the time, I was a sophomore in college, and had just discovered their debut, North Hills, a year-and-a-half late. (That was thanks in part to one of its tracks, “When My Time Comes,” pervading cable TV via its placement in a Chevy commercial over my winter break.) As I caught on, I became fully entranced.

Read MoreShow less

A more affordable path to satisfying your 1176 lust.

An affordable alternative to Cali76 and 1176 comps that sounds brilliant. Effective, satisfying controls.

Big!

$269

Warm Audio Pedal76
warmaudio.com

4.5
4.5
4.5
4.5

Though compressors are often used to add excitement to flat tones, pedal compressors for guitar are often … boring. Not so theWarm Audio Pedal76. The FET-driven, CineMag transformer-equipped Pedal76 is fun to look at, fun to operate, and fun to experiment with. Well, maybe it’s not fun fitting it on a pedalboard—at a little less than 6.5” wide and about 3.25” tall, it’s big. But its potential to enliven your guitar sounds is also pretty huge.

Read MoreShow less