
Both stomps celebrate milestone anniversaries and will be available in June.
The SD-1-4A celebrates 40 years of continuous production, while the MT-2-3A celebrates 30 years. Each pedal features a black body with unique styling and will be available throughout 2021 only.
In 1977, the introduction of BOSS's legendary compact pedal series forever changed the landscape of stompbox effects for guitarists, bassists, and other musicians. Famous for their great sound, rugged durability, and timeless design, BOSS compact pedals have been loved by everyone from casual hobbyists to rock icons performing on the biggest stages, and it's difficult to find a player who hasn't owned one or more throughout their musical life. To date, there have been over 125 unique compact pedal models produced and more than 17 million total units sold. The current lineup includes nearly 60 models, from effects like overdrive, distortion, chorus, delay, and reverb to tuners and other utility pedals.
BOSS SD-1 SUPER OverDrive - INTRO
Many BOSS compact pedal models have been continuously produced for multiple decades, and the SD-1 Super Overdrive and MT-2 Metal Zone are two of the most revered. Scores of innovative and trendsetting guitarists across all genres have adopted these pedals for their core tones and used them to create some of the most popular and influential music of all time.
BOSS MT-2 Metal Zone - INTRO
Introduced way back in 1981āthe same year that MTV launched and mass-market personal computers began to take off in large numbersāthe SD-1 Super Overdrive has remained a players' workhorse for four decades strong. Its distinctively smooth voice is derived from the groundbreaking OD-1 Overdrive, one of the three original BOSS compact pedals from 1977, and also the pedal that created the now-ubiquitous "overdrive" category in the industry. Powered by a unique asymmetrical clipping circuit that produces the pleasing sound and feel of a driven tube amp, the SD-1's rich, versatile, and highly musical tone continues to inspire guitarists everywhere.
The commemorative SD-1-4A features a black body with yellow lettering, gold-capped knobs, and a vintage silver thumbscrew for the battery compartment and comes in a box with a special 40th Anniversary logo. Unleashed in 1991 as heavy and aggressive music styles started to hit full stride in the mainstream, the iconic MT-2 Metal Zone continues to reign supreme as the king of high-gain distortion stomps for devoted fans around the world. With over one million sold and counting, the MT-2 is the second most popular BOSS drive pedal after the DS-1 Distortion. Its famously thick, saturated sound is perfectly suited for metal music and is also great for playing powerful rhythms and soaring solos in other genres.
A standout feature of the MT-2 is its three-band active EQ with semi-parametric midrange, which provides extensive tone-shaping range that goes far beyond the capabilities of most analog distortion pedals. The commemorative MT-2-3A features a black body with gray lettering and a vintage silver thumbscrew for the battery compartment and comes in a box with a special 30th Anniversary logo.
Availability & Pricing
The BOSS SD-1 Super Overdrive and MT-2 Metal Zone will be available in June 2021 for $59.99 and $112.99.
For more information:
boss.info
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Thereās so much that goes into bringing a pedal to life. Hereās a stash of DIY kits in various stages of completion at the authorās workshop.
Do you scoff at pedal prices? Hereās a deep look at the process and expenses of bringing a pedal to market.
Youāve come up with something special and inspiring on the breadboard and are ready to put the circuit into a pedal. How do you do that? You could hire a contractor, but letās go full DIY.
You will need a CAD program to lay out the schematic and the subsequent circuit board. Once purchased, you need to learn to use the software to create a digital schematic and PC board. This process is not strictly about understanding the softwareāyou also need to learn PCB layout practices as they relate to grounding, trace length, footprint design, and other common elements. While adhering to these, you also need to layout hardware, like potentiometers and toggles, in specific locations that allow them to appropriately mate with the enclosure that they will be stuffed into.
Now that we have our circuit laid out, we need to create specific file types to send off to a fabrication house so that they can open the files and manufacture the PC boards correctly to our design. Once weāve submitted the files and they are approved, we wait with excitement, and dread, until they come in. Why dread? Well, we wonāt know if the PCB is correctly populated with components that fit the package footprints and distribute power correctly, and if the audio sounds like what we designed on the breadboard, until they arrive. There may also be noise or other issues that weāll need to track down before we can call the PCB finished. The first PCB that I ever designed came in looking exactly like the digital file, but did not work whatsoever.
After weāve debugged the PCB to make it work, we get to a fun and frustrating step: putting the circuit into our enclosure. The enclosure part is fun because itās the external, artistic side of the product where the builderās creativity is first seen. An unappealing look could be the deciding factor for a consumer. Iām sure most of us have made a decision on a guitar or pedal before itās even plugged in.
Trying to squeeze everything into an enclosure can become discouraging. The more hardware thatās affixed to the PCB, the more every measurement counts. This means every knob, toggle, footswitch, audio jack, and DC jack will play a role in making the PCB line up with the drill holes on the enclosure. Thatās an aspect we havenāt even covered yet.
āAn unappealing look could be the deciding factor for a consumer.ā
Most of us in the industry have our enclosures manufactured at one-stop-shop locations. This is because having the facilities and tools to do drilling, powder coating, and UV or screen printing in-house is simply not feasible for most. Once we get a line on an enclosure manufacturer, we need to get them our drill measurements. This includes drill-hole diameters and locations related to each other, and from the edges of the enclosure. Once done, we need to get those measurements into digital form along with any artwork. We also need to pick a powdercoat color from the thousands of colors available. Not all powders adhere the same way to metal and not all powders work well with UV printing. So how do we take our drill measurements, powder color, and artwork to the next step? This is stomping grounds for Adobe Illustratorāanother software program to purchase and learn. Crud!
After the enclosure files are sent off, made to spec, and received, we hold our breath and hope the populated PCB fits into the drilled enclosure. If it does, we dance. If it doesnāt, we break out the ruler and calipers and measure the places that we messed up. If the changes are to the PCB, we make them and order new samples. Same goes for the enclosure. While those revisions are being fabricated, we can focus on the packaging for the pedal. This is another fun part, and something that the customer will interact with upon receiving.
This is where I need to leave you. Before doing so, Iād like to point out that we havenāt gone into the remaining aspects of bringing a boutique pedal to life. There are still major considerations like product photos done in a photo area with a nice camera and edited with (more) software. Website construction to display that pedal along with copy and SEO, packaging materials, a label printer, and shipping software that talks to the website.
And at that, Iāve omitted a lot of small and medium steps in the breakdown of bringing a pedal to market. So I ask, are pedals really overpriced?
Blair White, a pedal consultant to the pros and owner of Nashvilleās Eastside Music Supply, shares his favorite contemporary pedals for recreatingāand reimaginingāthe gnarliest sounds of the past.
I love fuzz. I am so grateful for fuzz. I donāt know who or where Iād beāat least musicallyāwithout it. And whether or not you like using fuzz, you love fuzz, too. You just might not realize it. Fuzz pedals, which are considered loud, rowdy, and unnecessary musical devices by some tonal purists, have changed the world.
From Jimi Hendrix to Jack White, David Gilmour to Billy Corgan, fuzz pedals have not only shaped guitar sounds but shaped the way we think of and experience guitar. Starting in the 1960s, they have steered culture as the musical voice of protest (Hendrixās āMachine Gun,ā anyone?) and the communicator of a generationās angst . And donāt forget the more recent doom and stoner genres! Also, some tones that you perceive as clean or merely overdriven are actually created by finding the sweet spot between a fuzz pedal and a guitarās volume dial.
There are tons of different fuzz pedals out there right now, so navigating all of your options can seem like a difficult task. We truly live in the golden era of gear and, as a pedalhead, Iām here for it. But the roots of fuzz run deep to earlier eras. So in that spirit, here are some of my favorite modern fuzz boxes that nail the tones of yesteryearāwithout the vintage-market price tag. Enjoy! And keep thinking fuzzy!EarthQuaker DevicesĀ Hoof ($179 street)
The Hoof is a flagship pedal from this Akron, Ohio-based company, and for good reason. This pedalās circuit is rooted in a specific tall-font Sovtek Big Muff owned by the Black Keysā Dan Auerbach. According to Jamie Stillman, owner of EQD, Auerbachās favorite Big Muff didnāt sound quite like other green Russian Big Muffs heād played, so he approached Stillman to recreate its hairy goodness. The Hoof is a hybrid of germanium and silicon transistorsāa modern variant of the Muffās legendary, strictly silicon sound. While the original is a 3-knob fuzz (volume, tone, and distortion), the kicker here is a fourth āshiftā control that allows you to dial in additional midrange to your liking. Want that doom-y wall of sound? Itās here. Need a bit more string articulation for your riffs? It can do that as well. Built tough, the Hoof is extremely easy to use to get killer vintage fuzz tones and will take a beating on the road.
Way Huge Swollen PickleĀ ($149 street)
Star designer Jeorge Tripps has had a huge impact in the pedal world for decades. The Swollen Pickle is one of the staples in his creative lineup. What started as a 3-dial Big Muff-style fuzz (See a pattern here?) took on a life of its own with the addition of āfilterā and āscoopā controls. Between these two knobs, the sonic landscape is huge... you could even say way huge. The newest version of the Swollen Pickle features additional clipping options under the hood that allow you to tweak further, should you feel the need. But out of the box, this fuzz is a ripper capable of searing leads and wall-of-sound chords. Built like a tank, with a reasonable market price, Iām a big fan of this one. Itās great for guitarists interested in a Big Muff-rooted fuzz without committing to that voice exclusively. Definitely check it out!
Mythos PedalsĀ Golden Fleece ($139 street)
Sometimes simple and stupid is the best approach, and it absolutely works with the Golden Fleece. This single-knob, no-nonsense fuzz from Zach Broylesā company is a fine-tuned machine with a minimum of options. All the tough decision making has already been done and built into a germanium-and-silicon-based circuit. So, donāt let this pedalās size and lack of additional controls scare you. It is a monster fuzz pedal.
With its single āmoreā knob (the output volume), touch dynamics, the pickup selection on the guitar, and guitar volume and tone settings play a huge role in the results. It cleans up extremely well and can go from light and crunchy to full-on saturated awesomeness. Tone-wise, it lives in a unique vintage-fuzz sweet spot. Muff-y? It kinda can be, but it has much more clarity and string definition. Fuzz Face-y? Yes, but itās much smoother, while simultaneously more aggressive. Youād think a fuzz pedal with one knob would be easy to explain, but this pedal just does so dang much. Iām a huge fan of the tones that this stomp offersāespecially at $139, and with the tiny amount of precious pedalboard real estate required. Mythos calls it, āyour gateway pedal to fuzz.ā Fair enough!
Analog ManĀ Sun Face ($195 street)
Whatās a list of killer vintage-sounding fuzzes without an Analog Man pedal? Itās no secret that Mike āAnalog Manā Piera sits high up on the list of vintage-fuzz experts, and his constantly in-demand pedals (youāve heard of the King of Tone?) are a direct result of his passion and knowledge of old-school dirt. I could write a whole article on his smartly crafted fuzz pedals alone. But the Sun Face, as the name might lead you to believe, is Analog Manās take on the legendary Dallas Arbiter Fuzz Faceāthat little round box championed by guitar heavyweights like Hendrix, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Eric Johnson, and Pete Townshend. But Analog Man doesnāt just make a one-size-fits-all Fuzz Face clone. Piera offers a dozen different variations of the pedal, with a multitude of choices. Both silicon and germanium transistors are available, as well as low- and high-gain options, which are a result of Mike carefully hand-selecting transistors that allow us nerds to get very specific about what flavor of Fuzz Face sound we want in our rig. The Sun Face is a top-quality build from a top-quality builder. You really canāt go wrong with any variation if youāre chasing the vintage-fuzz dragon.
Red River Amplification Bonetender ($199 street)
The Bonetender was created out of a love for the classic MkII Tone Bender circuit, which Sola Sound debuted in 1966. This device has two knobs, three transistors (Russia-made NOS MP41A āflying saucerā transistors, for the super-nerdy), and a name that bears its influence on its sleeve. David Britton of Red River Amplification in Nashville has nailed the classic Tone Bender sound. He hand-picks his PNP germanium transistors to craft a warm, round voice, with insane sustain and exceptional clean-up. This straight-to-the-point 2-knob (dirt and volume) fuzz provides instant joy for players of all skill levels and is easily one of my favorite MkII-inspired fuzz pedals.
By the way, since youāve seen the terms germanium and silicon come up in this article several times by now, I should probably give a quick explanation of what they are, for fuzz novices. Silicon and germanium transistors are semiconductors that amplify or alter electronic signals, like those produced by your guitar that travel through your cable. Silicon transistors are more modern, and were developed in the 1950s. Germanium transistors were developed in the 1940s, and opened the door to solid-state electronics. The earliest germanium fuzz pedal, the Maestro FZ-1 used by Keith Richards on āSatisfaction,ā was introduced in 1962. The first silicon pedal appeared in the late '60s. Generally, silicon is less responsive to guitar volume attenuation but more temperature-stable than germanium, which can be fussy in hot or cold weather, but pedals using either germanium or silicon can blow a hole in the side of a barn. Okay?
ZVEX Fuzz FactoryĀ ($319 street)
Where to start with this one? Odds are you know about this pedal. Itās a staple on so many rigs. It has inspired thousands of guitar players, as well as other pedal builders. It has been loved and used by fuzz purveyors like Trent Reznor and Billy Gibbons. And it is a modern classic. It started as a Fuzz Face clone, but the Fuzz Factory quickly carved its own path in the pedal world, though itās a bit divisive among players due to its chaotic nature. The Fuzz Factory, which debuted in 1995, was one of the first pedals that purposely use feedback-loop-style self-oscillationāsomething that other builders at the time tried to avoid. But this stompās self-oscillation can easily be tamed and is part of what makes it so damn versatile. The Fuzz Factory is perhaps one of the most flexible fuzz pedals ever created, capable of nearly any tone youāve heard on classic records or sounds you hear in your mind. Ripping Velcro-style Jack White vibes, spikey āSatisfactionā leads, or full-blown wall-of-sound fuzz are all here! If you're not scared of fuzz pedals with more than three knobs, the five on this stomp (volume, gate, compression, drive, and stability) allow you to explore fuzz in new, creative ways.
Benson Amps Stonk BoxĀ ($279 street)
Chris Benson quickly went from unknown apprentice at Verellen Amplifiers and repair tech at Old Town Music in Portland, Oregon, to in-demand, consistently backordered boutique amp builder, and for good reason. Also, his contributions to the pedal world have been fantasticāspecifically his creation of what he terms āautomatic thermal bias technology.ā Essentially, he invented a system that regulates and stabilizes the bias of germanium transistors in a pedal, no matter how hot or cold it is outside. This is a big deal! And the Stonk Box? It is a Tone Bender MkI-inspired device that excels in vintage fuzz voices, with tone, volume, filter, and trim controls. It nails the FZ-1, MkI, and Zonk Machine sounds (which are all basically the same thing). It does the sought-after, beautiful, blossoming fuzz sound. And it can surely handle your Keef riffs, but the range of this high-quality build goes well beyond that.
Rude Tech 3MuF-14 Distortion/Fuzz ($255 street)
Jesse Rhew, of Rude Tech in Nashville, really knocked this one out of the park. Taking three well-loved and legendary Sovtek Big Muff circuitsāthe "Civil War," "Green Russian," and "Black Russian"āand putting them in one enclosure is cool, right? But the modern improvements and additions included in the 3Muf-14 make these classic sounds more usable in any setting. If youāve played a Big Muff-style circuit, you know itās very common for your guitar or bass to lose presence as soon as you turn the Muff on in a live-band setting. Because of this, a lot of players run their Muff-style fuzzes into mid-heavy overdrives or EQs, so they donāt get lost in the mix. The 3MuF-14 adds a mid-focused drive circuit with its own footswitch, so your sweet riffs aren't left out of the fun. As youāve gathered by now, there are lots of killer Big Muff-style circuits out there, but if youāre looking for a gig-able option that offers just enough tweak-ability without menu diving, the 3MuF-14āwith volume, tone, and sustain dials, plus toggles for tone and Muff-style selectionāshould be on your watch list.
But Wait, Thereās More!
These are my favorites, but there are dozens more fuzz pedals, at all kinds of price levels and control options, worth investigating. See Ted Drozdowskiās companion story for a rundown of many of these, and, meanwhile, here are a few more pedals that are on my radar right now, and the historic devices or characteristics they emulate.
⢠JAM Pedals Octaurus (currently sold out): For fans of the Univox Super-Fuzz, Shin-Ei Companion, and Tycobrahe Octavia.
⢠Seeker Electric Effects SUPA (currently sold out): MkI and MkII Tone Bender
⢠Yesterday Effects Peach Fuzz ($200 street): Frantone Peach Fuzz
⢠ThorpyFX Field Marshall ($254 street): Lovetone Big Cheese
⢠Death By Audio Fuzz War ($180 street): Inspired by the Colorsound Supa Tonebender
⢠Spaceman Effects Spacerocket (currently sold out): An āintermodulationā fuzzStrong midrange-focused personality. Particularly vowel-ly and vocal sweep. Feels controlled.
Some players will miss silkier, hazier bass-range sounds.
$249
Dunlop Mick Ronson Cry Baby
Park and fly with this mid-focused but very vocal wah honoring Bowieās right-hand man.
Dunlop Mick Ronson Wah - MAIN by premierguitar
Mick Ronsonālead ripper, lieutenant, riff-dealer, and arranger in David Bowieās Spiders from Marsāwas such a cool amalgam of ā60s British guitar voices. He had Keith Richardsā sense of rhythm and hooks, Jimmy Pageās knack for evil-sounding ear candy, and a preference for loud, simple rigs: Les Paul, Marshall, Tone Bender, Echoplex, and, most critically, a Cry Baby wah. You know the sound of this Cry Baby. Itās everywhere on early 1970s Bowie recordsāāQueen Bitch,ā āMoonage Daydream,ā and āWidth of a Circle,ā to name a fewāand it put discernible fangs and venom in his playing. There are many such sounds in Dunlopās excellent new tribute, the Mick Ronson Cry Baby.
Ronno was not a wah player in the āwocka-wockaā sense. He primarily used the pedal in a fixed position or with subtle longer sweeps. His favorite wah for the job was an early Cry Baby built in Italy by Jen. These wahs were notoriously, shall we say, āuniqueā from specimen to specimen. And without Ronnoās original on hand for comparison, itās hard to know how close the tribute gets to nailing it. But there is an unmistakable mid focus that mirrors and invites Ronnoās biting phrasingāparticularly in Bowieās live recordings from the time. The new pedalās sweep starts out squawky at the heel-down position, where my other vintage-voiced wahs just sound foggy. That midrange emphasis and presence remains through its sweep, suggesting the Ronson Wahās singing range is narrow. On the contrary, the many distinctly different vowel sounds within that range color the base tone more strongly than many wahs with a smoother, bassier taper. That profile lends itself to great control and multiple bold, distinct soundsāparticularly when an angry gain device is situated upstream.
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.