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10 Noise Gates That Will Keep Your Tone Tight

10 Noise Gates That Will Keep Your Tone Tight

Down with the noise! Here are 10 options to rid your rig of those buzzy demons.

Unless you’re in a Sonic Youth tribute band, or maybe you’ve finally realized your dream of starting an avant-garde tribute to Neil Diamond, you might have a bit of noise in your signal chain you would want to eliminate. These 10 options aim to slam the door on extraneous buzz and hum, and at high-gain settings, they will keep your rhythm chugs tight.



Boss NS-1X Noise Suppressor

Centered around the company’s MDP technology, this gate aims to eliminate noise without sacrificing feel or response. It also includes an effects loop and a mute mode.

$199 street

boss.info

GUPTech MWAC Noise Gate

Precise and high performance even at lower signal, it excels in all situations—from high-gain havoc to gentler terrain. Available in four colors: red, orange, purple or army green. It's affordable enough for everyone to clean up their act.

$127 street

guptech.ca

Revv G8 Noise Gate

A pedal-sized version of the noise gate in the Generator 120, this stomp offers hold, release, and threshold controls, and a full effects loop.

$199 street

revv.com

MXR M135 Smart Gate

The single-knob design allows for on-the-fly tweaking, but the included extended trigger range and three different noise bands allow for a highly versatile setup.

$149 street

jimdunlop.com

ISP Technologies Decimator II

One of the most popular noise gates, this pedal uses Time Vector Processing to help craft a smoother level of noise reduction. You can also link multiple units for maximum signal tracking.

$143 street

Isptechnologies.com

TC Electronic Iron Curtain

Housed in a rock-solid enclosure, this gate features decay and threshold dials, a switchable mute control, and an entirely analog circuit.

$49 street

tcelectronic.com

Darkglass NSG

With a push of the big knob, you can move between soft and hard gain reduction, which can be adjusted from -65 dBV to +5 dBV.

$199 street

darkglass.com

​Electro-Harmonix Silencer

With three different controls (threshold, decay, and release), you’re able to dial in and customize the exact level of gain reduction. It also features an effects loop to help with any noisy pedals.

$80 street

ehx.com

Ibanez Pentatone Gate

Nabbed from the Pentatone preamp, this standalone version offers a dead-simple setup with a single threshold knob and a switch to move between high and low modes.

$99 street

ibanez.com

Pigtronix Gatekeeper 2

A studio-quality gate created around a JFET circuit and a release control that dials in the speed of the gate.

$119 street

pigtronix.com


When he’s on the West Coast, Jim Campilongo feels something like a stranger in his own home. His latest record pays tribute to the city he misses when he’s there, and the one where he built most of his career.

Photo by Joe Ferrucci

The San Francisco-born roots-rock guitarist feels like an East Coaster at heart, and his latest, She Loved the Coney Island Freak Show, might be his most rocking, fitting homage to the Big Apple.

When Jim Campilongo phones in with Premier Guitar, it’s from his home in the Bay Area—the same place where he first picked up the guitar in the 1970s, began playing shows with local groups some years later and, eventually, launched his recording career in the 1990s. Over the subsequent decades, he established himself as one of the instrument’s foremost creatives, building a catalog of primarily instrumental albums that encompass a dazzling array of styles—rock, jazz, roots, Western swing, classical, experimental—all informed by his inventive, flexible and never-predictable playing, mostly on a Fender Telecaster plugged direct into an amp.

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A Trio of Dreamy Dreadnought Options
A Trio of Dreamy Dreadnought Options

Join PG contributor Tom Butwin for a review of three exceptional dreadnought-style acoustic guitars from Larrivée, Taylor, and Breedlove, complete with a brief history lesson on the iconic guitar shape. Discover the unique features and hear the incredible tones of these modern classics.

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Marcus King plays his Gibson Hummingbird at his Nashville Guitar Center in-store last week.

Photos courtesy of Guitar Center

The roots guitar hero stopped at Nashville’s Guitar Center last week to show ’n’ tell his favorite Gibson guitars—and more.

NASHVILLE, TN—Music City fans and players got an opportunity to hear and see roots guitar hero Marcus King up close last Thursday, when he played an in-store performance in the acoustic room of Nashville’s Guitar Center. The occasion, “An Evening with Marcus King & His Gibson Guitars,” also included a Q&A and autograph session.

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A Godzilla-sized bass octave fuzz that is capable of doomy devastation—or more nuanced sounds that fit in mellow, organic musical settings.

Surprising selection of hazy, subtle bass-drive tones that transcend doom and desert rock.

Interactive controls can make some tones elusive when fine-tuning on the fly.

$129

Electro-Harmonix Lizard King Bass Octave Fuzz
ehx.com

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Bass octave-fuzz effects aren’t typically for the timid. And as its name suggests, theEHX Lizard King largely trades in Godzilla-huge, cityscape-leveling sounds that lift bassists above Bonham-aping drummers and desert-rock guitar players that don’t have to answer to the neighbors. But there are shades of low end beyond simply menacing in the Lizard King.

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