a place to bury strangers

Gazillions of tone colors lurk in this box of swampy fuzz and funky filters. The PG Fuzzrocious Croak review.


Recorded via Shure SM57 and Apogee Duet to Garage Band with Guild X-175 and Fender Vibro Champ.
Electric rhythm track recorded at low gain, filter 1 and 2 settings, and high output volume.
Electric lead features real time adjustments to gain, filter 1 and filter 2 settings.
 

Ratings

Pros:
Deep reserves of unexpected filter/fuzz sounds. Amazingly deep fuzz textures.

Cons:
Precise filter settings can be elusive and difficult to return to.

Street:
$189

Fuzzrocious Croak
fuzzrociouspedals.com


Tones:


Ease of Use:


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Oliver Ackermann started his pedal company, Death by Audio, by taking custom orders for anything, and then forcing himself to figure out how to build it.
Photo by Igor Vidyashev / Atlas Icons

Oliver Ackermann plays mad scientist with his band, A Place to Bury Strangers, and his pedal company, Death by Audio.

Brooklyn-based band A Place to Bury Strangers creates gnarly, outlandish, ear-crushing mayhem. Their guitarist, Oliver Ackermann, keeps his volume just north of 11 while engaging in such stage antics as guitar smashing, mid-air instrument collisions, and unnatural string removal. He chains pedals together and generates multiple layers of self-oscillating chaos.

But there’s a method to the madness. Ackermann is chasing a specific aesthetic, one he started cultivating in high school. That sensibility also informs his pedal-building business, Death By Audio. It could be described as controlled anarchy.

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