Travel back in time 30+ years and meet the circuit-tweakers who started a stompbox craze.
Not long ago, guitar pedals were made by larger companies with the machinery, infrastructure, distribution networks, and resources to bring them to market. The big players were names you knowālike Boss, MXR, Ibanez, Electro-Harmonix, and othersāplus a handful of outlier operations, and that was about it.
But guitarists like to tinker, and a lot of players took their devices apart, modified the circuits, improved designs, and conjured up innovative ways to craft tones. But tweaking pedals, or even developing new ones, is a far cry from launching a pedal company, and most aspiring builders did not have the wherewithal, or desire, to do that. Even for hobbyists, information was hard to come by. Schematics were difficult to find, and mentorsāor even just brains to pickāwere few and far between. Taking those factors into account, the idea of a boutique pedal scene was beyond most people's imagination.
Then something wonderful happened. Although books and articles about simple electronics projects for musicians had been circulating since the early 1970s, putting that information online helped spawn a pedal-making revolution. Schematics, definitions of terms, innovative insights and tweaks, and easy access to experts to consult when you got stuck became commonplace.
And as the internet developed, that only got better. Rare, impossible-to-find components were unearthed or reissued, and the ability to find buyers, seemingly everywhere, made it possible for anyone with a workbench and a dream to get in on the act. The prospective builder could build pedals at home, produce them one at a time, and find a market no matter how niche. And with that, the boutique pedal community was born.
Today, thousands of pedal companies compete and thrive in a space once dominated by a few, and their offeringsāfrom thousands and thousands of variant fuzz circuits to oddball mutant glitchy delaysāexist in excess. Even crazier, they all seem to make money.
To tell the story about how this scene developed, we spoke to the people at the heart of the movement. That includes Craig Anderton, the godfather of the scene; R.G. Keen, an innovative engineer, forum regular, and founder of the GEO website (Guitar Effects Only, geofex.com); early boutique pioneer and pedal information guru Analog Mike Piera; Aron Nelson, the founder of DIY Stompboxes, which is one of the oldest and most influential online forums; musician, audio developer, and guitar gadget expert and builder Joe Gore (also a contributing editor at Premier Guitar); and boutique legend and builder Robert Keeley.
On the surface, the birth of the boutique pedal scene is a story of changing technology, but, really, it's a story about community. It's about people working together, sharing, volunteering, and offering support, which, in these hyper-politicized, polarized, strange times, is a wonderful thing.
Craig Anderton used a car manual, How to Keep Your Volkswagen Alive (left), as a template for writing his guitar-tech opus, Electronic Projects for Musicians (right). The book by Craig Anderton came out in 1975 and was like a guitarist's bible for understanding tech aspects of gear. Anderton is currently working on his 45th book.
How to Keep Your Volkswagen Alive
Craig Anderton gets the credit as the person who brought pedal building to the masses. āReverb did an interview with me at NAMM," he says. āThey were doing something about the history of pedals, and they said that half the companies they spoke to got started with my book [laughs], so they figured they better talk to me."
Anderton's book Electronic Projects for Musicians was first published in 1975, and that, as well as his monthly column in Guitar Player magazine, demystified the insides of music technology and inspired people to look under the hood. It gave hobbyists a green light to tinker, and even inspired budding engineers.
āI was heavily into Craig Anderton's series in Guitar Player," says R.G. Keen, whose GEO site also had a major impact on the early boutique scene. āHe was a major influence. I learned and tinkered with his very early stuff. I was already headed for an engineering education, and it got me started on the road of electrical engineering."
Anderton is a guitarist and received some notoriety with his late-'60s band, Mandrake Memorial, touring parts of the U.S. and England and opening for acts like the Doors and Frank Zappa and the Mothers of Invention. He started writing about DIY projects for musicians in Popular Electronics magazine in 1968. By the mid 1970s, Popular Electronics switched its focus to computers and stopped publishing music-related projects. Anderton, looking for work as a writer, reached out to Guitar Player.
Craig Anderton, a godfather of pedal building, began writing for Popular Mechanics in 1968, and then started a monthly DIY column in Guitar Player in the 1970s.
āI pitched them on doing an article about a headphone amp, but they had a couple reservations," he says. āOne was, they didn't think anybody cared, and two, they were afraid that someone would electrocute himself. Apparently, they had done an article on an amp modification, and someone almost electrocuted himself. Eventually, they asked someone at Alembic about my circuit. Alembic said it was safe, and I sent Guitar Player the article, but they wouldn't let me do the schematic. They said, 'No, we have our own art department and our own look. We'll do the schematic.' I said, 'But if you make a mistake, the thing won't work.' They said, 'We'll get it right. It will be perfect.' Well, they made a mistake on the schematic, and the thing couldn't work. You would think it would be a disaster, but I owe my current level of success to that art department making a mistake. They got over 300 letters from people that varied from, 'Gee, I never built anything before, so I must have done something wrong,' to āHi, I'm an audio engineer at National Semiconductor and you know there is a mistake in the schematic.' They decided there must be interest in this stuff. They asked me to write another article, which was the treble booster, and that evolved into the column, which evolved into Electronic Projects for Musicians."
Anderton is currently working on his 45th book, but in 1975 he was a beginner and unsure what to do. Inspired by the handbook, How To Keep Your Volkswagen Alive, by John Muir and Tosh Gregg, which he used to keep his 1966 Volkswagen running, he borrowed the book's format as the template for his fledgling release.
āHow To Keep Your Volkswagen Alive assumed you knew nothingāand I mean nothingāand I was able to do all kinds of things to my car thanks to that book," he says. āI realized that book was the outline I needed to follow for Electronic Projects. The first thing it did was discuss the terms you needed to use, and then the tools, and then the techniques involving those tools, and then the actual projects themselves, and then what to do if something went wrong. I followed that outline and did the book, and it did really well."
Analog Man Mike Piera was a software engineer working for a Japanese company in the early '90s when he started tinkering with pedals. āI started out doing the Tube Screamer mods, because you couldn't find 808s back then," he says.
Pedal Modding Begins
Anderton's book opened a door and gave musical laymenāpeople who didn't work for major music equipment manufacturersāprojects to try, and, more importantly, permission to experiment. But if you got stuckāand you didn't have Anderton's phone number or physical mailing addressāyou were stuck.
The internet changed that. Even before the development of the World Wide Web, the nascent internet made it possible for aspiring new builders, often working in isolation, to find like-minded enthusiasts, share information, ask questions, confer with experts, and eventually even check out schematics of classic devices.
The earliest groups were user networks, or Usenet groups, and email lists. Although at that time computers were not yet ubiquitous, and only real nerdsāengineers, and others working in the tech field or somehow associated with a larger institutionāhad access.
āIn the early days of the internet, people didn't have computers, there were no cell phones, and pretty much the only people on it were engineers and scientists," says Mike Piera, who started his pedal company, Analog Man, in those early years. Piera was a software engineer, worked for a Japanese company, and split his time between the U.S. and Japan. During his downtime in Japan, he discovered the vintage guitar market, which, eventually, piqued his interest in vintage pedals. āWe just had email back then, and some forums. Usenet, before there was a World Wide Web, was the way you interacted with people. You would post something, and it was like a forum. Most of it was probably used for porn and weird things. There were a lot of 'alt' thingsā'alt' meant like alternate lifestyles. The guitar effects forum was alt.guitar.effects, or something like that, because it wasn't totally mainstream. People like R.G. Keen, Jack Orman, and a lot of guys were on that forum helping each other out."
Piera got his start on those early forums. Web pages didn't exist yet, and he had a large file on his desktop filled with cut-and-paste repliesāso he didn't have to retype the same instructions over and over again. His first project was modding Ibanez Tube Screamers. It sold well, and that's how he got out of software engineering and full-time into pedals.
Mike Piera's Tube Screamer mods caught on in the 1990s through Usenet forums. Guitarists would send Piera their pedals to mod, along with a payment, and a business was born.
āI started out doing the Tube Screamer mods, because you couldn't find 808s back then," he says. āThis was in the early '90s, and I figured out how to mod the 9s into 808s. I mentioned [on one of the forums] that I modified Tube Screamers with parts I got in Japan. People would post things like, 'Can I send you mine, and you'll mod it?' I came up with the mod to make it public, and a lot of people were sending their pedals in. I was really surprised that people would just send me their pedal and money and expect to get it back. But once I started doing a few and people were raving about them, then the orders kept coming in."
Godfathers of the Gear Forums
As the internet developed, and the World Wide Web became a thing, it became possibleādespite slow speeds and painful dial-up connectionsāto post content on actual web pages. Some of the people to take advantage of that included bona fide electrical engineers, like R.G. Keen, who was based in Austin, Texas.
Keen worked for 30-plus years at IBM. He was with the company as the personal computer movement started to develop, took an interest in the possibilities that meant for music, and was an early adopter of the IBM PC serial adapter card, which was converted over to run MIDI. He was also interested in music-related electronicsālike guitar pedalsāand joined the online chatter early on. In addition to his contributions to many forums and conversations, he launched his own site, GEO FX, which is a repository of insights and wisdom.
R.G. Keen points to the Internet for the rise in pedal enthusiasts. āIt snowballed. It was the availability of the informationābecause we have the same number of people these days who are interested in doing technical and musical stuffābut before the Internet, they didn't have a way to express that. I think of the soldiering iron as a tool of expression, just like a guitar is."
āThe wider internet that existed in something like today's form only started in the mid-to-late '90s, roughly the same time we were getting started," Keen says. āI wound up with a local internet account from a provider here in the Austin areaāeden.com [The site today is for UNICOM Global, which looks like a software company.]āand I did the earliest work on GEO FX in late '97. A year or two later, I was regularly turning out articles and putting them on GEO FX, and I had that name for it by then."
āI view that site as a little bit of paying it forward or paying it back," he continues. āI used GEO FX as a way to tell other people, 'Here is how you can do more advanced stuff in electronics. Here's how you make more guitar pedals.' I viewed it as ways people could think about the electronics in ways that maybe would help them. There is a lot of stuff on GEO FX that is purely, 'Here's a technique,' or 'Here's how it's done.' I went through a period there in the late '90s and early 2000s where I was thinking about getting into the business of selling guitar pedal kits and electronics. I started on that a little bit, and said, 'Nah, let's just do the intellectual stuff. I can tell people that this is a schematic. This is how to put stuff together. Here's a trick on how to drill your boxes so that everything fits.' That's really what GEO FX evolved into."
But more important than Usenet groups, email lists, and even information-laden websitesālike Keen's site, General Guitar Gadgets, Harmony Central, and online pedal guru, Jack Orman's site, AMZ (at muzique.com)āwere online forums. The forums were, and still are, places to have open discussions about problems, learn new tricks, and interact with experts and others with more experience. One important forum, first launched in 1999 by Hawaii native Aron Nelson, is DIY Stompboxes.
āWhat I'm most proud about is that on my forum, there's hardly any fighting," says Aron Nelson. "I don't like fights, and I try to get people, for better or worse, to be civil. I realized that I have these genius guys, like R.G. Keen, Mark Hammer, and others, and they are helping people out night and day. People appreciate that. It is just a great place to be."
āIt was a fantastic time at the beginning," Nelson says. āJack Orman and R.G. Keen were almost like the godfathers of this whole thing. Jack with his page, and R.G.'s, and they are still helping people now. Another page was ampage.org, and that was actually one of the biggest forums aroundātoday it goes under the name Music Electronics Forumāand at some point they even hosted a subsection for me, because I was totally into it. It was guys like me who were having fun making these things. It felt good. But then there were the other guys who were figuring out how to monetize it. For me, it was a total hobby. I thought, 'If I can make these things, I'm going to get other people to realize that they can make their own effects, too.' That was my goal. The beauty of building your ownāor at least knowing how to modify itāis that you can get it that much closer to what you want. And that brings up another point, too: Most of the people on the forums are not electrical engineers."
āDIY Stompboxes was really the first good place on the internet, after Usenet, and more specifically to the DIY aspect," Piera says. āOn Harmony Central, if someone asked, 'Can somebody help me? My Tube Screamer died,' the reply would usually be, 'Go to DIY Stompboxes and search it.' He was definitely about building, repairing, and stuff like that. It was a really good forum, with lots of good people, and not too many idiots on thereāvery little as far as shills or snake-oil salesmen. I still send people there, and I still check it out every few months or so."
The PG Seamoon FX Funk Machine review.
Recorded direct using PreSonus FireStudio and PreSonus Studio One 3.
Clip 1: Miles passive short-scale bass - sub-drop setting - frequency maxed, blend maxed, filter off, volume maxed.
Clip 2: Miles passive short-scale bass - wet-drop setting - frequency 11 oāclock, blend noon, filter 2 oāclock, volume 4 oāclock.
Clip 3: ā75 reissue Fender Jazz - drippy drop setting -frequency noon, blend 1 oāclock, filter 2 oāclock, volume 3 oāclock.
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RatingsPros:Great range of tones. Cons: Internal preampās trim pot for gain could be a pain to adjust on the fly when using multiple instruments or settings. Street: $199 Seamoon FX Funk Machine seamoonfx.com | Tones: Ease of Use: Build/Design: Value: |
Passion for tone is what brings us all here, and for Neil Jason, that passion has earned yet another title on his resume. Not only has he been a top-call bassist for decadesārecording with the likes of Paul McCartney, the Brecker Brothers, Mick Jagger, Cyndi Lauper, and dozens of other heaviesābut heās also been a producer and composer. And now, in a partnership with Ben Fulton of Red Witch, he has started a pedal company called Seamoon FX. The outfitās first offering is the Funk Machine, which is a reimagining of the original ā70s envelope filter of the same name.
Stuffed Envelope
Out of the box, the Funk Machine is sleek, compact, and easy to navigate, with a few more controls than the original (that was made by a now-gone company, also called Seamoon). This new version boasts a blend and volume control in addition to the frequency and depth controls of the first Funk Machine. There is also a mini toggle to switch the onboard preamp on or off, allowing the pedal to be tailored to a playerās particular instrument.
I plugged in a Fender ā75 reissue Jazz bass for this run-through, as it is the absolute funkiest bass in my arsenal. For another flavor, I also used a short-scale Kohlman Miles bass, which has a more rounded tone than the J. I started with the blend control on the Seamoon at about noon, the volume at 3 oāclock, and adjusted the frequency and filter to my tastes.
This pedal just oozes funk. The wet, drippy sound is really crushing, and the touch sensitivity is an absolute dream. I can chug along with a cool groove, hit it just a little harder to get those nice accent pops happening, and add more of that effect with the depth control. The frequency control is really nice, too. It allows the user to adjust the frequency spectrum in which the pedal will operate, from supersonic-high to subsonic.
In addition to the super-retro and useful vibe of the filter, there are also some other settings built in that can push your tone into new places. One really sweet setting is the āsub drop,ā in which I dimed all the controls except the filter, which I set to zero. This setting is the ultimate in subterranean bass and will make dance and reggae records shake. Another great tone is when the filter is barely engaged (about 10 oāclock), which adds just a touch of the watery effect, but also gives the bass a sonic enhancement thatās quite useful.
The Verdict
I was never privy to the original Funk Machine, although I have heard it countless times on recordings. I am happy that it has been revamped in an analog, compact, and flexible package, which comes in at half the price of an original, and with added features. The no-frills, useful approach of the Funk Machine will help you get the funk out in all the right ways and still leave plenty of room on your pedalboard ā¦ and in your wallet.