The Farmer's mill is an all-analog pedal aimed at players who are looking for more avant-garde and experimental sounds.
Poland (October 14, 2013) -- Farmerās Mill is the first in the world, authentic and highly innovative guitar pedal which delivers exceptional sound breaking experience straight at your feet. Billed as the 100% Electric Mud Grinder Farmerās Mill is the ultimate solution for players who seek for avant-garde musical expression tools. It makes your guitar sound like broken, set on fire and ran through a blown amp.
Improved and expanded Farmerās Mill comes in white and orange finishes and offers the following features:
- True Random Technology | adjustable pure analog chaos / randomness generator
- Full Range Mill | breaks the whole audio spectrum
- Low Range Mill | selects only the low frequencies to be broken
- TNT | tube dedicated boost activated when the Mill comes in action
- Versatile footswitch | momentary when on hold, double-click to turn on permanently
- True Bypass
Watch the company's video demo:
For more information:
Crushsound
Sometimes, in the quest for buttery, singing, and perfect diamond-like tones, you can forget about the twisted potential of stompboxes, how beautifully demented their creators can be, and what
Sometimes, in the quest for buttery, singing, and perfect diamond-like tones, you can forget about the twisted potential of stompboxes, how beautifully demented their creators can be, and what a delightfully varied art form music is in the first place.
Consider the Crushsound Farmerās Mill. This is a stompbox born of motivations most traditional guitarists would consider bizarre. It unapologetically existsāin partāto create the sound of your cable or jack crapping out. And if at first that sounds like a waste of your hard-earned cash, few would fault you. But the Farmerās Mill is a thoughtfully executed and wellbuilt piece of gear that digs deep into the artistic notion of creation through destruction. And no matter where you stand on that particular aesthetic gesture, for musicians that live comfortably outside convention and willingly incorporate more chaotic sounds into their playing, the Farmers Mill can be a surprisingly powerful musical tool.
Set to Destruct, Indestructible
The Farmerās Mill is a very cool, thoughtful,
and downright lovely piece of stompbox
design, which is no surprise given that
architect Jedrzej Lewandowski (check out
his āHouse on the Waterā super-villain lair/
fantasy pad) is a part of the brain trust that
conceived the pedal. The thing is a rockā
built with thick, unbending steel that rings
like a church bell when you tap it on the
bottom panel. Considering that this is a
pedal thatās likely to be used in chaotic stage
situations, thatās a good thing. Apart from
flinging it from a fifth floor apartment window,
it will take a lot of effort to do damage
to this pedal. Itās also a good-looking pedal.
The footswitch is situated in the center of
a stylized windmill graphic, while the three
chicken-head control knobs are stacked
vertically along the left edgeāspaced far
enough apart to switch on the fly.
Manipulating the controls is relatively intuitive once you get a handle on how the pedal works. But keep in mind that the controls enable you to manipulate some very unusual effect parameters. Mix is the most straightforward, and permits you to balance your straight and effected signal. The rate knob is where things start to get more esoteric, but essentially it determines the frequency with which the crackling, broken effect kicks in. The mill knob is actually a four-position switch, and it increases the intensity of the effect as you move it clockwise. The footswitchārather than a click-it-and-forget-it type switch works only when you hold it downāan indication, perhaps, of how judiciously youāll want to use this effect.
Parts Unknown
You have to approach the Farmerās Mill
with an open mind. But what really helps is
a dose of punky, irreverent, smash-āem-up
attitude. To start, go to YouTube and check
out a young Pete Townshend assaulting
his Rickenbacker and stacks on āAnyway,
Anyhow, Anywhereāāitāll not only fire you
up appropriately, but itāll offer important
clues to how to best use the Farmerās Mill.
I set the pedal up on the tail end of a chain of fuzzboxes and just before an analog delay with a feedback-ready rig of a cranked blackface Tremolux and a Rickenbacker 330āand taking a cue from Peteālaunched into the barrage of hanging 1st position and power chords that makes up the Whoās āCircles.ā With the mix and rate at high noon and the mill switch in its second-most intense setting, the Farmerās Mill became great punctuation for big-lingering chordsāespecially when I threw in some switch toggling to add to the anarchy. It would be easy to dismiss such use of the Farmerās Mill as mere theatreāand to be sure, throwing the effect on is an attention grabber. But thereās a real musicality to the way the Farmerās Mill sounds in this contextāand if you thrill to the sounds of Townshendās auto-destruct assaults or the raw, unbridled aggression of punk and garage, the Farmerās Mill has a knack for adding a clues to how to best use the Farmerās Mill. sweet drop of adrenaline on top, and at high volume, the thrilling sensation that the whole house is about to come down.
The Mill works well with different flavors of low-to-medium gain fuzz and buzzing ā60s-style fuzz tones. And switching quickly between fuzz voices created a cool compound chaos that could be thrilling, were it not for the effort it took to keep the Farmerās Mill bypass switch depressed while activating different fuzzes. And this is one situation where the otherwise cool intermittent switch setup became a considerable limitation.
Ratings
Pros:
Rock solid and artfully designed.
delightfully chaotic. Great studio tool.
Cons:
Very expensive.
Tones:
Playability/Ease of Use:
Build:
Value:
Street:
$359
Crushsound
crushsound.com
At more extreme settings, the Farmerās Mill is great for more experimental expressions. And itās a great texture to have on hand in recording situations. I mixed a few tracks of detuned chords subjected to the Millās more aggressively crackling fourth position into a sort of melodic, musique concrĆØte-styled sound collageāwhich added a touch of dread and menace not unlike the haunting sound of Thurston Mooreās dying amp on Sonic Youthās āProvidence.ā More adventurous applications aside, though, the Farmerās Mill gets a lot less practical at these extreme settingsā especially when you dial the mix way up. And if you are using this pedal in more conservative settings, it might be best to reserve use for a really big finish or the more controlled environs of the recording studio, where this pedal can be a real asset.
The Verdict
Most tone purists and traditionally minded
players wonāt find much use for the Farmerās
Mill, in fact, chances are that many will
find it downright repellent. But guitarists
who live on the experimental side of
the fence and understand and value the
expressive side of sonic chaos will relish the
potential of what the Farmerās Mill can do.
While radical at its core, it can be dialed
back to be very effective and highly musical
when used judiciously. And if itās pure bedlam
youāre looking for, the Farmerās Mill is
more than willing to take the ride.
A few modificationsālike a set-and-forget switch and an expression pedal option for the rate controlāwould make the pedal even more usable. But the Farmerās Mill really is about surrendering control for your sound to some extent, which can be a very powerful creative gesture. Itās fun to imagine the wildly varied and new music that can emerge from that mindset, and itās reassuring to know that madmen are building pedals like the Farmerās Mill to make such music happen.