Come with us, time travelers, as we revisit a year’s worth of axes, amps, stomps, basses, baritones, and other tools of our music-making trade—all deemed worthy of the Premier Gear Award.
Fulltone 2B JFET Booster
Much of what makes Fulltone’s Full Drive 2 and 3 such hits is their forgiving simplicity: They make dialing up great overdrive and boost tones a breeze. The 2B takes that simplicity a step further, extracting the boost section from the Full Drive 3 and stuffing it into a sturdy, ultra-compact pedal that packs a wallop and serves as a tone masseuse extraordinaire.
$103 street, fulltone.com
Click here to read the full review
Red Witch Zeus
The chrome-clad Red Witch Zeus took a Premier Gear Award this year thanks to its split personality—part analog sub-octave, part silicone fuzz. The two completely stand-alone effects are impressive as solo beings, but run both simultaneously and you’ll summon thunderous sonic mayhem.
$299 street, redwitchpedals.com
Click here to read the full review
Jackson SLATXMGQ 3-6 Soloist
Stable, sonically potent, and ready to slay, this imported X-series Soloist impressed reviewer Joe Charupakorn with it’s buttery action, tuning-stable vibrato, and surprising versatility. These qualities make this metal-on-the-surface axe equally suited for blues, rock, and pop applications.
$699 street, jacksonguitars.com
Click here to read the full review
Faith FNCETB Neptune
The Neptune managed the ever-so-satisfying trick of sounding and feeling very expensive at a three-figure price. Using Indonesian trembesi wood for the back and sides, along with an Engelmann spruce top adds up to a simultaneously bright and bass-rich voice. And with versatile Shadow electronics, it’s a great stage-ready performer too.
$999 street, faithguitars.com
Click here to read the full review
Demeter Bass 400
Designer James Demeter has been handcrafting high-end pedals and amps to the delight of players for 30-plus years. With the Premier Gear Award-winning Bass 400, he paired his revered VTBP-201 tube preamp with a class-D power amp to deliver a rig that’s lighter on the back and pocketbook, yet remains plenty heavy in tone.
$999 street, demeteramps.com
Click here to read the full review
Reverend Descent H90 Baritone
Shawn Hammond ventured that the H90 might be the most versatile baritone electric on the market. With potent Railhammer pickups and sound-shaping features, including powerful tone and bass contour controls, it’s hard to argue against that assertion. The H90 is stout, affordable, and capable of sounds from fabulously fat to searing.
$999 street, reverendguitars.com
Click here to read the full review
Nace PRO-18 Tolex Combo
Our esteemed colleague Ted Drozdowski has done a gig or two in his time, so when he called the PRO-18 “a damn-near perfect gigging machine,” we figured this classy little EL84 tweedster had a thing or two going for it. And while Ted found the Nace capable of the rowdy brashness you’d expect from a Marshall-inspired circuit like this, he also found it capable of great nuance, and agreeable to guitars and pickups of every kind.
$1,799, naceamps.com
Click here to read the full review
DryBell Vibe Machine
Croatia’s DryBell did not dabble in half measures when they built this Shin Ei Uni-Vibe clone. The photocells at the heart of the pedal (a must for any real Uni-Vibe clone) are all carefully matched and tested. The extra work yields a fantastically rich and authentic Uni-Vibe-style stomp, complete with expression-pedal functionality.
$295 street, drybell.com
Click here to read the full review
Xotic RC-Booster SH
This groovin’ collaboration between fusion guru Scott Henderson and Xotic is a dual-channel version of the company’s flagship pedal, the RC Booster. Its two voices—a clear, warm transparent boost and a singing, saturated lead mode—both respond well to picking dynamics. The RCB-SH is ideal for players who are happy with their core tone, but seek a little extra kick to make their guitar stand out onstage.
$168 direct, xotic.us
Click here to read the full review
PRS SE 227 Baritone
We were not at all surprised when the PRS SE 227 turned out to be an exquisitely built and playable baritone electric—we’re used to that sort of thing from Paul Reed Smith. What really knocked us out was how sonically adaptable and varied the 227 turned out to be. With nuanced, low-output pickups that proved equally capable of delivering raging rock and softer, snappier fare, it’s one of the more multifaceted and value-packed baris we’ve run into in years.
$749 street, prsguitars.com
Click here to read the full review
MXR 5150 Overdrive
Promising any aspect of Eddie Van Halen’s tone in a box is tricky business. The dude is a magician and you don’t cop that kind of wizardry through circuits. But in terms of enabling the quest for Eddie-dom, it would be hard to find a more capable tool than the 5150 Overdrive. Sensitive, aggressive, and surprisingly tweakable, the feature-packed stomp offers a killer path to the brown sound and beyond.
$199 street, jimdunlop.com
Click here to read the full review
Ampeg PF-50T
The all-tube PF-50T might not be laden with bells and whistles, but this classic-looking head thoroughly impressed reviewer Steve Cook with its rich vintage warmth, handy dual DIs, and very attractive price for an amp of this caliber.
$899 street, ampeg.com
Click here to read the full review
Carr Lincoln
Joe Gore called Carr’s Lincoln a “freewheeling fantasia on Voxiness,” a description that’s not just reflective of the Carr’s design inspirations but also of its abundant color and personality. Like just about every Carr that’s crossed our transom, it’s beautifully built. But it’s the bounty of complex, rich, and rainbow-spectrum Brit-tones on tap that put us over the moon for the Lincoln.
$2,980 street, carramps.com
Click here to read the full review
Sire Marcus Miller V7
Sire stirred up more than a splash in the bass community with their sub-$500 Marcus Miller V7 this year. The tones, construction, and aesthetics impressed reviewer David Abdo so much that he bestowed very heavy praise: “In fact, it might be one of the best production J-style basses out there regardless of price.”
$499 street, sire-usa.com
Click here to read the full review
Catalinbread Katzenkönig
As Joe Gore pointed out in his review of the Katzenkönig, working with old circuits need not rule out creativity. The Katzenkönig proves the power of imaginative circuit DNA scrambling—mating the raw potency of Tone Bender MKII on the front end with the tone shaping power and thrust of a RAT on the output end. The result is tight, tough, explosive, surprisingly easy to wrangle, and above all refreshingly original.
$169 street, catalinbread.com
Click here to read the full review
RJM Mastermind PBC
On the surface, pedal switching seems like a very mechanical task, but RJM’s Mastermind PBC reveals how judiciously applied doses of digital functionality can expand the potential of an affordable switcher in really practical ways. With 768 possible presets, you’ll almost certainly run out of licks before you exhaust the compact RJM’s possibilities.
$999 street, rjmmusic.com
Click here to read the full review
Boss ES-8
Power, ease of use, and an accessible price. This wouldn’t be the first time we’d used this loose group of descriptors for a Boss product. But given all the ES-8 pedal switcher does (800 presets and deep programmability) and it’s affordability relative to the competition, the ES-8 is a great value and a killer foundation for any busy pedalboard.
$699 street, bossus.com
Click here to read the full review
Carl Martin Octa-Switch MK3
The Octa-Switch MK3 proved there’s still room for straightforward mechanical simplicity in the fast-evolving realm of pedal switching. With its intuitive operation, it’s especially suited to neophyte switcher users. And with a $427 price, it represents one of the best bang-for-the-buck propositions in the pedal switcher game.
$427 street, carlmartin.com
Click here to read the full review
Ernie Ball/Music Man St. Vincent
It’s no surprise that a guitarist as potent and delightfully irreverent as Annie Clark would help conceive an axe as potent and irreverent as her signature Ernie Ball/Music Man, the St. Vincent. The three mini-humbuckers add up to a multitude of possible voices, while the superb playability translates not just to comfort, but huge expressive possibilities.
$1,899 street, music-man.com
Click here to read the full review
Mesa/Boogie Subway D-800
Mesa’s highly anticipated entry into the lightweight class-D game did not disappoint reviewer Jordan Wagner, who was especially taken with the amp’s EQ. The smart-looking 800-watt powerhouse might weigh in at a slim 5 1/2 pounds, but as Wagner remarked, “Even with the input and master knobs conservatively set to 10 o’clock, the rig packed quite a wallop.”
$699 street, mesaboogie.com
Click here to read the full review
Dr. Z Z-Lux
In its all-gray-and-black guise, Dr. Z’s Z-Lux is an unassuming creature. But with 40 watts of quad-6V6 power, high headroom, versatile EQ, and onboard spring reverb and tube tremolo, it’s an ideal partner for modern players who love mid-’60s American amp vibe and lots of wiggle room for their effects.
$2,399 street, drzamps.com
Click here to read the full review
Dusky D₂O
The D₂O would probably walk away with the prize for “coolest-looking amp we tested all year.” But we discovered it also sounds every bit as killer as its pop-art look suggests. While the dual 6L6 power section suggests a blackface Fender clone, the D₂O delivered a Vox-like crunch that was fat with sustain, multifaceted, and delightfully full of surprises.
$1,500 street ($575 cabinet sold separately), duskyamp.com
Click here to read the full review
Thorpy FX Fallout Cloud
It’s a cliché to draw parallels between any English product and Her Majesty’s fave superspy, but in the case of the Thorpy Fallout Cloud (formerly known as the Muffroom Cloud), the mix of stylish tailoring, tough-as-nails build, and killer performance truly make it the 007 of Muff-inspired fuzzes. Indeed, Fallout Cloud sounds huge while maintaining a harmonic complexity and sophistication that’s worthy of Commander Bond himself.
$290 street, thorpyfx.com
Click here to read the full review
Chellee Odie Classic
The Odie Classic might be the Screamer-inspired overdrive for players who don’t like TS pedals. Reviewer Charles Saufley found it more open, oxygenated, and complex than his own vintage Tube Screamer (which he likes quite a bit). And at less than $150, it’s priced competitively with a lot of TS clones that can’t approach its wide-spectrum sonic profile.
$149 street, chellee.com
Click here to read the full review
Echopark F-1
David Von Bader called the F-1 “foolproof, musical, and explosive.” That’s good, given that there are only two knobs to control this primitive, but sonically cultivated little beast. But while the minimalistic F-1 may appear limited, it’s wildly adaptable. Gray it may be, but this Echopark is a fuzz for all seasons.
$230 street, echoparkguitars.com
Click here to read the full review
Korg Pitchblack Custom
Following in the footsteps of Korg’s successful Pitchblack tuner, the true-bypass Pitchblack Custom offers an improved detection range of +/- 0.1 cents, triple the battery life, a smaller enclosure, and a bigger display with four user-selectable meter modes. The Pitchblack Custom’s bright 3-D vertical strobe-like display instills confidence that this black box can handle its duties on the darkest stages.
$99 street, korg.com
Click here to read the full review
Tyyster Pelti 12-String
“Pelti” means sheet metal in Finnish, and that’s what luthier Ville Tyyster uses for the body of this immaculately built electric 12. If you love the crisp, jangly tones of classic 12-string electrics from Rickenbacker and Fender, the humbucker-equipped Pelti delivers in spades. But thanks to an internal contact mic, dual volume controls, and a stereo output, the Pelti offers exciting new sonic turf for hardcore jangle-holics to explore.
$4,570 street, sites.google.com/site/tyysterinkitarat/
Click here to read the full review
Bergantino Audio Systems B|Amp and HD112 & HD210 Cabinets
Already known for his standout bass cabinets, Jim Bergantino decided that the time was right to design his own amplifier. The resulting 700-watt B|Amp packs tons of tonal and operational features—most of which are governed by a quartet of knobs below the LCD display—into its 6 1/2 pound frame, and it received accolades aplenty from reviewer David Abdo for its loud, clean tone and sound-shaping ease. Paired with Bergantino HD112 and HD210 cabinets (also Premier Gear Award winners) that were praised for their “crushingly clean tone,” this rig proved to be the whole enchilada.
$1,399 street (B|AMP)
$729 street (HD112)
$829 street (HD210), bergantino.com
Click here to read the full review
Malekko Charlie Foxtrot
Borrowing elements of a sampler/looper, a delay, and a pitch shifter, Charlie Foxtrot almost defies categorization. Once you grasp how the controls interact, Charlie avails textures ranging from subtly warped pitch hiccups to beautifully bizarre 10-second loops. The pedal delivers the sort of delicious dementedness you can typically attain only through complicated digital gear, but in a functional format even numbskulls can grok.
$189 street, malekkoheavyindustry.com
Click here to read the full review
Line 6 Helix
An ambitious multi-effector with nearly 200 amp and pedal models, a built-in expression pedal, exceptional rear-panel connectivity, and large, bright, color-coded editing surfaces, Helix is an extraordinarily powerful recording and performing tool. Crafty guitarists might use it for composing and sound design, tracking to DAW via Helix’s quality convertors, gigging through a P.A., or bypassing Helix’s amp/cab simulations and playing through a conventional amp. Guitarists who like hanging out in the digital realm will be hard pressed to find a superior traveling companion.
$1,499 street, line6.com
Click here to read the full review
Boss VB-2W Waza Craft Vibrato
An enhanced version of the VB-2 Vibrato—a Boss pedal coveted for its relative rarity—the new VB-2W Waza Craft is a wonderfully quirky modulation device. Like the original, the VB-2W is an analog pitch wobbler, but it has a quieter circuit, a jack to control depth with an expression pedal, and two switchable voices. Those looking for unconventional sci-fi sonics will find them in the VB-2W.
$199 street, bossus.com
Click here to read the full review
BluGuitar Amp 1
A 100-watt, 4-channel amplifier that can be mounted on a pedalboard? Meet the Amp 1, an ingenious device that combines a tube-powered preamp with a solid-state class-D power amp. Amp 1’s tones range from darn good to ridiculously good, and the 3-band EQ section works beautifully in all modes. Though not dramatic, the digital reverb is rich, musical, and convincingly spring-like. Amp 1 is a triumph of both engineering and sound design.
$799 street, bluguitar.com
Click here to read the full review
Henriksen Bud
Jazz and fingerstyle players are likely to love this tiny (9" x 9" x 9") 135-watt, solid-state combo, but the dual-channel Bud has a lot to offer guitarists of almost any musical persuasion. The Bud’s flexible inputs and outputs, excellent reverb, potent 5-band EQ, and burly low end make it ideal for small gigs. Need a personal monitor, teaching-room tool, or micro-PA for a laptop or tablet? This Bud’s for you.
$1,099 street, henriksenamplifiers.com
Click here to read the full review
Strymon Dig Dual Digital Delay
With its two delays and flexible, interactive controls, Dig is a powerful echo-generating machine. It delivers the best of ’80s rack-device sounds, yet it feels as timeless as any echo unit out there. Triplet, eighth, dotted-eighth, and dotted-quarter settings let you dial in intriguing rhythmic repeats, and its three resolution settings and many “hidden” secondary functions means Dig adds up to more than meets the eye.
$299 street, strymon.net
Click here to read the full review
Fender American Elite Precision Bass
Reviewer Steve Cook discovered P-bass glory with the Fender American Elite model that’s outfitted with a noiseless P/J configuration and active electronics capable of covering a vast tonal landscape. Cook says, “Yes, plenty of basses are marketed as built for all styles of music, but the American Elite Precision can truly back this claim.” Superior tone, killer components, and an impressive build? That’ll seal the deal for a Premier Gear Award.
$1,799 street, fender.com
Click here to read the full review
3Leaf Audio Wonderlove
Players who dig the Mu-Tron III will adore Wonderlove, a potent envelope filter from Seattle’s 3Leaf Audio. It covers all the Mu-Tron III bases while adding controls to unlock sounds you can’t coax from a vintage unit. Well made and reasonably priced considering its quality hardware and design innovations—which include a built-in effects loop—Wonderlove nails expected envelope filter tones, plus many others.
$299 street, 3leafaudio.com
Click here to read the full review
Fender Bassbreaker 45
Early Marshall amps “borrowed” heavily from the Fender Bassman circuit, a point Fender underscores with their 2-channel Bassbreaker 45. The 45-watt 2x12 combo mates a vintage Fender-style circuit with a pair of EL34s to create a distinctly British flavor with lots of headroom. Equipped with powerful 70-watt Celestion G12s, a hefty transformer, an attenuator, and a clever scheme for connecting the dual channels in series, this amp delivers classic tones at a cost-conscious price.
$999 street, fender.com
Click here to read the full review
JColoccia ID
When you set the controls on the JColoccia ID overdrive at neutral positions, it’s a sonic dead ringer for a vintage Tube Screamer. But unlike most 808 clones, the ID delivers a genuinely useful, expanded EQ section that lets you dial in more air, more punch, and more radical tones than you’ll get out of any 3-knob Tube Screamer. This sonically flexible pedal offers a satisfying way to dirty up your world.
$169 street, jcolocciaguitars.com
Click here to read the full review
Mojo Hand FX Sacred Cow
Mojo Hand Sacred Cow is one of the best Klon-inspired pedals we’ve seen in recent years, and it’s more than a slavish copy of this well-codified sonic template. The Sacred Cow’s most obvious enhancement is its lean/fatty switch. Lean settings are “normal,” while fatty settings lend low-end heft that gives flexibility to players who switch between single-coils and humbuckers. For Klon tones at an accessible price, the Sacred Cow is tough to top.
$179 street, mojohandfx.com
Click here to read the full review
Taylor 562ce 12-Fret 12-String
The 562ce gushes gloriously rich tones and plays like a dream. Its mahogany Grand Concert body has an elegant Venetian cutaway that affords easy access to all 18 frets, despite the 12th-fret body joint. With its flawless workmanship and factory setup, low and fast action, hyper-accurate intonation, unreal sustain, and Expression System 2 electronics, the 562ce is an instrument of refined delicacy that makes fingerstyle playing an utter delight.
$2,699 street, taylorguitars.com
Click here to read the full review
Marshall JCM 25/50 2555X Silver Jubilee
Produced only in 1987, original Marshall Silver Jubilee amps now fetch ridiculous sums. Marshall has heeded the clamor with the new JCM 25/50 2555X Silver Jubilee. While the 2555X boasts several design changes, in most critical ways it’s a faithful recreation of the original. Powered by four EL34s, the amp delivers 100 watts in triode mode and 50 watts in pentode. It boasts responsive EQ controls, heavenly clean tones, and a hot-rodded JCM800 vibe.
$1,899 street (head); $1,299 street (cabinet), marshallamps.com
Click here to read the full review
Schroeder SA9+
While some may argue the potential effect of say, a single capacitor in an amp or pedal, the SA9+ reveals how good the sum of many great components and an inspired, well-executed build can sound. Powered by twin KT66s, the amp’s superior headroom means very sweet clean tones, but the 40-watt head also makes a very responsive blank slate for pedals ranging from modulation to the most aggressive fuzz.
$3,950, schroederamplification.com
Click here to read the full review
SolidGold FX Horizon
The beauty of the Horizon optical compressor? How it goes beyond basic compression. Yes, it can handle the most pedestrian compression tasks if you keep those attack and comp settings at the lowest levels. But the real treat is the swelling, super-squished, and downright psychedelic approximations of tape manipulation and studio-chain compression you can get via three knobs.
$175, solidgoldfx.com
Click here to read the full review
Ibanez Analog Chorus Mini
Ibanez’s Mini series has produced hit after hit so far, and with its warm, liquid modulations, the Analog Chorus Mini reveals how adept Ibanez designers have become at stuffing their best analog effects into petite packages. At 99 bucks, and with a footprint not much bigger than a Matchbox car, it’s one of this year’s price-to-performance ratio champions!
$99, ibanez.com
Click here to read the full review
Fender American Elite Telecaster
The Telecaster is nearing 70 years old. But it’s a long, long way from retirement. In fact, the American Elite Telecaster reveals not just how freaking perfect the Telecaster is as a guitar design, but how much wiggle room there still is for tweaking. Fast, comfortable, and overflowing with sustain, the American Elite is a bold proclamation of how the granddaddy of solidbody electrics remains alive and vital.
$1,799 street, fender.com
Click here to read the full review
Peavey Classic 30
The latest addition to Peavey’s Classic series, this all-tube 30-watt 1x12 combo has enough versatility to handle virtually any playing situation. With two foot-switchable channels and four EL84s, the Classic 30 covers a wide sonic territory, and its shared 3-knob EQ and spring reverb make it easy to dial in everything from sparkling surf to roadhouse rock. An effects loop and switchable boost are welcome additions to this affordable, rugged stage amp.
$699 street, peavey.com
Click here to read the full review
Alexander La Calavera Phaser
Though it’s digital, La Calavera sounds and operates like a great analog phaser. It’s no more difficult to use than a vintage Boss phaser, but its tonal range is far greater. La Calavera strikes a savvy compromise between power and simplicity, and all the controls offer deliciously musical ranges and tapers, which makes it incredibly easy to create compelling sounds in the pedal’s three operating modes. And hey, it looks rad too.
$189 street, alexanderpedals.com
Click here to read the full review
Source Audio Nemesis Delay
With seven knobs, two switches, two push buttons, two footswitches, and a raft of I/Os, the Nemesis digital delay may look imposing, but dialing in personal variations on classic and newfangled echo sounds is actually intuitive and fun. Nemesis can dish authentic slapback or perform precise sound-sculpting functions, and it’s a joy to explore the musical possibilities between those extremes. An easy-to-use editor app makes this powerful standalone delay even more versatile.
$299 street, sourceaudio.net
Click here to read the full review
EarthQuaker Devices Spatial Delivery
Don’t let Spatial Delivery’s simple layout fool you—this envelope filter is capable of countless cool tones. Thanks to a clever multi-mode filter, you can create new sounds in a fraction of the time required by more complex filter effects, and it’s easy to dial in just the right response to suit your touch. The versatile controls are beautifully calibrated, the sound quality is superb, and the price is right for a handmade pedal.
$195 street, earthquakerdevices.com
Click here to read the full review
Ibanez TSA5TVR Tube Screamer Amp
The 6V6-driven Ibanez TSA5TVR Tube Screamer amp—which, as you might have guessed, has an onboard Tube Screamer circuit—is a 5-watt, 1x8 combo that excels at blues-rock leads, grinding power chords, ’60s garage fuzz, and Led Zeppelin-style leads. And how about that two-tone vinyl that looks lifted from a ’57 DeSoto Fireflite? Throw in a subtle but lush Accutronics spring reverb and you have the perfect amp for recording or playing intimate club gigs.
$399 street, ibanez.com
Click here to read the full review
Come with us time travelers, as we revisit a year’s worth of axes, amps, stomps, basses, baritones, and other tools of our music-making trade—all deemed worthy of the Premier Gear Award. This year’s list is as diverse as ever: Classics revisited, shred machines made affordable, fuzzes refined and made more fiendish, amps that blast and purr, basses that boom, and time-warping delays and reverbs that mock astronomers’ notions about the cosmos. From manufacturers big and small, these delights await you in the pages ahead. Enjoy the voyage.
This roundup of kickin' overdrives showcases classic sounds and new directions in grit.
Overdrives are often the point around which a whole pedalboard pivots, making the variables and differences between these devices critical. And whether you consider the mysterious harmonics and compression they can add to an analog delay, the way they give a clean 6L6 amp the ringing grit of EL34s, or the way they can heap mass on a germanium fuzz, overdrives can go beyond just adding a spoonful of Buddy Guy attitude to your tone.
In reviewing these five recent stomps, we took this broader outlook on the overdrive’s role in your rig. And while we primarily evaluated each for its standalone performance (indeed, some of these pedals left us convinced we’d need little else), we also paid attention to how they interact with such common effects as fuzz and delay.
You’ll see familiar and classic lineage and inspiration among our selections, as well as a few unique circuits that evolve the overdrive concept along interesting trajectories. Each showed us something about the possibilities of this often overlooked effect. If you think you’ve got the world of OD all figured out, we might just have a few surprises in store.
Click onto the next page or select the dirtbox you want to explore next:
JColoccia ID
Mojo Hand Sacred Cow
Oddfellow The Bishop
Zen Zero Red Crown
Pettyjohn PettyDrive
All Review Demos On One Page
JColoccia ID
Generally speaking, when you see an overdrive clad in green you can be somewhat sure of its spiritual ancestry. (And no, we don’t mean Gumby, Lime Jell-O, or Oscar the Grouch.) No surprise then that when you set the controls on the JColoccia ID at neutral positions, it’s a sonic dead ringer for a Tube Screamer.For a lot of folks, that aural stamp is enough to pique curiosity—especially at a price that’s in line with most mass-produced 808 clones. But what the ID delivers that most 808 clones don’t is a genuinely useful, expanded EQ section that drastically enhances the pedal’s flexibility and delivers unexpected, sometimes very un-808 surprises.
Behind the Green …
For all the extra EQ control that ID puts at your fingertips, the circuit board is very spare, compact, and tidy—taking up less than half the enclosure’s interior space and leaving plenty of room for chassis-mounted input and output jacks, as well as a 9V battery compartment. The EQ controls themselves are a simple set—treble, mid, and bass. It’s a sturdy pedal, with a refreshingly utilitarian feel.
Anyone who loves a good Tube Screamer will feel cozy and at home with the ID. With all controls at noon, it dishes the squishy, present-but-not-spiky midrange that—with a twist this way or that—can convincingly stand in for a screaming tweed or jangling Vox. The big fun begins, however, when you leave the path most trodden and start attacking tone knobs.
Ratings
Pros:
Effectively expands on the TS formula. Great pick sensitivity for a TS-style pedal. Airy high end.
Cons:
None.
Tones:
Ease of Use:
Build/Design:
Value:
Street:
$169
JColoccia ID
jcolocciaguitars.com
The most immediately satisfying departure from tried-and-true TS-ness comes via an inversion of the TS formula—which means, more or less, scooping the midrange and boosting the bass and treble. The transformation that results from this simple adjustment is profound, particularly with single-coil pickups. My Bassman has rarely sounded quite so Marshall-y. And the extra high end enlivens pick attack in a way that might win over the staunchest TS detractors.
Such settings highlight how responsive the ID is to guitar volume attenuation. Adding high end from ID also extends the range of your guitar tone knobs—particularly on Stratocaster- and Les Paul-style control sets where you can set up the individual pickups for radical tone shifts. And finding myself in a Beatles mood, I eagerly and easily moved from scathing, stabbing Revolver chord tones to soft, percolating Abbey Road lead tones using this technique and a two-humbucker Telecaster. In each case the ID lends excited, organic dashes of grit and a jolt of classy, not-too-brutish attitude.
On the back end of a fuzz, ID contributes bulk and aggression without sacrificing overtones. Not surprisingly, it also becomes a very effective equalization tool for a more unruly fuzz or distortion. I tried ID out with a Tone Bender, RAT, Fuzzrite, and Big Muff and the sum total of sounds I could extract from those combinations—and the civility with which ID interacted with each—was super-impressive.
The Verdict
I encounter more polarized opinions about the Tube Screamer these days than ever, but ID is a TS-inspired pedal that could put many related disputes to rest. Use the EQ right and adventurously and you can dial in more air, more punch, and more radical tones than you’ll get out of any 3-knob Tube Screamer. By any standard, however, the ID offers a versatile and satisfying way to dirty up your world.
Watch the Review Demo:
Click onto the next page or select the dirtbox you want to explore next:
Mojo Hand Sacred Cow
Oddfellow The Bishop
Zen Zero Red Crown
Pettyjohn PettyDrive
All Review Demos On One Page
Mojo Hand Sacred Cow
If there’s an upside to the plague called “Klon hype,” it’s that the condition drives builders to duplicate the circuit and sound at (relatively) affordable prices. Better still, it’s compelled a few manufacturers to pursue enhancements and improvements on that now well-codified sonic template. The Mojo Hand Sacred Cow is one of the better fruits of that effort I’ve come across—and we’ve seen many in recent years.Economical Execution, Top Tones
Crack open the Sacred Cow and you see smartly applied economical construction and thoughtful, creative circuit design. Input and output jacks and the AC jack are mounted on the circuit board, though there’s little reason to suspect they are anything other than totally secure. The footswitch itself is mounted apart from the circuit board, which makes replacement easy down the road if necessary. Elsewhere, the circuit is neat and well executed. Texas Instruments op amps and germanium clipping diodes hint at Klon inspiration.
At many equivalent levels, it’s hard to tell the difference between the Sacred Cow and the excellent Klon clone I keep on my own board (which itself is about 95 percent authentic sounding in a head-to-head test with a real-deal Centaur.) But I did hear an ever-so-slight extra airiness and shimmer across the frequency spectrum that I really loved—and that, in fact, might have been the difference between my own klone and the real thing.
Ratings
Pros:
Smooth and tasty take on the Klon recipe. Nice higher gain tones. Big harmonic spectrum.
Cons:
Would be nice to avoid board mounted jacks at this price.
Tones:
Ease of Use:
Build/Design:
Value:
Street:
$179
Mojo Hand FX Sacred Cow
mojohandfx.com
The Sacred Cow shines with essentially clean amps set right at, or just below, the verge of breakup. Low- to medium-gain settings on the pedal yield creamy, harmonic distortion that’s perfect for greasy Stones riffs and snappy lead tones with a just-right softness and glow on the top end. The dynamic shifts you can achieve by clicking the pedal on and off at these settings is akin to the ideal outcome from guitar volume attenuation. But using that technique on top of the Sacred Cow, which is very responsive to guitar volume changes, yields exponentially more color.
Beefier and More Buttery
Higher gain settings highlight what I consider an unsung attribute of Klon-type circuits—a harmonically multifaceted growl that marks that perfect point where “overdrive” and “distortion” shake hands. With Fender single-coils it produces an intoxicating and complex drive tone that’s perfect for punky, grinding chord work. With humbuckers it can give an otherwise mild-sounding 6L6 amp an air of Sabbathoid evil.
Sacred Cow’s most obvious enhancement (apart from delivering authentic Klon-ness at a fair price) is the lean/fatty switch. Lean settings are “normal.” Fatty settings, however, lend low-end heft that almost never obscures the pedal’s lovely high-end detail. It also gives flexibility to players who switch between single-coils and humbuckers, or need extra presence or thump in the course of a set. It’s an addition that genuinely works—one that guitarists are likely to use, rather that leaving in a single, preferred position.
Downstream from my Tone Bender, the Sacred Cow proved to be a great fuzz enhancement, lending punch and the kind of compression and boost you might seek from a nice outboard compressor in a studio. The harmonic depth of the Sacred Cow also makes it a great pairing for delay and reverb textures—exciting ghost harmonics and color in subtle slapback settings, and celestial ambient and shoegaze zones alike. It’s a great pedal for retaining 1st position and barre chord detail amid the blur of reverberations and modulation.
The Verdict
There’s a lot to love about the Sacred Cow. It’s forgiving, flattering, musical, and, in many cases, a touch of magic tone dust. For Klon tones at an accessible price, it’s tough to top.
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JColoccia ID
Oddfellow The Bishop
Zen Zero Red Crown
Pettyjohn PettyDrive
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Oddfellow The Bishop
With participants in the great Klon arms race looking beyond the constraints of nailing the Centaur sound, we’re hearing how wonderful variations on the theme can be. Oddfellow’s Bishop makes no specific claims to Klon-ness, but the sonic likenesses are unmistakable and the differences are intriguing, practical, and full of possibilities.Undercover Agendas
Removing the backplate from the Bishop reveals little about the circuit. Oddfellow inverted the circuit board, so you can’t see what components actually populate it. The upside is that you don’t have to hunt for the very practical true bypass/buffer switch. There’s also room for a 9V battery just adjacent to the board-mounted footswitch.
To my ear, the Bishop is fundamentally very Klon-like, though at most settings it dwells on the darker end of the Klon spectrum. At equivalent settings with my own Klon clone, the Bishop is darker and you have to open up the treble by an additional third to get the same airiness and tonality. The differences are more than treble range, though. There’s just a touch of TS-style compression (the kind I really like), and the combination of the darker tendencies and that trace of TS boxiness make the Bishop a killer match for trebly single-coils and hotter humbuckers. It’s also lends softer contours to British amps with a tendency for spiky transients without stripping the signal of top-end punch.
Ratings
Pros:
Nuanced gain control. Airy and detailed at higher tone settings. Nice interactivity between controls. Great with toppy single coils and hot humbuckers.
Cons:
Can sound comparatively boxy at mellower tone settings.
Tones:
Ease of Use:
Build/Design:
Value:
Street:
$165
Oddfellow The Bishop
oddfellowfx.com
The Bishop is not a hair-singeing, high-gain affair. And at first, the gain control can seem to lack range—at least in the sense that it doesn’t flirt with metal distortion textures. Whether this is a plus or minus is totally subjective. But I loved the subtle shades and gradients of distortion that you get in trade. And what the gain control might lack in range, it makes up for in fine-tuning accuracy—especially when you use the equally effective tone control with care.
The fact that the pedal is not too hot also translates to a very nice harmonic balance that highlights the individual components of complex chords very effectively. I could grind out Faces riffs all night for the way the Bishop makes barre chords so intricate-sounding and delicious. And if the Bishop has already lured you into the Ronnie Wood/Keith Richards boogie zone, you’ll find that the pedal’s sensitivity to harmonic intricacies make open-tuned riffs colorful and huge.
The Bishop’s more compressed and less gainy output also works well with additional effects. It can help analog delay repeats nestle more softly and subtly into a mix—I found this pairing especially subtle and sublime—and soften digital repeats. The pedal’s capacity for taming high end also makes it a great companion for a sizzling fuzz.
The Verdict
Like the figure that graces the enclosure and gives this Oddfellow its name, the Bishop is resolutely devout in its mission. It’s not on the fence about whether it’s a distortion or something else. It’s an overdrive that specializes in the subtleties, softer glow, and patina of Peter Green’s tone palette and the classier side of Brit boogie raunch. But it’s also a less macho overdrive in many respects, which makes it a very refreshing alternative for driving digital effects. And while Bishop is completely capable of getting rowdy, its real strength is nuance and a control set sensitive enough to explore that world in depth.
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Mojo Hand Sacred Cow
Zen Zero Red Crown
Pettyjohn PettyDrive
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Zen Zero Red Crown
The Red Crown is designed by an Italian guitar nut living in Japan. And if you told us little more, our imaginations would still be fired by the potential tone outcomes of that culture collision. Sure enough, this Zen Zero box sounds quite unlike anything else.Mark of Solidity
Red Crown is a beautifully designed unit—from the elegant, subdued graphics to the soldering within. While you can’t use a battery, the builder positioned input and output jacks lower on the enclosure so you can snuggle the unit closer to pedals with jacks situated at their enclosures’ center points. Inside, the Red Crown is tidy, if a bit crowded. Two notable fixtures include a Texas Instruments LF353 OpAmp and a fat 516D capacitor—another component you don’t see in an overdrive circuit every day. If you guessed we’re headed for unique sonic territory, you’d be right.
Brutishly Big and Toppy
For starters, the Red Crown is loud—very loud. And many of the most impressive, growling overdrive tones are found at impractically loud volumes. How loud is it? I had to dial gain and level settings back to about 9 o’clock or less to achieve unity gain. But for players that like leads to soar above everything else in a mix, or that relish extreme volume shifts within a performance, the Red Crown’s high volume ceiling will be a blessing from the guitar heavens. It’s also a good fit for underachieving small amps, in this respect.
Ratings
Pros:
Rare combination of high output and harmonic complexity. Amazing with neck humbuckers. High-quality construction.
Cons:
Feels way too hot for many applications.
Tones:
Ease of Use:
Build/Design:
Value:
Street:
$185
Zen Zero Red Crown
zenzeroelectronics.com
One of the most interesting things about the Red Crown’s output is that it remains pretty transparent in spite of itself. For single-coil users—especially Stratocaster players who don’t want to sacrifice chime for extra muscle and a bit of dirt—the Red Crown can feel miraculous. It also does magical things with a neck humbucker, and the high gain profile and hot top end mixed with aggressive guitar tone attenuation generates scalding but smooth Cream and David Hidalgo sounds that will sing for an eternity.
Red Crown’s frequency spectrum feels very even for all the excitability in the high-mid and treble zones. It’s much more open and airy than a pedal like a Tube Screamer. And the “punch” control adds emphasis and body to the low end without suffocating the strong trebles. It’s a great feature for thickening thin single-coil output, though in excess it can affect dynamics.
Volume attenuation from your guitar is tricky. You can get nice clean-ish tones by reducing guitar volume, but you may have to roll the knob back to 2 or 3 to get there. There’s a lot of color in between, but it’s trickier to manage than something like a Stratocaster and Marshall, which can go from clean to crunchy with a little nudge of the volume control. With practice, you can get used to the extra range and color. But if you like to shift dynamics with small adjustments, the Red Crown might feel touchy.
For all the extra treble presence, the Red Crown sounds surprisingly great after a fuzz. Common sense says the hot output would turn my Tonebender into a wailing feedback banshee. Counterintuitively, it highlighted some of the loveliest bits of the fuzz frequency spectrum. A Russian Big Muff clone sounded smoother still.
The Verdict
If you’re accustomed to TS- or Klon-style overdrives, the Red Crane’s hot output and top end might sound and feel extreme. The extra high end and surprising transparency can leave you feeling naked if you don’t mind your technique. And though some players might miss that touch of sag and compression that many ODs add to the tone equation, pickers with great technique and timing will love its extraordinary responsiveness.
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Mojo Hand Sacred Cow
Oddfellow The Bishop
Pettyjohn PettyDrive
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Pettyjohn PettyDrive
The Pettyjohn PettyDrive looks complicated, but with two channels, a parallel effects loop, and multitudinous voice-shaping options, it’s as much a brain or hive for your pedalboard. Remember what we said about overdrive being a pivot around which your whole sound can turn? The PettyDrive very constructively takes that potential to great lengths. And if you’re a control freak or a player that approaches tone with a studio engineer’s mindset, the PettyDrive’s potency is hard to resist.Tone Dispatches from the Mothership
At a glance, the PettyDrive is an indecisive player’s horror show. In actuality, the control layout is quite logical—which is good given that Pettyjohn did not label a single control. Taping the easy-to-eyeball instruction card that comes with the unit to its underside is a pretty good idea.
Essentially, the PettyDrive is made up of two matching sets of controls. Gain, level, and tone for each channel are stacked vertically along each side. One significant difference between the two sets: The lower-gain “chime” channel uses a “tilt” EQ, which boosts treble and cuts bass, or vice versa, simultaneously. The higher-gain “iron” channel uses a simpler high-cut tone control. The top knob is a mix control for the effects loop, which only works with the “iron” channel. Switches include dedicated, three-position low-cut toggles for each channel, plus a clipping diode selector for each channel. You can also flip the order of channels using the center switch.
Ratings
Pros:
Thoughtful design and execution. Top-flight quality. Rock solid. Well-matched drive channels. Endless tone permutations.
Cons:
Expensive. No labels for a complex control array.
Tones:
Ease of Use:
Build/Design:
Value:
Street:
$317
Pettyjohn PettyDrive
pettyjohnlectronics.com
First impressions aren’t very telling when you look inside. Squint and the mass of wires looks like a clown-colored riot. Look closer, though, and you notice what a well-executed, robust build this is. Individual knobs and switches are all chassis-mounted well away from the densely populated circuit board, which is mounted on four strong steel posts on the chassis’ underside. The topside of the unit hints at the ambition in this OD design, but the guts reveal how thoughtfully it is carried out.
Sounds abound in the PettyDrive, and describing every possible permutation or tone would take a review many times this one’s length. But I loved the subtleties and articulate nature of the “chime” channel in particular. It’s a very transparent overdrive and a comparatively low gain channel, which leaves a lot of room for your guitar and amp to speak in their native tongues. Single-coils loved soft clipping on this channel with a little extra bottom from the low-cut selector. The humbuckers in a Telecaster Deluxe sounded best with a little extra low-end cut and a generous heap of high end from the tone knob. Needless to say, the possibilities for dialing in very precise tone profiles for situations like overdubs are vast.
The higher gain “iron” channel is high-gain in a strictly relative sense. In fact, it’s a medium-gain type drive that derives much of its extra heat from the selectable LED and MOSFET clipping sections. And while some players might long for more extreme differences between the two channels, the smaller gain discrepancy means they stack beautifully and can be shaped and chiseled in very precise ways when run together.
The effects loop and the mix knob work brilliantly. And while the PettyDrive sounds great with other effects in series, the very simple process of adding a pedal via the effects loop adds a delicious additional layer of texture.
The Verdict
The PettyDrive probably isn’t an overdrive for the casual player. Adjustments in the heat of performance are tough without practice, and the process of discovering the tones that best fit your rig demands deeper investigation than the average drive pedal. That said, the PettyDrive is surprisingly intuitive and the cornucopia of sounds this thoughtful circuit can produce will thrill the sonically curious.
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JColoccia ID
Mojo Hand Sacred Cow
Oddfellow The Bishop
Zen Zero Red Crown
All Review Demos On One Page
And so you can compare all the pedals at once, here are all the Review Demos in one spot
JColoccia ID
Mojo Hand Sacred Cow
A Brit-flavored overdrive that walks the fine line between rowdy and refined.
Overdrives—and the players that use them—can be a very divergent set. Because the effect bridges boost and distortion, some players look for a pedal that roars, while others seek only a subtle tone shift.
The op amp-driven JColoccia Big Cannoli resides primarily on the bolder end of the spectrum. It has a British essence, sounding at times like a compressed and cranked AC-30, and sometimes like a grinding Marshall Super Lead. It’s not exclusively a “Brit amp in a box”—it offers cool, boxy TS shades and high-mid gain settings with an almost Klon-like refinement. But the Big Cannoli’s essence is more sledgehammer than sculpting knife. Any player that loves organic, rambunctious mid-gain rock tones stands a fair chance of falling for its high-calorie crunch.
Tricolore Triple Switch
If you’re accustomed to three-knob TS-style overdrives or one-knob boosters, the Cannoli’s four knobs and toggle switch may look comparatively busy. But the controls are simple to navigate and intuitive in practice.
While the volume and gain knobs are standard overdrive fare, and the bass and treble knobs are self-explanatory, the three-position toggle’s function is less obvious. The tight setting rolls off a little bass, adding focus. The cut setting (which seems to primarily cut lows) also adds focus, but with an emphasis on midrange presence. The fat setting provides the widest harmonic range and the most bass-heavy tones. The differences between the settings can seem subtle at times, but at higher volumes and with high-power amps, the differences become much more apparent, revealing the many facets of the Big Cannoli’s personality
Ratings
Pros:
Glorious crunch tones. Smooth lead tones. Never sounds over-compressed.
Cons:
A little extra top end would be nice for aggressive leads.
Tones:
Ease of Use:
Build/Design:
Value:
Street:
$149
JColoccia Big Cannoli
jcolocciaguitars.com
Growling Like a Big Cat, Kicking Like a Horse
When it comes to straight-up riffage and power chords, the Big Cannoli is tough to beat. In the cut or tight position with a semi-hollow Rickenbacker driving the works, the pedal dishes the growling, overtone-rich drive that made young Noel Gallagher’s Epiphone-and-Marshall tones so feral and hypnotic. P-90s are a perfect match if you love rowdy, hell-bent-for-leather, Angus-and-Malcom rhythm propulsion. And if you throw the fat switch on, you can make a Fender Deluxe combo sound like a stack punishing the front row at Madison Square Garden.
Lead tones have a more cultivated and sometimes tamer personality. Even at presence-enhancing settings there’s a certain smoothness to the Big Cannoli—a combination of compression and harmonic evenness equally well suited to silky jazz-rock leads and atmospheric space rock.
For players who prefer a little more savagery, the Big Cannoli might be a touch too smooth. The treble control lacks the top-end range that can make a lead really sail over a mix. And players that dig the Big Cannoli’s Marshall-like sound on crunchy chords might find the lack of raw, metallic, plectrum-on-string immediacy in single notes a curious sonic disconnect. That doesn’t mean aggressive lead tones are absent—with P-90s and hotter humbuckers you can hit the cut switch and max the treble for slicing Paul Kosoff tones. In general though, the Big Cannoli’s strength as a lead boost is its ability to lend smoother, contoured, and more civilized edges to big Brit-style lead tones.
The Verdict
The ease with which the Big Cannoli delivers big English-style crunch—regardless of the amp—is a minor marvel. Whether you’re in a studio with a Fender Blues Jr. or onstage with a borrowed Twin, you can create the illusion of stack-scale humungousness. That makes the pedal a potentially invaluable backline solution, especially for players that primarily ply classic rock waters. Lead tones are exceptionally smooth and controlled. The never-too-heavy compression (particularly in the lows and low-mids) is a great match for all three voices. And though the range of the EQ controls can seem narrow at times, they provide an easy-to-navigate canvas with few high-end spikes when pairing the Cannoli with higher-gain pedals or hotter amps or pickups. For players working in the studio or coping with an ever-changing backline, this combination of silk glove and pugilist’s fist could be a major asset.