See how Clayton Stevens fuses stinging single-coils, subtle atmospherics, and a tour-tested signature drive to generate his post-hardcore clang.
Facing a mandatory shelter-in-place ordinance to limit the spread of COVID-19, PG enacted a hybrid approach to filming and producing Rig Rundowns. This is the 32nd video in that format.
Touché Amoré formed in 2007 and have been a perennial post-hardcore player that’s thrived on taking risk.
2009’s …To The Beat of a Dead Horse and 2011’s Parting the Sea Brightness and Me proved they’re running on pure, high-octane gasoline. Even though both releases feature no songs over 160 seconds, they still had room for shifting dynamics, a screamed-over piano ballad, and cloaked themselves in At-The-Drive-In catchiness. 2013’s Is Survived By adds more air, space, and time (with four songs over three minutes). Lighter moments include “Anyone / Anything” and “Non Fiction” that ultimately intensify the inevitable crash. 2016’s Stage Four saw singer Jeremy Bolm lyrically work through his mother’s lost battle to breast cancer. The anger and despair are on 10, but the antithesis plays off that rage with dreamier melodies and chiming, modulated guitar tones (including a cameo with reverb mistress Julien Baker on “Skyscraper”). And 2020’s Lament rewrites the post-hardcore playbook working with super producer Ross Robinson who helped flourish their sound by incorporating 12-string guitars, both lap steel and pedal steel, and additional keyboard layers. Those types of hues shouldn’t coexist in a backdrop for slam dancing, but it does … really well.
Cofounding guitarist Clayton Stevens virtually welcomed PG’s Perry Bean into his L.A.-based gear lair. In this Rig Rundown, he opens up about how Mono and Godspeed You! Black Emperor informed his single-coil stank, details an unknown Telecaster that’s amalgamation of American models, and explains how beneficial it was to use touring as an extended R&D trip for the band’s pedal collaboration with Electronic Audio Experiments.
A cosmic ambience machine that goes from cavernous to Frippertronic with the twist of a knob.
Reverb’s impact on popular music may outshine that of any other effect. Most recordings have some form of natural or artificial reverb to fill out space or add texture, and that’s because reverb can affect a song’s mood almost as much as the notes themselves.
Effect lovers such as pedal builder Jack Deville understand this. His new SuperMoon, an ambient modulated reverb from a subdivision of Jack Deville Electronics called Mr. Black, mines this potent effect. The pedal’s digital circuit is designed for vast-sounding, lo-fi reverberation with precise control over decay rates. A pitch-shift control lends this atmospheric effect an eccentric twist.
Fly Me to the Moon
Dialing in cosmic reverb tones is simple, thanks to the SuperMoon’s three straightforward controls. One sets the reverb mix level. (Maximum wetness is 1:1.) Another regulates decay time. A third knob, labeled “sway,” applies wobbling pitch modulation to the effect. The reverb's maximum setting of 300 milliseconds is ideal for cavernous-sounding passages, while a heaping 30 seconds of decay time lets you create Fripp-like soundscapes and howling volume swells.
The SuperMoon features true-bypass switching. It can be powered by either a 9V battery or a Boss-style power supply. (Since it’s a power-hungry digital effect, you'll probably want to go the latter route.) It’s hand-built in Portland, Oregon.
Ratings
Pros:
Easy to dial in sounds. Small footprint. Exciting pitch-shifting tones.
Cons:
Fixed modulation rate. Somewhat limited applicability.
Tones:
Playability/Ease of Use:
Build/Design:
Value:
Street:
$179
Mr. Black SuperMoon Reverb
mrblackpedals.com
Into the Void
You won’t mistake the SuperMoon’s spacious sounds for a dynamic-sounding spring reverb—its lo-fi voicing is more akin to that of a dusty record than a warm, bubbly vintage spring. But its precise control, distinctive texture, and mammoth-sized spread make it a stellar tool for ambient passages, endlessly reverberating chords, and swaying, pitch-shifted echoes.
I auditioned the SuperMoon using a Fender Classic Player Strat and a Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier, with the pedal connected via the amp’s effect loop. I set the pedal’s reverb and decay knobs halfway up and turned off the sway control to evaluate the pure reverb sound. Playing the sparse, clean-toned intro to the Cure’s “If Only Tonight I Could Sleep,” I immediately noticed the reverb’s granular quality and super-smooth decay. Turning down the decay and pushing the reverb mix yielded a cool, futuristic-bathtub quality, with the effect bursting loudly and quickly dying off. Patching in an Ernie Ball volume pedal and maxing the reverb and decay knobs, I generate dazzling ambience that bloomed and faded with each swell of the treadle.
The real fun began when I turned up the sway knob to add pitch shifting. My Strat’s neck pickup provided perfect clarity and presence for the reverb’s crawling modulation. Reverb can be eerie to begin with, but the SuperMoon’s creepiness was off the charts. Sadly, the pitch-shift rate is fixed, so you can’t get fast, alien ray-gun spurts and other weird astral effects.
The Verdict
If you’ve longed for a simple, compact reverb that excels at nearly limitless ambience, it’s worth considering the Mr. Black SuperMoon. It’s great for hall- and cathedral-type reverb, and it’s endlessly fun. With its even, somewhat static response, the SuperMoon won’t replace for your favorite spring reverb and all its subtle nuances—but to be fair, that’s not the pedal’s goal. It’s designed for would-be celestial travelers seeking tones wider than the skies above—and on those terms, it’s a cosmic knockout.