Get ready for another week of high gain amps! We continue our Monsters of High Gain series this week with the Freidman Amplification BE-100 Deluxe.
Friedman BE-100 Deluxe 100-watt Tube Head
Featuring a revamped plexi-style clean channel based on the acclaimed Smallbox amplifier, the Friedman BE-100 Deluxe tube amplifier head covers a truly expansive sonic range. A three-way gain structure switch plus switches for sat (saturation), voice (3-way), and fat on the two dirty channels allow you to dial in your ideal flavor of overdrive and distortion. A bright switch on the clean channel allows you to enhance the snap and detail of your tone. In addition, master controls for thump, response, and presence offer fine-tune control over the amp’s playing feel in a way that few others provide. Complete with Dave’s critically acclaimed, totally transparent series effects loop (with a return level control), the Friedman BE-100 Deluxe is an incredibly tonally versatile 100-watt tube amplifier that is perfect for a plethora of styles including all forms of rock and metal.
Marshall-style muscle in miniature.
Well built, simple to use, and dripping with appealing cranked-plexi tones.
Controls arrayed less intuitively than on an actual amp.
$199
Friedman Smallbox
friedmanamplification.com
The Marshall-in-a-box stompbox format is so popular at this point that it seems like almost every prominent pedal maker builds one—each of which purports to deliver the sound and dynamics of a classic Marshall in enclosures that would barely accommodate an EL34 power tube from the real deal.
Friedman's take on the Marshall-in-a-box is a transistorized spin on the maker's own popular interpretation of a modified plexi: the 50-watt, all-tube Small Box head and combo. Of all the amp builders that make plexi-style heads, Friedman's are among the most highly acclaimed. Does the pedal version have the same magic?
Boxing Clever
The knobs on the top of the compact 4 ½" x 2 ½" x 1 ½" metal box are the same controls you'd find on a single channel of the Small Box amp. The control order is shuffled around a bit compared to the amp, but gives you the means to control gain, mids, volume, presence, treble, and bass.
There's also a gain-structure toggle switch on the side to replicate the amp's two channels. The down position voices the pedal as a cleaner vintage plexi; the up position takes on the qualities of a modified high-gain plexi. Switching is true bypass, there's a small red LED indicator light to signal on/off status, and the pedal accepts an external center-negative power supply that can run on voltages from 9V to 18V DC. There is no 9V battery option.
The touch and feel are great, and you can barely get a bad sound out of it, whichever way you turn the knobs.
Crunch Time
I've owned and gigged with a Friedman Small Box amp head for about four years, and its sound and feel are now very familiar. So I was a bit surprised at how effectively the Small Box pedal delivered me to so many of the same tone destinations, albeit via a different expressway. Playing a Les Paul and a Novo Serus J with P-90s, I used the Small Box with a variety of amps: a tweed Deluxe-style 1x12 combo, a black-panel Fender Bassman head and 2x12 cab, and a Friedman Mini Dirty Shirley 1x10 combo with its voicing switch on low gain. Obviously any type of overdrive pedal will sound a little different through different amps. That truth applies here, too. But aside from variables in volume and the sense of mass you derive from different speakers and cabinets, the voice, character, and touch dynamics of the pedal remain remarkably consistent, and that's an impressive start.
I'd challenge any player to plug this into a quality clean-ish amp, dial it in to taste, and not be impressed with the way it captures our contemporary perception of a juicy, dynamic, and ultra-satisfying plexi-inspired lead or rhythm tone. It excels at chunky, beefy crunch. The mid-gain blues drive is rich. Saturated soloing tones are available in abundance. And to my ears and fingers, it does that pedal-replicating-amp tone thing more accurately than any other Marshall-in-a-box I can think of. The touch and feel are great, and you can barely get a bad sound out of it whichever way you turn the knobs (which is typical of Friedman amps as well). It's an addictive pedal, and ultimately it just makes you want to play.
The Verdict
The Friedman Small Box pedal is simply a great Marshall-in-a-box-style overdrive that provides a very satisfying fast track to plexi-style crunch and lead tones. Long story short: I'd barely put in five minutes with the thing before I started wondering if Friedman would mind if I stuck some Velcro on the bottom and slotted it right onto my own board. If it's a Marshall-in-a-box you crave, the Small Box is a no-brainer.