The All-Pedal Microdose is a mind-altering experience, but it’s not for the faint of heart.
Endless sounds and tweakability, from subtle to brain-melting.
Expensive. Probably too much firepower for most users.
$325
All-Pedal Microdose
allpedal.com
When it comes to effects like phase, chorus, and vibrato, many of us tend to have a staple (and sometimes cheesy) sound in mind. But such preconceptions obscure the reality that these effects can be much more radical than their best-known applications.
If you’ve ever thought that phaser pedals are one-trick ponies, All-Pedal’s new Microdose, a digital phaser collaboration with Portland’s Spaceman Effects, will happily relieve you of that notion. The Microdose is to the MXR Phase 90 what the modern smartphone is to an old Nokia flip phone: It’s so feature-packed and overflowing with an embarrassment of tone riches that it feels barely related at all to its humble ’70s ancestor.
“It gets percussive, punchy, and juicy, turning single-note runs into intergalactic transmissions, and full chords into blasts of alien goop.”
Discoveries From the Outer Reaches of Space(man)
The Microdose is an evolution and expansion of Spaceman’s Explorer Optical Phaser. It’s maximalist in terms of both enclosure art and functionality, and can feel a bit cluttered as a result. Between eight knobs, two switches, two footswitches, and a groovy font and graphics vying for visibility there is a lot to take in. There are a lot of sounds too. The crowning achievement here is the collection of 16 wave forms—more than triple the Explorer’s five—all of which are selectable via an 8-stop rotary knob and a switch that moves between standard or alternative (and weirder) versions of each wave form. Each setting can be treated to two-, four-, or eight-stage phasing, and the level control provides a hearty boost for the effect to make sure that when its engaged, differences between settings won’t get lost.
Rate, multiplier, blend, and depth knobs all function as you’d expect them to, but the Microdose’s resonance and warp controls breathe new life into familiar sounds. Resonance controls phaser feedback, generating gentle, tried-and-true phase sweeps at low settings and more prominent, insistent phasing when cranked the other way. Coupled with the depth knob, it allows for precise tuning of intense phase sounds. The warp knob, meanwhile, does exactly what it says: At noon, the phase wave form remains unaltered, but turning it in either direction produces varied modifications to each wave form.
The Microdose’s tap tempo is a welcome addition that adds flexibility and more control over complex modulations—especially in live situations. But with such a vast expanse of sounds on tap and no preset functionality, the pedal’s usefulness on stage can feel limited. While dedicated phase jockeys will no doubt find a spot for it on their gigging boards, it sometimes feels more like a piece of studio kit.
Mind-Expanding Tones
The Microdose lives up to its name. It can give you a subtle, just-fun-enough, vintage experience if that’s what you’re after. But it can also blast way beyond that into sci-fi, psychedelic, and fearsome ghost-in-the-machine meltdowns that sound nothing like guitar.
Set for a classic, two-stage sine wave phase with all controls at noon, the Microdose is surprisingly unassuming, adding just a sliver of movement and dimension. This is where the pedal’s dense tweakability really shines. You can dial in a modest always-on sound that breathes life and unusual texture into rhythm or lead parts without overpowering your signal. Deep depth and blend will swing you well into Waylon Jennings territory, but that’s just the start.
Things get trippy in the best way possible as you add phase stages and explore the alternative wave form algorithms, which are a lot of fun on their own and even more so with a wiggle of the warp knob. With each bump up in stages, the effect gets waterier and three-dimensional, which feels like splashing around in some interstellar swamp. When you max out at eight, the effect is in the driver’s seat. It gets percussive, punchy, and juicy—turning single-note runs into intergalactic transmissions, and full chords into blasts of alien goop.
The Verdict
There’s a whole world of sounds here between the Microdose’s extremes. It can probably execute every single phase sound you’ve ever dreamed of—plus some wackier than what your puny human brain could come up with without lysergic inspiration. If you’re up for a phase experience, Microdose is a trip you’ll want to take. PG
A new phaser offering a plethora of options, in collaboration with Spaceman Effects.
This collaboration, inspired by the previously discontinued Spaceman Effects Explorer Deluxe, presents a plethora of phasing options and more. The Microdose Phaser is crafted for guitarists with a penchant for rich "phase" effects.
Features
- Knobs: Warp, Depth, Res, Level, Rate, Blend
- Phasing Options: 2, 4, 8 Stage Phasing
- Waveforms: 16 distinct modulation shapes
- Multipliers: .5, 1, 1.5, 2, 3, 4
- Additional Features: Tap Tempo, EXP Input, True Bypass on/off switch, and 9-volt operation with standard DC input.
The All-Pedal Microdose Is a Feature-Filled Phaser | Tone Report Demo
Available at a competitive price of $325.00, the Microdose pedal can be procured directly from the All-Pedal online store: www.allpedal.com
A modulator rooted in rich and varied chorus tones is a launchpad for exploring unusual phase and flange textures—and more.
A varied menu of modulation tones. Rewards exploration with uncommon sounds. High build quality and beautiful design execution.
Not always easy or intuitive to find sounds and textures outside the chorus realm.
$329
Spaceman Meridian
spacemaneffects.com
Spaceman’s Meridian walks an interesting line. It inhabits worlds of chorus, phasing, flanging, and vibrato. But unlike multi-modulators that allow you to switch between effects like picking meal deals from a fast food menu, the all-analog Meridian enables a player to dial in shades of those effects from a chorusing foundation. If that sounds limiting, it’s not. The modulation textures here are rich and often unusual—bypassing same-old modulation templates and presets and inviting an exploratory, interactive approach. As you might expect, you’re likely to encounter some surprises along the way.
Built for Blast Off
Spaceman Effects has always maintained high standards for construction quality, inside and out. That’s plain to see in the Meridian. The thick, engraved, layered plastic control panel that evokes ’60s-vintage aerospace instruments, plus the Fender amp-style lamp, sturdy toggle, and knobs that turn with satisfying resistance and enable precise control adjustments, all remain Spaceman fixtures. They make the Meridian a beautiful pedal to behold and it’s sure to class up any pedalboard. Inside you see that the Spaceman prioritizes keeping the Meridian in service for a long time. I/O and expression pedal jacks and the soft relay switch are all wired independently and mounted to the sturdy aluminum enclosure, making fast replacement easy. The tiered circuit boards are also immaculately wired.
The control array is beautifully laid out, too. The opposing-triangle orientation of the knobs, along with the white-against-black engraved labeling, makes it easy to discern the function of each dial. These might seem like simple considerations. But on a pedal with controls as interactive as these, you’ll want to know exactly what you’re adjusting, in what quantity, and be able to rest assured that the setting will stick. The controls themselves will be recognizable to any player who has dabbled in modulation much. Mix, volume (which adds up to 6 dB of boost to overcome perceived volume loss), rate, and width (or intensity) are pretty self-explanatory. Regen, or feedback, will be familiar to most flanger users. Time, which sets the lag in the delay line that helps create the chorus effect, might be less familiar to players that use the simplest analog modulators, but it adds a lot of tone-shaping flexibility here.
”The Meridian excels at enabling creative reshaping of basic chorus sounds.”
Meandering Through the Modulation Matrix
When we say that the Meridian works from a chorus foundation, it is in part because those are the easiest sounds to find and tap into. Parking each of the controls at 10 o’clock, for instance, evokes classics like the Boss CE-2. These vintage sounds become yet more alive when you add a little regen and width. And getting aggressive with the mix and mixing in a little extra regen generates a very passable David Gilmour Dark Side of the Moon Leslie tone. Even when you move all the controls to 2 o’clock, though, the resulting molasses-y, submarine throbs are still recognizable as thick chorus textures (an especially robust EHX Small Clone would be a good point of reference). All these sounds, and those in between, provide beautiful alternatives to the most common chorus tones. And, in general, the Meridian excels at enabling creative reshaping of those basic chorus sounds.
But some of the Meridian’s richest sonic rewards come when you make more radical tweaks. Shifting the delay time and width to more extreme clockwise settings from the basic chorus sound yields a queasy, crooked-and-busted rotary speaker sound that is amazing with lazy lead lines—giving them both punch and an alien presence that would suit King Krule’s hazy, unraveling jazz mutations, to name one musical setting. Reducing the width from this point and adding maximum mix and regen settings lends those not-quite-right Leslie sounds a bit more formality and structure. From that point, dialing the max to the counterclockwise side of noon, backing off the regen, and slowing down the rate while kicking up the width a notch, meanwhile, yields a pretty metallic phase with a hint of flange.
The Verdict
In some ways you have to have a searching spirit to extract the most from the Meridian. The paths away from the chorus tones, which are easy to find, aren’t always obvious. The payoff, though, is often in the unexpected tones you find along the way. And the discoveries you make there may indeed add more to your song, solo, riff, or arrangement than any standard meal-deal modulation could ever could.