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Pedal users in 1999 are very sophisticated. Take the old conventions:
of in on the right, out on the left, battery connected when input plug
is in place, use this pedal before that one for a certain sound, reverse
for another, positive ground, negative ground, pedal switching systems...
we're living in a 'been there, done that' pedal world. Most every guitarist
is familiar with the limitations of putting one fuzz or distortion into
another... losing the detail but perhaps gaining that fun "shutdown"
effect as one overloads the other, and the "where's my fuzz?"
experience of playing a fuzz into a really dirty amp. Limitations. They
increase your creativity but hob-gobble your plan.
I designed this new distortion generator, Machine, with some different
limitations. Like try playing chords through it. Hmmm. But put it in
front of any string of fuzz pedals, and try to make it disappear. Machine
is actually a dual frequency-tripler circuit that uses crossover distortion
for the first time in any pedal, ever. It generates the distortion of
the wave in the sloped part of the cycle, instead of the peaks and valleys
like all other distorters and fuzzes. In other words, it distorts when
your guitar string is in the middle of vibrating, while it's swinging,
not as it's turning around. That's the same place where your speaker
cone is sort of coasting, between all the way in and all the way out.
Where nothing is happening, this pedal happens. With Machine you can
leave your favorite distorting pedals on and still add a new element
of energetic grind.
One thing to keep in mind, however, is that this pedal basically sounds
horrible. It's primary purpose is to cut through. But like a wild man
with a machete, it is not nice.
Knobs are In, which is drive; Limit, which clips the original waveform
off at about the same size as the harmonics (if you want); and Out or
Volume, which is output level. If the Limit knob is set to the right,
the signal remains unclipped.
You'll notice the dynamic response is higher than most pedals. If you
put a tremolo pedal set smooth in front of it you'll hear it sweep through
it's wild frequency multiplying stages, or if the trem is set for square
wave it will jump back and forth between crunchy harmonics. Conversely,
you can get ringing harmonic effects using a dynamically freezing pedal
in front of it like a compressor. The biggest drawback to this pedal
is that of anything in your arsenal, it's the most likely to get you
kicked out of the house by your mom, girlfriend, boyfriend, or wife.
Or roommate or Dad. Or Grandma. Even your dog. Whine.
Keep in mind that this pedal needs to see a sloped wave in order to
do it's thing, so an undistorted guitar signal going into it will allow
it to generate the strongest harmonics.
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