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Posts tagged "Electro Harmonix"

Electro-Harmonix Intelligent Harmony Machine

Electro-Harmonix Intelligent Harmony Machine NYC's Electro-Harmonix has been a leader in the niche of additive synthesis (aka pitch shifting) since the release of their beloved POG pedal in 2005, and the release of the Intelligent Harmony Machine takes things one step further in the development of that technology.... Click on the title for more

Electro-Harmonix Intelligent Harmony Machine

All About the Klon Centaur

The Klon Centaur The Klon Centaur Professional Overdrive, designed by Bill Finnegan, is an indisputable "tone hero." Let us tell you why that might be the case. ... Click on the title for more

All About the Klon Centaur

New Pedal: Electro-Harmonix Nano Q-Tron Envelope Filter

Electro-Harmonix Nano Q-Tron NYC's Electro-Harmonix continues the process of miniaturization of its classic pedals with the Nano Q-Tron, a compact version of the Micro version, which was already considerably smaller than the "Mini" one, not to mention the original, a larger than life beast.... Click on the title for more

New Pedal: Electro-Harmonix Nano Q-Tron Envelope Filter

Electro-Harmonix Green Russian Big Muff Pi

A classic fuzz stompbox returns, in a compact case format! The Electro Harmonix Green Big Muff Pi is a faithful reissue of the legendary Green Russian Big Muff from the mid-1990s.... Click on the title for more

Electro-Harmonix Green Russian Big Muff Pi

Electro-Harmonix Ripped Speaker Fuzz

Electro-Harmonix Ripped Speaker Fuzz The folks at Electro-Harmonix know something about fuzz, since they invented the Muff. Their latest fuzz pedal, however, is not inspired by their signature fuzz model. Enter the Ripped Speaker, a modern fuzz with old school roots and a wider sonic palette than the average Muff pedal.... Click on the title for more

Electro-Harmonix Ripped Speaker Fuzz

Electro-Harmonix Grand Canyon Delay & Looper

Following a trend we discussed a few months ago in this article, Electro-Harmonix's pedals, once known for their simplicity, seem to be getting more and more complex by the day.... Click on the title for more

Electro-Harmonix Grand Canyon Delay & Looper

Electro-Harmonix EDDY Vibrato/Chorus

Electro-Harmonix is going old school with their lush new Vibrato/Chorus pedal, called EDDY.... Click on the title for more

Electro-Harmonix EDDY Vibrato/Chorus

Electro-Harmonix Oceans 11 Multi-Mode Reverb

Electro-Harmonix has just announced its new Oceans 11 reverb pedal, featuring 11 different types of ambience algorithms, and we are thrilled to announce that they will be debuting it at our Brooklyn Stompbox Exhibit on June 9-10!... Click on the title for more

Electro-Harmonix Oceans 11 Multi-Mode Reverb

Electro-Harmonix Pitch Fork Plus Polyphonic Pitch Shifter/Harmony Pedal

Electro-Harmonix Pitch Fork The Electro-Harmonix Pitch Fork+ builds on the original Pitch Fork circuit offering two independent pitch shifting engines and an extra modulation effect and a host of other features.. ... Click on the title for more

Electro-Harmonix Pitch Fork Plus Polyphonic Pitch Shifter/Harmony Pedal

Electro-Harmonix 1440 Stereo Looper

Electro-Harmonix 1440 Picking up where its predecessor, the 720, left off, the Electro-Harmonix 1440 Stereo Looper is a rather affordable Midi enhanced looper that offers 1440 seconds of high-quality, uncompressed, stereo recording time (twice as much as the 720) plus the ability to store 20 different loops.... Click on the title for more

Electro-Harmonix 1440 Stereo Looper

Electro-Harmonix Oceans 12 Dual Stereo Reverb

Electro-Harmonix showcased a few prototypes at NAMM 2020 and the Oceans 12 Dual Stereo Reverb is probably the most exciting of the bunch.... Click on the title for more

Electro-Harmonix Oceans 12 Dual Stereo Reverb

The 5 Most Pupular Fuzz Pedals of All Time: Compare Five Classic Circuits

Best Fuzz Pedals Transistorized fuzz came about by accident in 1961 when a faulty circuit in a mixing console caused Grady Martin’s six-string electric bass to distort. Martin was in the studio tracking a session for country singer Marty Robbins. “Don’t Worry” was the tune, and its inclusion of Martin’s fuzzed-out ax made it the first hit record to feature distortion produced by transistors, rather than by a damaged speaker or overdriven tubes.... Click on the title for more

The 5 Most Pupular Fuzz Pedals of All Time: Compare Five Classic Circuits