Now i love fuzz and i don't want to exclude the tonebender family from my list, so i was hoping the masters might help
oh heres a tonebender i do like
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-VBWCFJwmPk[/youtube]
Moderator: Ghost Hip

jrmy wrote:And unlike the rest of the country, we recognize Sarcasm as a crucial building block of spoken language. Kind of like umami in cooking.








hclapp219 wrote:Try the big box Tone Reaper, also known as the V1. It's all germanium, so it has some nice warmth to it.



Gunner Recall wrote:Buzzarounds and dizzytones are for sure more buzzy, but they start to enter into the big muff super saturated sound and don't quite sound like tonebenders (though they are in the tonebender family).




whoismarykelly wrote:Gunner Recall wrote:Buzzarounds and dizzytones are for sure more buzzy, but they start to enter into the big muff super saturated sound and don't quite sound like tonebenders (though they are in the tonebender family).
It really depends on how you set them up. You can make one sound very thick and bassy like a muff, but a buzz will never have the scooped mid tonality or extremely compressed tone of a muff. They also dont have a buffer stage so they respond nicely to volume changes. They remain very tonebendery if you roll the sustain back a bit and play around with the timbre controls. Transistor selection can also make some dramatic differences.
jrmy wrote:And unlike the rest of the country, we recognize Sarcasm as a crucial building block of spoken language. Kind of like umami in cooking.

Wizard wrote:AH AWESOME, thanks for the help. I've got a Skin Pimp buzzaround lined up to demo tomorrow, and we've got the creepy fingers one too... i'm really excited to try it. It's funny to me, The Tone Reaper by EQD sounds more muffish than tonebender to me, and the Hoof sounds more like my dream sort of tonebender than a muff! (though it can get muffy)whoismarykelly wrote:Gunner Recall wrote:Buzzarounds and dizzytones are for sure more buzzy, but they start to enter into the big muff super saturated sound and don't quite sound like tonebenders (though they are in the tonebender family).
It really depends on how you set them up. You can make one sound very thick and bassy like a muff, but a buzz will never have the scooped mid tonality or extremely compressed tone of a muff. They also dont have a buffer stage so they respond nicely to volume changes. They remain very tonebendery if you roll the sustain back a bit and play around with the timbre controls. Transistor selection can also make some dramatic differences.
i actually love that tonebenders respond awesome to volume changes on the guitar, that is like the one thing i dug about them.
I will always be a muff guy. ALWAYS.
What do you think the dude from the turtles used in Buzz Saw? that's a cool tone.
THANKS FOR THE INFO!!!
what about takes on the roland Bee Baa? I hear that can sound like a chainsaw if i do it right.