Some of the earliest effects available to guitarists were tremolo and vibrato. These effects were usually built into the amplifier. Between the vibrato, tremolo, and reverb there was little else available to the electric guitarist.
Leo Fender's company while prominent in the development of the electric guitar led to some great confusion with the mis-labeling of their amps tremolo channel as vibrato.
Seasoned guitarists have figured this out but for anyone who hasn't quite nailed down the difference here is a quick video to demonstrate to the difference between tremolo and vibrato.
Mini pedals seem to be all the rage these days. With the prevalence of pedal board power supplies and the all the pedal board wiring kits available these little gems are great for packing more punch into your rig without taking up too much real estate.
If you're a gigging guitarist or just a bedroom jammer a Marshall would be an awesome piece of gear to have. Unfortunately we can't always haul around a large 4x12 cabinet and head. This is where the Plexion comes in.
This little giant has an enormous sound. Everything from lower gain JTM 45, to Mid gain JCM800 to the highest gain offerings,this little pedal does it all for very little money.
It has a volume,tone, and gain knob. It also has a bright switch which
alters the voicing giving way to even more tonal options. I couldn't be happier with this little monster. I've used it in a band setting and it turned my very clean Fender Blues Jr. into a fire breathing dragon.
Check out the below demo of the Tomsline Plexion pedal
Dumble amps are the things of legend. Handcrafted and owned by only the elite of the guitar world these elusive amps are extremely desirable.
For the common man the unobtainable nature puts these amplifiers well out of our reach. There have been many clones as well as pedals that claim to capture that elusive sound.
The Dumbler Overdrive Pedal does not make any claims although the name alone would suggest m this pedal is inspired by the rare and expensive Dumble amps.
Since I've never played a Dumble amp I can't speak to whether or not this pedal sounds like a Dumble so you tell me, what do you think.
The Ibanez Tube Screamer is undoubtedly the most ubiquitous and famous overdrive pedal ever. It has been used by countless guitar hero's as well as being in the arsenal of a huge number of working musicians.
A number of years ago I decided to take a stab at building my own pedals. The Tube Screamer type circuit has so many iterations and variations that it is almost mandatory that one tweak the circuit and put their own twist on it.
Below is a video demoing my take on a TS type circuit with plenty of mods to satisfy my own needs.
Tremolo is one of the earliest effects guitarists had at their disposal. Whether Optical or Bias based tremolo the warbling throb of the volume fluctuation in he guitar signal conjours a hypnotic feeling.
While most of us don't have a use for tremolo frequently, it is something the working guitarist should have in their
arsenal.
The Joyo tremolo is an inexpensive decent sounding tremolo that won't break the bank, yet give you that swampy throbbing goodness when you need it.