Showing all 21 results
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Keeley Angry Orange
€ 259 Add to cart -
Crazy Tube Circuits Motherload
€ 239 Add to cart -
Aguilar Stormking Distortion Fuzz
€ 219 Add to cart -
Crazy Tube Circuits Starlight
€ 189 Add to cart -
Crazy Tube Circuits Limelight
€ 189 Add to cart -
Gamechanger Audio Plasma Coil
€ 349 Add to cart -
JAM pedals Red Muck MK2
€ 219 Add to cart -
Vs Audio Fuzzytale
€ 169 Add to cart -
JHS Cheese Ball
€ 205 Add to cart -
Electro Harmonix Flatiron Fuzz
€ 85 Add to cart -
Electro Harmonix Deluxe Sovtek Big Muff
€ 209 Add to cart -
Electro Harmonix Deluxe Bass Big Muff
€ 149 Add to cart -
Electro Harmonix Deluxe Big Muff
€ 149 Add to cart -
Electro Harmonix Big Muff Pi Tone Wicker
€ 99 Add to cart -
Electro Harmonix Bass Blogger
€ 69 Add to cart -
Electro Harmonix Big Muff Pi
€ 99 Add to cart -
Death by Audio Waveformer Destroyer
€ 359 Add to cart -
Death by Audio Fuzz War
€ 219 Add to cart -
Death by Audio Apocalypse
€ 359 Add to cart -
Gamechanger Audio Plasma Pedal
€ 299 Add to cart -
Catalinbread Katzenkönig
€ 199 Add to cart
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Fuzz pedal
Fuzz pedal
A fuzz pedal is a common effect that is also called a fuzz box to distinguish it from overdrive and distortion. it has a more extreme sound compared to the other two distortion pedals. The sound usually comes out as a square wave. It is a rich and complex effect that can be heard in many recordings.
How do you use it?
Depending on the place in your signal chain, you usually use it without other drives. So you don’t stack the sound, at most with a boost before it to get even more distortion. You often place the pedal first in your signal chain or immediately after a wah wah, but there are no fixed rules for it.
Iconic fuzz pedals
The most famous pedals come from the 60s and 70s. Think for example of the Maestro, Dallas Arbiter, Vox Tonebender and Electro-Harmonix Big Muff. Today Fulltone, Black Cat, Vemuram, Catalinbread, JHS, Keeley, Death by Audio, Wrenn & Cuff, Walrus Audio and of course Electro-Harmonix (still) very nice pedals.