Maestro Fuzztone review
Posted: Thu Dec 06, 2007 9:52 pm
The day has finally come for "Satisfaction"! I received an email about a week ago from a website that handles some of Gibson's other brands, like beginner level guitars, etc. Well, they also handle Maestro gear. I had signed up on the website about a year ago to be notified if they ever got any Maestro Fuzztones back in stock. For those that aren't familiar, the Fuzztone is the "Satisfaction" pedal. Well, that email said that they finally had them back in stock. Needless to say that I ignored the mounting Yuletide debt and ordered one. It arrived a few days ago and I finally had a chance to test it out now that school is winding down for me. It was a very frustrating pedal at first. It would spike in volume, have no sustain, etc. Well, I finally just sat down in front of the amp and started messing with it. Now it sounds like there's a buzzsaw ripping my amp apart. It's absolutely nailed the sound down of some of the best riffs: Satisfaction, 19th Nervous Breakdown, Psychotic Reaction, etc. The thing is built like a tank too, and runs on a single AA battery. It has just two knobs, attack and sustain. The downside to this pedal is that it is a decided one-trick pony. It has fuzz and that's it. To vary the tone, you need to adjust the guitar knobs/switches to get what you want out of it. I've been running my 330 through it with in the neck position and have been playing a lot of the mid-'60's Stones classics to a lot of success. The pedal just takes some getting used to. It also comes in a reproduction of it's orange box and has reproductions of the original instruction manual.
I figured that I'd A/B this with another famous '60's era pedal: the Vox Tonebender. The Tonebender is a completely different beast. It nails the Jeff Beck/Yardbirds and has somewhat of a variance of tone compared to that of the Fuzztone; think of the sound on "Heartful of Soul" or "Over Under Sideways Down". It's also a two-knob pedal. The Tonebender can also hit sounds like "Paperback Writer" where the Fuzztone can't. A little more versatile of a pedal, but different so there's not too much overlap.
I figured that I'd A/B this with another famous '60's era pedal: the Vox Tonebender. The Tonebender is a completely different beast. It nails the Jeff Beck/Yardbirds and has somewhat of a variance of tone compared to that of the Fuzztone; think of the sound on "Heartful of Soul" or "Over Under Sideways Down". It's also a two-knob pedal. The Tonebender can also hit sounds like "Paperback Writer" where the Fuzztone can't. A little more versatile of a pedal, but different so there's not too much overlap.
