EarthQuaker Devices always wows us with new pedals and their DIY, musicians-first attitude. This year, they took things up a notch by hosting the first annual EarthQuaker Day event at their world headquarters in the gilded city of Akron, OH. The event definitely embodied the EQD spirit with live music, pedal demos, a riff contest, food, beer, a record swap — the list goes on. We were there to take it all in and document things for EQD fans who didn’t have a chance to be there in person.
Being the interesting and hospitable man that he is, EQD founder and chief pedal inventor Jamie Stillman invited us into his lair prior to the festivities to walk us through his design process and some of the newer EQD pedals, including the Transmisser, which launches today. He even let us nerd-out over his personal basement gear hoard. After we got the talking out of the way, Jamie was kind enough to make some noise for us in three more exclusive videos:
Transmisser Resonant Reverb
The Transmisser is not your everyday reverberation device. It does not do subtle. It does not do spring. It does not do a wood paneled rumpus room with 1″ thick carpet. It will not recreate the classic sounds of the ’60s, ’70s and ’80s. The Transmisser will create an ultimate soundscape-y backdrop to your all-night guitar freak-out.
Night Wire Tremolo
Night Wire is a feature-rich harmonic tremolo. What is harmonic tremolo? In short, the signal is split into high pass and low pass filters, then modulated with an LFO that is split 180 degrees. The Night Wire takes the traditional harmonic tremolo a few steps further by allowing the center point of both filters to be adjusted for different tones.
Bellows Fuzz Driver
Bellows is a back-to-basics, transistor-based dirt device. This two-knob wonder has a whole lot of character for such a simple, unassuming pedal. It straddles the line between amp-like grit and fuzzy saturation to create a remarkably vintage, tweed-type tone.
Leave a Reply