mattlefevers's Pedalboard

mattlefevers

mattlefevers

Gear IQ 284

Pedalboard by mattlefevers featuring Mojo Hand Fx Rook Overdrive, Diamond Comp Jr, and Electro-Harmonix Micro POG Polyphonic Octave Generator and 9 more pieces of gear

More gear photos from mattlefevers

Gear in this photo

This rig

~$2,839

Value by category

  • Multi Effects Pedals
    23%
  • Overdrive Effects Pedals
    22%
  • Amp & Cabinet Simulators
    13%
  • Reverb Effects Pedals
    9%
  • Distortion Effects Pedals
    8%
  • Harmonizer & Octave Effects Pedals
    8%

Price mix

12

Mix of standard and high-end

7 Standard
5 High-end

Overdrive Effects Pedals

Mojo Hand Fx Rook Overdrive

Avg price: $124.00

My favorite drive, after years of searching

I adore this pedal. I've made a twenty-five minute YouTube video just talking about how much I love this pedal.

I've been happy with my clean tone for quite a long time, but the search for a good medium-gain overdrive has been grueling. I've been through bluesbreakers (multiple), tube screamers (multiple), distortions, $30 Boss drives, rare boutique drives you have to order from the builder... none of it clicked for me. Then I found out about this guy and gave it a shot and everything changed.

It's got the thickness of a tube screamer but without subtracting all of your low and high end. It can do just a hint of grit, or all the way up to hardcore and metal distortion. It sounds good stacked into stuff; with stuff stacked into it. The EQ knobs have so spoiled me that I don't think I'll ever buy a drive that doesn't have both a bass and treble EQ now. I can't believe I got by for so long on drives with only a single "tone" knob.

No exaggeration, I've legitimately considered buying two of them, one for lower gain and one for higher, and just setting them up next to each other. I adore this drive.

Preferred Settings + Usage:

My preferred toggle position for most things is the upwards one, though the down toggle (higher gain) is great for hardcore punk. I boost the bass and treble up to, say, one or two o'clock, and the drive similarly.

Compressor Effects Pedals

Diamond Comp Jr

Avg price: $205.80

mattlefevers's rating:

Harmonizer & Octave Effects Pedals

The best all-around octave pedal

I'm embarrassed, because the Micro POG was my first octave pedal, and I then embarked on a seven or eight pedal quest to find something better, only to have to re buy this one again at the end. It really is the winner.

The tracking is impressive and clean, even on chords and strange intervals. Dissonant chords or minor second intervals, which are usually the bane of octave pedals, even track well on this one.

The sound of the lower octave is pretty good, and if you needed to 'fake' a bass signal by pitching down a guitar, this is the octave pedal I'd choose. The high octave is a bit obnoxious on its own, but I don't think anybody really plays the high octave by itself. Mixed in with the dry signal at ten or eleven o'clock, it sounds perfectly good.

Do yourself a favor and skip the seven or so other octave pedals I tried before having to re-purchase this one again, and just start here.

Preferred Settings + Usage:

I basically always have this set with Dry all the way up, Low all the way down, and High at about ten o'clock.

Chorus Effects Pedals

Honestly terrific

I've been playing guitar for twenty-five years and have gone through hundreds of pedals at this point, but I recently got nostalgic for the first pedal I ever owned. It was a DOD Ice Box that my twelve-year-old self bought at Guitar Center and held onto for a few years, then must've sold or gotten rid of (I honestly don't even remember). So for Christmas my wife tracked one of these down and gave it to me, and I was thrilled. I loved seeing it again after all that time, and having it around made me happy.

But let's be real: I had a Boss Waza Craft CE-2w on my board already, one of the best and most iconic chorus pedals money can buy. What was I gonna do, shoot it out against a strange nostalgia artifact from the '90s and then decide which was better?

Then I did that, and here's the surprise: the Ice Box won.

The secret weapon of this DOD chorus is the high end knob, which on mine is called "Freeze" because DOD couldn't just name any knob a clear or comprehensible name back then. With this knob at noon or higher, the chorus effect is very bright and cold and sparkly. It's perfect for that chilly Metallica's "Sanitarium" tone or so many other clean parts from metal songs. But it's also lovely for strummy, ringing chords with open notes, like '80s pop or the modern pop that is currently borrowing from it. Both of those are tones the CE-2w really can't manage, with its warm and gritty tone. But if you roll that Freeze/Hi-EQ knob back, the Ice Box can do the warm subtle thing, too. So that's Ice Box 1, boutique Waza Craft pedal 0.

The other thing that pushed it over the edge is that the Ice Box sounds like it's maintaining a clean blend as well — the whole time I was using it, no matter how rich and lush I made the chorus signal, I could clearly hear my guitar's natural tone as well. The CE-2w has no blend knob, and wherever I set the controls, it substantially changes my guitar's tone, and not always for the better. Ice Box 2, CE-2w 0.

I know this is ultimately a preference thing, and if you want your chorus sounds warm and thick and almost flanger-y, you can't do better than the expensive Boss one. But in a head to head comparison I kept preferring the shimmery high end and clarity of the Ice Box, and how my normal guitar tone still carried through. I'm frankly shocked but that's where I landed.

Preferred Settings + Usage:

It sounds basic but all the knobs at noon turned out to be just the sound I wanted. Then lower the Freeze/Hi-EQ back to ten o'clock or so for a darker, subtler chorus if needed.

Overdrive Effects Pedals

Paul Cochrane Timmy

Avg price: $305.14

mattlefevers's rating:

Amp & Cabinet Simulators

Strymon Iridium Amp & IR Cab

Avg price: $370.40

Distortion Effects Pedals

Pro Co RAT

Avg price: $230.00

mattlefevers's rating:

Reverb Effects Pedals

Volume Effects Pedals

mattlefevers's rating:

Pedal Tuners

TC Electronic PolyTune 3

Avg price: $66.19

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About this setup

This gear photo by mattlefevers features 12 pieces of gear, including Mojo Hand Fx Rook Overdrive, Diamond Comp Jr, and Electro-Harmonix Micro POG Polyphonic Octave Generator. The rig is a mix of standard and high-end pieces. Artists with this kind of gear are most often found in the Rock, Pop, and Electronic scenes. Notable artists with overlapping gear include Andy Timmons, Chris McQueen, and Pete Thorn.

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