John Martyn's Effects Pedals

Used from the mid-1970s to the early 1980s, as known from the following:

When did you first hit on that whole echo effect?

I honestly don’t know when it started. Initially, I got into it because I sussed out that if you put enough repeat echo on the thing, and the signal went in strong enough, you had to get incredible sustain. I wanted as much sustain as possible, and that’s really how it started.

What kind of equipment do you use to get the effect?

Just the average stuff: Gibson Boomer pedal, an Electro-Harmonix Big Muff, a fuzz box, Fender amp, Echoplex, and a phase-shifter. Nothing exotic, really.

Very few people seem to use it on stage.

Well, most of the people that do don’t use it right. On the other hand, Joe Zawinul doesn’t use it the same way I do, but what he does with it sounds fantastic! [Tenor sax player] Eddie Harris is another guy who really knows how to use it. The thing is, you've got to be so tight with it. I listen to things I recorded two years ago, which I thought were great, and they're just not there now. I wasn't precise enough.

  • Three of seven photos taken by Gus Stewart of Martyn performing with Steve Winwood at the Rainbow Theatre on November 21, 1977 (#1, #2, #3)

  • Melody Maker, December 24, 1977, "Martyn's Martin" by Anonymous

I SAW John Martyn on Sight And Sound In Concert and was amazed at the sounds he got from his acoustic guitar. What did he use to achieve these effects? If he used a special gadget, how does it work? – Neil Sutherland, Finchley, London N12.

John plays a Martin guitar and, for electric music, he utilises a De Armond pick-up across the sound hole, which goes to a pedal board comprising (in this order) a Big Muff (a kind of fuzz box), boomerang pedal (swell pedal) and MXR Phase-Shifter Mutrone (a variable frequency booster). From there the signal goes to an Echoplex and on into an amplifier. He also uses a Korg rhythm box. For his acoustic sound, he uses the same guitar, but with a Barcus Berry transducer/ pick-up situated just behind the centre of the bridge on the flat of the body. Then the signal is fed into a Barcus Berry studio pre-amplifier and on into the sound-desk. – ISLAND RECORDS LTD, 22 St Peter's Square, London W6 9NW.

P.M.: Was there any precedent for what you were doing with the Echoplex?

J.M.: I had heard someone play with the echo, yes, I cannot tell a lie, but not on guitar. Terry Riley, he used to give like five-hour concerts on Hammond organ and electric piano.

P.M.: Was the Echoplex sound something you set out to achieve?

J.M.: No, I bought the Echoplex actually to look for more sustain, I bought it and the fuzz box at the same time. I had the idea of playing one chord and letting it hang a very long time and improvising over it vocally, and I really discovered the rhythmic possibilities by accident, just stumbled across it. It's been done a lot since. I heard a side of a Pink Floyd album, it sounds very like 'Glistening Glyndebourne' to me. Echoplex and guitar have been used by a lot of people since, that's another reason for stopping actually.

  • Music UK, No. 18 (June 1983), "John Martyn" by Max Kay

“Pete Cornish, the pedal board man, didn’t build this one, but he does repair it; each time he sees it his hands flap further in the air in horror because it’s extremely outmoded. It’s just very familiar and I like it and decided to bring it back into the fold.”

What’s in there?

“A Big Muff fuzz (to which John dedicated his song Big Muff) which I’m using less and less, and a Gibson Maestro Boomerang (should come in handy on the Australian tour) which is wonderful. It’s a volume/wah pedal and it’s a favourite. There’s a Roland Chorus CE2 and a Mutron Ill which I love. It has a touch of octivide to it and it started Iife as the automatic wah-wah for clarinet, I think. The Echoplex I’m in love with, it’s a wonderful machine, but it’s extremely noisy, I mean it is very much outdated now, and I would, if possible, reduce the noise level. The calibration on it is very accurate, all you have to do is memorise three or four figures and you’re there.”

"I used to like Electro-Harmonix stuff, too. It was cheap and cheerful but it did the business. I even called a song of mine Big Muff after their fuzz box. And a few other things.

  • Kit Rae, Big Muff Pi Page, ""

JOHN MARTYN

[https://www.kitrae.net/music/Images_Secret_Music_Page/John%20Martyn%20Big%20Muff%201978_2sm.jpg]

[https://web.archive.org/web/20221002105329im_/https://www.kitrae.net/music/Images_Secret_Music_Page/John%20Martyn%20Big%20Muff%201978_4sm.jpg] [https://web.archive.org/web/20221002105329im_/https://www.kitrae.net/music/Images_Secret_Music_Page/John%20Martyn%20Big%20Muff%201978_3.jpg]

Shown above, left to right: John Martyn's pedalboard from 1978 showing a V2 Ram;s Head Big Muff. There are a few television performances from the 1977-78 period that appear to show a V3 or V4 Big Muff on his pedalboard.

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His pedalboard contains a Big Muff, a Mutron III, a Phase 100, and a Boomerang volume/wah pedal.

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The sequence was; Elec guitar (Les Paul or SG) into Electro Harmonics Qtron +, Qtron+ to ProCo RAT, RAT to BOSS DDI, DDI to Ernie Ball Volume Pedal, EB to second DDI, DDI to DI Box and then to JC120 amp.

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His pedalboard contains a Big Muff, a Mutron III, a Phase 100, and a Boomerang volume/wah pedal.

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His pedalboard contains a Big Muff, a Mutron III, a Phase 100, and a Boomerang volume/wah pedal.

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In 1976 Roland launched the mains powered Chorus CE-1 chorus pedal and this was added between the pedal board and the Echoplex. Due to the lack of real estate on the board and size of the CE-1 this was normally placed on the floor next to the board.

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Towards the end of this period, his on-floor effects set-up was simplified, no more wah only an Ernie Ball Vol Pedal and the EH Big Muff was swapped for a ProCo RAT distortion pedal. Playing volume had increased in this band context.

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John Martyn used the Boss DD-3 Digital Delay as part of his guitar setup, which included running the signal from an electric guitar (Les Paul or SG) through an Electro-Harmonix Q-Tron+, a ProCo RAT, and into the DD-3. The chain continued from the DD-3 to an Ernie Ball Volume Pedal, into a second DD-3, and finally to a DI Box before reaching a JC-120 amp. This setup is detailed on the official John Martyn website in the article "A History of John's Guitar Set Ups."

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The new album sees the mysterious ‘Mutron guitar’ credited on several tracks. “They’re now called Q-Trons,” Martyn explains (different company, though: he uses an Electro-Harmonix Q-Tron+).

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The Mastro Boomerang pedal has long gone and been replaced by an Ernie Ball Volume pedal.

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Mentioned in Guitarist Vol. 1, No. 8 (released January 1, 1985), as transcribed on fansite Big Muff: The John Martyn Pages.

What about your effects and backline equipment?

I have a Pearl effects board consisting of phaser, flanger, chorus and overdrive. I have an envelope generator, (can't for the life of me remember who makes it) and a Korg 3000 DDS digital delay unit. Occasionally I use the Echoplex which I used to use a lot but I didn't last night and I won't tonight. That all goes into a Peavey Renown, 120 watts. I used to use a Fender Twin Reverb but it doesn't have enough poke for what I want to do now.

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Mentioned in Guitarist Vol. 1, No. 8 (released January 1, 1985), as transcribed on fansite Big Muff: The John Martyn Pages.

What about your effects and backline equipment?

I have a Pearl effects board consisting of phaser, flanger, chorus and overdrive. I have an envelope generator, (can't for the life of me remember who makes it) and a Korg 3000 DDS digital delay unit. Occasionally I use the Echoplex which I used to use a lot but I didn't last night and I won't tonight. That all goes into a Peavey Renown, 120 watts. I used to use a Fender Twin Reverb but it doesn't have enough poke for what I want to do now.

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Mentioned in Guitarist Vol. 1, No. 8 (released January 1, 1985), as transcribed on fansite Big Muff: The John Martyn Pages.

What about your effects and backline equipment?

I have a Pearl effects board consisting of phaser, flanger, chorus and overdrive. I have an envelope generator, (can't for the life of me remember who makes it) and a Korg 3000 DDS digital delay unit. Occasionally I use the Echoplex which I used to use a lot but I didn't last night and I won't tonight. That all goes into a Peavey Renown, 120 watts. I used to use a Fender Twin Reverb but it doesn't have enough poke for what I want to do now.

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Mentioned in Guitarist Vol. 1, No. 8 (released January 1, 1985), as transcribed on fansite Big Muff: The John Martyn Pages.

What about your effects and backline equipment?

I have a Pearl effects board consisting of phaser, flanger, chorus and overdrive. I have an envelope generator, (can't for the life of me remember who makes it) and a Korg 3000 DDS digital delay unit. Occasionally I use the Echoplex which I used to use a lot but I didn't last night and I won't tonight. That all goes into a Peavey Renown, 120 watts. I used to use a Fender Twin Reverb but it doesn't have enough poke for what I want to do now.

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A PS-1A is visible throughout this excerpt of Series 4, Episode 15 of the The Old Grey Whistle Test (aired January 17, 1975), with an explicit closeup at 0:56 at Martyn's prompting.

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Discography

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