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Post by edoetsch on Jun 17, 2020 6:39:57 GMT -7
I have not had a wah for a while and am considering picking one up to be used in an overdriven/fuzz scenario primarily. If it can do the classic clean funk that's an added bonus.
I've had a Cry Baby in high school and a Vox Clyde McCoy copy maybe 5 years back.
suggestions?
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Post by Mark (Basement Enthusiast) on Jun 17, 2020 7:26:22 GMT -7
It's been years, but I tried a few/couple Teese's, as well as Fulltone Clyde and a couple others. If I remember correctly the Teese "Wizard" is wicked for overdriven & rock 'n' roll stuff.
I still fondly reminisce over the beautifully-musical sounds of the Clyde (standard), but that was strictly for the cleaner stuff--it sort of got weaker and almost lost under distortion; but MAN it sounded beautiful clean. I settled in the middle-ground with my Area 51, which handles both clean & overdriven sounds equally well. Maybe not "the best" at either, but very good on both fronts. (I feel that this clean-vs.-overdriven capability is a big one with wah pedals. It wouldn't be wrong to have TWO--one for clean, one for gain--if you're really a wah connoisseur.)
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Post by Paul (TRANE) on Jun 17, 2020 8:16:49 GMT -7
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Post by Rhino on Jun 17, 2020 17:38:58 GMT -7
I can only share my joy of having owned a Teese Pic wah for more than 15 years. Before that was a standard Fulltone but the Teese quickly put it on the "For Sale" block. It just works. I did install the fuzz "buffer" to make it play nice. <edit> Here's the buffer I'm using...
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Jun 17, 2020 20:00:01 GMT -7
+1 on the Picture Wah. Also getting good results with the Xotic wah, and the Dunlop MC404 CAE wah, which is my current favorite.
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Post by edoetsch on Jun 18, 2020 10:08:03 GMT -7
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Post by Paul (TRANE) on Jun 18, 2020 11:09:08 GMT -7
Yes. You got it right. Based on what I read all are fuzz friendly, except the first one listed.
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