Ok you perverts, I am here at work today, and I decided to do a little product research. Since we are now official Electro Harmonix dealers, I decided to compare as many Muff pedals as I could. For my test equpiment I used a Burny Les Paul copy into a late-60's early-70's silverface Fender Deluxe Reverb. The Muffs I tried out were the US Big Muff, Russian Big Muff, Double Muff, Little Big Muff, Metal Muff, and a vintage 1980 Big Muff.
One thing that I noticed right away was that the Metal Muff is distinctly different from the others. It is more of a heavy metal distortion than a fuzz like the rest of the Muff pedals. It sounded great for what it was, real warm for a metal distortion, yet totally tough. The Russian Big Muff seemed a bit less powerful than the other Big Muffs. The winner in my eyes(ears) was rather suprising to me. I would have to say that honestly the Little Big Muff is the thickest, nastiest of them all!!! The vintage Big Muff came in second. The new Big Muff sounds really good too, nearly identical to the vintage one, but not quite. The double Muff has two muff circuits, but together they still were no match for the Little Big Muff. Funny how big sounds can come from little packages!!!
One thing that I noticed right away was that the Metal Muff is distinctly different from the others. It is more of a heavy metal distortion than a fuzz like the rest of the Muff pedals. It sounded great for what it was, real warm for a metal distortion, yet totally tough. The Russian Big Muff seemed a bit less powerful than the other Big Muffs. The winner in my eyes(ears) was rather suprising to me. I would have to say that honestly the Little Big Muff is the thickest, nastiest of them all!!! The vintage Big Muff came in second. The new Big Muff sounds really good too, nearly identical to the vintage one, but not quite. The double Muff has two muff circuits, but together they still were no match for the Little Big Muff. Funny how big sounds can come from little packages!!!
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