NPD: Death By Audio Apocalypse 'overdrive'
Moderated By: mods
NPD: Death By Audio Apocalypse 'overdrive'
Instantly smitten, and not just because it looks so good.
It manages to cover hyper-scooped Muff sounds to fat, almost 'cocked wah' midrangey shit, as well as overbiased glitchies, octave-up and some chunky overdrive sounds. The 'equaliser' control changes per mode, so you get waaaaaay more variety across the pedal than you normally would in your standard fuzz.
Any dirt pedal that sounds good 'direct to board' on headphones (how I've been demoing it) will sound amazing into a real amp and this fits me SO well; considering DBA's lineage, the Apocalypse has some very warm ORGANIC sounds as well as some harsh shit- will try and do a super simple demo at some point soon.
While not super affordable, I feel like this can replace a lot of boxes in my ever-growing fuzzstable, which has got preeeeeetty big in the advent of lockdown boredom.
Last edited by Doog on Thu May 06, 2021 10:50 am, edited 1 time in total.
- Freddy V-C
- NOD FLANGERS
- Posts: 5591
- Joined: Sun May 17, 2009 4:55 pm
Re: NPD: Death By Audio Apocalypse 'overdrive'
It does. But you ought to clean up your coffee stains, young man.Doog wrote:it looks so good.
Please do, am interested.Doog wrote:will try and do a super simple demo at some point soon.
Fran wrote:I love how this place is basic as fuck.
ekwatts wrote:I'm just going to smash it in with a hammer and hope it works. Tone is all in the fingers anyway.
Re: NPD: Death By Audio Apocalypse 'overdrive'
Nothing about the pube on the bottom left?BearBoy wrote:It does. But you ought to clean up your coffee stains, young man.Doog wrote:it looks so good.
I'm at my gf place's right now so can't compare directly, but there's definitely some overlap, especially given the octave and bias options on the Humdinger. It obviously has the same core "TOAN" though, whereas all the modes on this cover a lot more (generally grosser) ground.sunshiner wrote:Congrats, I still remember your praises to a Humdinger. How do the two compare?
Re: NPD: Death By Audio Apocalypse 'overdrive'
Interesting. I would be immediately and probably permanently put off by a "sweepable frequency equalizer" being one knob. Which is irrational I suppose, because I have plenty of pedals with just a tone knob. Is it just a tone knob or does it do anything else? I remember reading a review of some amp or other (always thought it was a THD, but that seems not to be the case....) that had a single "EQ" knob, that changed the character from Fendery bright to chimey Vox through Marshall to Orange darkness. Not just a tone knob, but boosted and shaped things as it swept. It's going to bug me trying to remember what it was....
PubescreamerDoog wrote:Nothing about the pube on the bottom left?BearBoy wrote:It does. But you ought to clean up your coffee stains, young man.Doog wrote:it looks so good.
Re: NPD: Death By Audio Apocalypse 'overdrive'
Blackstar ISF maybe?Bacchus wrote:Interesting. I would be immediately and probably permanently put off by a "sweepable frequency equalizer" being one knob. Which is irrational I suppose, because I have plenty of pedals with just a tone knob. Is it just a tone knob or does it do anything else? I remember reading a review of some amp or other (always thought it was a THD, but that seems not to be the case....) that had a single "EQ" knob, that changed the character from Fendery bright to chimey Vox through Marshall to Orange darkness. Not just a tone knob, but boosted and shaped things as it swept. It's going to bug me trying to remember what it was....
It's an interesting control on the DBA for sure, definitely more than just a normal 'brightness' kind of tone control. It seems like clockwise end of the dial is adding more upper mids (not really 'treble'), but doesn't just dump the low end like a Big Muff tonestack does, and it doesn't ADD loads of bass when it's pulled back anticlockwise. From what the 'manual' says, it really is controlling multiple frequencies that change dependant on the mode, or at least that react different depending on how that mode is voiced. It's totally usable in a lot of settings though.
On the J-FET mode (the most traditional OD-fuzz mode), the very bottom of the dial seems to add top end back in, and also results in a big gain boost, almost like it's a tone bypass on those old Muffs.. it's probably my favourite setting, sounds fucking MASSIVE.
- Freddy V-C
- NOD FLANGERS
- Posts: 5591
- Joined: Sun May 17, 2009 4:55 pm
Re: NPD: Death By Audio Apocalypse 'overdrive'
Ain't no Big Muff without pubesDoog wrote:Nothing about the pube on the bottom left?BearBoy wrote:It does. But you ought to clean up your coffee stains, young man.Doog wrote:it looks so good.
XY
Re: NPD: Death By Audio Apocalypse 'overdrive'
So the Pubescreamer - a MBM special combining Big Muff and TS?dezb1 wrote:Ain't no Big Muff without pubes
- Mike
- I like EL34s
- Posts: 39170
- Joined: Thu Apr 20, 2006 8:30 am
- Location: Edinburgh, Scotland
- Contact:
Always thought their pedals had great looks and they certainly do a lot with the enclosures to make even something like a volume control look cooler
Never tried one in person but built a few circuits, and they were quite mad - but I think they were early designs.
What's going on there is that a multiposition toggle for the 'modes'?
Never tried one in person but built a few circuits, and they were quite mad - but I think they were early designs.
What's going on there is that a multiposition toggle for the 'modes'?
Yeah, more than a coupletones, that big ol' SFE DIAL seems to do way more than just EQ carving too; the circuit reacts differently to the extremes so lots on offer. Will pinch an audio interface this week to do a quick-n-dirty.Mike wrote:What's going on there is that a multiposition toggle for the 'modes'?
The Apocalypse is our jack-of-all trades fuzz pedal. After being dramatically overdriven, the signal is routed to one of five selectable post-amplifiers for five wild and unique fuzz tones. Toggle through its five signal paths and choose your desired apocalyptic sound. To further refine this beast, control the Sweepabale Frequency Equalizer and carve your tone out just the way you like it.
Twin-T Scoop: A circuit adding bass and treble simultaneously. Quieter volume than the rest.
War Fuzz: A very full and dynamic distortion with rich harmonics and sustain.
Dual J-FET: Similar to the War Fuzz setting using dual J-FETs to get its sound.
Octave Rect: Sums the bottom and top halves of a waveform to create an octave up.
Gain x1000: The gain is cranked super high on this post amp causing erratic results.
Sweepable Frequency Equalizer: This is a special tone knob designed to function as a multitude of tone controls simultaneously . Its range is extreme, starting with a bass booster that fades into a mid scoop, followed by a mid boost, and eventually into a few stages of treble-boosting to give you a beautiful bright sound.