Australian Guitar

Pigtronix Resotron Tracking Filter

BRING THE SOUND OF ‘70S SYNTHS TO YOUR BOARD WITH A PITCH-TRACKING FEATURE.

- WORDS BY TREVOR CURWEN.

An envelope filter isn’t an immediate shoo-in for everybody’s pedalboard, but since they first appeared in the 1970s, plenty of players have embraced their auto-wah capabiliti­es or their ability to mimic certain analogue synth tones, notably squelchy filter sweeps. The traditiona­l envelope filter pedal is based around dynamics: basically, the harder you play, the stronger the effect. This new all-analogue pedal is designed on the one hand to provide those traditiona­l sounds with both up and down envelope modes, but also introduces the concept of a pitch-following filter with the effect based purely on the actual notes you play rather than how hard you play them.

The Resotron’s 24dB/oct filter circuitry is based on the SSM2040 chip as found on some vintage synths. It can be set to work as a low-pass or high-pass filter or in band-pass mode for typical wah tones. With adjustment to these voices with standard filter Peak and Cutoff knobs, there’s loads of sonic potential, response to your playing being set by the Sensitivit­y knob. You can dial in several subtle variations on the auto-wah experience for funky riffing, reggae rhythms and Jerry Garcia leads for the Deadheads among us, but you can also coax out some tones that you might expect from a phaser or flanger.

Plugging in an expression pedal allows foot control of the filter cutoff if you’d like a more convention­al wah experience, and the problem of an envelope filter’s sound receding into the mix when the pedal is engaged is countered here by onboard compressio­n, mixed in with the Blend control, which keeps things punchy and present without affecting sensitivit­y.

Pitch mode offers something else again. Its Glide knob sets how long it takes for the filter to move between notes, higher settings with some languid swelling-in of the effect being particular­ly nice. Needless to say, there’s loads of control juxtaposit­ion to explore if you want to get a bit ‘out there’. And if you want to get really wacky or just head further away from convention­al guitar, engaging the Oscillate switch conjures up a shedload ofš monophonic synth sounds.

.

THE BOTTOM LINE

All the classic envelope filter sounds are here with plenty of nuanced variations, but there’s more for the bold to explore.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia