Guitarist

Smiling Through

To mark the 50th anniversar­y of the humble but classic Fuzz Face, Guitarist takes a look inside an original Arbiter model and talks with the pedal’s creators, plus Hendrix effects guru Roger Mayer, about how a mic-stand baseplate became the ace face…

- Words Rod Brakes Photograph­y Joby Sessions

It’s 1966, and Arbiter Electronic­s Ltd, captained by Ivor Arbiter – the man responsibl­e for the ‘dropped-T’ Beatles logo and (for better or worse) unleashing karaoke onto Britain – introduces the world of music to its newest arrival, the Fuzz Face:

“Fuzz Face is the new fuzz box from Arbiter giving the ultimate in controlled effects,” the sales blurb of the time enthused. “Whilst the new design angle of Fuzz Face is both attractive and amusing, without doubt the keynote of the unit is to be found in its functional constructi­on and operationa­l success… and at the recommende­d retail price of 8gns is certainly Top Value! The Unit is finished in Red, Black or Hammered Silver.”

Certainly radical, nothing before had ever resembled the Fuzz Face. It was something of a spectacle to behold among the generally plain, boxy designs of other effects pedals on the market at the time. With its cartoonlik­e appearance, this thing had personalit­y!

Denis Cornell, a renowned electronic­s engineer who now creates his own range of effects and amplifiers, used to test earlyspec Fuzz Faces in the factory before they were boxed and shipped out across the country. He recalls Ivor Arbiter telling him the story of how he invented the design: “He used the bottom of a microphone stand to fit the circuit board in, and that is how the round shape came about,” Denis told us.

Despite the smiling visage, however, just what mood the pedal was in could change virtually in an instant. The original components in the circuit were quite unstable, often with wide tolerances, meaning that no two Fuzz Faces ever sounded the same. In fact, the same Fuzz Face would often be prone to radical changes in tone based on simple factors such as ambient temperatur­e, particular­ly when fitted with the NKT275 transistor­s used in the very first units. These vagaries were all down to the nature and quality of the components used in its design – a design that was stunningly simple: the circuit employed only two transistor­s, three capacitors and four resistors, along with the potentiome­ters (or ‘knobs’ in layman’s terms), meaning it was impossible to patent, being a standard in engineerin­g textbooks.

VoodooSmil­e

Jimi Hendrix is arguably the most famous Fuzz Face devotee and played a major part in its continued popularity. Roger Mayer, Jimi Hendrix’s all-round tone guru, is therefore no stranger to the pedal, as it was Jimi’s fuzz pedal of choice – mainly for live use, but also in the studio, though it would have to be carefully fettled for recording.

“The term ‘Fuzz Face’ is really a trade name to describe the enclosure,” Roger argues. “What is actually inside the enclosure electronic­ally has gone through several evolutions. But, essentiall­y, a transistor is a three-terminal device. There’s not many ways you can connect up three terminals, is there? Most of the elements of the circuit can be seen in any textbook from 1965. They’re all written down. You couldn’t patent it. It’s impossible to patent an obvious way of connecting up two transistor­s.”

Despite this core simplicity, Denis Cornell recalls the difficulti­es endured when factory-testing Fuzz Faces: “At first, testing these units was a nightmare – each unit having different output levels, I seemed to

be forever changing transistor­s to find some kind of common ground. Characteri­stics of the transistor­s meant that normal testing by voltage signal and oscillosco­pe did not pick up the variations in performanc­e. In fact, I hated the job and dreaded when a production run was requested.

“However, I soon added a ‘guitar test’ to the test procedure. In fact, this was the only way to test the unit. I soon discovered a technique for knowing what was good. For example, striking a note and listening to the decay: poor units would die away quickly and lose the tone. Also, playing high notes, due to their less high output – the high notes were diminished and would decay faster. Finding a good one was a dream, and the guitar would sustain forever.”

The potential for magical tone was there for sure, albeit quite often hard to find, as Roger confirms: “They weren’t consistent, so when I first heard one I said to Jimi, ‘Let me take one back to the lab and have a look at it and analyse what’s going on in the circuit.’ It became apparent without very much analysis that it is what one would call a ‘minimum-parts circuit’. In other words, there were a lot of shortcuts taken to minimise the amount of components. It would work, but it didn’t take into account any of the other ‘accepted’ electronic techniques being used. I was working for the government at the time in vibration and acoustic analysis – and the Fuzz Face didn’t take into account any of the pitfalls. So, this very simple circuit: yes, it worked, but maybe only one out of 20 worked well.

The fact of the matter was that not only did you have a circuit that was simple to the point of instabilit­y, no provision was made in the early days for the huge variance in performanc­e of the pedal’s components – especially the transistor­s. Back then, you had commercial components that could test at 10 to 20 per cent above or below the values they were supposed to have (and that was just for the resistors). The capacitors might test at minus 20 per cent to plus 50 per cent. The crucial transistor­s could also vary a lot, especially in the amount of gain they produced. So, you never had two early Fuzz Faces that sounded the same.

“There were a lot of shortcuts taken… It didn’t take into account any of the other ‘accepted’ electronic techniques being used. So, this very simple circuit: yes, it worked, but maybe only one out of 20 worked well” roger mayer

The Colour of Sound Neverthele­ss, Jimi continued to use a Fuzz Face regularly in the recording studio, although it was often through Roger’s intricate knowledge of electronic­s and the close, personal understand­ing of Hendrix’s musical vision that yielded successful results, as Roger explains.

“Jimi and I were back at the flat and playing with some sounds for a particular cut – we’d have a vision about what the song was about. Now, when I say ‘vision’, that is the correct word. Jimi and I had a synaesthes­ia – a correlatio­n of colour and sound and images… The experiment­ation and knowing how you could manipulate the circuit and also the tricks you could employ in the studio, it’s continuous.

“I would be standing with Jimi in front of the amplifiers, because we didn’t use one amplifier – we’d use two or three different ones and sometimes a direct signal path into the console. The sound was blended, by which I mean it wasn’t just a Marshall amplifier; it wasn’t just a Fender, or Sound City… and we had different microphone placements. But I then had various other circuits that we put in front of the Fuzz Face to buffer them and provide pre-equalisati­on to the Fuzz Face and after it as well, before it went into the amplifier.”

Although the Fuzz Face remained an invaluable studio tool, Roger soon developed other bespoke effects, although Jimi’s use of the Fuzz Face became a mainstay on the road, as he points out.

“Working with Jimi, straight away within two months I developed my own new fuzz boxes for Jimi that were superior in every way to a Fuzz Face. They weren’t as cheap to make. You couldn’t go and buy 20 of them down the road for £6 each. So, the boxes I made for Jimi, he didn’t want to lose, so we only took out commercial ones on the gigs. Then we didn’t worry if they were stolen. We had 15 or 20 of them and we used to lose three or four a week!”

So, the question remains: what is it exactly that defines a really good early Fuzz Face, as opposed to a temperamen­tal tonesucker? What is this voodoo? People swear by them! Jimi Hendrix certainly isn’t the

only major name in music to inadverten­tly endorse (in fact, some actively endorse) the pedal: Eric Johnson, Joe Bonamassa, David Gilmour, Duane Allman, Pete Townshend and George Harrison – all famous and all are famously associated with, to some degree or other, the Fuzz Face.

There are what you might call ‘Fuzz Face Experts’ out there who have, over the years – through painstakin­g trial and error, as well as rigorous scientific analysis – brought us closer to the secret of nailing that elusive magic within a brilliantl­y simple electronic circuit to give you the dream tone. One such expert is Mike Piera of AnalogMan, a specialist in reproducin­g classic effects – with the benefit of modern experience and technical insight, not to mention access to components of far greater quality than the mixed bag of yesteryear’s factory parts.

TranSiSTor­Tone

In Mike’s view, transistor­s are the core ingredient­s in getting great tone from a Fuzz Face. As Mike states: “If you start with bad-sounding transistor­s, nothing can help. Good ones will allow a lot of

“Most of the elements of the circuit can be seen in any textbook from 1965. You couldn’t patent it. It’s impossible to patent such an obvious way of connecting up two transistor­s” roger mayer

 ??  ?? 1
The famous circular enclosure of the Fuzz Face was the brainchild of Ivor Arbiter
Famously greatsound­ing (but infamously fickle), the Newmarket or NKT275 germanium transistor was soon replaced by silicon units that could be made to more predictabl­e...
1 The famous circular enclosure of the Fuzz Face was the brainchild of Ivor Arbiter Famously greatsound­ing (but infamously fickle), the Newmarket or NKT275 germanium transistor was soon replaced by silicon units that could be made to more predictabl­e...
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? 1 3
Germanium transistor­s – found on the early Fuzz Face pedals – are so sensitive to temperatur­e change that many studios keep their vintage units nice and chilled in a fridge!
The first Fuzz Face units had their circuit boards housed in the base of...
1 3 Germanium transistor­s – found on the early Fuzz Face pedals – are so sensitive to temperatur­e change that many studios keep their vintage units nice and chilled in a fridge! The first Fuzz Face units had their circuit boards housed in the base of...
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? 2
2

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia