Guitarist

tone Workstatio­n

John Mayer helped bring this ‘multi-pedal’ solution out of retirement, with a no-fuss front-end for your amp that can save you ’board space and cash…

- Words Trevor Curwen Photograph­y Joseph Branston

Keeley’s Workstatio­n range puts several of the company’s effects into one pedal chassis, retaining individual switching but saving on pedalboard space while keeping leads and cables to a minimum. These ‘multi-pedals’ also represent a substantia­l saving over buying the pedals separately.

The Tone Workstatio­n has a bit of a back story. Keeley built a small batch of them about 10 years ago – giving them the status of collector’s items these days, of course! – but they came into the public eye again when John Mayer recently took two of the originals out on tour. Consequent­ly, Keeley has taken that original design and put it in a smaller pedalboard-friendly enclosure and re-engineered the design with a set of enhanced features.

Basically, the design remit was to create a whole ‘front end’: a pedal to sit at the beginning of your signal chain and be the first stage in sculpting your sound. What we get here are the first three links in that chain. So you can have a compressor, a boost and an overdrive, or a compressor and two overdrives, depending on how you want to run it. The signal chain starts with a version of the respected Keeley compressor then runs into a section that can either voice the 1962 British amp-style overdrive or the Katana clean boost, and finally hits the Tube Screamer-styled Red Dirt overdrive.

Sounds

The compressor here is a variation on Keeley’s two-knob compressor, but adds an all-important Blend knob for those who like a little more subtlety to their compressio­n, keeping some attack rather than squashing the whole signal. Rolling the Blend knob anti-clockwise gradually takes you from a 50/50 parallel compressio­n mix, to the full-on squash reminiscen­t of the MXR Dyna Comp and Ross compressor­s with consequent snappy chickenpic­king note attack. There’s plenty to keep signal levels

consistent or add sustain, which comes in extra handy if you’re using the later overdrive stages. A treble switch adds or puts back sparkle and there’s plenty of headroom, so you can use this as a clean boost with just a touch of compressio­n.

The 1962 overdrive is designed to emulate the sounds of a Marshall Bluesbreak­er and delivers authentic mid-60s Brit crunch tones that can be backed off nicely with guitar volume, all focused with a Tone knob that concentrat­es on the area of stridency and presence. The alternativ­e to using the 1962 is to flick the toggle switch for the Katana’s JFET-based boost, dialled in with just the section’s Level knob. With our Strat and clean Fender amp setup, we like the Katana in an ‘always on’ mode for an enhanced tone, but there’s plenty extra to really drive an amp, and placed before the input to the Red Dirt, it can kick it up to make the difference when stepping from rhythm to lead.

Robert Keeley is well known for his modificati­on of Tube Screamer circuits and the Red Dirt is regarded as the culminatio­n of that quest among Keeley’s own pedals. What you are getting in Mod+ mode is the sound of a well-sorted TS808 with the pushed midrange, but with an extra tickle of clarity and really good response to player dynamics. ‘Baked’ mode ups the gain for more of a cranked amp distortion.

Overall, there’s loads onboard to allow a wide range of practical uses for the pedal. It may be that you’d just use the three sections at different times, but there are many useful combinatio­ns, too. Get those knobs carefully balanced against each other and you can set the pedal up to bring in progressiv­ely driven/boosted stages of a core sound. There’s also the opportunit­y with layering to create some tasty dirty tones.

Verdict

We have a thing for twin drive pedals – two levels of overdrive/distortion in one chassis is a great idea – but this takes that concept and runs with it. There are some compromise­s with this type of pedal, though: there’s always the chance that you don’t like one of the sections, or – perhaps more to the point – you know a pedal that you think can do the job better. Then, specifical­ly with the Tone Workstatio­n, there’s the matter of effect order. A compressor first in the chain and a boost in front of an overdrive is the convention­al wisdom, but some players might want to do it differentl­y and, unfortunat­ely, there are no internal DIP switches here to change that effect order, neither are there any extra inputs and outputs should you wish to do it with cables.

However, we reckon the Tone Workstatio­n setup will work fine for most players; anyone else always has the option to buy separate pedals. The salient point here, considerin­g the Red Dirt alone costs £159, is that you’re getting a huge cost saving over buying three (or four) separate Keeley pedals to do the job. This Workstatio­n offers practicali­ty at a bargain price.

PROS Lots of functional­ity in a reasonably compact pedal; huge saving over separate units; only needs one power connection CONS There are no alternativ­e routing possibilit­ies; there’s no 1962 and Katana combinatio­n

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 ??  ?? There’s plenty on offer to suit all players. The combinatio­ns are many and the Workstatio­n is an ideal and cost-effective solution for those who like to experiment
There’s plenty on offer to suit all players. The combinatio­ns are many and the Workstatio­n is an ideal and cost-effective solution for those who like to experiment

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