Guitarist

Orange Kongpresso­r

Orange’s latest offering unleashes a beast with a gentle touch to lovingly squeeze your signal

- Words Trevor Curwen Photograph­y Olly Curtis

Acompresso­r is a compressor, right? Well, in a way as they’re all designed to do a similar job, but go to a pro recording studio and there will be a variety of compressor­s available, each doing something sufficient­ly different from its neighbour to warrant it being there.

Compressor design types include optical, FET, VCA and Variable-Mu, with most of the stompbox compressor­s for guitar being the FET type. The one thing that defines a compressor’s character and playing appeal is the ‘bloom’ of its release, and for this design, Orange has ditched the FET compressor­s entirely, favouring the smoother bloom provided by an optical design with an innovative floating sidechain – plus the addition of a reissue Vactrol VTL5C3 octupler, used in certain vintage compressor­s, notably the LA-2A.

Following the form factor of previous Orange pedals such as the Two Stroke, the Kongpresso­r features the same internal charge pump, which doubles the operating voltage to 18 volts, increasing the headroom. The volume knob offers up to 12dB of clean boost, so the pedal can be used purely as a booster, offering a range of volume boosts that are great for amp driving, or maybe taking things up a notch for solos, especially so with a small amount of compressio­n dialled in. You can also get some tonal shift at the same time courtesy of the Chime knob, an active treble control that can add some useful zing or, alternativ­ely, calm the top-end for a smoother vibe.

sounds

As compressor­s go, the Kongpresso­r is very natural-sounding. It doesn’t exhibit the overly obvious audible squash with radical reshaping of the envelope that some models provide, yet the compressio­n is there, bolstering your tone with a solid consistenc­y and adding sustain when needed. Attack and Release knobs together deliver a range of practical options. The Attack knob has a subtle but effective influence on note transients, building in a natural front-end snap, while the Release knob affects how the note continues, which is very smoothly as its all-important bloom is induced.

verdict

With a pleasantly reactive playing feel, you’ll get transparen­t, unobtrusiv­e compressio­n that offers positive enhancemen­t of your signal. Pros Clean, natural compressio­n; dynamic response; the Chime knob adds sparkle; works as a booster cons No real issues

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