Guitarist

brantone electronic­s tonemaster Mk2

The classic sound of Tone Bender-style vintage germanium fuzz at a vintage price!

- Words Rod Brakes Photograph­y Olly Curtis Video demo http://bit.ly/guitariste­xtra

This germanium transistor (1967 NOS Mullard OC84) fuzz pedal is based on Gary Hurst’s classic 1966 Sola Sound Tone Bender MKII design. Pedals of this type left an indelible impression upon our ears having featured on innumerabl­e landmark 60s recordings subsequent­ly informing our tastes with regards to what a decent fuzz pedal might sound like. As such the Tonemaster MK2 does a respectabl­e job of recreating a host of Cream Eric Clapton and Yardbirds/early Zeppelin-era Jimmy Page tones.

The inherent tonal character of a ‘good’ germanium transistor is, ironically, a product of the technical limitation­s that instigated its demise and ushered in the use of silicon, yet fuzz pedals of this ilk are still in favour. In yearning for the mojo of ‘that 60s sound’, these units have never been in more popular demand; indeed, many of the reissue circuits featuring NOS (‘new old stock’, or ‘new on/off the shelf’) germanium transistor­s from unused stocks can now set you back several hundred pounds, with some originals on the vintage market around the £4k mark!

The first question, therefore, is why is this pedal only £135? A pedal hand-built in the UK with topdrawer components that sounds as good as this is incredible value. It’s a true boutique (as opposed to an artificial­ly limited run) effects pedal with a matched set of three British 1967 vintage NOS Mullard OC84 germanium transistor­s individual­ly tested for noise, leakage, gain and tone. The result is magnificen­t – a characteri­stically warm, smooth and super-saturated Tone Bender-style pedal with an endless variety of cleaner tones available courtesy of the guitar’s volume knob.

The Tonemaster MK2 seems every bit as rugged as the Tone Benders of yore – and if they’re still going over half a century later then you might expect the Brantone Tonemaster MK2 to carry on fuzzing in true 1960s style until at least the 2060s.

VerdicT

High quality, classic British fuzz at a steal – but that stock of NOS Mullard transistor­s won’t last forever! Pros: 1967 NOS Mullard OC84 germanium transistor­s; authentic 60s fuzz; exceptiona­l value Cons: Sound changes relating to position in signal chain; ambient temperatur­e effects tone

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