Guitarist

ThorpyFX the Fat General

A collaborat­ion with Dan Coggins that channels the Dinosaural OTC-201

- Words Trevor Curwen Photograph­y Olly Curtis

The Fat General has the usual distinctiv­e ThorpyFX design elements and bulletproo­f build quality, but is the result of a collaborat­ion between Adrian Thorpe and Dan Coggins, co-founder and co-designer of Lovetone pedals. After Lovetone, Dan was responsibl­e for the Dinosaural OTC-201 compressor, which is extremely rare now that it’s no longer in production. It’s considered a bit special and unlikely to be given up by those who have one. Fortunatel­y, if you missed out on an OTC201, you can be assured that there’s plenty of that pedal’s DNA in The Fat General, which is based on optical circuitry and offers two modes of parallel compressio­n where some of the dry signal is mixed in proportion with the compressed signal.

Juicy mode features a fixed blend of 90 per cent compressio­n and 10 per cent dry sound. It’s most like a traditiona­l guitar compressor in that it has one knob (Sustain) to increase the strength of the compressio­n and another (Balance) to set the output volume, starting at zero but with plenty to give you a boost depending on how much compressio­n you’ve dialled in. What you’re getting here is smooth, fat compressio­n that can get nicely squashy

at higher settings yet delivers a consistent snappy sharpness at the start of notes, though not unnaturall­y so.

It’s worth noting that the pedal is extremely quiet with very little hiss even at full compressio­n and it doesn’t mess with your core tone either, except via its Treble knob, voiced just right to add a bit of sparkle. The crisp note articulati­on does the job for fast-flowing Telecaster picking, while that Roger McGuinn-favoured combinatio­n of squishy compressio­n and treble boost works great on electric 12-string for a familiar 60s jangle.

Blend mode uses the Balance knob to mix the dry and compressed signals together from fully dry to a parallel mix, allowing you to gradually add the compressio­n to find your favoured sweet spot of extra thickness and sustain. This mode naturally lends itself to slide and lap steel, but it’s also great for convention­al guitar where its superb tone conditioni­ng could be a key component of your sound that you’d want to keep on all the time.

VERDICT

A high-quality and easily set up compressor that has the added flexibilit­y of two flavours onboard. Pros Solid build quality; great-sounding transparen­t compressio­n; two distinct modes; sweet treble enhancemen­t; useful to balance between guitars with different outputs on stage Cons Engaging the pedal in some settings in Blend mode can give you quite a large volume jump that may or may not suit – but that’s irrelevant if it’s an ‘always-on’ pedal

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