Guitarist

Greg Howe’s signature lick box

The Danish effects company joins the trend for three-footswitch dirt/boost pedals, here with the US guitarist’s fave tones

- Words Trevor Curwen Photograph­y Joby Sessions

After looking at the LunaStone Three Stage Rocket in last issue, it’s clear that the dirt/ boost pedal with two levels of dirt and a clean booster is becoming a hot format, certainly for Scandinavi­an pedal companies. Carl Martin’s take comes courtesy of guitarist Greg Howe who was after a pedal to recreate his signature sound.

The resulting Lick Box offers two independen­tly footswitch­able dirt channels, voiced to Greg’s specificat­ions and each with dedicated Level, Gain and Tone knobs, plus a separately footswitch­able boost that offers up to 12dB of extra gain via its single knob. You can use all singly or in any combinatio­n with the signal path running first into the High Gain channel before hitting the Crunch channel; the Boost channel sits at the end of the signal chain for an increase in the overall output.

Trying the boost by itself, a setting at about eight o’clock gives our clean Fender valve combo a nice frisson of edgy breakup and that remaining knobtravel offers more than enough for any boosting task. The Crunch channel is strong on midrange with a full sound that’s naturally amp-like, and offers dirt upwards from a clean-ish boost to medium-level overdrive. By contrast, the voicing on the High Gain channel has more of a scooped character with bottom-end girth and plenty of high-end emphasis. There’s loads more gain, delivering a harmonical­ly rich sustaining sound with a practical tonal range – both channel’s Tone knobs work to emphasise or subdue the upper register and can add a touch of top-end crispness.

Using the channels separately gives three stages that will get you through virtually any gig, but reaching for Crunch and High Gain in combinatio­n offers yet another level as you’re cascading the gain stages for extra gain and distortion. If you’re using High Gain and then give it a boost by adding Crunch, you’ll lose a little of the former’s low and high frequencie­s – but this immediatel­y bolsters the midrange, giving you a saturated solid lead sound loaded with harmonics and sustain that will cut through the mix. It may be Howe’s choice of sounds, but this pedal’s potential is clear to non-fans of the guitarist, too.

verdict

If the channel voicings suit your sonic ambitions, there’s plenty of drive/distortion placed practicali­ty all in one box here. Neat.

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