Tone Report Weekly 173 | Page 48

GEAR SPOTLIGHT KEELEY ELECTRONICS HOLY FUZZ REVIEW BY PHILLIP DODGE STREET PRICE $229.00 As the story goes, once upon a time (2014 to be exact), Robert Keeley stumbled upon a stash of 86 Matsushita germanium transistors that were perfectly suited for use in a MKIII Tone Bender circuit. Rather than just do a straight clone, Robert and Craighton added a defeatable gate control to the circuit and legend was born. They built them. They sold them. And that was the end of our story—that is, until Keeley discovered a new clutch of Mullard OC75s and set about to rebirth this white rhino of a fuzz: The Holy Fuzz. 48 COMPLETE CONTROL With controls for Volume, Fuzz, Tone, and Gate, the Holy Fuzz seems pretty straight forward. And on some level, it is. The potentiometer for the Gate control incorporates a switch that removes it from the circuit when it’s rotated fully counterclockwise. In this position, you get nothing short of a really fantastic MKIII Tone Bender. BENDER BUT BETTER I’ve played some pretty fantastic MKIII Tone Benders over the years. How To Keeley Master Electronics Your Jazzmaster Holy Fuzz TONE SPOTLIGHT GEAR TALK // // They’ve all sounded amazing at various settings, but none have sounded amazing at every setting. Some get really hissy when you fully crank up the Fuzz control. Some get impossibly dark and muddy when you dial the Fuzz back too low. And most have tone controls with just a few sweet spots.  The Holy Fuzz is one of the few I’ve met that sounds great with just about any mix of control settings. Sure it’s a little dark and weak at low Fuzz settings, but the Tone control has just enough bite and snarl to create a