Tone Report Weekly Issue 110 | Page 54

DAWNER PRINCE BOONAR REVIEW BY YOEL KREISLER STREET PRICE $349.95 One of the very first albums that really blew me away and changed my entire perception of what the electric guitar could do, was Pink Floyd’s Dark Side of the Moon. Some of my fondest memories are walking to school through the cold desert, watching the sun peak over the golf courses and suburban homes, and listening to the massive tones and intimate guitar work of my favorite guitar player to this day, David Gilmour. During my first forays into gear-land, the Binson Echorec would constantly come up as the key ingredient in his early tones. The little Italian machine known for its quirky architecture held a near 54 GEAR REVIEW // mythic reverence from me, and still does. Whenever a new Echorec style pedal is announced, I become as excited as I did the first time I listened to the solo on “Time,” waiting to see if the secret sauce to that timeless tone will finally be unlocked. The Boonar is the latest pedal from Croatia-based effects outfit Dawner Prince. Like I mentioned above, it is based on the legendary Binson Echorec, an echo machine most famously used by David Gilmour on Dark Side of the Moon, Live at Pompeii, Meddle and many others. While most echo machines at the time employed a tape loop or similar mechanism, Dawner Prince Boonar the Binson Echorec used a magnetic drumhead, which was very unique for its time. The original Echorec featured four different playback heads; each spaced out differently to give you a different delay time. You could combine them to create haunting, dark, reverblike tails, or use the famous Swell control (unique to the Echorec) to create repeats that bubble beautifully into each other. The Boonar is very much like an Echorec for the 21st century, with FET inputs to simulate tube-like dirt on the repeats, and a digital DSP unit controlling the virtual magnetic head. There are a multitude of controls here for tweaking the dank and cavernous delay