Tone Report Weekly Issue 125 | Page 37

W hat guitar pedal is more iconic than the old Fuzz Face? One can get a lot of dirt from that smiley-faced mic stand base. The first one was born back in 1966 (with NKT275 transistors inside of it), but new Fuzz Face pedals are rolling off the assembly line as we speak. Jim Dunlop bought the rights in 1993 and his pedals remain faithful to the original design and aesthetic. They still have the twotransistor circuit board inside and the look and feel of the one’s from the ‘60s and ‘70s. For players wanting to harness the sound of Jimi Hendrix, this is the ticket. Joe Bonamassa, Eric Johnson, Pete Townsend, and David Gilmour all have one on their pedalboards. There are quite a few Fuzz Faces on the shop shelf right now. They all have the Fuzz Face look and feel, so it can be a task to keep it all straight as far as which one is which. The devil is in the details they say, so I’ve done the leg work for you. I tell you what makes each one different, and I’ll talk about what is on the inside and the outside of them. So without further ado . . . Here is a rundown of the half-a-dozen or so Fuzz Faces in production right now: First there is the full-sized original, the classic. JDF2 (JIM DUNLOP FUZZ 2): When thinking of the Fuzz Face, this is the first one that comes to mind— big red! Jim Dunlop has recreated the original using the same Dallas-Arbiter specs. There are two germanium PNP transistors (NTE158s) underneath so players c