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词条 Fuzz Face
释义

  1. History

  2. Components

  3. Use

  4. References

  5. External links

The Fuzz Face is an effects pedal used mainly by electric guitarists and by some bass players. It is a stompbox designed to produce a distorted sound from an electric guitar, a sound referred to as "fuzz," which earlier was achieved sometimes by accident, through broken electrical components or damaged speakers.

{{Sound
|filename=Fuzz Face into clean Fender sim.ogg
|title=Silicon Fuzz Face into clean Fender amp
|description=Silicon Fuzz Face clone into a clean Fender amp simulation.
|filename2=Fuzz Face into crunchy vox (playing with volume pot).ogg
|title2=Silicon Fuzz Face into crunch Vox amp (playing with the volume knob)
|description2=Silicon Fuzz Face clone into a crunchy Vox amp simulation. Notice the dynamics in the gain when volume knob is rolled back.
|filename3=Fuzz Face into wah into tube distortion.ogg
|title3=Fuzz Face and wah
|description3=Silicon Fuzz Face clone into a Crybaby wah into tube distortion (velcro fuzz tone)
|filename4=Fuzz Face overloading tube overdrive (HT Dual ch 1) vol pot dynamics.ogg|title4=Fuzz Face overloading tube distortion|description4=Silicon Fuzz Face clone into a Blackstar HT Dual. When the volume pot is on 10, the fuzz "overloads" the overdrive (velcro fuzz tone).}}

History

Arbiter Electronics Ltd. first issued the Fuzz Face in 1966. Later units bear the "Dallas Arbiter", "Dallas Music Industries Ltd.", "CBS/Arbiter Ltd." or "Dunlop Manufacturing Inc." name.

The earliest units used germanium transistors. Silicon transistors were used in later editions of the pedal. Silicon transistors provided for a more stable operation, but have a different, harsher sound.

The electronics are contained in a circular-shaped metal housing. Ivor Arbiter "got the idea for the round shape when he one day saw a microphone stand with a cast iron base".[1] The design was originally intended to be used as a microphone base for guitarists who sang.{{Citation needed|date=November 2016}} The pedal uses two knobs, one for volume, and one for the amount of distortion the pedal produces. The arrangement of controls and logo on the box suggests a smiling face.

The circuit is based on the shunt-series-feedback amplifier topology - a standard in engineering textbooks. Sola Sound and Vox had been using the same circuit topology for their Tone Bender pedals earlier in 1966.[2] The Fuzz Face is particularly similar to the Sola Sound unit known today as the "Mk1.5" Tone Bender. The main difference is that the Fuzz Face is biased slightly colder, making it more usable in warm environments. The original instructions even described the Fuzz Face as a "Tone-Bending" unit.

Dallas Music Industries made a final batch of Fuzz Face units in 1976 or 1977, shortly after moving to the United States. The company bought Crest Audio in the 1980s and although it was operating under that name when it reissued the Fuzz Face in 1986, the units still bore the Dallas-Arbiter name. They made about 2000 Fuzz Faces until 1990.[3][4] In 1993 Dunlop Manufacturing took over production, making a variety of Fuzz Face units until this day. Several germanium and silicon models are available. In 2013 smaller versions with status LEDs and AC power jacks were introduced.[5]

In the late 1990s Arbiter reissued the pedal as well.[6]

Components

The circuit uses only a small number of components, plus a battery. Its sound is mostly dependent on the selection of transistors (type, hfe and leakage in case of germanium transistors). In addition, germanium transistors tend to be sensitive to temperature, so the sound produced using the box would change as the equipment heated up. According to Roger Mayer, his guitar tech, Jimi Hendrix would buy half a dozen Fuzz Faces and mark the one he liked best only to find out that he didn't like it in a different environment.[7]

Despite popular belief that Arbiter used randomly selected pairs of transistors, Dennis Cornell, one of the engineers who worked for Arbiter in the 1960s,[8] described in a 2016 Guitarist magazine article how he auditioned them for their sonic properties.[9]

Early units used NKT275 germanium transistors. Later on, BC183L, BC183KA, BC130C, BC108C, BC209C and BC239C silicon transistors were used. The American made versions used BC109C transistors.[1][10] Arbiter reissues used AC128s.[10] Hendrix also switched to the silicon transistors, but they created additional difficulties on stage, since they are much more susceptible to receiving AM radio signals, which were then audible through the guitar amplifier.[11]

Use

{{Sound
|filename=Fuzz face clone into tube distortion (humbucker).oga
|title=Silicon Fuzz Face into distortion
|description=A guitar riff played on the brige humbucker (full volume) with a Fuzz Face clone into tube distortion.
|filename2=Fuzz face clone into tube distortion (humbucker - volume rolled off then at max).oga
|title2=Silicon Fuzz Face into distortion (volume dynamics)
|description2=Sound example of a Fuzz Face clone played into a tube distortion (humbucker - volume at 4, then increased to the maximum then decreased again).
|filename3=Fuzz face clone into tube distortion (volume rolled off then max - neck pickup).ogg
|title3=Silicon Fuzz Face into distortion, neck pickup (single coil)
|description3=Fuzz Face clone into tube distortion, volume rolled off then increased to the maximum, neck pickup.
}}

The Fuzz Face's continuing popularity and status as a classic may be explained by its many famous users. Among them are Jimi Hendrix,[12] David Gilmour,[13] Duane Allman,[14] Pete Townshend,[15]Eric Johnson[16] and George Harrison.[17][18]

The Fuzz Face has a low input impedance and thus is very sensitive to the guitar pickup[19]. By rolling the volume knob, the guitar player can decrease the gain of the pedal and get a clean or crunch sound, while still having all the gain when the volume knob is on maximum. For the same reason, Fuzz Face pedals react differently when placed directly after the guitar than when after other pedals or after a buffer. Wah-wah pedals are especially known to be troublesome with Fuzz Faces[20].

References

1. ^ "Fuzz Face" by David Morin
2. ^ "Pedal Porn - A Little History" by David Main
3. ^  1980's Crest Audio FuzzFace reissue story
4. ^  Foxrox electronics scrapbook
5. ^Music Radar - Namm 2013: Dunlop launches Fuzz Face Mini and MXR Talk Box
6. ^  Vintage Guitar: Arbiter Fuzz Face reissue
7. ^  Premier Guitar: Roger Mayer Talks Fuzz
8. ^[https://www.vintageguitar.com/3050/arbiter-fuzz-face-reissue/] Vintage Guitar: Arbiter Fuzz Face Reissue
9. ^{{cite magazine |last=Brakes|first=Rod|date=Nov 2016|title=Smiling Through |url= |magazine=Guitarist|location=Bath, UK|publisher=Future Publishing Limited|access-date= }}
10. ^Analog Man Sun Face and Fuzz Face Page
11. ^{{cite news|last=Dregni|first=Michael|title=The Arbiter Fuzz Face|newspaper=Vintage Guitar|pages=62–64|date=August 2012}}
12. ^  Dunlop - Jimi Hendrix Fuzzface
13. ^  Gilmourish - Dallas Arbiter Fuzz Face
14. ^ 
15. ^  Who Tabs - Pete's Gear - Dallas Arbiter Fuzz Face
16. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.modernguitars.com/archives/001025.html |title=Archived copy |accessdate=2007-10-23 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20071022233005/http://modernguitars.com/archives/001025.html |archivedate=2007-10-22 |df= }} Modern Guitars - Eric Johnson Interview
17. ^"Get Back" by the Beatles; Apple, London, 1969
18. ^"Beatles Gear" by Andy Babiuk and Tony Bacon; Backbeat, 2002
19. ^{{Cite web|url=https://www.electrosmash.com/fuzz-face|title=ElectroSmash - Fuzz Face Analysis|website=www.electrosmash.com|access-date=2019-02-09}}
20. ^{{Cite web|url=http://screaminfx.com/tech/wah-before-or-after-fuzz-pedal.htm|title=Wah Before or After Fuzz Pedal|website=screaminfx.com|access-date=2019-02-09}}

External links

  • R.G. Keen: The Technology of the Fuzz Face
  • Fuzz Central: Arbiter Fuzz Face; Schematics

1 : Effects units

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