Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
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Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 10/12/2009
at 02:22pm
by James
Email: stjimmy69<at>hotmail dot co dot uk
Ease of Use
:
9
Very easy to use. 3 knobs.
The volume seems to be a linear pot so it has plenty of range to it. The gain and tone knobs are log pots so a mid hump is probable. This is good cos its where the muff sounds best.
Could have more range on the fuzz knob i found.
Sound Quality
:
9
Sound doesnt get much more fuzzed beyond 2 on the gain knob - it just adds a little more white noise.
Best settings for me are
volume : 10
tone: 1
gain: cranked
Good for solo work and sounds killer with a wah
Seems to react differently to single coils and humbuckers - but the differences are both amazing sounding so its a good thing.
Keep in mind that it is a heavily buffered fuzz so dont expect a gated sound like a fuzz factory face.
Reliability
:
8
Use it all the time.
The case is a bit flimsy feeling but you can stomp as hard as you want and it wont budge. Its a brute of a thing to use.
Takes up a lot of room on a pedal board but its room well spent cos it looks mean as hell.
The paint job is rather nasty - small knocks come off as huge scuffs, but it all adds character.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never had to deal with them yet, but i hear good things about the customer services.
All EHX pedals are tested before being sold anyway so chances are youl never have to bother with customer support for this particular pedal.
Overall Rating
:
10
Bought mine for 30 quid - sounds amazing. Good mixture of nirvana/smashing pumpkins sort of heavyness. I use mine with an EHX HOG too to emulate white stripes stuff (octaves on Blue Orchid and whammy style on Ball and Biscuit and Icky Thump). Pulls it all off.
Doesnt take 2 minutes to find "your sound" either.
Uncomplicated, universal and a mainstay of many artists pedalboards - that should tell you something.
Also, dont believe the crap people say about it not sounding like the original - the settings just need tweaking a little more; it still sounds like a proper muff.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: GBP 80
Submitted 08/05/2009
at 09:48am
by Roshan Gonsalkorale
Email: Roshan_g_uk<at>hotmail dot com
Ease of Use
:
9
This is a very easy pedal to use - just three knobs and then two switches to switch the wicker on and off and to also bypass the tone control.
Very easy to get a good tone out of it and the manual is very good at explaining what each feature does.
Only reason I don't give this a 10 is because I think the unit could perhaps be manufactured to be slightly smaller but that's only a niggle.
Some people give this lower scores (like a 6 or a 7) but I'm not sure how this pedal could be that difficult to use - there are three knobs, two switches, in and out jacks and a power jack. What could be easier. I've owned a bunch of pedals and unless it's some mad delay or multi-effects unit I'd find it hard not to give any pedal a high score.
Sound Quality
:
9
I use the following set up:
Mesa Boogie 1x12 Express 2:25 or Fender Deville 1x12 >> RV-3 reverb >> Verbzilla >> DD6 delay >> Voodoo Lab Tremolo >> Modded RAT >> Muff Pi >> HBE Powerscreamer >> Analogman Ibanez TS9 tubescreamer >> Barber compressor >> Fender Strat / Tennessee Gretsch / Rickenbacker 620
There are lots of ways to use a pedal, lots of different setups to use it with and lots of different settings to use. I'll just go into what I find it useful for and base my rating on that.
I use this as something to get a big chunky riff from (generally just using one string) and always on the neck pick-up of my guitars (esp a strat). I switch the tone-bypass on so I don't lose bottom or top end and I leave the tone-wicker on to get a bit of trebly highs on top of the fat sound.
I don't put the gain up past 11 o'clock really because I stick a tubescreamer in front of it (no drive - just a volume boost) and here is the result:
OMG...it's just a fat big rounded tone with a gritty edge to it. This works WAY better than my modded RAT (keeley'esque) and does wonders if you want a big fat gritty tone on your neck pick-ups. This sounds great without the tubescreamer boosting it but if you don't mind losing a bit of bottom end - the tubescreamer really pushes it to a big but beautiful sound.
There are lots of different tones with this that I'm still finding over the 8 months or so I've had this so for the price of this pedal - I'm going to give this a 9 as it's way better value than my power screamer or my RAT because of the versatility.
The only reason I don't give it a 10 is because of the big hum you get when you have it on a high setting but to be fair - without a built in noise-gate, you're never going to avoid this as unless you have it on 0 gain - it's uses A LOT of distortion.
BTW I hear arguments that this is a fuzz pedal and arguments that it is a distortion pedal. From what I've read, I believe this is a distortion pedal. I've owned a few Roger Mayer fuzzes (the best IMHO) and this doesn't really sound like them.
I think this pedal will become a fan favourite because of an excellent price-point.
Reliability
:
9
I doubt you could break this easily. None of the knobs are loose and everything seems very well made. Having said that - I've NEVER broken a pedal but I'll give it a 9 as I think the footswitch may eventually break.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never had to deal with them. I've heard their support is awful but I doubt you'd ever need it.
Overall Rating
:
9
I play mainly alt rock and don't really get the chance to use this pedal much in my style of music as music as I'd like but when I need a big riff - this pedal is the one to use.
I've been playing for about 8 years and owned a TONNE of stuff for only 8 yrs playing so I'd say I'm fairly qualified to review a pedal. The only thing I'd probably ignore my review on is if you're REALLY into your guitar tone preservation (true-bypass lover) as I don't really care about that too much.
This is a great pedal if you want your own sound and a really versatile distortion pedal. You'd struggle to find a pedal that sounds like this at all - for whatever price.
If you want a big muff/fat distortion - just buy this - you can get the EXACT tone from a normal big muff on this too.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 05/02/2009
at 07:44am
by Qmech
Email: nof3994<at>charter dot net
Ease of Use
:
6
I'm writing about a 1974 Ram's Head Big Muff Pi that I've owned for decades. I've played a bit thru an even older model, the one with the knobs in a triangle rather than straight, and there seems to be some differences, but mine is the knobs-in-a-line ram's head model. And folks, there's some tricks to getting the best out of this pedal.
I'm rating ease of use a bit low, as it took me YEARS to figure out how to get the best use out of this thing; now that I know the tricks, I LOVE IT!
Sound Quality
:
9
I mostly play Strats and Teles, but this can be cool with humbuckers, too, provided you put a bit of woodshedding in to get the best settings. Ampwise, I play various blackface Fenders (vintage) as well as stuff like Valve Jr.'s and assorted old single-ended class A amps. For this review, I'm pretty much referring to a recent gig with a '67 Fender Showman head thru a couple of small cabs w/ Celestion Vintage 30's.
The sound was off the hook! Very responsive and reactive, as you use the guitar's volume to vary the input signal...this is one of the keys to getting the most out of these vintage muffs. Backing down the guitar's volume smooths out the fuzz into more of a good, workable distortion even with chords. The downside being the overall drop in volume. I solved this by using a volume pedal after the muff, and setting my amp volume for the guitar-down, pedal-up volume setting. When I opened the guitar up, I could back down the pedal and maintain a fairly consistent overall volume.
Remember, this thing provides a fair bit of gain hiss, so I'm only rating sound quality a 9, although disregarding that I'd go 10++
Reliability
:
7
Well, this thing is 35 years old and the only thing I've had to do to it was resolder on battery connection and clean the pots and switches. One of the reasons I did not use if for many years was the flimsy construction...I always felt a really good stomp on it would just flatten the thing. The couple of times in the past that it was part of my regular rig, I usually hooked it up late in the pedal chain, up on top of the amp, and manually turned it on and off, rather that using my foot. THIS HAS BEEN A MISTAKE! and one of the reasons I didn't GET how to get the most out of it. If I start playing out again, I'll probably use an ABY to create a little loop to bring it in and out with a more durable switch.
As far as backup, I'm in the process of working with an electrical engineer friend to see if we can revamp the newer "Little Big Muff" to sound and react like this vintage unit. I've hung onto the vintage Muff through thick and thin; if I lost it, I'd probably try to find another on eBay or something.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
I have no idea. About a decade ago, I bought one of the russian reissues. I worked with it for several weeks and could never get it to act like the vintage. Some folks maintained that that version (green case, triangle knobs, very strange "button-like" footswitch) was supposed to sound and act more like the original muff, but that wasn't my experience. I ended up selling it to one of my students...I always felt a little bad about that.
Overall Rating
:
9
I'm pretty much a blues-rock, classic-rock player. I've been a guitarist for 40 years and I've played through everything you can think of, pretty much. I've had Fender, Gibson, and assorted custom guitars; I've played a wide-range of amps, but after I got over having to have Marshall 50 and 100 watts, I've pretty much stuck to vintage Fenders and the ilk. Pedal-wise, again I've messed around with tons of stuff but I've almost always relied on the amp to get me the sound I wanted. I've worked with various distortion units and have some digital modelers but as far as I'm concerned, modelers are just that-simulacrums and not the real deal.
Managed correctly, this thing is amazing! I had read about guys like Duane Allman using nearly dead batteries to tame it down a bit, but my experience (see above) suggests that managing the input voltage is just as effective at rendering various settings reasonably useable. The vintage is very responsive to pick attack and makes the guitar really responsive. The whole reason I'm writing this review today is, I used it in a one-off performance yesterday, in a situation where at one point I had to play very clean and chimey, then later had to have a great, over the top solo sound. I couldn't find what I wanted with the modelers and, in a fit of frustration, decided to go old-school.
It was awesome. With the Muff out of the chain, the Showman and Strat sounded chimey and brilliant, perfect for the part I had to play. Later, I jacked in the muff and backed off the treble a bit, and turned off the bright switch. With the guitar backed down and the vol. pedal up I had just the right amount of distortion and responsiveness; when solo-time came, I rolled the guitar up and toed the vol. pedal back just a bit and the Strat just sang! I am in love with this thing!
It will be great if we can make the newer, more robustly-built models sound like this. If you can find a vintage for a reasonable price, GET IT!
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: GBP 55 USED
Submitted 03/17/2009
at 02:50pm
by Nathan Bayfield
Email: tomb dot raider54<at>hotmail dot com
Ease of Use
:
8
3 Knobs plain and simple
BUT
I noticed that sustain doesn't make much difference when tweaked slightly, and the tone knob makes hardly any difference, I can only tell a slight change in 'clankyness'.
Also the volume knob is very tempermental, when it gets to just below 12 o'clock it starts to make massive volume jumps.
Sound Quality
:
8
I'm using the Russian Re-issue (black, no wooden box) with a bass,
it's a vintage (1984) Fender JB Special with a passive EMG bridge pickup.
I also use a bi-amp setup and run the Muff through a Vintage (1974) Londoner L100A and have a Fender Rumble 2x10" running clean at the same time.
I'll go over the Parameters of the effect first:
Sustain: When turned low you the Fuzz becomes more overdriven and sounds a bit crunchier and the feedback/background noise is reduced alot however when the sustain is turned all the way up there can be a static-like background noise but the sound is extremely fuzzy and feedback increases the length of your notes, I usually keep it about half way but have recently started using it at full because I like the sound of half my signal being THAT fuzzy.
I've owned the USA muff aswell and found that when turned down the USA one became much more like an overdrive and wasn't fuzzy at all compared to the Russian one, the Russian also maintains alot more low end than the USA version though not enough that I would recommend to use this pedal without a blend pedal or a bi-amping rig.
Using this pedal I can get some sounds from popular band, Muse, but most of the Bass-fuzz parts are backed up with Synth from Morgan.
Reliability
:
9
The Pedal has no DC input but I brought an adaptor (by a company called 1Spot) which I plugged into the Battery port to my power brick. I would and have gigged with this and it works fine, just the extra sensitive volume knob can cause problems in mixing etcetc.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never had to deal with Customer Support.
The person who sold it to me gave me a circuit diagram for the Creamy dreamer mod but as I am using a bass I felt no need to get a 'Smashing Pumpkins' sound.
Overall Rating
:
9
I play in a Post-Hardcore/ Emo/ Pop-Punk band and use this along with a BOSS OS-2 and a GT-6B(in studio/at home) and works fine as long as you can get the levels sorted out.
I've been playing about 2 years now and this is one of the best fuzz boxes/ distortions I've owned and is just so phat and big sounding, however the little time I've spent playing around with a guitar on it I've hated it and much prefer my fuzz factory for that.
Though I wouldn't dream of using one of them on basses *shudder*
I think this should have been shipped with a DC port and not one of those shitty tiny ones like ones on the US versions either but it's not a big deal to order a ??2 adapter.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: USD 60
Submitted 03/16/2009
at 07:50am
by CAMeyer
Ease of Use
:
9
You'll need to experiment a bit with the volume, tone, and sustain knobs to get sounds you're happy with, but it's not at all difficult or frustrating. Really, that's part of the fun with this thing. One bit of advice: Start low on the volume knob and work up--the unit can generate a whole lot of gain!
Sound Quality
:
9
The muff I have is a recently manufactured Russian version, the black one. I play a Tribute Legacy through a silverface twin. Sound-wise, the muff is the real deal. It can deliver crunch, fuzz (though I don't think of it as a fuzz box) and a nice singing sustain (that is, a distorted rather than clean sustain). If you're into vintage heavy metal or the latest stoner rock, this box (or something like it) is a must. I played a US muff pi years ago, and the current Russian version is a capable of a darker sound. When I plug it in, I start play Black Sabbath riffs, and I'm not even a big BS fan. An important caveat: This unit is prone to noise and even radio signals when the volume is cranked
Reliability
:
5
This rating is perhaps misleading--you could use it on at a gig without backup, presuming it's intact at start of the show. The problem with the unit is its durability, as described by many other reviewers. E-H should include a screwdriver and soldering iron with every unit! On my unit, first one of the chicken head knobs kept coming loose. Then, from my frequently having to screw the knob back on, a nut that held the pot onto the box came loose. When I tightened the nut, it moved the entire pot and one of wires attached to it was torn loose from the circuit board. I opened the box up and reconnected the wire to the board (with duct tape!) and saw how shoddily the thing is put together. Given this example of Russian electronics engineering and manufacture, it's no wonder the Soviets never made it to the moon.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
My unit is a year old and past warranty, so I never communicated with them. E-H must not be too bad with customers; they've been around forever and are bigger than ever.
Overall Rating
:
7
I like playing old blues rock, garage, psychedelic stuff and the big muff is a basic for that kind of music. It works very well with an Ibanez echo/delay unit I have, though when connected to a vox wah wah I do get a lot of hiss and other problems requiring that I tweak the knobs and go easy on the wah. I have a lot of fun with this box when it's working properly. It's reasonably priced, but when it dies I'll probably look for something else that delivers the same sounds--I'm not too handy with repairs!
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 10/28/2008
at 07:15pm
by Crakula
Ease of Use
:
10
Sound Quality
:
9
* 1968 Rickenbacker 360
* 2004 American Fender Stratocaster w/ Rio Grande (Vintage Tallboy - Bridge & Muy Grande - Neck)
* 1982 Fender American Bullet Deluxe w/ Dimarzio Tone Zone S - Bridge & Dimarzio YJM - Neck)
* Mid 90'S Ibanez RG-570
Great Sound - thick but you can really get it to sing as well.
Reliability
:
2
Here lies the problem. I've had the pedal for less than a year, and have really babied it. I've never even put it on the floor to step on the switch. It started breaking up and became absolutely useless (batteries or power supply) a few days ago.
I'm going to have to accept it's a lost cause and buy a Jimi Hnendrix Fuzz Face (which is what I should have really gotten in the fisrst place - but I tried to sace a few bucks)
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
4
I will not be replacing it....
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 09/27/2008
at 10:47pm
by epi
Email: epi_the_epiphone<at>yahoo dot com
Ease of Use
:
No Opinion
Standard 3 knob pedal. sustain, tone and volume.
I bought this pedal off ebay, still had the wooden box that went with it. no instructions, but why need them when you have the internet?
Sound Quality
:
5
this is definatley more of an overdrive pedal than distortion. That is, if you can convince the damn thing to give you a decent sound. It is also very tempermental. I've tried everything to get a decent sound out of this pedal. From chords, to batteries, to amps to guitars. The sound is choppy and like my drummer says "its sounds ratty" It has way too much bottom end. During a recording session, we had it hooked up to my Marshall G100r with 2X12 cab w/electro-harmonix speakers andit just wasnt producing a sound that was good enought o record with. So, The sound guy suggested using it on a Peavey 5150 and it sounded even worse.(Yes, it actually sounded shitty on a 5150) We eventually went with a BOSS SD-1 super overdrive and man,that did the trick.
The problem with this pedal, are the cheap parts and short cuts made during construction. If this tank had a dc9v input jack and true bypass it would probably be a better pedal, but as is, it kills the **** out of your tone and if you dont have a battery that it likes, then your going to get crazy and ****** sound.
I give this pedal a 5, when it wants to work for you, it sounds great but that's few far and between.
Reliability
:
5
Case wise, yeah this metal tank was built well. Component wise.......HELL NO! If its gotten what it needs out of your battery,it will suck more tone when your hitting the stomp button and it sounds like you have a loose connection
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
dunno why bother? everyones pissed with Russia right now anyway.
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
I just bought a boss sd-1 super overdrive and a visual sound jekyll and hyde pedal. Far superior in construction and sound than this tone killing beast. If you want a pedal to mod, than this is the pedal for you. I havent decided this pedals fate yet. I may mod it or i may sell it to a basist friend, who has had more luck with it than I have.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 04/16/2008
at 06:48am
by Mal
Email: aussiebass at gmail<dot>com
Ease of Use
:
9
If you have difficulties operating a three knob distortion pedal, I think you may need professional help.
I did knock off one point because the input and output are around the wrong way compared to Boss and MOST other pedal manufacturers. Not a biggie, just a bit surprising considering that my Russian Bassballs has them the "right" way round, and I can see a situation where if you're a bit tired or distracted you could inadvertently plug then in the wrong way round.
This one's the common Russian one.
Sound Quality
:
9
I use this with Bass - a Fender Precision made up from about three other Precisions (all USA) which is my main gigging bass. My rig is (usually) a MarkBass SA450 into an Eden D210XLT or, occasionally, a Warwick 411 Pro.
I wanted something which could "sort of" sound like an old valve stack being driven way too hard while still retaining a solid well-defined and punchy bottom end.
I don't use it on everything, just some old classic rock numbers like Rock And Roll Hootchie Koo, Sunshine of Your Love, etc., with a Blues/Classic Rock Guitarist I gig with sometimes. Used *SELECTIVELY* it's unbeatable. It certainly gives ME the result I want.
9 because nothing's perfect, and it is a bit fiddly getting the volume just right so it sits in the stage mix.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
It appears to be solidly built. I wouldn't carry a backup 'coz if it stops working, I'll gig happily without it although I would definitely get a replacement fairly quickly.
Dependable so far.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
9
I've been doing gigs for 30 years, and do a LOT of casual subs and some session work as well as the three or four main bands I gig with. I play a bunch of styles: Blues, Country, Jazz, 50's and 60's Rock 'n' Roll, Swing, Heavy Rock. Only stuff I don't play is Metal and Modern Top 40.
As stated above, my main setup is the Frankenstein Precision into the MarkBass/Eden rig. I have a bunch of other Basses, Cabs and Amp setups for specific types of gigs, but 90% of the time this is what I'll show up with.
I only use the Big Muff for certain stuff and when I do it's magic. It just happens to fit the whole sound of the particular gigs I use it on.
It would be nice if it took a standard Boss type power adapter - it'd be easy enough to modify it to take one but frankly I couldn't be bothered.
If it was ripped off or if it broke, I wouldn't be devastated as I can gig without it but I'd get another one fairly soon.
It's definitely NOT for everyone, but it works for me.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: USD 79.99
Submitted 02/23/2008
at 04:49pm
by Edgar Blood
Ease of Use
:
10
Three knobs. The only three you will ever need. EVER.
Volume, Tone, Sustain (Gain)
Sound Quality
:
9
First off, before buying this peice you need to know the difference between distortion and overdrive. This pedal basically takes your signal and sends it into orbit, it doesn't modify what's being pushed thru it (meaning more than guitar applications). This means you wont be getting your run of the mill barely distortion, no slight touch and get responce (no tapping or EASY hammer on's and pull off's), no palm muting. If you want a MUFF with these, i recomend the Metal Muff.
Another awesome thing about this pedal is, sence it boosts thru the roof, when having an even slightly overdriven amplifier, it feeds back. But, for some reason it isn't ear splitting, "i can't hear for the rest of the day" feedback. Once mastered, you can add awesome intentional feedback between riffs.
Set-up: Fender Princeton 65 (volume, treble, and bass all at about 7 1/2) > EHX Pulsar (original, not micro) > BIG MUFF(NYC) > Digitech Whammy WH-4 > Epiphone Dot Studio (Tomato Red) = Feedback generator.
Best pedal i've ever owned.
Reliability
:
10
Have had for quite sometime and has NEVER had problems. I'm in a band where I use Big Muff, obviously, my memory is shot =\ ... anywho... I'd trust this thing with my life. No seriously, if some one tried to shoot me, I'd hold up my Muff and it would probably deflect the bullet. Die Cast aluminum housing. STURDY.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never had a problem with my Muff. Never had to ask...
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
http://www.myspace.com/thecorpses
to listen to me and my muff in action
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: USD 66 USED
Submitted 02/03/2008
at 11:47pm
by AnalogGuy
Ease of Use
:
9
Pretty easy to get good sounds from this guy. Only 3 knobs, in fact it's very hard to get a bad sound.
Sound Quality
:
10
I'm using a 1997 Epi Les Paul Standard Flake Limited Edition with a Fender Super 112 all tube 60w 1x12" combo.
My Big Muff is the black Russian one. Killer, unique, mystical sounds. It gives a nice variety of 70ish heavy psych stoner tones. I can easily nail the sound of Matt Pike (Sleep) and similar stuff. Only a few changes of pickup combinations in the guitar, a few tweaks in the Muff and in the amp eq and I have all the trippy sounds I ever dreamed to hear from my amp.
Very bass heavy, fucking great for downtuning (I tune down to C). This pedal can make your amp sound like is about to explode and can give you all the feedback you want, but at the same time it makes ZERO noise, which is absolute perfection (EH pedals are said to introduce lots of noise in the signal, that has to be the exception).
It's sound like a cross of a classic distortion pedal with a compressor, a bass booster and a certain amount of fuzz. I can get more classic 60's fuzz tones too (with the tone control in the treble side), but if you want 60's fuzz sounds you could be happier with a Maestro, a Fuzz Face or Mosrite Fuzz-Rite.
I'm in love with this pedal sound, don't ask me to be very objetive. Sure, you can't play metal or sound like SRV with it, but there are MetalZones and Tubescreamers for that. Buy the russian Muff if you want heavy psych, shoegazing or indie rock sounds. Period.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
It hasn't died yet. Looks well built, but who knows. I bought second hand and works perfectly. The guy who sold it to me used it for a couple of years with no problems.
I would use it in a gig without doubt.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
I live in Argentina and bought the pedal second hand. So...
Overall Rating
:
10
I currently play Stoner-psych rock, this pedal is THE PEDAL for stoner rock, period. I had played guitar for 14 years, I also have a Vox Valve-Tone (Tubescreamer clone) which is great for "cleaner" blues-rock.
If it were stolen or lost I would buy another without thinking twice.
I love: The Sound, the sound, and the sound. It also looks cool and I love big things (big tits, big asses and big pedals).
I hate: no AC adaptor input, only batteries (I hate batteries). Also, no true bypass, but it doesn't sucks much tone.
Get one, it's cheap, it's terrific, it's really magic.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: USD 70
Submitted 11/19/2007
at 07:16pm
by Tango
Email: wgg3606<at>yahoo dot com
Ease of Use
:
10
3 chicken head knobs that work their magic, and a big silver button.
Sound Quality
:
10
absolutely insane. this thing could destroy worlds. smashing pumpkins, silversun pickups, sabbath, theyre all here. not brilliant for palm muting, but thats not my scene really.
any and all settings sound amazing, but i never turn the sustain down anyways, good thing since the cheap crap knob broke within a year.
bought a little big muff reissue, FAR better build quality, but just not as much rip-roaring sonic character as my black russian (which is the one im reviewing currently).
Reliability
:
1
horrible! this is the 4th black russian muff, and its been a different problem every bloody time, all in relation to awful build quality.
1st: dropped it from a height of maybe 3 ft onto the CARPETED floor, one of the capacitors split open and it was no more. knew nothing of electronics at the time, so just gave it away.
2nd: It just quit working. nothing apparent looked wrong, the wires looked fine. gave it away again, and it turned out to be a faulty sauter joint in the 9 volt connector.
3rd: The IN/OUT jacks are made almost entirely of brittle plastic. the brackets holding them on just snapped off one day. no provocation, just drying/cracking of the plastic. took the hint and just resautered some new in/out jacks into it.
also, the sustain knob doesnt work right, it just spins and spins and spins. so, i spun it into the full-on-sustain setting (my favorite) and just superglued it in place. consequently had to resauter several wires that fell off their wimpy sauter joints during this.
if these didnt have such a heavenly sound, i wouldve moved on when the first one broke... much less cobbled my last one back together so many times. the quality control on these is just TERRIBLE!
its not just me either, im good to my ****, nearly obsessive. the fact is either im having terrible luck or they ALL suck like these ones did/do.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
never bothered.
Overall Rating
:
8
i wish these would stop breaking. but oh, that SOUND...
ive been using these black russians off and on since 2000, while messing with other distortions/fuzzes along the way: a Boss DS-1 & MD-2, a Marshall Jackhammer, an SPF Red Threat, a Tech 21 Sansamp, an MXR Distortion +, ProCo Rat, EH Little Bigmuff Pi Reissue, and others.
This thing still whoops *** on all of them, if not for it's simplicity and raging sound alone.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 10/06/2007
at 03:36pm
by dj7eight
Email: cfm at riseup<dot>net
Ease of Use
:
10
3 knobs, just twist 'em...
Sound Quality
:
10
allright, in my endless quest to **** on self-serving "guitar players" who act like they know everything about gear and tone i've come to put yr mind at ease potential muff buyer... i don't play traditional rock or anything like that, i go to the goodwill and buy little kids toys and then get into the circuit board and **** everything up until it sounds weird... i use drum machines and i make digital hardcore... once in a while i plug in a guitar and play some chords and stuff to... i've had a big muff in my collection of guitar effects for 10 yrs, the one i have now is the cheapo russian black model, i've had us made and old green ones too... all of them have the big muff tone that's great and can't be rivaled... they're noisey and ugly and that's why they're great! if you're in yr bedroom trying to re-create dark side of the moon you wont like the intricacies of this pedal, go spend $300 on some stupid boutique ****, if you're a budding musician please do something that doesn't sound like guitar/bass/&drums because that's what everybody is doing and it's not interesting anymore... i've ran and owned a venue and played in rock style bands for years and nobody has the balls to do something different...
Reliability
:
No Opinion
who cares, i work in a pawn shop and all pedals are $10 for me...
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
who would contact a company over something stupid on a $60 pedal anyways?
Overall Rating
:
10
my guitar setup is like this
a bunch of cheap japanese copys that are modded
i have a vintage monty ward tube amp & fender deluxe 112plus
i have boss chorus, digital delay, power driver & turbo overdrive
tube screamer (over rated!)
60's moog-made maestro stage phaser
70's dod 690 chorus
earnie ball vol
vox wah
i use whatever's laying around next to my amp, i don't use picks, i use a metal lighter and/or my car keys to make noise...
i use the muff to distort the **** out of drum machines for an atari teenage riot like cluster**** and it's the best distortion pedal ever made (i've played hundreds!)
do yourself a favor and listen to anything devo (except whip it) and get inspired, if you really want to hear the "sound" of a big muff listen to some mudhoney, "superfuzz migmuff" is prbably the muff tribute album if there ever was one, anything by mudhoney features the muff, also listen to tad or older nirvana... the best band to ever play a note is sonic youth and they have used muffs off and on over the years... check 'em out!
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: USD 137.50 USED
Submitted 08/31/2007
at 12:33am
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
7
Only three knobs but it has many available tones. Mine is a silver Russian model.
Sound Quality
:
6
This thing is a 9 on sound but it is VERY noisy. When I first got it a thought it was junk. I was using it with a Strat with GFS Lil' Killers through a Fender Champ. Then I switched guitars and ams. Now I use it with a Strat with custom handwound singlecoils through a Sovtek Mig 50 with a Keeley Java Boost and a Boss NS-2 noise suppressor which helps with the noise but some feedback gets through. This pedal likes singlecoils much better than humbuckers. A Strat with good singlecoils shines with this pedal especially with a Plexi-style amp but humbuckers don't work well with it.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
6
I play a wide variety of music both old and new. This handles both well. It is just so noisy. I would buy this again because I have never seen another silver Russian one so it may be worth a lot some day. I would not gig with this pedal. I have a Keeley modded DS-1 which i would use instead. I do like messing around with this pedal though. If you like fuzz, it sounds great minus all the noise. It would be an 8 overall if it was quiet.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 06/26/2007
at 12:21am
by Michael Espinosa
Ease of Use
:
8
This pedal is pretty simple to use. Just volume, sustain, and tone knobs. There is no user manual unfortunately, but you won't really need one. It honestly can't get much simpler. The only negative thing is that the input and output jacks are reversed from usual pedals, probably because it's made in Russia. This is why it's only getting an 8 instead of a 10. It makes it somewhat inconvenient to use with other pedals, if you like them in really specific order.
Sound Quality
:
9
The one thing you really have to understand about this pedal is that it's sound depends almost entirely on your other equipment, pedals, order of pedals, volume, etc. I use a Schecter C-1 Exotic, Traynor YCV 40 tube amp, Keeley Boss SD-1, and this pedal as my equipment. This pedal sounds really, really good with my setup, but when I played it on my friends SS Marshall amp and Stratocaster, it sounded pretty bad. Overall, you MUST try it out with similar equipment to yours BEFORE you buy it, or else you could be very dissapointed.
If you do have the right gear to go along with this pedal, it will sound great. With a good tube amp and overdrive to fill the sound up a bit, you can get really good Hendrix-ish fuzz, and an almost perfect David Gilmour sound. The sound is really smooth and heavy. Also if you turn the tone up to full, you get a really good grunge and punk sound. I suggest you have an overdrive for your lighter riffs and chord work, and then turn the Big Muff on for solos. It's not that great of a rhythm pedal. The overdrive is a key factor, because for some reason it fills the sound out amazingly and makes the pedal sound a lot better. With the right set up, this pedal is pure tonal bliss.
This pedal can be noisy with single coil guitars, but it's not that much noise. It's bearable if you don't have everything turned up to 10.
Overall, I'm giving the sound a 9 because it really depends on your set up. It will either be perfect for you, or it will sound like crap. When you do find a good set up for it though, it will sound amazing.
Reliability
:
8
The only issue here is the fact that there is no AC jack, and you have to carry 9v batteries around with you anywhere. This can be very inconvient for home practice, but with gigs it's no problem. So far it seems dependable. It's definitely sturdy, and would probably kill someone if you threw it at their head as hard as you could.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
N/A.
Overall Rating
:
9
You'll either love or hate this pedal. Remember to TRY IT OUT WITH SIMILAR GEAR TO YOURS BEFORE YOU BUY IT. If you find it suits your gear, it will be an amazing asset to your pedal board. Also remember to buy some 9v batteries, because there is no AC jack. If this pedal were stolen, I'd buy another one in a second.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: 50
Submitted 06/22/2007
at 10:38am
by James
Email: james_grimwood<at>hotmail dot co dot uk
Ease of Use
:
10
Ease of use? There are three knobs. Each of which turns with little effort, but are solid enough to stay in position if stood on by an over-zealous foot.
The footswitch gives great feedback, unlike some "is it on?... did I press it hard enough?" pedals. In the case of the Big Muff - activating the switch feels like you're crushing a very small leprechaun. Trust me, that's the only way to describe it.
Sound Quality
:
10
Being a Smashing Pumpkins fan the range of sounds this pedal offers could not be more perfect. As usual with these sorts of things it's horses for courses, but if you like sneering, rip-snorting, bassy, universe-destroying, grungey, herd-of-elephants-walking-over-your-testacles distortion then this pedal is for you. I happen to like that sort of thing.
My setup starts off with Epi LP Custom with SD Pearly Gates and Alnico II pro, but I'm forced to play it through a terrible 15-watt amp, the name of which I would not care to divulge, such is its awfulness. My tube amp, she breaks :(
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Seems pretty solid but I haven't thrown it out of any windows or urinated on it yet so I can't comment.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
I've had no reason to deal with them.
Overall Rating
:
9
This is perfect for me but could be terrible for you. It's worth bearing in mind I haven't used a lot of pedals, but those I have tried don't come anywhere near this for the style of music I like to play.
I'm giving it a nine because it's not the most versatile. Great for grunge, but not much else.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: 100
Submitted 04/30/2007
at 11:44am
by Darkeve
Ease of Use
:
10
I have the sovtek green one(vintage).Three knobs.No problems at all....
Sound Quality
:
10
For me this is the best distortion ever...I really love Big Muffs sound and i think sovtek green is the best muff ever produced.
I use it with the tone knob on the left(max basses) and sustain around 2 o clock...It produces a really big distorsion with an endless sustain,anyway it is soft...i call this sound "the fuzzbed".
I used a lot of distortion pedals(boss ds1 and ds2,mxr dist+,E-H NYC big muff,subdecay blackstar,proco rat and dirty rat...)and this one is the best.
My set up is: Fender Telecaster custom '72--->Proco dirty rat--->sovtek big muff--->E-H Holy Grail--->E-H Flanger Hoax--->Diaz Texas Tremodillo--->E-H Small Clone--->Maxon AD 999--->Vox ac30
I've found my perfect sound...
Reliability
:
10
Mine is 20 years old...it is a fu**ing tank...i depend on it
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
10
I play alternative rock/noise/psychedelic...simply perfect for my style...
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 04/21/2007
at 06:05am
by gjb
Ease of Use
:
9
Super easy. Basic vol, tone and drive.
Sound Quality
:
9
I think the sound of this pedal is excellent. Big fat fuzz sounds great sustain. I brought this for a heavy fuzz tone, i have an aramat fuzz that i use which is brillant but wanted something even heavier!!
I run this through a Fender Vibrolux, 52 "keef" Jap tele with Humbucker and a boss delay.
If your looking for a subtle pedal that is responsive to volume changes etc this is not really the pedal for you. Don't expect it to be super useful for everything. It is not a jack of all trades but it is a master of one!!!
Amazing for big fat chords and leads!
Reliability
:
7
Only had it a short while. We'll see. I don't think the case of the pedal is that great. It has kind of tin pot feel.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
N/A
Overall Rating
:
8
Great pedal. Although for RRP ??100 ($200) the build qual of the case is not that sturdy. Even my cheaper Marshall guv is made better i think. The sound quality is what it is about and i'm glad to say i'll use this for many years!!!
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: USD 50 USED
Submitted 04/12/2007
at 09:07pm
by Keith Gosnay
Ease of Use
:
No Opinion
Ive got a USA re-issue of the big muff pi, i thought i would buy one and try it out despite all of the negative reviews. So let me cut to the chase. It is VERY difficult to dial in a decent fuzz sound. But once you find the sweet spot, it sounds pretty great. I was just about to give up on the pi, but i eventually found a way to tweak it for a sound that just about nails old sabbath.
Sound Quality
:
No Opinion
Im using this with my 18watt plexi clone. The thing about the pi is, it will sound awful until you turn up the amp loud enough to get the power tubes overdrivng.. it just does not respond well with buzzy pre-amp distortion unless you like your tone anemic and shrill. I find my plexi responds the best to a volume boost, not so much with an increase in gain. I also found that the best way to set up pi is to have the volume almost dimed, the other two knobs might as well not even be there... if they are turned past 8 o' clock the only thing that happens more noise and over clipping. Even with the 'sustain' knob turned way down i find that there is still more than enough sustain. Mid stong speakers seem to complement the big muff. I find that this thing sounds alot better thru my greenback equipped cab. It sounds very harsh thru my T-75 cab...
Reliability
:
No Opinion
It feels fairly solid; theres nothing rattling inside when you shake it or anything like that. It doesnt feel as robust as my old ibanez ts-9. The paint chips off easily...but the switch feels solid, still i wouldnt go stomping on it. I would say it is perfectly suitable for gigging.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
Overall, i like the pedal. Its a little noisey, but once its tweaked to the sweet spot, its fun to pop the switch, belt out some power chords, and let the raw fuzz do its thing.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 02/21/2007
at 11:35am
by Fernando Frugis
Email: frugis at gmail<dot>com
Ease of Use
:
10
Very easy to use just three knobs: volume , sustain , tone.
Sound Quality
:
10
My Big Muff is simply awsome, sounds great, a masterpiece! It's an original Big Muff I from 1971 (triangle knob version). David Gilmour is using now one like mine (2006).
My setup is all customized by myself.
Epiphone SG G400 (all customized with Gibson parts)
DeArmond Volume Pedal (As Gilmour's Live at Pompeii)
Dunlop Jimi Hendrix Wah-wah
MXR DynaComp Compressor
Ibanez TS-9 Tubescreamer
ProCo RAT II
Electro Harmonix Big Muff Pi I
Boss GE-7
DOD EQ-660
Electro Harmonix Small Clone
MXR Phase 90
Boss BF-3
Boss DD-20
The Amp: Gianinni Duovox 100G Head (a copy of a Fender Twin Reverb)
Reliability
:
9
I've made some minor improvement:
True by pass on/off switch
AC adaptor (since this Big Muff only runs with 9 volt batery)
This Big Muff is been working for more than 35 years, what makes it very, very reliable.
But, as all Electro Harmonix pedals, it seams to be fragile, so I will give it a 9.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
I never use customer support since I fix, repair and make upgrades all by myself in all my equipment
Overall Rating
:
10
To sound like Gilmour's or Santana's Big Muff you have to have one like this, it's very difficult to find one, and I am not selling it.
If I lose it I will kill myself, coz I can't live without MY PRECIOUS !!!
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 02/05/2007
at 11:51am
by suilebhain
Email: suilebhain<at>gmail dot com
Ease of Use
:
10
Three knobs, each one clearly labeled, doesn't get any easier than that. Black Sovtek. I paid a little more than I should because I wanted the wooden box.
Sound Quality
:
7
I use an American Strat and a Guitar Research amp and a few other pedals that change according to the situation.
This is my third Big Muff over the years. The first one, the one with the small case and black print, purchased around 1972, was the best, but the tone potentiometer suffered a mishap when the plastic post broke off near the nut, requiring a sharp object (like a thumbnail or small screwdriver)to be placed against the plastic to turn it for different settings. The second, the larger one witht he red print and purchased around 1973, howled like mad when the sustain was turned up, not a nice, controllable feedback, more of a shrill squeal that would suit a noisy Helmet-type band but sound poorly in a more controlled, Fripp-like sound. This one does not suffer from either of those problems. Instead, it has a hum that becomes more pronounced as the tone is turned to the left from the 12 o'clock position (which is too bad for me because that is where I like it, right around 9 o'clock). The hum is not present when the unit is switched off. If not for this "feature", it would be right up there with my first Big Muff.
I would give it a ten because with that tone turned to 9 o'clock my sound is right where I want it to be, but that hum is annoying for any kind of recording. It comes very close to the sound I have been trying to achieve - that long sustain fuzz used alot by Jimi on Electric Ladyland and also by Fripp on early King Crimson albums or extensively by Steve Hackett.
Reliability
:
10
This one is far more reliable than my older ones in the sense that it has metal posts on the pots that are far less likely to break. If I gigged I would use it without a backup.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never tried. I don't speak Russian.
Overall Rating
:
8
I play a noisy brand of music but I prefer the noise to be something intentional or accidental but not caused by a noisy box. This Big Muff, as I said before, would be the be-all if not for the hum, and I am not sure if that is a condition of all of them and most people just live with it or if I have a lemon. If it were stolen or lost I would probably get another because, so far, I have not heard a box that has THIS sound. The Big Boys (and Girls) don't use these because they are built like tanks, they use them because they sound so good. I also have a VooDoo Labs Superfuzz and it doesn't compare to the Muff, tone-wise.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: USD 80
Submitted 01/17/2007
at 01:29pm
by re-animator
Email: padrechargerfan at yahoo<dot>com
Ease of Use
:
8
3 knobs. Volume, tone and sustain. Sustain is the gain control, and you can get some very different gain voicings. Tone goes from very dark and boomy, to creamy and fuzzy. The volume also changes the tone considerably. At first I was a little dissapointed because I couldn't get quick and puncy rhythm sounds out of it... but then i realized what it was really meant for.
Sound Quality
:
10
Let me tell you something, this fuzzbox is simply my favorite pedal of all time, and I've owned and tried MANY. This sort of sound is something you just can't get from an amp, or a multi effect, or anything that doesn't say big muff on it!
I don't like trying to emulate guitarists, but this vintage sound really jumps out at you. You can get a REALLY great SATURATED lead tone a la early Santana and David Gilmour. The notes sustain pretty much forever. The only problem with that is that the notes sustain too long for led zeppelin type leads, and if you want to play metal on this i suggest you think again.
At lower settings you can mimick Fuzzface type tones as well, just like jimi. And the pedal is much more versatile than most people think, you can get a really mean and nasty texas blues tone with one of these.
My favorite part of the big muff sound is the way the notes jump off the fretboard. it doesn't sound like the note is being picked normally. It sounds like the guitar is almost forcing the notes out.... its very difficult to describe, but trust me, you will hear it. Try listening to the outro slide guitar solo on the Red Hot Chili Peppers song "Scar Tissue."
I use it with a telecaster, ----------crybaby-------ds-1----------treble booster-----------big muff--------boss ce-5 chorus --------- amp. It reacts decently well with other effects.... i usually run it with chorus to fatten up the sound.... not that its not fat enough, its just that I am always running with chorus and short delay to make the muff sound even biggern than it normally does. I don't like to give out 10s, but this deserves it. Just beware that if you turn the volume knob up all the way and you are using single coils, of course you'll get noise.
Reliability
:
9
Made of nickel steel.... extremely sturdy knobs and switches.... these things have been around forever. I totally feel I can depend on it. I don't back up pedals, I can use a ds-1 to ***TRY*** to fill the void if somebody (a jealous guitarist) accidentally throws this one out of a window.
Customer Support
:
8
I've dealt with electro harmonix, and they are a great company.... i just hate how their 9volt adapter jacks are non standard... talk about pain in the ass! its worth it, for this tone.
Overall Rating
:
10
I play pop, fusion, blues and rock. Been playing for a while, always testing out new gear to find "that" tone. My quest for "that" distorted tone is over. I've found it. It really inspires you to play more and more. I've had it for about a year, so this is not a honeymoon review. It really is a great product and invaluable to my sound. If it were stolen, i'd probably kill myself or something... then come back to life as a zombie to buy another one. Great sound that suits me perfectly. Like I said, i don't like to give tens, but this just plain kicks ass. Bravo, EHX!
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: USD 160
Submitted 01/11/2007
at 05:10am
by the buck
Ease of Use
:
9
Very simple - three knobs, you don't need to be a tech head to work this out - a 9V input jack would be good though
Sound Quality
:
10
I run this thru a Laney VC 30 2x12" combo, with a Mexican Tele and the sound is great - sounds like classic grunge, Sabbath - very nice
Reliability
:
3
It has broken down twice in two years - once the footswitch, once with the internal wiring, have been able to get it fixed both times, but haven't been impressed with this aspect of it
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
9
I've been playing Guitar seriuosly for the better part of 15 years and I love the sound for grungier songs - although I think the sound is pretty one dimensional - a TS 9 or Boss Distortion pedal would suit other styles better. Am a bit dissapointed with it breaking down but overall if you're after a fuzz rock or grungy distortion sound this is a great pedal
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: USD 59
Submitted 12/26/2006
at 11:32pm
by Chris M
Ease of Use
:
No Opinion
Like the other reviews say, this thing is pretty much the epitome of simple when it comes to overdrive/distortion. Three knobs, Volume, Sustain and Tone all of which are very self-explanatory. I usually leave the Sustain all the way up and play with the Tone to get the sound right.
Sound Quality
:
9
This thing is great. I got it because of a Raconteurs song ("The Level") and I can get it to sound just like the solo in that song. Turn down the Tone and you can get a great Smashing Pumpkins sound. Turn the Sustain all the way down and you can get a totally different sound too. It is just fun to play with this thing.
Reliability
:
8
This thing is made in Russia so it is pretty much bullet proof, except for the plastic input and output jacks. I'm pretty careful so I don't worry about gigging without a backup.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never had to deal with them
Overall Rating
:
9
I was looking for a vintage sounding fuzz and this thing is exactly what I was looking for and more. The only major downside is the lack of a 9v adapter jack. I might invest in something like the One-Spot AC adapter thing with a battery adapter.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 10/17/2006
at 01:51am
by GhostBitch
Ease of Use
:
10
Very easy to find a great tone to work with. Same three knobs as the USA Big Muff...Volume, Distortion, and Tone. Mine didn't come with a manual but you really shouldn't need one!
Sound Quality
:
9
The distortion of this pedal is amazing to me. You get a lot of low end and mids with it. Highs get a little muddy when playing full chords, but for me, I only use this pedal in situations where I need power chords or leads.
As with most OD/Distortion pedals it does get a little noisy on high gain settings. Only not giving it a ten because I have yet to find something I can say sounds perfect.
I play Fender Stratocasters into an old Peavey Classic or Fender Chorus.
Reliability
:
10
It looks like a tank, so it must be built like one.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Hope I don't have to deal with the company.
Overall Rating
:
10
I play primarily high energy rock and roll. A little bit punk and a whole lot a love. I've been playing 13 years and other pedals I use are Boss TU-2, NS-2, LS-2, CE-2, RV-3, DF-2. Ibanez TS-9 (reissue), Tech 21 SansAmp Classic, Chandler Tube Driver.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: USD 90
Submitted 10/10/2006
at 06:35pm
by desertores
Ease of Use
:
9
It's as easy as it gets. Volume knob works for volume, tone knob works with how bassy or trebly does your fuzz sound. Sustain is for the amount of fuzz/distortion. Footswitch. I lost the manual for mine but it would be senseless to waste time reading it as everybody can use this right away. Getting good sound out of it it's not so easy, actually there's a lot of possibilities you tweak for an hour and only get one or two good sounds. But once you get to know it it shines.
Sound Quality
:
9
This pedal can be used in two ways: when you use it on a clean amp, it is like a fuzz pedal. sounds like mudhoney's first album, some stooge's era ron asheton and a lot of classic rock sounds. No use in palm-muting when using it like this, and it rages and sings but doesn't scream.- now, when you get this on top of an overdriven amp you get the more sharp sounds, think dinosaur jr and nirvana "in utero" album. I'm running this with an Epiphone les paul studio and a fender cyber twin amp. when the clean channel gets hot on the fender this pedal rips. a turn off it seems to me, the tone and sustain knobs are not very useable before 10 o'clock. it is noisy like a distortion pedal is supposed to be, but it's not as feedbacky as other pedals i've tried.
like i said earlier, the only thing this pedal does, it does it with flying colors. it rules.
Reliability
:
7
it doesn't look as strong as a boss pedal. it's made out of plastic and a metal layer bolted on. in/output jacks scare me. i would use it on a gig, i have a ds-1 for backup.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
8
for the music i do in my band, which is punk rock/grunge if i have to describe it, it is a perfect match, it gives me the angry distortion i use and is noisy enough for out of control solos. i've been playing for 4 years, i had a crybaby wah and a ds-1 distortion pedal besides this thing, but the ds-1 is most suitable for playing mainstream stuff. if it was stolen i could do nothing about it since i got this in the usa and i live in south america (peru) and this boxes are not imported in here. i love the distortion onthis thing, but i don't like it being less versatile than average. if i compare it to my other distortion definetely this is unique, the ds-1 doesn't have it's own voice but the big muff is not so big on te range of sounds it's got. i wish it didn't chew batteries as it does, i'm going to buy a power supply soon. it helps me to get my music to sounds as it it supposed to: aggresive. this pedal is worth it, i love its sound.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 08/31/2006
at 11:42pm
by AR
Ease of Use
:
8
This one's a little tricky. It's real easy to get a good sound with a clean amp, but it's a little harder to pair it with a little bit of grit to get a bigger sound a'la Proco's Rat or a Tubescreamer. That's not what this thing was built for in the first place, though.
Sound Quality
:
9
Incredibly useful for folks wishing to smoke lots of pot and play heavy jams in the vein of Sabbath and soforth. Also useful for nostalgia ridden grungers who want a good fuzz sound. Paired with a reverb, you can get sick, beautiful washes of feedback that last for days and a fuzz thicker than a triple thick milkshake...and that's just on guitar.
On bass, this thing cuts like a razor! Not in a swarm of bees sort of way, either. Sounds best with 15" speakers. It's like a punch to the chest that makes you hungry for more. Just...so much growl. Not in a tubey way, or a mildly distorted way, or a crappy paper thin / scooped mids awful sort of way. It's just a voluptuous, sickening tone that rattles your teeth out. Best with a couple of equalizers to shape everything up.
Reliability
:
10
Oh hell yes. Depending on the year of the pedal, Sovtek made some solid shit back in the mid nineties. This particular model is the green box that Musician's Friend used to advertise before they started using the cheaper parts and sending over imposter black boxes. Those particular Muffs have their place, but to me...this one is the holy grail. It's obvious that the first run reissues were put together much better than the more recent ones, and they sound less compressed and nasal than the NYC reissues that EHX wants almost $50 more for. This particular model is the one that folks have been paying upwards of $100 on eBay for, becuase of Thurston Moore or something like that...
Keep in mind that reliability definitely varies from pedal to pedal.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
8
Not what I'd consider a multi-purpose tool, but it's a great starting point for a unique sound on guitar and a bludgeoning hammer created in the Russian tundra for bassists to knock the heads off of mere mortals. Knock yourself out if you can find a good one. I've been through three and they were all different, but good. The black one seems to be the least reliable in terms of construction, and the green ones vary.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: ?? 35
Submitted 08/27/2006
at 03:52pm
by Hand
Ease of Use
:
9
Three dials, pretty easy to use.
Sound Quality
:
9
This has a nice sound but if you put the gain at full you get a little buzz noise thing. However should you reduce the gain to a 9 o' clock position, you receive a very heavy sound, similar to full gain, with much less of the buzz
Problem solved
And the overall sound is definatlely a FUZZ. It isn't a distortion as some people say
Good for Hendrix in particular. But good for some blues bands such as the black keys
And it is a high gain device.
Reliability
:
8
The box itself is quite sturdy however the dials are not similarly sturdy.
The gain dial (labelled as sustain?!) came off when I stepped on it. . .By accident. The pot was then dismantled and I had to glue it back on. Even though. I cannot adjust the gain at the moment. The parts are easy to replace though. #Just ask some-one who knows what they're on about
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never spoke to them. Do most repairs myself
Overall Rating
:
9
I love this pedal as it was so cheap. I don't use it quite as much as I used to because I play classic rock, which need a tube overdrive ,(Digitech bad monkey comes close enough for me.) Metal, which I use a danelectro fab thing.
I use the big muff for blues though.
Although I said this pedal was cheap. I use cheaper ovedrives/distortions. But yeh, good for Hendrix
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: USD 6570
Submitted 08/07/2006
at 12:18am
by Big Rammy
Ease of Use
:
8
It didn't come with a manual.
Luckily, it didn't need one.
With volume, sustain, and tone knobs, it's an extremely easy pedal for a loud crunch. With a bit of dial tweaking, it'll give you anything you ask of it, from a blues fuzz to a metal crunch.
Still, if you're new to pedals, the lack of an instruction maual can be a problem.
Sound Quality
:
10
I play anything and everything, and it's a great pedal. If you want a more grungy or metal crunch, you can dial that up easily. With just a bit of tweaking, it can be a lighter fuzz for blues and older hard rock.
And there was absolutely no noise. I could be on a clean channel, and switch to a thunderous distortion with no noise whatsoever.
I play a Fender Highway 1 Stratocaster > Big Muff Pi > Dunlop Crybaby > Ibanez Tone Blaster 50R Amp, and it's absolutely great in this setup.
Reliability
:
10
This stomp box is built like a tank. Drop it on a hard surface, and the tile will probably crack before the metal on the Big Muff even dents.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Haven't had the need to contact them yet.
Overall Rating
:
10
Like I said, I will play anything from grunge to blues to hip-hop, and it's a great stompbox.
I've been playing for nearly two years, and of the distortion I've used, this is the cleanest, and most affordable box I've used.
If it were lost, it's very affordable, being under $80, so it's a great deal for an amazing pedal.
If you're an entry-level player, or a guitarist playing for years, it's a great pedal. I'd highly reccomend it for anyone wanting a great distortion.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 06/04/2006
at 06:38pm
by Tom
Ease of Use
:
8
three knobs..youre normal stompbox. mine diddnt have a manual..(used off of ebay)
Sound Quality
:
4
i was running a mexican strat into a fender deville and it was fairly noisy..a little more than youre average noisy overdrive pedal. the sound really diddnt do much for me, it diddnt sound too high quality.
Reliability
:
7
fairly sturdy..mine had a bit of a problem with an intence humm that would pop on or off..never happened at a gig, but still..other than that it worked all the time.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
never dealt with em.
Overall Rating
:
4
i cant see using this pedal for long. to my ears, its just not the sound i want. sounds very brittle with no bottom. i plan on putting it on ebay soon..
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: US $70.00
Submitted 06/01/2006
at 07:56am
by scott
Ease of Use
:
10
Simple as a women's nipple and just as fun.
Sound Quality
:
8
I have a Fender Hot Rod Deluxe Amp, my other gear varies from time to time, but main ax of choice is a American Deluxe Tele w/SCN pickups.
I think it took me about 2 years to finally get this pedal, it wasn't a money issue, it's just I have heard so much about it, that it's a 1 trick pony(Not 100% true), it was too gainy(there's a knob that fixes that), and I heard that it's THE BEST DIST PEDAL IN THE WORLD(100% false), it's good but I have much better pedals. The best thing about the Muff is the Sustain when playing lead, I'm a hobbyist who doesn't write music or anything, so I play other peoples stuff. And this pedal nails the new Red Hot Chili Peppers song Solo "DAni California"
Reliability
:
10
I bought this thing USED and I'm mean Used and Abused, I think someone ran over w/ a car but it works great.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never delt w/
Overall Rating
:
8
I play hard rock(Janes Addiction,Alice In Chains,Guns n Roses-not the new poor ass excuse Guns N Roses, the real deal) Blues(Hendrix, Vaughn,john Lee Hooker) and this pedal isn't good for any of it. Except Hendrix type leads.
That's my review, I hope it helped you out, or not.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: #40 (#UK)
Submitted 05/06/2006
at 01:23pm
by Josh Rubner
Ease of Use
:
8
I just bought this pedal today and i fucking love it! Its the Russian edition of the EHX Big Muff. If u r thinking of buying a Big Muff, do what i did and try all the variations out in one go. This is because they all sound different (duh!). You have 2 understand that no opinion is 'correct' on this website and all my answers are based on my own personal taste. ANYHOO, i found this version of the big muff to be the best sounding for me. Little Big Muff coming in at a close 2nd. In terms of ease of use, its quite difficult to dial in a bad sound, which is good 4 me! Reversed Input/Output jacks r a pain in the arse because who the fuck wires their pedals that way?!?!? Also to power my pedal board, I use a daisychain cable with an adapter. Luckily the daisychain came with a 9V battery adapter so i can now power my muff from the mains. This may be a concern to u if ur thinking of buying one.
Sound Quality
:
10
As i was trying all the big muffs out i noticed that the USA made ones sounded a little boxey and unsuprisingly exactly like Kurt Cobain. When I tryed the Russian, it cud also do all the grungy stuff but i found i could coax out other sounds resembling Kaiser Cheifs, Arctic Monkeys, Strokes n recent Chillis (Dani California)! Ive played through some other pedals like EMMA reetafratzitz ( i think thats how u spell it?) and a Visual Sound Route 66, and im telling u this pedal is just as versitile, sounds just as good and costs less than half the price.
If u want to use this pedal max gain i suggest u use a noise suppressor. I use the Boss NS-2 and it removes the hum very well.
Reliability
:
10
To be honest im not in a band. Im much more interested in music production in a studio. Here, I dont really need all my pedals to be bombproof. My russian muff is made from fairly thin metal. I own a NYC Small Clone and these american EHX pedals are much tougher than the russian ones. However, if u do gig this pedal, i reckon if u look after it, it shud b ok. If i did hav 2 gig this pedal, i dont think i wud need a backup, but they r cheap enuf so why not!?
Customer Support
:
10
Never dealt with EHX before, but i do own a few of their pedals, each one is fucking brilliant. I guess the 1st step in good customer support is building quality gear. U cannot beat analog fx for things like chorus n distortion. Delay n reverb best kept to digital i think.
Overall Rating
:
10
Amazing pedal. My rig at the mo is:
Fender Telecaster->Boss TU-2->Boss NS-2, then loop for NS-2 goes Crybaby Wah->EHX Russian Big Muff->Small Clone. Output from NS-2 goes to Line 6 HD147.
I am going 2 change amp to Fender Blues Junior v soon. I only use blackface model on amp and then big muff for distortion. Sounds so good but with this pedal driving a set of tubes it wud sound phenomenal!
Ive been playing for 11 years. If it were lost or stolen i wud replace it immediately. I love the fact that i can shape the sound any way i want and nothing seems to sound bad or unuseable. I hate the fact that it looks like crap...come on lets be honest. It works for me and my sound and i think i will always use it now. i compared it to all the other 'muffs', some high end boutique distortions and overdrives and some tube pedals like soldano n damage control. This doesnt hav the tone of the tube pedals but for the price and sound quality on offer from the muff, i had to go for it. I bought this because its a useful tool in a studio and its extremely versitile. I knew this before i bought the pedal but hearing the thing just made me want 2 buy it. The Big Muff shud b part of every guitarists staple sonic diet.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: N/A used
Submitted 02/02/2006
at 05:07pm
by mike
Email: paquetm599 at aol<dot>com
Ease of Use
:
9
see most above, easy controls for any mind.......mine is the "real"(?) 70's or earlier...thrashed when i got it but everything works as should (and does have dc adapter)finding your specific sound may take a little work, but generally with this beast 11 works best on all 3 knobs ;)
Sound Quality
:
9
ive owned this for over 25 years, played it with everything from cheapo practice amps, old tube silvertones and fenders, through friend's marshalls and slick traynors....currently resides on top of my old crate 1 (brilliant old amp....) also have probably owned 30 guitars that ive used this with...sounds best with heavier guitars with humbuckers (i loved it with my us ibanez iceman i owned years ago, but crap les paul copies, epiphones, etc kill through this pedal)
yep it still has a buzz when yr not playing, or lotsa feedback (in a good way) sure sure the mudhoney album title....sure sure the fuzzy sound...but with a decent neck pickup it'll chime and sing, and sustain like no other....ive had a couple fancier "distortion" pedals dod, etc for "heavy metal" sound, but they make everything sound the same...if you like overproduced sound, hire satriani or his producer, if you like RAWK this is for you
Reliability
:
10
currently held together with duct tape as ive lost the screws to open it...9v battery snap piece twisted on, and the nut on the input jack once was replaced with a pop top from ma beer can to hold it in place....25 yrs of abuse, and she still keeps going. pots still turn without much discernable noise.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
other than the tiny circuit board this is an easy piece to fix yourself (even if mcguyvered) clueless on e/h service...mine made in brooklyn (i think theyre gone) surely even later versions simple to fix
Overall Rating
:
10
ive played guitar since before my nuts dropped (and still stink)..this is absolutely the coolest pedal for any metal/punk/noise/alienate yr friends, neighbors, etc. this beast is prob 30 yrs old and keeps going, even makes my crappy old ampeg practice amp scream (but prefer the crate) currently i play a mutilated jap strat knockoff, and my turser 335 copy through it...humbuckers sound a little better.....for the ultimate in obnoxious run a wha before the muff and peel the paint off the walls! enjoy!!
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: US $30
Submitted 02/01/2006
at 01:27pm
by Mark Harper
Ease of Use
:
8
It is pretty easy to use step on the switch fuzz out. I will say that getting a decent tone out of this is some what time consumming. It was a constent tug of war between my amp and this unit. I have an original one so I don't have a manual but I have been playing over 20 years and this is the second go around for me with this unit.
Sound Quality
:
8
The set up I use mostly with this is a G&L Comanche with the Z pickups, Diamond Pedal J drive with the drive pretty clean and the boost on, Big Muff, Keely modded DD-3 and to my THD Univalve. Once I got it set it screams now. I can use it for 60's stuff and some heavier tones as well. I have the Volume at 9:00 the tone at 10:00 and the sustain at 3:00. I can get whatever sound after that by using the volume knob on my guitar. I also use a Voodo Lab Micro Vibe in front of it sometimes to get that Jimi and Trower tone. It does make a lot of noise but it is a fuzz and once you start playing you don't notice it. The J drive helps tighten up the sound without compressing it but I do wish I could tighten it up some more.
Reliability
:
10
Like I said this is an original one and it has lasted this long. It stays in mounted on a rack shelf with all my other pedals and goes though a switching unit. It should last another 20 years or so as long as the rack doesn't fall off the truck.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
never delt with them
Overall Rating
:
8
I play all types of Rock and Roll and have been for over 20 years. I also have a Gibson Class 5 Les Paul and a Heritage 555 for electrics. I also have a Martin J1 jumbo acoustic and a all nickel Dobro. I mostly play for fun now and for personal studio work. If it were lost stolen or broke I would try to find an old one again if not I would try a reissue. I had a Diamond Firebust but it just didn't give me the deep tone I was looking for and the distortion side was also lacking in depth.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: US $80.00
Submitted 01/25/2006
at 07:47am
by RagingLeonard
Email: ragingleonard at yahoo<dot>com
Ease of Use
:
10
First off, let me say that this pedal is not designed to be an extreme metal distortion pedal. I've read a lot of reviews from kids who are mad when they find out that this box won't make them sound like [insert crappy nu-metal band here].
This pedal is designed for a more creamy, softer tone and to add sustain. That is not to say that you cannot get that thin, hollow, scooped-mids crap-tone (Metallica's new stuff) out of it. You can, but you will ned to fiddle with your amp too.
I have no problems getting a number of great tones out of this pedal. Three knobs, pretty easy to mess around with and find your sound.
Sound Quality
:
9
My main guitar is a Gibson LP Standard, but I also use a Jackson Dinky, an Agile 335 copy, and a homemade telecaster. All of them sound good, but the 335-style and the LP seem to be more suited to bring the best out of this pedal. The Jackson and Fender clone are thinner and would probably work better with a colder pedal, like a Boss DS1. However the Jackson does get into that thrash terrirory if you keep the gain down a little.
I play through a solid state Kustom combo but have a tube Laney head on the way. I'm looking forward to trying that one out.
The pedal is not too noisy, I believe it has true bypass. However, I haven't recorded with it yet, so I can't speak to that.
I play a lot of bluesy doom rock (Pentagram, Place of Skulls, Witchcraft, etc.) and this pedal is perfect for that sound. It has a real vintage, warm, full tone...almost analog sounding.
Reliability
:
6
The box seems solid, but i don't like the way it chews through batteries. There seems to be a jack for a power cord, but I haven't found one that fits yet. I will probably modify it so I can plug it into a standard 9 volt cable.
I've found that if I pull the cables out of the pedal when it's not in use, I get longer battery life.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
No issues yet.
Overall Rating
:
6
As I said, this pedal is a good fit for my style. It's full and warm and versatile.
I like that it is big and sturdy, it's easy to stomp on the switch and the LED light is bright and visible.
I had long heard the legend of the Big Muff and I was eager to get my own. Now that I have one, I'm a little disappointed. It's a great pedal, but not a whole lot better than my old Danelectro Fab Tone that I paid $15.00 for. You may want to look for an alternative if you can find a good one.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 01/15/2006
at 10:12am
by harekrishna
Email: zombieluv138<at>hotmail dot com
Ease of Use
:
6
3 knobs
one bipass switch
no adaptor, only takes 9v
Sound Quality
:
6
Very bass heavy distortion. I found for guitar it was a little too bassy and saturated for chunky rhythm parts. Alright, for lead tone. It kind of just sounded like an out of control indecipherable fuzz mess if you played too hard (unless you like that). I found it more useful as a bass distortion pedal, which was a staple on my pedal board until the thing fell apart.
Reliability
:
2
Can you depend on it? For about 1 year.
I bought this pedal about 3 years ago and it gradually deteriorated over that 3 year period. It worked well for about a year. After that the wiring connecting the 9v battery became loose and came apart. I had to soder it back on. Then shortly after the bipass switch became faulty. Sometimes it wouldn't work, or only work and give you half the volume for the pedal. It was a very strange idiosyncrasy that you could stomp on it and it would give you very soft volume (and minimize your guitar signal) or give you half volume, full or another variable inbetween any of these. Very frustrating. After a while the bipass switch stopped working altogether and you could not turn the pedal on or off. The sustain knob also broke off, so I could no longer adjust the sustain. All in all, it was your basic piece of shit. I strongly don't reccommend this pedal to anyone. Although i hear the other Big Muff models perform much better.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never called customer support.
Overall Rating
:
4
There's a better distortion pedal out there for you.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: US $80
Submitted 01/09/2006
at 08:11pm
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
No Opinion
Very Easy to use
Sound Quality
:
No Opinion
VERY IMPORTANT!!!!!!!
I bought this pedal to get a vintage sound, and at first I thought this pedal was a rip off, but then I ran it through the FX loop on the amp and it sounds awsome!!!
FX LOOP!!!!!!
Reliability
:
No Opinion
don't know, but seems very easy to break.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
-
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
9
Hendrix, Zeppelin, Floyd
Fender Eric Clapton Strat
Marshall AVT 50
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: US $54.95
Submitted 01/07/2006
at 02:12pm
by NPAmaster
Ease of Use
:
9
Since this a one-effect device...it was really easy to figure out and get a great sound out of this. Three knobs- Volume is of course the effect volume, Sustain and Tone are also obvious. No manual either- not needed. Some tweaking needed though.
Sound Quality
:
10
M'kay my setup is straightfoward. Just my amp (a Marshall) an Alesis Faze- also awesome, my Big Muff, and my Epiphone Dot or SG. There's some feedback, but not in bypass mode (of course). Overall...THE BEST FUZZ/DISTORTION I'VE EVER TRIED!!!!!!!!!!! I easily get a good sound for most of my favorite artists- PINK FLOYD, NIRVANA, ALICE IN CHAINS, and LED ZEPPELIN. From warm blues-like to Black Sabbath and everything in between, the Muff cannot be beaten.
Reliability
:
9
From everything I heard before I bought my Muff it seemed some Muffs were built like tanks while others were flimsy and poorly built. I have to say my Muff is very reliable. I'm not rich so I can't afford a Backup. Have gigged with it and it proved itself as reliable.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never had to deal with Electro-Harmonix.
Overall Rating
:
10
I've been playing about 2 years in 2 bands and for the Grunge and Alternative stuff I'm into, the Muff is great. It also works for some of my Classic Rock stuff (oddly enough I use it for some Folk Rock too). If it were stolen I'd kill whoever took it!
Compared to other stompboxes like the Rat or a Tubescreamer, the Muff is more warm and more versatile. Its simplicity is one of the best things about it. Also it's not some digital s***box, it's all analog. Quite Frankly, the Muff kicks A**!! Buy it!
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: N/A used
Submitted 11/18/2005
at 12:45pm
by seant48
Ease of Use
:
10
Bought it used about 4 years ago so no manual, but very easy to use. Straightforward - 3 knobs; Volume, Distortion, Tone. I love the big fat round footswitch, with a huge LED that's very easy to see.
Sound Quality
:
10
This is not the best distortion/fuzz pedal for basic hard rock/metal or blues, and I never use it for my blues soloing or hard rock. However, for that modern rock, psychadelic sound, this is awesome, in a catagory of its own. I say that because it's not just a fuzz or distortion/overdrive pedal, it sounds like some sort of combo of the two. A bit noisy, but keep the master volume knob below 12 0'clock and it's fine.
Being a huge Floyd fan(David Gilmour) I got this because I know he used it in his setup on their last 2 world tours. (Really old Floyd stuff I have no idea what he used) It's got an imposing, huge, fat overdrive with practically endless sustain. Play this into any tube amp(I use a Strat) and you've pretty much got Pink Floyd's 'Sorrow' from the 'Momentary Lapse of Reason' album. Add on a flanger, and you've got the distortion from 'The Wall' and a lot of Nirvana's stuff. Very imposing, loud and "angry"(my personal take on its unique tone) sound.
My Setup:
Fender Strat w/active EMG pickups -->Boss CS-2 Compression/Sustain-->Chandler Tube Driver-->Big Muff Pi-->Pro Co Rat-->Electro-Harmonix Electric Mistress Flanger-->Boss CS-2 Chorus-->Boss RV-3 Digital Reverb/Delay--->(All Tube) 40W Marshall JCM 2000 DSL 401 combo amp.
Never played through solid state, so this is only based on an all-tube setup.
Reliability
:
8
Brand new, I assume this thing is completely reliable, but this is the original Big Muff Pi(very old - late 70's early 80's) and mine, only on very rare occasions, has a problem at the input/output jacks - they are not the usual sturdy metal type, with the guitar input securely locking in and holding. The input and output are metal but the actual input/output is a sort of hard plastic in inside the exterior metal ring, so the connection feels weird and its hard to know that its completely in there.
It does cut out once in a great while, but 98% of the time its completely fine.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
N/A, never had to deal with them
Overall Rating
:
10
Its not a univeral overdrive pedal that can be used for just anything. But add it to just one of your overdrive, distortion, flange or chorus effects and it will give you the fullest, fattest psychadelic/modern rock sound. What I love about this pedal is the tone knob - you can change the high end/low end to change the overall sound very precisely.
A must for my setup, I'd definitely get another if anything happened to it.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: US $30
Submitted 11/16/2005
at 01:20pm
by just some dude
Ease of Use
:
No Opinion
Sound Quality
:
8
Picked it up at a pawn shop out of curiosity and the price was right.
I spent some time tweeking due to the variety of sounds available. I usually use OD pedals in front of a dirty amp. boogie heartbreaker, JCM800 & ampeg (deluxe reverb type). I'm a tinkerer, and I modify everything. I'm anxious to get at this with a soldering iron and some good quality caps.
Turning down the sustain all the way with the tone at low levels shows the affect on the tone (transparency). Some of the tone suffers with this pedal. I'm thinking changing coupling caps will get back some of the good tone and enhance this pedals performance. Now if this pedal was crap I wouldn't even bother. But when you crank the sustain with the volume up over half way this pedal gets down right rude. I like the tone all the way down for some really cool mid boost. However set like this the bass is a bit loose. Smaller coupling caps may solve this. But the distortion is great. The fuzz creeps in as you turn the tone up. Above 2:00 gets real fuzzy and trebly. This pedal also enhances some amps more than others. I wasn't real impressed when i plugged it into my heartbreaker. I plugged it into the JCM800 into the 4x12 and was blown away. Ranges from ACDC crunch through Iron Maiden distortion up to Metalica (Master of Puppets) distortions. The fullness of this rig was impressive. I then plugged it into my Ampeg that I just modified with 6v6s. This sounded like SRV's Tightrope fuzz face lead.
It's a good pedal compared to others you can buy, and may be a great pedal when modified - I'll find out.
I've modified my TS9 and DS1 with great results. I also like the MXR ZW44 just plain stock. In front of a clean amp for rythm or a dirty amp for sustained lead all sound good with their own characteristics. The muff pi will do the metal sounds that I don't get with the others.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
8
good match for metal, or fuzz face Hendrix/ SRV stuff
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: US $55
Submitted 08/06/2005
at 02:31pm
by sheastang
Ease of Use
:
10
Volume, Sustain, and Tone. I don't think it's that hard.
Sound Quality
:
10
Best distortion pedal i've ever used, hands down. One of the great things about EHX is that they push their pedals to the extreme, which I likes.
Reliability
:
7
It seems pretty sturdy. The Big Muff ? USA is much sturdier though. I think you could probably depend on it on a gig as long as you're not gonna expect Boss-level reliability on it (eg, don't jump on it from high heights. if you're planning on doing that, get the Big Muff USA).
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
9
I play anything I like. I've used many distortion pedals, and here lies the one I am finally and truly satisfied with. If it got stolen, however, I wouldn't care much because then I could go and buy a Big Muff ? USA (it's definately worth the few extra dollars).
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: US $60.00
Submitted 07/08/2005
at 02:42am
by Nate
Ease of Use
:
10
Well, three knobs Volume Sustain Tone. Doesn't get much easier than that. They're all self explanatory and no problems with the controls!
Sound Quality
:
8
Well, this pedal has been run through a Peavey Studio Pro 40, a Vox Pathfinder (into a 1x12 ext. cab with a Jensen C12N), a Peavey Chorus 2x12, a Fender "Evil" Twin reissue, a Univox U65Rn (1x12 18 watts), a Paramount PA100 (1x12, 35 watts) a Peavey Festival Series Head into a Peavey 1x15 bass cab (set up for guitar, though with an Eminece 151 Legend) a 70's Fender Bassman into an 70's Marshall cab, and for bass a SWR Workingman's 1x15 combo and a Crate 1X15 combo. It always gave the right amount of fuzz/sustain/feedback no matter if a Fender Jazz Bass, a Strat, SG, Les Paul or a crappy DeArmond knockoff were put in front of it! It did the task put in front of it with a warm fuzzy sound, even if it did muddy with the volume and (or) tone cranked.
Reliability
:
3
I have to say that this pedal with it's substantial size and heft was not that reliable. The pots were replaced in 2000 and the pedal was bought BRAND NEW 1999! I, twice was forced to use my buddy's Danelectro FabTone which has been soaked in gallons of beer and cocktails and was never phased! Considering the Big Muff was primarily used for recording and used for less than 15 shows it's VERY disappointing that it finally died, and that it only took 6 years. The switch is broken and the ground wire needs to be completely replaced. I've had problems with it since 2001 and don't want to spend parts and labor fees on a $60.00 pedal. (The pots were replaced by a tech buddy of mine on the sly and everything else he's repaired for me is still working just fine!)
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never dealt with them and the warrnaty's long expired!
Overall Rating
:
6
The Big Muff that I had was EXTREMELY wonky, which is sad because it did sound fantastic when it worked! It made tube amps roar with a visceral growl and warmed up the cold built solid state disrtotion of other amps. It sounded great I just wish it had lasted. The biggest complaint beyond durability was the input/output are on different sides than other pedals so a longer cable is necessary for them! I will probaly get another, but I will be more selective this time around! The old FabTones offered more control and my Boss pedals don't complain even when they geytleft out in the car and it gets to 45 below zero, but none of them (NONE OF THEM) sounded as good as the Bigg Muff!
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: 35 (UK pounds)
Submitted 06/02/2005
at 05:21am
by high_on_skittles
Ease of Use
:
8
3 knobs and an on/off switch so it's very easy to use, although it can take a bit of tweaking to get the sound you are looking for. Although the knobs are labeled sustain and tone, they both seem to control a mixture of the two. I also find that you have to adjust the volume control depending on what you are using for apmlification.
Sound Quality
:
8
I play an Epiphone thunderbird bass, and have two Big Muffs on my pedalboard, as I have an Akai Unibass pedal which can create a guitar signal from my bass sound. One Big Muff is for the bass signal, which is placed after a Line6 FM4 and somtimes a Boss BF-3 flanger, and the second Big Muff is for the distortion on the guitar signal, and goes into a guitar amp. I have them both set at sustain almost full, and tone 3 o'clock. The distortion sound is what i was looking for, although it is very distinct meaning i am tempted to get a different type of distortion to use as well. My bass doesn't have amazing sustain, but the sustain in the Muff is awesome My only complaint is that it can make a lot of noise on it's own, so you have to get used to turning it on and off exactly when needed to avoid unwanted squeals.
Reliability
:
9
The pedal itself is built like a tank and has never failed on me, although I always try to keep a spare battery just in case.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
8
I play in a progressive rock band, and the Big Muff sound fits well, but as i mentioned before, it is a very specific sound so you may want to use other distortion pedals as well. If i ever lost it or it broke i would certainly replace it.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: US $50
Submitted 05/21/2005
at 06:59pm
by Petrucci
Ease of Use
:
10
It is easiest-to-use piece of equipment in my rig!
Sound Quality
:
10
Usually when using this pedal, it's the only thing between my 1979 SG and Music Man 212 amp. It's kind of noisy but I don't really care. It's got a great Billy Corgan tone and I just use it for whatever, it's pretty versatile.
Reliability
:
10
It's built like a small metal box. I wouldn't gig with a backup because I'm too poor.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never had to deal with them.
Overall Rating
:
10
I play literally every style of music and this thing works great. If it were stolen, I would definetly buy it again. When I was in the market for a distortion pedal, I also considered a Boss DS-1. I didn't even try the muff before I bought it, it just had me with the coolness factor.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: 199 (NZD)
Submitted 04/28/2005
at 07:12pm
by T
Ease of Use
:
9
It's definately very easy to use. It only has 3 knobs and just fiddle around and you can the sound your after pretty easily.
Sound Quality
:
6
The sound quality is alright although it soundas a bit hollow sort of if you know what i mean. I'm not sure if it's my guitar (a piece of poop squire strat) but i just cant seem to get that really full sound. When used with the overdrive channel on my amp (behringer ac112) i can get this although i would prefer not to have to use that. It definately has plenty of distortion.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
I would hope with the size of this thing it is pretty durable. I havent really tested it's durability yet but it certainly looks durable.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
8
For the price i paid it is definately a good buy. I bought to try and duplicate that awesome smashing pumpkins distortion but i'm still searching for it. But this pedal will suit probably all other styles of rock when used with a decent guitar and i would say it would help using it with a tube amp.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: GBP (65)
Submitted 04/28/2005
at 11:48am
by liam gaughan
Ease of Use
:
10
This pedal is really simple to use. I baught it after hearing it's sound on many muse songs , such as hysteria and fury. So im using it on a bass. Its really easy to use, Volume, Tone and Sustain. I use it on max sustain, minimal tone.
Sound Quality
:
8
This thing sounds really good. With my settings as above, it sounds really phat, keeps a lot of bass, i used to use a Bluesbreaker 2 for my bass, and the bass tone would drop out. But this pedal does it all, really low bassy to really high trebbly. Like you could set it high and go for a mad solo, or keep it low and steady. However, as soon as you hit more than one note, like if your articulation is poor, you might not get on so well, because it seems to collapse. I havent really tried this beast on guitar, no need to i suppose. So it gets an 8, not a 10 mainly due to that more than one note thing.
Reliability
:
8
It's very reliable. Battries dont last long tho. Its pretty strong, but not that good. The top layer of metal comes away from the black box, especialy when pulling the jack cables out, they are really stiff!!
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never had to speak to EHX. Hopefully never will
Overall Rating
:
8
not sure about the above price, my gf baught me it for valenties day. Its a good match to what i baught it for. My other gear- Whine-O wah, and thats it. I would probably replace it if lost, and it certainly helps me make music.
overall a good buy
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: US on sale. $11 dollars and i traded three of my really beat up digital crapboxes.
Submitted 02/20/2005
at 01:56pm
by matt
Email: Lord_Hazanko13 at yahoo<dot>com
Ease of Use
:
8
pretty simple. volume, eq (labled tone), and distortion (labled sustain). pretty easy to get the sound your looking for. just set the amount of distortion you want and play something while turning the tone knob till you get the right sound. sometimes tricky trying to get sounds with more note definition at higher distortion. just screw around with it and its not that hard.
Sound Quality
:
6
ANALOG!!!! I LOVE ANALOG!!!!!
im pretty poor so i use a fender 25r as my amp and a cheap washburn i bought at half price but ive tried this out with other amps and guitars. however on all of them this thing has been very noisy. it does have an obscene amount of sustain though which is always good. the main factor in the sound is the tone knob. turned down its very thumpy and creamy and muffled. it gets very undefined and muddy at the low end. in the middle however it gets beutiful and crunchy. decent note definition and the sustain is good too. but for the real sustain freak turn the distortion and tone all the way up and this thing screams. the tone up makes this thing really hold notes. i dont really do crazy solos as much as i like to do a mix of rythym and lead. chunky rythym parts with little breaks in and out for short solo riffs. so i keep the tone around the middle. a gate control wouldve done wonders for this pedal but they are so popular as a classic pedal i dont see them including one any time soon. the noise problem would be solved and you could dial in the right thickness of tone as well. no gate and pretty noisy but still a nice crunchy sound.
Reliability
:
6
the top seems pretty solid and is made of metal. the sides and bottom however are plastic. maybe its just me but i really prefer my pedals to be all metal and to be able to survive a several flights of stairs drop. i wouldnt gig without a backup.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
never dealt with them but ive heard that ehx is helpful.
Overall Rating
:
8
i play psychedelic, experimental, funk, synth, jazz, rock. its an interesting breed of music and my influences are frank zappa and the unicorns. those and the best band of all time HAMPTON GREASE BAND. remember that name. their album is out of print as its columbias second worst selling album of all time (that and all their songs are 20 minutes long so theyve NEVER been played on the radio once). so look on ebay for their cd "music to eat". believe me if you like zappa or improvisation this will become your favorite band. but anyway. overall this pedal is pretty nice. if your looking for sustain the best pedals are: big muff, fuzz factory, and swollen pickle (if you can find one or even afford it). so besides the lack of a gate knob this is decent and very reasonably priced. if it werent on sale and i didnt trade for it the price was 81 dollars. less than an mxr distortion plus and a lot better sounding. the mxr d plus is one of the beat up pedals i traded for this and this is much better. im addicted to psychedelic fuzz and this is on my list of the best distortions. (1. way huge swollen pickle, 2. zvex wooly mammoth, 3. zvex fuzz factory and fuzz probe, 4. big muff.)
PS. does anyone know how to get a really growly LFO sounding fuzz out of this? listen to the wooly mammoth sound clip at www.zvex.com and youll see what i mean
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: US $160
Submitted 01/24/2005
at 05:42pm
by David
Ease of Use
:
No Opinion
Three knobs. Volume, Tone and Sustain. I bought mine new and still I didn't get any manual. But as they say, it'd not needed.
Sound Quality
:
8
I'VE READ ALOT OF WEIRD REVIEWS ABOUT THIS PEDAL. SAVE SOME TIME AND READ THIS ONE INSTEAD!!
Ok. Here's the deal. I know lot of people use this pedal as a drivepedal playing grunge music such as Mudhoney mostly because of their album Superfuzz Big Muff released in 1990 according to UBL. I remember it was 1989, nevermind.
And I also know some people may play stonerrock using this pedal as a drivepedal too, for getting that Kyuss sound.
Sure, it works. Fine with me. But this is NOT where this pedal has its sweetspots!
For you SERIOUS MUSICIANS out there, this pedal should be used for playing guitarsolos or melodies.
When playing one tone above 12th fret with neck pickup you get this amazing round sound that doesn't sound distorted with amazing sustain. Play 2 tones at the same time and the tone will get heavily fuzzy and the sustain will drop off immediatelly.
This reaction can be both for good and bad, but it's a fact that you have to deal with.
Personally I think the Big Muff PI sounds best believe it or not through the FX loop because it cuts off some fuzz and by that increases that amazing sustain.
Speaking about what happens when you adjust the knobs I'll start with the tone knob.
Turning the Tone knob to about 8 o'clock and the sound will be very bassy. Turning the knob clockwise and the pedal will sound more treble (and the sweep is totally crazy, everything from deep dark to rediculous sqeeky treble). But turning the knob all the way to left the sound will totally flip, adding some treble to that bassy sound. Sounds like having the tone knob at 10 o'clock but cutting off all mid tones.
I haven't had any use for this specific sound yet but I'm sure I will some day.
I usually have the tone knob between 12 o'clock to 2 o'clock. All other tone settings sounds usually too bassy or too treblish.
The sustain knob controls the amount effect really. First I thought it just added more fuzz, but after getting to know the pedal better I realized that it actually add sustain just as the knob says. Sustain and fuzz actually goes hand in hand, but I understand now why Electro-Harmonix chose to name the knob "sustain" instead of "fuzz".
The more sustain you use, the more difficult it will be to play cause every little unwanted sound will be heard. Like pick noise, when hitting the string will cut through.
I usually have the sustain knob between 11 o'clock and 2 o'clock. Here the pedal still gives a huge amount of sustain without having to deal with unwanted pick noise. I only use a higher sustain setting when legato* playing. (*long tones without pausing)
If a somewhat Jimy Hendrix sound is wanted, this pedal can do it but there other pedals out there that WILL do it BETTER. Check out Fulltone's pedals.
Anyway, for these old school fuzz sounds a.k.a. Jimy Hendrix cut off all sustain or almost all, and boost some tone and you have a '60s fuzztone that works enough to me. I'm not that into that old school fuzz sound that much.
Summing up the Big Muff PIs' "sound quality" it's a good pedal but I wouldn't like it as much if I didn't have the ability to play it through the FX loop. But I bet it's a matter of taste.
Reliability
:
9
This is funny, reading the other reviews. Some say "It's built like a tank" while others seem to consider it more to be solid as a cardhouse.
The truth is that this pedal is NOT built like a tank but it is solid enough. Solid like a tank is Fulltone or MXR.
It might feel like a week built pedal because of its' enormous size which makes the pedal light weight because it still has only one circuit card like any other distortion or fuzz pedal.
What I find quite disturbing is that under the pedal a battery hatch is located that is attached with a screw. This requires a screwdriver when replacing battery and with the hatch open you are literally inside the pedal. You wouldn't want to drop the battery inside the pedal.
But hey. This IS the coolest pedal out there!
It's built out of one chrome plate and one black plate screwed together. The top chrome plate is painted with black and red color (that will come off sooner than later) saying Big Muff (and a pi sign) which stands for Big Muff pie, muff as in the female genitals and muffpie as in pubic hairs. In other words, a big seventees bush! =)
I read someones review about the Big Muff causing strange feedback during liveplay. Might be true, I still haven't used this pedal live, but I guess cutting some sustain and problem solved.
Reliability sum-up.
This pedal is well built, and yes the knobs are made out of platic but they doesn't feel cheap by any means, and I'm really a person disliking cheap knobs and buttons.
This pedal has yet never let me down in any way. A battery lasts longer than other pedals in my possesion.
This pedal has TRUE BYPASS. Don't belive anything else.
I'll give the reliability rating a 9, saving the 10 for Fulltone pedals and the Orange channelswitch. =D
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Have never dealt with Electro-Harmonix.
Overall Rating
:
9
I'm going to use this space make set straight any doubts about whether this Big Muff or the Russian Big Muff is the real thing.
This Big Muff is the bigger chrome one from USA. This is the original.
The russian version is smaller and dark green, almost black.
DO NOT BUY THE RUSSIAN BIG MUFF!!
Why? The best reason. The russian Big Muff can ONLY be powered with battery! You can not use a battery eliminator!
The other obvious reason is that it simply doesn't sound as good.
If using this pedal right it can be used in almost any kind of music.
If stolen or lost I would not buy the Big Muff again right now. I don't have any use for it at the moment. But I guess I would eventually.
What I love about this pedal is it's cool looks and it's even cooler name. I love playing in neck position on my Gibson LP over the 12th fret to achieve the most of its round sound.
I don't like the battery hatchet. If it had tendency of falling off or being difficult to attach I would hate it, but it's not.
I just don't like the screw and that the battery doesn't have its' own little room.
I give the overall rating 9, because I think some people would really dislike the size of this pedal. When having a pedalboard, this beast takes alot of space.
I also personally would like this pedal to be somewhat less fuzzy, but it's my opinion. It's matter of taste.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: US $45.00 used
Submitted 01/05/2005
at 06:01pm
by Jason
Email: tjrenn<at>hotmail dot com
Ease of Use
:
8
Pretty idiot proof...3 knobs..volume, sustain, tone...if you can't set it, maybe you should look into percussion. Didn't come with a manual...got it on e-bay. Pretty easy to get usable sounds out of, tweaking are variations on the overall Big Muff theme...fuzzy sustained distortion ala Mudhoney. However, I have the black russian model...and I absolutely HATE the reversed input/output jacks, it's a pain in my pedal board, also am not thrilled about the lack of an AC jack. Two points dinged for these.
Sound Quality
:
9
It's very quiet when not engaged, very distorted when turned on...like it should be. Not the distortion for everyone by anymeans, it's like a blend of fuzz/distortion, but it's exactly what I wanted for replicating that mark arm/screamingtrees/mudhoney/early nirvana/grungy wall of fuzz. The knobs give you variations of this sound in lesser/greater degrees.
Reliability
:
8
Seems a little flimsy..the metal seems thin and the plastic input jacks are kinda chintzy, but, I'm pretty careful with my stuff, so i don't sweat it. I'm po'..I always gig without backups, except extry batteries and strings.
Customer Support
:
5
Haven't dealt with EHX, but have heard very mixed reviews about their service...but, I have started judging companies by the level of service available on their website..for that EHX gets kinda low ratings..no online registration (huh?!? I thought that was an industry standard these days), no online manuals (again with the huh?!?)..so from a service stadpoint, they seem pretty average.
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
I like it a lot...it's grittier than my OD (Dano daddy-o), but it's not a real squealy full out metal dirtbox either. it fills the gap nicely.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 12/31/2004
at 06:46pm
by Danielle Sottosanti
Email: drownsoda416 at aol<dot>com
Ease of Use
:
10
This pedal is simple to use and most of the controls are self-explanatory.
Sound Quality
:
5
I have the older Russian Big Muff (army green color). It's great for practices and recording, when you control the variables of your situation better. You can get anything from a thick, heavy rhythm guitar tone to that Billy Corgan lead tone, just by moving one knob. However...this pedal is way too tempermental to use for live shows. For 3 years, I used it when playing live and, much to my and the sound engineers' dismay, the Big Muff would cause all sorts of feedback. I used to think that it was my amp or guitars, until I played a show where a sound engineer who was originally from Chicago controlled the sound. He had controlled the sound for several of the Smashing Pumpkins' local shows before they had become so famous, and said that the E-H Big Muff is known to cause hard-to-control feedback when playing live. If you're really into experimenting with feedback, then by all means, use this pedal live. I found a distorted tone I liked better by just using the 2 built-in overdrive channels on my Marshall VS-100 amp. My set-up (when using a Big Muff live) was: Fender Jag-Stang, Squire Jagmaster (older Japanese version), or Danelectro Hearsay through a E-H Big Muff, E-H Small Stone, Boss BF-1 Flanger, Danelectro compressor, and a graphic equalizer ran into a Marshall VS-1 amp.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Reliable in all areas except tone (see above) when playing a gig.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never used it.
Overall Rating
:
7
I've had the E-H Big Muff for about 9 years, and I've been playing that long, too. If it got lost, I'd buy a vintage one (70s model maybe), but definitely not a reissue, because I've been reading about a lot of problems the reissues have. I don't really use the Big Muff too much anymore, but I'm still glad that I have it.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: US $58.00 used
Submitted 12/17/2004
at 03:51pm
by E.Nigma
Ease of Use
:
8
Easy. Three knobs. I didn't get a book, but you don't need one. Mine came in a wooden box. Sustain knob controls how much distortion you want. Tone and Volume are self explanatory. There is no input for an AC adaptor but I use a Godlyke power supply set, and it comes with a piece that plugs up to the 9V battery connector, that then plugs into an AC adaptor daisy chain.
My pedalboard has the Big Muff after a Dunlop Crybaby Wah and a Boss DS-1 distortion. Behind the Big Muff is a Boss BF-2 Flanger, a Dunlop Rotovibe, and a Boss RRV-10 half rack reverb. All plugged into 20 watt MEGA amp which I use for recording on my PC.
Sound Quality
:
9
The sound is superb. The sustain can go from no distortion at all, to thick and warm fuzzy distortion. The Boss DS-1 has no fuzz and no sustain. That is why I got the Big Muff. The big muff has long sustain and good fuzz. It is not a fuzz pedal but it has a fuzz-like quality which is good. The Big Muff sounds similar to a ProCo Rat 2 distortion (both have good tonal ranges and sustain) but the ProCo Rat 2 doesn't have as much fuzz quality.
Reliability
:
9
I don't do gigs but I don't think I would need a backup if I did. It is big and sturdy.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
haven't had to mess with em
Overall Rating
:
8
The style of music that I play is that ol-school R&B sound that has guitar solos in it. AKA (Isley Brother's Ernie Isley...The Gap Band, Prince). I also like some of Jimi Hendrix's stuff.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: US $55
Submitted 11/08/2004
at 01:54pm
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
10
I have the black Russian reissue that I got a year ago. Best money I've ever spent on audio gear. There's only 3 knobs so you'll only be messing around with it for a few seconds until you find a good setting.
Sound Quality
:
No Opinion
I've got a 50th anniversary strat and a 30 watt Marshall practice amp with all EQ knobs turned up to max. With only 3 knobs on the pedal I was surprised to find how many different sounds I could get out of it. I play alternative and hard rock, and a bit of metal. Bands like Deftones, old Silverchair from Frogstomp, Filter and Smashing Pumpkins are what I try to emulate and I can nail their guitar sound 90% of the way at worst. You could use an equalizer in-line with it to squeeze a little more out of it but I don't have one and I very rarely consider getting one. The only way this pedal is noisy is if you use cheap patch cords, you live under power lines or have your pickup selector in the wrong position. I don't find that the sustain goes on forever as some reviewers mentioned, it last probably 3 or 4 seconds before it starts to fade away.
Reliability
:
9
It's hurt me more than I've hurt it when i smash my foot on it or accidently kick it. It shows no signs of wear or anything. I swear it was designed by NASA. I don't really like the lack of a DC input but a 9 volt battery lasts 2 months for me.
Customer Support
:
9
Never called them. Never needed to.
Overall Rating
:
10
I've only been playing for 2 years and I'm getting compliments left and right about my playing ability. I think it's due to the cool sound I get from the Muff. The thing has such good sound you can't quit playing because you want to keep hearing it. I've heard a lot of people say they used a Boss DS-1 and then they switched to this. Good idea, considering it costs half the price and sounds better. Quite a thinker.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: 37 (Eur) used
Submitted 10/28/2004
at 10:38am
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
9
Stomp on it and you get a sound :)
3 knobs: volume, distortion, tone
one makes it louder, one makes it more heavy and the last one bassy or trbly :)
Sound Quality
:
9
Well, the reason for writing this review is that I once bought a reissue and today I got the Original One.. At first I was angry cause it seemed to sound like the reissue.. but after some switching between them I found some small but major differences!! The reissue sounds more harsh and has less sustaaaaaaain :)
The green old one seems to have a lot more volume and sounds warm on the one hand but harsh on the other.. even the internal circuit is different than the reissue!!
If you have the chance to get the vintage one, you should prefer it!
And even if it looks fu**ed up like mine, it sounds much better and that's what counts !
Reliability
:
9
build Like russian tanks :)
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: US $70
Submitted 10/13/2004
at 12:16am
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
10
I just bought it yesterday, and I have already found my 'perfect' preset. This is actualy my third distortion/drive pedal, but it realy stands in all aspects.
I am using the latest US built model.
Sound Quality
:
10
I just use a squire Strat plugged in to a Laney HCM30W amp, and I with my other pedals it realy sounded that way, but with my new bigg muf it sounds almost like a vintage strat through a JCM800!!
I just bought the pedal yesterday, but I have already fallen in love with the sound of this superb pedal.
I have been looking for a pedal with could mimic the sound of David Gilmour and also Iron Maiden, and finaly my search is over.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
n/a
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
just bought it yesterday
Overall Rating
:
10
I was searching for a good distortion for quite a while now, and tried all sorts of pedals with were a lot more expensive than the bigg muff, but I when I finaly tried this precious gem, I was convinced.
I am playing for almost 6 years now, and I play all sorts of music, from Pink Floyd to Rancid to Iron Maiden, and Bigg Muff has it all!
I also love the fact that it is a quite big pedal with bigg knobs, this adds to the ease of use of Bigg Muff
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: EURO (45) used
Submitted 09/25/2004
at 07:40am
by KJ
Ease of Use
:
10
No need for a manual! Three knobs, volume, sustain and tone. Its quite easy to use, but it takes time to figure out what tone you really like.
Sound Quality
:
9
I use various guitars with it. My usual setup is: Epiphone Les Paul Custom -> Big Muff Pi -> Boss DS2 Distortion -> Boss DSD2 Delay/Sampler -> Dunlop Crybaby -> Danelectro Milkshake Chorus -> Pearl Flanger. The sound quality is great. Its very close to my Valvestate 8080 distortion. I also use a boss ds2 but its sound is alot different. I usually play alot of Smashing Pumpkins/Silverchair/Nirvana. This is as close as it gets.
Theres one annoying little thing about it, or actually two: it takes time to figure out what sound you want. My suggestion: write it down. The second thing is, that its too freakin big! It almost didnt fit on my pedalboard! Thats why im rating it a 9.
Reliability
:
10
Its russian, its black, and its constructed well... I think it would last a lifetime.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Havent dealt with them.
Overall Rating
:
9
Overall its a great pedal, its endless sustain gets you what you want. It can be used for all kinds of music styles, from 90`s punk/grunge, to nowadays gothic. It has a few minor things that i dont like, such as: the size of the pedal, the fact that it doesnt have a adaptor input, and the "easy to move" knobs. Im rating it a 9. Really worth the money. If someone stole it i would concider buying it again.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: N/A used
Submitted 07/22/2004
at 08:54am
by Nwashski
Ease of Use
:
10
Message to Godmachine review posted below- I've got a BMP just like the one you were describing with the mostly silver face and the little lamb/ram/lord of the rings looking head in the bottom corner. A pot shaft on mine was broken also and I sent it to Analog Mike. He fixed it by just replacing the pot shaft without having to desolder the original pot! Amazing to me. Works great again. Thought you should know. I'd keep all your BMPs in the best shape as possible and AMike does nice work. I have no idea what specific components mine has, not sure I care. It sounds outrageous and wonderful/unpredictable as you describe. Wouldn't trade or sell it, nor would I true-bypass it. Putting a more focused OD/Disto/booster/fuzz/etc in front will actully make it track better, should you want that at times. Great with wah pedals.
Sound Quality
:
10
It kills me every time I play it. I pretend I'm traveling to other galaxies. Noisy as hell but who cares.
Reliability
:
6
I don't exactly take this one out too much. It's old and you know what these are built like. Please be careful with the good old ones.
Customer Support
:
10
I love this company and their history. Great to see them on the scene again. I've met Mr. Matthews' daughter at the guitar shows, she graciously is involved in promoting their current products, nice gal.
Overall Rating
:
10
I've been playing for 33 years. Guess I wouldn't change anything on it, it is what it is. Any change would spoil it's essence, warts and all. Buy a boutique hot rod remake or something for heavy duty usage. Never have tried the reissues. When I hit the switch on this motha, it takes me way back to when things were less refined/overdone. I feel like a kid first trying a fuzz and feeling the otherwordly energy. Go there if you can.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: US $75 used
Submitted 07/21/2004
at 03:04pm
by godmachine
Email: godmachine_57 at yahoo<dot>com
Ease of Use
:
10
This one is from the mid 70's, three knobs, 2 switches, no ac input, moslty just brushed aluminum with a little rams head in the lower right corner. The 3 knobs are big and have a red stripe on them. The tone control operates backwards if you ask me, it gets bassier as it's turned to the right.
Sound Quality
:
10
Played it last night for the first time in years again. Using a 2000 Fender American Series Stratocastor and a 2000 Fender Princeton 65 watt combo amp my results were mixed. I know this has the FC2339 germanium transistors like my other 70,s Big Muff that does sound PERFECT this one, for some reason, has just a riduclous amount of gain or compression. I'm sure Smashing Pumpkins would love this one for some wierd solo or something but, man, it's just "out there". The lower notes seem to dissappear in some kind of harmonic cancellation and as I move to the higher notes they get louder and clearer. Chords are blurred and seem to self distruct in a cloud of harmonic chaos. The tone knob seems to have a big impact not only on the bass , treble adjustment but on how notes are impacted by the harmonic cancellations. Just tons and tons of harmonics and compression. Notes are destroyed at the atomic level and then reassembled in random madness. A solo can be undefinable and then suddenly Carlos Santana breaks out of the mud with a sonic scream that is articulate and percise.
Attempts at reducing the sustain amount only lead to a lack of distortion and sustain. The harmonics and harmonic cancellations remain. There is no setting tha can be found that might be considered "conventional".
I have 3 old Big Muffs from the 70's and while they are all very similair they are all also very different. Do any two sound alike?
My favorite has the fc2339 transistors and has the large Big Muff logo on the front with all that black background. That pedal sounds just like all the great Hendrix solos but this very similair pedal is just crazy. Maybe like two Big Muffs in line. Just madness!
Reliability
:
10
I just broke the volume pot on my favorite and am having trouble finding a replacement. it was my fault that it broke. I could have been more careful. I think these boxes are fairly reliable. The one of switch is also starting to become intermittant in operation [old aerospace terminology].
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
never tried
Overall Rating
:
10
I've been playing guitar since 1969. I play in a Christian band and we do a show every Sunday night. I'm not a Christian but these people are great friends of mine. I just can't understand why they believe what they believe.
I love my Metalzone pedal and my 1979 DS-1 pedal as well as my vintage Big Muffs. I also think the DOD Grunge pedal is very cool. I don't get hung up about any one sound. I could easily use a different guitar and amp and distortion box for every song I play. I'm into variety I guess.
The Big Muffs do supply two very exciting tonal qualities. One is that they can be very wild sounding, with blazing, screaming solos that just sustain forever and have crazy harmonics jumping out everywhere and two, they can be extremely raw, fat, natural....a unique tone of the Big Muff that no other pedal I have ever tried has even come close to. While every other overdrive or distortion pedal seems to cut the tops off the high and low frequencies (what distortion IS) the Big Muffs seems to avoid. It's like distortion without distortion. Why, even the old original box goes on about how the Big Muff is not really a distortion device but a sustain device that gives guitar solos a hummingbird like charecter.
God, those guys are a crack up! But one thing I have noticed is that these Big Muffs all sound quite different.
The DOD Grunge pedal does have a similair characteristic of the Big Muff and I would say is inbetween a Big Muff and a Boss pedal.
I would never rely solely on a Big Muff for all my tones but they sure are fun and interesting. Every time I plug one in I'm playing all kinds of wild stuff for at least a couple hours.
I've tried the green Big Muffs (just didn't like it one bit) and a New York Reissue and found them to be dissappointing. I suppose the New York Reissue was ok but for some reason it just lacked some excitement...just alittle to safe sounding.
I guess I like the unpredictability of the older Big Muffs. You can hit a chord and it just might dissappear on you....or go into a solo and blow off the ears on the first 10 rows. You just never know whats gonna happen!
...now that's entertainment!
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: used
Submitted 07/06/2004
at 09:26pm
by Joe F.
Email: none
Ease of Use
:
10
This is an early '70s unit I bought used back around '76. It has the black and red graphics. Easy if you understand it.
Plug it in switched off and get your straight amp sound with both pickups and all the guitar's knobs on full. If your amp has 2 input channels, like a Twin, jump them together with a patch cord. Put the Muff's tone at 12:00 and the sustain at 9:00, turn it on and dial the volume up to solo level. Switch to the neck pickup and bring up the sustain while rolling off the fuzziness with the tone knob until you find the sweet spot. You'll know when you find it because there will be smooth endless sustain and your pants will be a little wet. If you've got your levels set right you should feel your hair move a little with each note you play.
Once you've done the neck pickup, switch to the bridge p/u. Sounds like crap doesn't it? You're on the right track then. This is where your wah pedal comes in. Switch it on and if everything is set right you should be able to get the dogs barking down the block. If you're really lucky you might be able to pick up radio transmissions. Yes? Then congratulations! You now have the authentic tones of classic rock at your fingertips. Roll up a fatty and celebrate!
Sound Quality
:
10
Well, I've been using the same one for what, 28 years? I guess the "sound quality" is good enough.
If the Big Muff <pi> has a sound of it's own it must be "brrrararhrrr", or something like that. The sound of 200 million mosquitoes farting is the best way to describe it. What it's really all about is what it does to the amp you're pushing with it. Legendary tones can be had with really crappy amps. If noise isn't beautiful to you buy another pedal.
Reliability
:
10
Can you depend on it? This is why $300 boutique pedals with point to point wiring and military specs make me laugh. This thing is a tin box with the cheapest components and wiring that could be had at the time; it's been stomped on for 30 years, about 50,000 times by now. Never even cleaned the pots except by turning them. Still works perfectly like the day I got it. Maybe 20 years ago I ripped out the battery connector and twisted on a 9 volt power supply.
As a back up, if it would fail during a gig, I use the "true-bypass" feature: (ie. I disconnect and play without it!) If you can't finish the gig because your fuzzbox failed your problem is more than "gear-deep".
Customer Support
:
10
I don't believe in customer support. Why should we burden manufacturers with our petty questions when the internet is chock full of people who know everything and are always willing to tell you anything you want to know. It's a no-brainer!
Overall Rating
:
10
Ah the crux. To understand the Big Muff <pi> you have to kind of imagine yourself back in the early '70s. Back when Clapton was God, many people looked down on Hendrix a bit because he "used effects". It really wasn't until Electric Ladyland that he won over the majority of guitarists. Strange but true. He was perceived as a novelty.
Most players back then used a Fender or Ampeg combo; buying a Marshall was a big deal, they were expensive and much more amp than most needed. EH came along, add some acid and weed and the rest is history.
This pedal is about extremes and pushing everything that comes after it. Once you''ve got it happening it becomes a part of you. Then you'll begin to understand the meaning of space and time as well as your place as matter within them.
Or you could try jazz...
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: 30 (# sterling) used
Submitted 06/10/2004
at 05:13am
by randypinkfloyd
Ease of Use
:
8
3 knobs. volume, sustain and tone. pretty easy i'd say! the only thing that is vaguely annoying is the lack of DC jack but the fuzz circuits use so little power, a battery will last for years.
Sound Quality
:
9
mine is the green russian one. I had a black re-issue but i wanted to try out the green one because i heard it's the best of the lot. I a/b'd it with the black one and there's not a lot in it. i think where the green one excells is the tone knob, it is quite a bit more useable. i found the black one had a sweet spot where it would sound cool but when i took it to either extreme it sounded lame. this one on the other hand, i can get a lot more usable tones out of.
i use it into a rocktron piranha pre-amp and marshall power-amp. if i use it through a clean setting on the amp, it is very smooth sounding. but i also found that if i set the pre-amp to an averagely distorted setting, and then use the muff in front but set to about 1/4 sustain it gets a lot more raw grungy sounding.
it's only noisy when you crank it, but not too bad. i've yet to see a maxed out fuzz pedal with no noise!
Reliability
:
9
man, this thing is so overly engineered! apparently it's made from melted down tanks and bits of russian space ship. i don't know if thats true but it weighs a ton. its easily the heaviest and sturdiest of all my pedals, mostly EHX. i haven't had it too long so i cant really say how reliable it is for gigging, but i definately trust it's not going to break in a hurry.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
I've never dealt with EHX directly, but i did have a question about one of my other EHX pedals which i sent to this guy someone told me about - Ron Neely (theehman@ronsound.com) and he answered it in about 5 minutes! i would recommend speaking to him about any technical queries.
Overall Rating
:
9
this thing rocks. full stop.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: 45 (GBP)
Submitted 05/25/2004
at 10:42am
by Richard
Ease of Use
:
10
Piece of piss to use, just plug it in and off you go!
Sound Quality
:
10
The distortion pedal I'd always wanted and never quite found, until now. It's only noisy in the way intended. It always sounds great, lots of different applications. Even just through a tiny practice amp, it totally kicks ass! You can do Mudhoney, Stooges, Jimi feedback stuff, Cream-era Clapton, or just sludgy RAWK. You can riff for hours with one of these.
Reliability
:
9
So far, so good
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
None as yet.
Overall Rating
:
9
I play all sorts of styles. I guess this pedal is only really useable on about 5% of what I play, but for that 5% its perfect. I use it with an SG, my beloved Guild T100 (Bigsby's good for controlling feeback), also good with a cry baby. I'd definately get another. I've used a Daddy-O and a Vox Distortion booster, and a Boss distortion, and they always felt tinny, soul-less, no character. This rules. It would be nice if you could lessen the sustain, so that you could just have a little of it - the gap between clean and even low-level fuzz is quite a big gulf.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: US $55
Submitted 04/12/2004
at 09:11pm
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
10
Like everyone else has said....3 knobs, 1 switch, 2 plugs. Doesn't get much easier. No manual but then again if you need a manual to work this thing you probably need a manual to put your pants on. Mine hasn't been messed with at all and it doesn't need any changes done to it.
Sound Quality
:
10
I use a '71 Fender Stratocaster and a friends Jap Strat for a back-up. I use it on a Peavey Express 112 and 80 watt single 12" crate. Lets face it....there is always a little noise coming in when you're playing out so considering its pretty darn quite. The best setup I've found for it is volume cranked, sustain cranked and tone half way.
Reliability
:
10
No problems yet. I heard the old ones have wiring issues but everything I've heard latley tells me the wiring on new ones is fine. I always have my channel switch on my amp as backup but I don't think I'll ever have to use it. I tend to baby my effects to ensure long life so I haven't really put it to the test.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Haven't dealt with the company and hopefully won't have to.
Overall Rating
:
10
I love this thing! Highly recommended for its wide range of tones...blues, metal, grunge, anything. If this was stolen...i'd first hunt down and kill the theif if i could but if i couldn't I'l buy a new one. The sustain you get is the best....makes a compressor/sustainer useless in my setup. I've been playing for 10 years with various other pedal (DS-1, hyper metal) and this is my favorite. I bought it after wondering what distortion smashing pumpkins used on siamese dream. After playing with it for a while I found their tone and a lot of others. Don't pay over $55 bucks! Music will try and charge more but either online or at larger music store you can find it for the standard price of $55.00 (US).
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: US $69.00
Submitted 03/29/2004
at 11:58pm
by Bobby
Email: buellracer<at>msn dot com
Ease of Use
:
9
This thing is pretty easy to use, there are only three knobs; tone, sustain, and volume, and they all do exactly what they say. There was no manual with it, but you really don't need it. I don't think mine is the newest one though, it is the black one that is Russian made. I give it a 9 because the tones you can get are awesome, and there are many different tones you can pull from it, also this thing has sustain for days. This thing actually has more sustaine than most compression/sustain pedals. I give it a 9 instead of a 10 though because there are a few tones in it that aren't very good, but they are few and far between.
Sound Quality
:
9
I have this in line with my Boss Dm-3 delay pedal coming from a Gibson Les Paul Gothic and going into a Fender hot rod deluxe. The unit is not noisy at all, especially when compared to some other distortion pedals. This box has a great amount of gain for pulling off lead, and as I noted earlier the sustain for days. This is probably one of the most versitle distortion pedals out there as it is great for rythm too at milder settings (pretty much everything but full crank) as you can still distinguish between chord changes. I have been very successfull at pulling off some Jimmi Hendrix with it, which I should because it is the same pedal he used.
Reliability
:
4
Reliability is the one thing I'm not so sure about on this pedal. The pedal is housed in a metal box, and has a good switch, but it doesn't look like it would take getting through off the stage (or any other harsh fall) judging by the cheapy plastic knobs and the way the circuitry is mounted on the inside. If you take care of it though it should last for years.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Judging by how they want you to pay for shipping with waranty and the wait they talk about one the warranty card, they don't seem like they like warranty claims to much, but I've never dealt with them.
Overall Rating
:
8
I play a lot of different styles of music ranging from country, jazz, rock, fusion, folk, classical, and this suites rock, country, and a little jazz just fine. I've been playing for about 5 years. If it were lost or some unfortunate incident occurs to where I am no longer able to use it or am in possession of it, I would deffinately get another. The one thing that I really like about it (besides the tone) is something that is so miniscule it's almost stupid that I like it so much and I don't think anybody else has mentioned it but it has rubber feat, which keeps it from sliding around if you don't have a board, and if there are many other cables around and say it is all on a metal surface it will not pickup interference. When buying this I compared it against an Ibanez Ts-9, a Boss DS-1, a Dan Electro Daddy-O overdrive, and a Boss Metalzone. This was most definately the most versitle of all the pedals, and especially at the price. But I'm giving it an 8 because of the cheap knobs and I think all effects are overpriced, but that's just my opinion.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: 129 (Canadian dollars)
Submitted 03/08/2004
at 08:06pm
by doug
Email: dgb_42<at>hotmail dot com
Ease of Use
:
8
I recently got a black russian reissue big muff pi new. Id been lusting after a fuzz for quite a while, so it was exciting to get it plugged in. Three dials (volume, sustain, tone)-pretty easy, since one dial is volume, and the sustain control is at the max for lead and rhythm, backed off to about 11 to 1 o'clock for more mellowness. The most trouble I had was the tone control. This sweeps the sound from a bassed-out rumble to biting treble, and it took me a while to find the right middle ground-low enough to be smooth and ballsy, but high enough to get that sizzle. I put the tone at about 1-3 oclock. No manual. No mods.
Sound Quality
:
7
Sounds pretty good. I wire a russian klira strat-type guitar through this and then a dunlop crybaby, into a crappy solid-state Fender fifteen watt practice combo. I can't wait to hear what it sounds like through my new fifty-watt Sears Twin Twelve tuber. I like the sound with the wah-all smooth, floaty psychedelia. My only complaint is that when the wah is all the way back (when it should be going OOO), the sound is very faint. Probably an almost-dead battery in the wah, as I didn't always have this problem. Not very noisy, except when the tone is all the way to the left. I don't really get a sound similar to any of my favourite artists (Kyuss, Black Sabbath, Led Zeppelin, Down, Pink Floyd) with this, but its probably because I havent explored all the possibilites of this fuzz.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Dont know, got it last week, dont gig.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Havent ever dealt with EHX.
Overall Rating
:
8
I like to downtune and play bottom-heavy heavy metal riffs and smooth, sixties psychedelic rock, blues. Its pretty good for that. Ive been playing just over a year and a half now. Ive come up with some pretty cool stuff since I got it-its got that rumbley rhythm and smooth solo sound Ive been wanting. If it were stolen, Id have to save up a while to get another one-I might go for an american then. I wish it had seperate bass and treble controls, instead of just one "tone" control. Then you could tweak the sound more, although there advantages to this.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: US $25.00 used
Submitted 03/06/2004
at 11:15am
by JC
Email: none
Ease of Use
:
9
This unit is straight forward. I always have volume, tone and sustain all the way up so I can control volume/sustain effects and tone exclusively from my guitar. With this approach you will be able to experiance the full range and capabilities of this unit or any other unit you may be testing for purchase.
Sound Quality
:
10
This unit really likes my Les Paul 61 SG reissue. However, the real suprise with aforementioned settings, this unit also likes both a transistor amp or tube amp with the latter warmer. I have a lot of pedals and this is the only pedal that is compatible with both types of amps. The sound is outstanding for what I like to play. Blues-rock and rock ie; Hendrix, Doors, Yardbirds, Grand Funk Railroad, Deep Purple and Stevie Ray Vaughn etc. This is a very powerful unit with the correct settings and very smooth through out the full spectrum of its capabilities. My Vox Mini Stack (15 watt Transistor)practice amp and Vox AC30 (30 watt) Hand Wired Head with double stack loves this pedal.
Reliability
:
8
This is my main effect pedal and have no problems to report. However, I did go to radio shack and purchased a 9 volt battery connector and spliced it to a Danelectro 9 volt power supply which yielded exceptional results. I use this pedal with no back up nor am I concerned about it since I've been using it since late 70's.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Again, must have lucked out and got a durable one. No exposure with the company.
Overall Rating
:
10
I have been playing since 1972 and would replace this pedal. It certainly is my main sound effect and could not live with out it. I also play a Casino for Beatles and Dave Clark Five. Further, I have a Hummingbird for acoustic sounds which generally allows me to cover most of the ground I want coupled with my other guitars and amps mentioned.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: #50 (GBP)
Submitted 02/24/2004
at 06:28am
by G.
Ease of Use
:
10
3 knobs, 1 footswitch, you'd have to be a real cretin not to be able to work it out.
Sound Quality
:
10
pretty noisey but well worth it, fantastic throaty fuzz / growl.
great sustain and you can get controllable feedback effortlessly.
it is also the daddy for fuzz bass sounds.
*****it sounds shit with a shit amp - but what do you expect?********
Reliability
:
8
I've had it 6 months no problems so far, it seems well built.
backup? are you joking? if you need a backup fuzz pedal then you are just a little bit too anal to be using a fuzz pedal anyway!
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
don't know and hopefully never will.
Overall Rating
:
10
I love this pedal......A LOT.
for lead boosts, grotty chord work, noise, feedback and for BASS.
best pedal i have owned except for an original coloursound overdriver which i sold for #30 (twat!)
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: US $85.00
Submitted 02/21/2004
at 07:52pm
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
10
I'm a simpal man that likes simpal things. This pedal couldn't be an easyer to handel.
Sound Quality
:
10
This is what I have always wanted my distortion to sound like. Harsh cord sounds and smooth warm single notes. My prayers have been answered.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
I,ve only had it for a day and haven't taken it any where yet so...couldn't say really.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Haven't needed to talk to them yet.
Overall Rating
:
10
I've been playing for almost 8 years now. I just traded my solidstate Fender Ultimate Chours amp for an all tube Blues DeVill. I had a Boss DS-1 and it gave me a great distortion for chords, but when it came to single notes, all my notes sounded waffer thin and had littel if no sustain. My Ultimate Chours on the other hand gave me great warm sustaining single note sound but it wasn't harsh enough for cords in my opinion. This pedal takes the best of both and makes them better. I'm playing this pedal with a '98 Fender US Strat, and with this pedal I don't think I even need humbuckers. If this was taken from me or broke, I wouldn't hesitate to buy a new one right away.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 02/10/2004
at 09:47am
by Mikee T
Ease of Use
:
10
The big muff is one of the easiest distortion pedals I have ever used. It is amazing how only 3 knobs can make a wide variety of sounds. A little hard to use without shoes on.
Sound Quality
:
10
I have used many, many distortion pedals in the past such as, DOD, Boss, POD distortion modulators, etc... But this hunk of iron is unlike any. It gives you that ballsy hard-core sound you have ALWAYS wanted. But the most important reason above all is CLARITY. Most distortion pedals make changing chords seem as if they slur together, making it impossible to hear these vital chord changes.
Reliability
:
3
Reliability is definitely not a winner in this category. I've had to re solder the wiring multiple times to keep it alive. it tends to fart out on occasion. When you're playing live and the pedal goes dead, you tend to get fired up.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
10
Like I said above, the sound quality of this pedal is the best I have ever known. I've been using distortion pedals for about ten years now and have finally found something worth using again and again for every style such as jazz, hard rock, country, punk.... the list goes on and on. Other than minor flaws in the wiring, i can't play my music without it. I wouldn't want to!
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: 52?
Submitted 02/08/2004
at 01:20pm
by Wadim
Email: wadimstreich<at>gmx dot net
Ease of Use
:
10
Sustain (Gain) , Volume and Tone... a child could handle it.
Very easy to get incredible sound within 5 min
Sound Quality
:
10
This device has an amazing sound, there is a great sustain and fuzz. My Settings are: Ibanez SA 160 > Big Muff > BOSS CHORUS CE-2 > Dunlop Crybaby > FAME PL-60 R AMP (very much reverb).
The sound is great if I do soloin' (Sustain at 9 o'clock) ... dirty sound but not trashy! Playing rythm is a pleasure the sound is intensive, warm and agressive! Incedible!
I've used BOSS DS-1 and Marshall Jackhammer...
Never found good sound with the DS-1 and it took me some months to get acceptable sound from the Jackhammer... Big Muff kicked ass after 3 min... warm and without uncontrolled ugly screaming terble.
I guess this pedal isn't made for HeavyMetal, as it is not distortion...it is fuzz and it is great fuzz...I play much hardrock and I get sound a la Santana, Black Sabbath or Deep Purple. You feel like back in the 70's. Big Muff gives more Fuzz than you need...I always play with sustain on 9 or 12 o'clock.
If you like hardrock and solin' this is the best Pedal ever! Go and get it.
Reliability
:
6
Uhh thats a tricky thing...
The metal box is hollow and doesn't look very relyable...actually I'm little afraid of pushing it ON and OFF...
My Big Muff is made in russia , so am I :) and I know what russian quality is.
I don't know weather the "Made in USA" version is made more solid...but hey the russian one isn't made of glass and i don't belive it breaks easily.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
hope I'll never need it
Overall Rating
:
9
Amazing sound, i'll give "only" a 9 because of the not very solid construction and the missing power supply (you can run it only with a 9V battery). If you don't care (like me) this is the best you can get. I'm little angry of investing money in (in comparison to the Big Muff) crappy pedals like the DS-1 or the Jackhammer.......avoid em!
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: 40 (# sterling) used
Submitted 01/26/2004
at 07:09am
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
10
As previously noted, you would have to be a halfwit to get it wrong. 3 pots (volume, tone, sustain/distortion). Easy as 1-2-3.
Sound Quality
:
10
I have the enormous black Russian model. No idea when it was built, or whether this is supposed to be the "good" Muff or not.
I don't care. It rules.
It sustains forever when I'm playing lead - which I don't do a lot: not my style. Where I really LOVE this pedal is for big, epic, roaring chords and grunty palm-muting.
I play mostly Sonic Youth-y noise rock with the occasional White Stripes moment. My amp is a Marshall Silver Jubilee 2554 combo (the best amp I've ever heard), and I play a reissued '72 Custom Tele and a USA standard Strat.
(I've never experienced any problems with my clean sound either, which suggests to me that the pedal has a true bypass).
Reliability
:
8
It's a black metal brick the size of my head. Of course it's reliable. The only problem is it doesn't have a DC power input, so I have to rely on batteries - so not quite full marks there.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
10
I love it. If it got stolen, I'd try to find another one.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: 85 (euro) used
Submitted 12/02/2003
at 02:36am
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
10
It's quite easy to get a good sound out of it, cause it has only three knobs: volume, tone, sustain (distortion level). The knobs are really sensitive: a little touch changes the sound. This pedal gives you overdrive, distortion, and a very high fuzz. Be careful because an old big muff may be a bit different from another big one, and so the sound whith the same set-ups may not be exactly the same.
Sound Quality
:
10
I use my big muff for a very full-sounding, rich distortion. Set up: volume 11 o'clock, tone from 10 to 12 o'clock (it depens on which amp I am using at the moment) sustain 11 o'clock. Many people say that especially old big muffs are really noisy... mine is an old big muff from 1978 and it's not so much noisy, not noisier than a distortion pedal. On my amp ( a Fender DeVille) it sounds great! It made my metal zone obsolete. I think old big muffs are affected by the change of amp: on my Fender DeVille it's great, very warm and in-your-face sound, while on a Marshall Valvestate of the reharsal room where I use to play it doesn't "explode", it seems to soffocate (know what i mean?). Maybe that amp is going to blow out! So when I use that Marshall amp I have to use my old metal-zone. When I used my metal-zone I used to think it was very good and rich (I still think it's the best BOSS disto pedal) but as soon as I listened the big muff with my ears I realised metal zone was not so good and that analogue effects are more real. Digital effects imitate a kind of sound, analogue ones create it. IMPORTANT: you need a true-bypass for this pedal especially if it is an old one, because analogue effects bite a bit your clean sound, especially in the high frequencies.
Reliability
:
7
I would surely depend on it and I would surely use it on a gig, especially because in my gigs I use my amp, and I know my big muff with my amp is great. IMPORTANT: electro-harmonix pedal seems very solid, but inside I think they are fragile. I had my Memory man broken for a month because an idiot made it fall. SO these pedal can't fall.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never dealt with the company. I modified my big muff for the tru-bypass, but I gave it to a tech for this. However it's a simple mod, you can also do it by youself
Overall Rating
:
10
I play a kind of indie-rock, elegant and melodic, but in other moments also very rough and noisy. If it were stolen I would beat the thief, if it were lost I would find it! I love the warmth, typical of the analogue effects, of the distortion. I love that it is has a "real sound". My metal zone is not so warm. I also compared it to a Rat: the Rat is a very good pedal, but is not so full sounding, it has less sustain, and it is not really a distortion, i think it's a bit more than an overdrive but less than a distortion, and I can re-create it with my dirt channel on my fender deville amp. I think it's great that big muff doesn't mess when you play power chords, it's rich when you play octaves, and it has a great sustain for solos.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: US $70 used
Submitted 07/22/2003
at 05:53pm
by mike
Email: t3k_9<at>yahoo dot com
Ease of Use
:
10
Three controls, Volume, Distortion, and Tone. On the back the input is on the left and output on the right, which was very confusing when I first got it cuz I don't know how many times I mixed them up only to wonder why the hell my setup wasnt working. Got used to it though.
Sound Quality
:
9
I have a Washburn WG208 into a Danelectro Free Speech -> Morley Wah -> Dod FX80B compressor -> Ibanez Super Chorus -> DOD Classic Tube Distortion -> The Muff running into a 120W Peavey Deuce. It's not noisy at all. No matter what knob you turn it's gonna change the sound, I've never played with a pedal with such precise controls like that before. I believe you need to run this into a tube amp to get its full potential though, as I've ran it into my Marshall 10W practice amp, directly into my computer, and my friends Rogue 15 or 20W amp, all solid state, and they all sounded like utter crap. On my Peavey it sounds awesome though. Can't really palm mute with it though.
Reliability
:
10
This thing is a freakin tank. It's a big green metal box with a big metal push button switch. I don't think it'd be possible to really break it on accident. I've jumped on the pedal a few times not paying attention and didn't harm the pedal a bit. I'd definatley gig without a backup. I'd most certainly gig without a backup.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never dealt with them.
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
I bought it used at a guitar swap meet kind of thing. Whoever he got the pedal from had clipped the battery connector and soldered on a 9v wall plug adapter, which I then clipped off and replaced with a battery connector :) I play indie rock and it can do my style no problem. It also has a nice sound for like death metal if youre into that sort of thing. You can also dial in a nice blues tone. If it were stolen I'd beat the guy with it cuz I'm sure it'd make a hell of a weapon. And if lost I'd definately buy a replacement if I could find the same one. From what I know I have one of the original russian made ones, and I've seen them on ebay selling for as much as $120. I'm more passionate about this pedal than I am any of my other equipment and wouldn't trade it for anything. I was almost ready to drop almost $180 for some other pedal at the same show that I thought had the sound I wanted, while I was waiting for the guy who's pedal it was to come back to his table I wandered around and came across another guy who was just starting to unpack his boxes and saw this sitting in one. I remembered hearing about it online before but I couldn't remember if it was good things or bad things, but c'mon it's got a eye catching name, so he hooked it up so I could try it and I fell in love. They didn't have bags or anything there so I had to carry it around and I can't even remmeber how many people stopped me to ask if I was selling the pedal. It's in such immaculate condition for such an old pedal.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: US $15 used
Submitted 07/04/2003
at 03:36am
by Anonymous
Email: punky_junky00<at>msn dot com
Ease of Use
:
8
You got to be a damn idiot, I mean, come on man! 3 knobs, Tone, volume, and sustain. Although, it is kind of hard to hit the muff and another stomp box both at the same time, since it?s such a big pedal, and the stomp button is so small. Eh, I give it an 8 on this
Sound Quality
:
8
My band does ALL kinds of alternative rock. From Nirvana to Tool, from Coldplay to Silverchair, from Pink Floyd to Smashing Pumpkins, from Pearl Jam to System of a Down, from The White Stripes to Audioslave (By the way, Check us out http://www.expage.com/page/theoblivionpage ). This pedal sounds great for what I play, nice and crunchy for my Tool, Silverchair, and System of a Down, but yet can get down and raunchy for my Pearl Jam, and Nirvana and White Stripes, but can be a very sweet, smooth distortion much like Smashing Pumpkins, Pink Floyd, and Radiohead. I use
4 guitars with my setup. Epiphone ES -335, Fender Tom DeLonge Strat,
Epiphone SG ? 400, and a Washburn WR ? 120. I Use my SG for most stuff, I keep her in drop D during live shows, that?s what we usually play in, most of our originals and some of the heavier stuff. Man, it speaks good and low with my muff if you know how to set the EQ on your amp. With the ES ? 335, it punches out real creamy. I use this guitar on my Pumpkins ? type stuff. And with my Washburn, it sounds damn good, for a little 150$ guitar, crunchy and treble-y. And on my Strat I use it for stuff like Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Audioslave, and white stripes. Good treble, raunchy distortion there with the muff. I use a crate GFX ? 1200H. When I first got this pedal, I was 14 years old, and it was my 1st pedal, and I still use it to the day. Back in those days, I played the hell out of My Cheap Assed setup, the Washburn, the muff, and a Shitty Little Rogue 20 watt amp. Before I got a real am on my 16th Birthday (a Beheringer 65watt combo) I thought the pedal was going to sound like shit just like it did through the rogue, but it sounded surprisingly really good. So if you got a cheap setup, hey, don?t blame the pedal, blame your amp. I am 18 now, and know now what good sound is. Good sound is this pedal.
But the tone knob on the sucker is more like a treble knob, so you got to watch out, unless you love very good, loud scream, this pedal is for you.
My Setup is as follows;
GUITAR(S)
LITTLE OLD FENDER TUNER
ROGUE VOLUME
MORLEY CLASSIC WAH
BIG MUFF PI
FUZZ FACE (sometimes)
BOSS CHORUS ESSEMBLE
DANELECTRO PHSYCO FLANGE
DIGI ? TECH DELAY
JOHNSON REVERB
DOD NOISE GATE
AMP
I give the muff an 8. ( I knocked off points because the tone knob could have been better)
Reliability
:
6
well, it was pretty beat up when i got it. BUT I MEAN, COME ON! I GOT A BIG MUFF FOR 15 BUCKS! one of the knobs were missing, witch i still havent replaced, lol. it shorted out one time at practice after about 10 years of being passed down thruogh VERY ROUGH teenage boys, but i guess thats pretty good for the 1st time, but it has sentemental value, so i re-wierd it instead of buying a new one, but i think thats pretty good after it had been through so much.
Customer Support
:
10
eh, daniel was cool, lol
Overall Rating
:
10
like i said before, ive reached my age where i know what good sound is, this pedal is good sound. i still use it every day since i was 14. it's a great pedal.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: US $50 used
Submitted 06/09/2003
at 07:23pm
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
9
I have the black Sovtek Russian version. Any setting on this miracle pedal is a good sound...manual is unneccesary.
Sound Quality
:
9
I use a stock Mexican Fender Strat. This really helps nail the Billy Corgan Siamese Dream/Mary, Star of the Sea sound. I hear that Gilmour from Pink Floyd, Rossdale from Bush, and even Hendrix, have also used this pedal (also Hendrix's main distortion sounds were, of course, a tube marshall or a fuzz face). It is somewhat noisy on high distortion levels, but so are other distortion pedals. This thing gives the best, richest distortion I have ever been able to achieve. I use it with a Marshall solid-state 100W amp through a Gibson 2x12 speaker cab.
Reliability
:
10
I would gig without a backup--It is built like a fricking Soviet tank.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
9
I play straight-ahead rock. More specifically, I like to call it "epic rock"--anything that sounds epic, such as Queen, Boston, Smashing Pumpkins, Joe Satriani, etc., and the Big Muff sounds perfect. I love the box it comes in, but unfortunately it has no AC adapter so I must depend on pesky 9V batteries. If stolen, I would get a new one ASAP. In terms of settings, I set the volume so that clean/distorted levels are the same, "sustain" is usually all the way up, and I change the tone based on what I want. A full, melodic distortion is tone at about 5 o'clock, a meatier rhythm sound is more 12 o'clock, and a Nirvana-style roar is 7 o'clock. All in all, a killer pedal.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: 69 (English pounds.)
Submitted 05/25/2003
at 01:51pm
by Dan Pietruszka
Ease of Use
:
10
You have to be blind and stupid to not be able to use this it's that easy to use! 3 dials and an on/off button to turn the effect on and off, couldn't be easier.
Sound Quality
:
9
Pretty good, unlike the Boss distortion pedals this is really silent-that is no background buzzing. I play a Music Man Stingray through a Harke B-90 and have a Boss Auto Wah (AW-3) and it sounds really good. If any one knows Valley Girl by Frank Zappa, this is the pedal to get for it! I have the tone dial at about 2 o'clock to get a bit of treble, but not too much. When I first switched it on to play Around the world by the chili's it just made it what it is. Perfect.
Reliability
:
10
I trust it all the way, Bought it around a year ago and still using the same battery! They dont have a mains power input like boss pedals which I was a bit iffy about but it has yet to die on me. When I get a gig with it I would put a new battery in just to be sure but it is defenitly a realiable box.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
There is no need to ever ring them up about this pedal!!!
Overall Rating
:
10
Very good, I'm really happy with it and I think it's worth the money, the sounds are pretty varied on it and it knocks every other distortion pedal flat. This thing comes alive from the the first note!!! If your after a distortion pedal, dont bother looking at any other boxes, get this one, you wont be dissappointed.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: US $50 used
Submitted 04/25/2003
at 12:04am
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
10
HOW DUMB DO YOU HAVE TO BE TO NOT BE ABLE TO FIGURE IT OUT, WHAT I CANT UNDERSTAND IS HOW DUMB YOU'D HAVE TO BE TO BUY ONE, LIKE I DID
Sound Quality
:
1
honestly i really cant stress enough how bad this pedal sucks, i hte it and everything about it, the pots are scratchy, there's no eq, no wa toget the sound you wnt unless you want to do ac/dc covers, i have a crate amp which blows this thing away with the light over drive gain on 2, sve yourself the time and get a DOD Grunge or Boss Metal zone or Tube Screamer, this thing has piercing highs and absolutely no bottom
Reliability
:
No Opinion
why would i depend on it or use it to gig with
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
1
i bought this before i knew what i wanted in my sound, i ended up selling the thing to some kid i know
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: #45
Submitted 04/23/2003
at 02:44pm
by Gareth G
Ease of Use
:
10
Easy as "pi"! Three knobs to control it all, a button to stamp on to use the effect and activate it!
Sound Quality
:
9
This pedal is very powerful, the distortion is amazing! with the right amp you could seriously knock down buildings. you have to adjust the thang to 'your' sound and then your away! if your looking for a SOFT LIGHT fuzz then you'll have to play around, if you still don't like it go buy a shitty Boss distortion pedal...
Reliability
:
10
Without a doubt. Very dependable I?ve had it for about 4 years and NOT ONCE has there been ANY problem with it, the batteries last as long as you can, I change them about twice a year! - that?s f'ing good!
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
N/A
Overall Rating
:
10
If you want ball smashing distortion to light fizzy wasp sounds to just fuzz, then this is you muff! if not go some place else! 10 out of 10 EVERYTIME!
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: trade
Submitted 04/10/2003
at 02:27am
by Mudd DieVer
Ease of Use
:
9
Three knobs for volume, tone and distortion, and on/off stomp switch, and a switch on the back of the pedal to choose between tone and bypass. When you select "tone" the tone knob becomes active, when you select "bypass" the tone knob is disengaged.
Sound Quality
:
7
Very noisy pedal. It roars. I use it with tube amps. Its over the top. Crazy, man!
Reliability
:
9
Mine is almost 25 years old and still works perfectly.
Customer Support
:
1
4 get about it!
Overall Rating
:
8
I traded a beat up used 5 watt Pignose portable amp with a busted speaker for this pedal, and trust me folks- I got the better deal, though I miss that 9 volt adapter the Pignose came with.
I vote 8 for the original Muff and a 5 for the re-issued version.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: US $12.50 used
Submitted 04/05/2003
at 05:54pm
by tba03
Ease of Use
:
10
3 knobs, 1 foot switch...
Sound Quality
:
10
i have an old one(i dont know how old but to say, the maximum for the 3 knobs are different positions so the solder can be made on the board, so its old) and it sounds FANTASTIC, i didnt mod'ed it but i use a PROCO RAT after to regain some mids(and a sansamp GT2 as a "single coil simulator")then directly into my PODxt. There is a muff in the pod but its not the same as the real 17 resistors thing
Reliability
:
10
when i bougt it it didnt work a transistor had a broken leg, i pushed it back on the leg and it never stopped working since
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
10
on the vintage side this is the best, but to me the BOSS FZ2 is more a FUZZ than the muff
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: US $60 used
Submitted 03/30/2003
at 08:58am
by Matt Bull
Email: mbull44 at yahoo<dot>com
Ease of Use
:
10
Pretty simple to use, three knobs: Volume, Distotion (Sustain on some versions), and Tone. Very easy to get a good sound of it, just turn the knobs until you get a sound you like. I'm sure anyone who's considering buying one of these things has already had a distortion pedal or too before, and probably has some idea of what they like in terms of distortion settings.
Sound Quality
:
9
Current set-up: Fender Jazzmaster > Boss FZ-2 > Cry Baby Wah > Big Muff Pi > Boss CH-1 > MXR Phase 100 > Boss NS-2 > Peavey Amp
This thing is great, it de-throned my Boss DS-1 as my number one distortion pedal. It can't be that noisy, nothing my NS-2 can't handle, I haven't noticed any major noise coming from this thing. You can get a lot of different sounds out of this thing too, you can get some really heavy distortion, nice fuzz, I've had this thing for a few weeks, and I've already discovered several great sounding settings. Also, this thing sustains forever. I have never heard a distortion that sustains longer then this one. Oh by the way, I have the army green Sovtek version that came out in the early 80's in case you were wondering.
Reliability
:
9
I've only had this for a few weeks, but it appears to be a reliable pedal. It's approximately 20 years old, and only has some minor paint scratches on it. I'm confident that it will last for quite a while, Sovtek made parts for Russian space capsules and military equipment, so I think this pedal will survive the test of time.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never dealt with Electro-harmonix or Sovtek
Overall Rating
:
10
I play alt. rock, and I love this pedal, it matches my style perfectly. I've been playing for about 3 and a half years now, and this is the distortion pedal I've been waiting for. If someone stole it, I'd hunt them down, and beat them senseless with this pedal, and then if it were broken, I'd find another. I love the sustain on this pedal, I can hold notes forever with it. The only set-back with this pedal is the size, it's massive, almost as big as three boss pedals, but I can deal with that considering how great this pedal sounds. It shoudl spend many years of permanent residence on my pedalboard. If you can find the vintage ones for a reasonable price, get one, you will not be disappointed, but I hear that the re-issues are junk sompared to the older ones, so if you're thinking of getting a big muff, do some extra shopping around and get a vintage one. I found this one for $60, and I've seen others available at a comparable price.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: 200 (Euro)
Submitted 02/02/2003
at 06:25am
by Riccardo
Email: tatu1 at libero<dot>it
Ease of Use
:
8
Just three knobs... and u can enter in the fantastic world of "Rally Good Distortion"
Sound Quality
:
9
I use it with a Sambora mexican strat on a Fender Hot Rod De Ville 4x10.. with the Di Marzio Paf Pro this pedal sounds incredible.
This is an original 70's Big Muff (no led; on-off switch) and recreate exactly the heavy sound you're lookin for (that dirty-lovely sound of the late '70!!!).
This units has 30 years, but no problem at all (weel built and no noise at all), the bypass section is quite neutral.
Reliability
:
7
I use it for heavy rythm and solo's on Purple, Zeppelin, Hendrix and so on...
If u wanna recreate that sound with a low price.. that's your choice!!!
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
9
The must for the "old" goos dirty sounds that made us start playin' our guitar!!!
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: 150 (Australian)
Submitted 01/26/2003
at 12:11am
by Marcus
Ease of Use
:
9
Pretty Easy to use, 3 controls.... took me a while to get the sound i was looking for, but i love it now..
Sound Quality
:
8
i use this more than the dirty channel on my amp (Ashton GA100 Head & cab) i find the amp's dirty channel is too bloody noisy. i use it with a dunlop crybaby, DOD Fx747 flanger, Gyatone "Flip Valve" distortion/preamp pedal, and a Pro Co Brat distortion, mostly with me Epiphone SG-310, (its a cheap SG, but i put in some duncan humbuckers and now its rad!) and i also use an old Ibanez Firebird (gibson copy) all in all, its a good distortion sound for guitar and bass.
Reliability
:
7
i had a component shit itself only after a few weeks, i think it was a resistor. i had it repaired on warranty and the guy said the original component wasnt available so they had to match it as close as they could. he said it would make it sound slightly different. i also installed a 9V DC input, because batteries are a pain in the arse.
Customer Support
:
10
i didn't deal wiht the company directly, but they warranty repairs i had sone were fast and i was happy with the result.
Overall Rating
:
9
i play mainly punk, old school hardcore, and some newer stuff. i find the big muff pretty good for the old school style songs more than the newer style stuff. the bass player in my band uses it sometimes in his other band.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: US $45 used
Submitted 01/15/2003
at 11:20pm
by brane doaner
Ease of Use
:
10
Mine is an old russian one, with the green metal housing, from before they reissued them.
Mindlessly simple to use. I set distortion to max and tone to min when i got it, and haven't touched either knob since.
Sound Quality
:
10
Runs into the front end of a '65 twin reverb. The thickest, most wonderfully lardassed fuzz i've ever heard. Think siamese dream. I use it to scare small children.
Reliability
:
7
Construction is pretty flimsy considering its metal enclosure. Cheap plastic knobs and switches. It'll probably meet an untimely demise one of these days.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
10
It's a bit of a gimmick, but it's cheap and offers a pretty distinct sound. A must if you want to sound like a blaring wall of mud.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: 75 (euros)
Submitted 12/30/2002
at 03:25pm
by Fede
Ease of Use
:
10
Simply 3 knobs. Volume, tone and sustain (gives an enormous range of gain, from a soft distortion to a great fuzz).
Sound Quality
:
10
My rig: Mexican Telecaster-->Nobels Overdrive Special-->Big Muff Pi-->Aria ACH-1 Stereo Chorus-->Zoom 505II (fuck, only for compression, flanger, phaser and delay). I think this is an incredible pedal, a must-have. I use it intead of a distortion (I tried a Boss DS-1 which I hated, a Marshall Guv'nor which was quite good and a Turbo Rat which was beautiful) with tone at 75% and sustain at 15%; very smashing pumpkins tone. But with tone 15% and sustain 100% o my god! Play with it it's simple fun.
Reliability
:
10
Yeah, like a tank
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
10
I play a mix of punk - alternative rock - grunge - noise, something like Sonic Youth. My favourite bands are Sonic Youth, Radiohead, Dinosaur Jr and Placebo. I've been playing for circa 5 years, and I played a bit of everything. This is the best match I could do, an incredible value pedal.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: (# stole it from a mate) used
Submitted 12/30/2002
at 02:54pm
by Craig McLaughlin
Email: snaps_left_guitar at hotmail<dot>com
Ease of Use
:
10
i have the original from the 70's. it still has the tone bypass switch which is easy to switch over. it has 3 knobs which are piss easy to alter, volume is simple enuf, sustain gives you more distortion, tone gives u bassy sonuds up to high treble, with sweet points along the way
Sound Quality
:
8
good if u play the right stuff. i mean like metallica or heavy metal will sound crap on this thing coz its FUZZ and not distortion or anything. Sounds amazing for alternative rock like Smashing Pumpkins or Queens of the Stoneage. Hendrix or classic rock is good. dont try to palm mute though, it works but not that well.
Reliability
:
10
very reliable, very good strong pedal metal. large strong plastic knobs
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
n/a
Overall Rating
:
9
fantastic for alternative music and fast chords and hendrix or clapton. crap for muting or heavy metal or fast punk. check it out at http://www.hilariouslybad.tk
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: US $50
Submitted 11/28/2002
at 06:48pm
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
10
Very easy, three knobs..
Sound Quality
:
4
My setup is an ibanez with a peavey classic 50, all tube. I bought this pedal wanting some sustain and overdrive. But I hate the way it sounds! It sounds pretty bad. But then again, depending on your guitar and amp could make a difference. But as for me, i don;t like it. Its alright for leads. But as for chords, no way.
Reliability
:
9
ITs dependable
And yes i would use it without a backup, if i even used it.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
havent bothered
Overall Rating
:
5
I play Classic rock, new rock, grunge, jazz, anything cool. Incubus, Blink182, Led Zepplin, Hendrix, Stp, stuff like that. Mabey if i had a really awesome guitar it would sound good.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: US $70 used
Submitted 11/28/2002
at 12:59pm
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
10
I don't think it's possible to make a pedal with more ease of use and as much versatility as this baby. One turn of the tone knob and your sound changes dramatically, similarly to how Digitech has their "Morph" knobs on their new stomp boxes. You get a whole array of sounds from one knob. The volume is self-explanitory. You turn it to the right, it gets louder. You turn it to the left, it gets softer. The sustain knob is just as versatile as the tone knob, creating a whole array of sounds. Bottom line: try and find a more versatile fuzz box that is as easy to use as this. I DARE you.
Sound Quality
:
9
If you want a fantastic singing lead sound, this is for you. Roll the tone knob on your guitar all the way back, kick the sustain into high gear on the Big Muff, and you get a singing violin like sustain. You can go from Hendrix to Santana to Zeppelin to Metallica and everything in between with this beast. One of the important aspects of the Big Muff's sound that differenciates itself from other fuzz boxes is its sustain. Virtually no other fuzz box on the market produces sustain like this.
Reliability
:
10
One look at this thing and you can tell it is built like a rock. It is housed in rugged metal casing. It is a good size, not too big and not too small. It hasn't died on me yet and has showed no sign of doing so anytime in the near and distant future.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
N/A
Overall Rating
:
9
This versatile lead pedal teamed up with my trusty Ibanez DS7 give me vertually every distortion possibility I could ask for, the Big Muff giving me the singing leads and classic fuzz while the DS7 gives me the crunch for rhythm and ballsier lead parts. I would not recommend this pedal for someone who wants it for blues, but honestly who would buy it for that anyways? If you're interested in buying a fantastically diverse and surprisingly simple analog fuzz box with endless sustain, this one is for you.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: US $55
Submitted 11/26/2002
at 04:09am
by Chris
Email: cmassa1<at>jhu dot edu
Ease of Use
:
10
I've got one of the russian reissues. Could not be easier to operate. There is no manual, but one is certainly not needed. Only a volume, sustain and tone on this baby.
Sound Quality
:
10
I generally run a '64 Fender Jag through this and a Dunlop wah, right into an Ampeg Gemini 6 tube amp. I've also run it through a boss DD-5 delay, a Boss chorus and a crappy flanger. Sounds absolutely beautiful at nearly any volume. My favorite distortion i have owned, over the Tube Screamer and the Boss Xtortion, although both of those boxes have their strong points as well. It - in my own opinion, though many people will disagree - is good for lead or rhythm. I think its great for anything from 60's rock to 90's grunge.
Reliability
:
7
I love this pedal to death, however the reliability kinda stinks in one aspect. The on/off switch stinks. I've had the pedal for maybe 3 years now and i think it's had a broken switch for longer than i was able to use it. The switch is hard as anything to find online and in electronics stores. The only way i found a switch for it (and the correct circut diagram to put it in) was by searching for schematics online. I've just gotten the part and am about to put it in tonight. Also, I know someone who discovered that dropping an Epiphone Les Paul Junior onto one is general fatal. Does not stand up to the beating that a Boss pedal would. When it worked i had no problems with it. I suggest you avoid jumping on it as i have been known to. That makes the switch very unhappy.
Customer Support
:
1
If i saw an Electroharmonix worker lying by the side of the road, i would probably not help him at all. Some of the most bitter, unhelpful people work here, and its sad because they make such good stuff. Tech support was a major turn off here.
Overall Rating
:
10
As a straight up rock musician, I refer to this pedal as "my baby". The sustain can not be beat, thats for sure. It gets my old Jag to have sustain even though the bridge is in worse shape than I would like to believe. I think this is a great pedal also to use when you write music, though i can not explain why. Also, I really do not have a feedback problem when using this and have used it in conjunction with my Takamine 12 string acoustic. I spent over a year i think trying to get a part to repair this. Definately worth the wait.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: US $25
Submitted 11/21/2002
at 02:55am
by Scotty
Email: tesla at ameritech<dot>net
Ease of Use
:
10
3 Nobs, what else you want! My Father bought it off a guy in a band in Northern Michigan in 19745 after I saw the ad in the paper for 25 Dollars!! It is one of the ORIGINALS!!..Do not know what its worth is...3 nobs, Aluminum case...Geranium transisters I have heard..
Sound Quality
:
10
Unbeileivable!...Does not compare to anything else out there!!
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Owned it for almost 30 years...
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
E. H Kicks Ass!! Never a prob with my devices!
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
I have never seen another like mine in over 20 years...I am sure they are out there!..How do the new ones sound?..
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: US $50
Submitted 11/20/2002
at 05:04pm
by rafe
Ease of Use
:
10
if you can't work a muff, you're a moron.
i modded my muff with a different cap (specifically a .33 uf cap) in the tone stack (the stock one is 1.0 uf) because i don't really like scooped mids. this EXTREMELY simple mod makes the bandpass more or less flat, and the tone knob much more flexible.
Sound Quality
:
9
don't get me wrong, i loved the distorion, but before the tone mod i didn't really like the scoop. i in fact hated it. after the mod it's perfect...so i'll average it out and give it a 9.
Reliability
:
9
it's extremely solid.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
i use this pedal in all my bands - one is a straight up punk band like the stooges (in sound anyway). the other band is a two piece rockband. we sound like sonic youth without feedback, if that gives you any idea. we have much more clean tone in that band...but i still use the muff for that wall of sound. it doesn't overdrive at lower gain settings, though...not like a distortionpedal. it just quiets the fuzz.
my gear can be viewed at http://www.angelfire.com/punk3/gearhead0/gear.html
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 11/18/2002
at 01:46pm
by Roy Boltz
Email: bolt_upright77 at hotmail<dot>com
Ease of Use
:
No Opinion
The unit itself is easy to use,but the way I use this pedal is a little complex.
Sound Quality
:
No Opinion
I use a Tokai strat into a Ball vol. pedal then into a Boss noise supressor.I route an Ibanez WH10 wha pedal & a 74 Big Muff in the loop of the supressor.I then route that signal into a early 70's Traynor Custom reverb head into both channels with a Y cable,and run a Marshall 4x12 with vintage 30's.I use a THD hotplate & route a line level signal to my Roland GP100 then into the power section of a Traynor Bassmaster 1x15 combo.I like the idea of sounding like I spent mucho cake with a rig that didn't cost me more than a total of a couple grand.You have to tweak this setup carefuly to obtain tone nirvana,but it was worth the patience.You may question my honesty when I claim to nail early Eddy tone when my Ball vol. is maxed,even with single coils.then by switching to my neck pickup & lowering the vol.pedal I nail S.R.V. This is a HUGE claim indeed!!Again I stress the importance of tweaking this pedal setup carefuly as to get the results that are indeed true.The WH10 is used strictly as a tone shaper booster,& the Muff is for driving the amp.The noise supressor is for,you guessed it,..noise.You need to be careful with it not to color your tone too mutch with the supressor.
Reliability
:
8
Customer Support
:
1
Overall Rating
:
10
sometimes you have to try what seems endless things to get the sound you desire.If you have any questions,E-mail me
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 10/26/2002
at 06:26am
by Harvey Kiltner
Ease of Use
:
8
Three large knobs for volume, tone and sustain, on/off switch, tone bypass switch, in and out jacks, a/c adaptor.
Sound Quality
:
7
Sounds OK through a quality tube amp, but thats it, not great, not awful, just OK. My pedal is an original from the 1970's with the tone bypass switch. With all due respect to the player who wrote an anonomous review here below dated 5/27/2002, if he paid $900 for this pedal like he says he did then he got ripped off. As far as I know no famous players used this pedal and the myth about Hendrix having using this pedal is pretty stupid considering Hendrix died September 1970 and the Big Muff didnt hit the market until the mid 1970's. Hendrix used a Dallas Arbiter Fuzz Face, and not this toy. Sounds very grainy and wont clean up with guitar volume.
Reliability
:
7
Mine is an original from the 1970's and is built fairly well, but its not worth $900 like the joker below claims it is.
Customer Support
:
1
Forget about it.
Overall Rating
:
7
Overhyped noisy pedal.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: 160 (Aus)
Submitted 10/21/2002
at 01:59am
by Cement Pig Rock
Ease of Use
:
9
Easy as 3.1415926
C'Mon, its got three knobs, if you can't get a nice furry, fuzzy tone from your muff, then maybe it's time to wax your style.
We've all heard farting from a muff, and its just not nice, yet the muddy growl thats healthy from i nice big black muff is not that hard to achieve.
Sound Quality
:
8
OK, i use a 1992 Kramer through an 'I-bin-had' smashbox, through a dunlop crybaby, into the big muff itself.
How nice it looks with my plug going deep into the muff...
Everytime you stomp on it, its like you can hear the bitch moan.
Out of the Pi, into my preamp (a pignose 7-100), into a bass amp.
Pure stoner grind tone.
I gaurantee, the Muff should please you just as well as it has pleased me.
Reliability
:
7
ok, here's where the Muff goes down. If you stomp on it too much, it will play up on you, it may even start ejecting some form of muddy discarge through your amp. When that happens, it aint pretty. Take your muff for a check-up, it may need a new switch, it may just have cystitis or gonorrhea.
Customer Support
:
4
well, the muff i have was from Russia. The russian muffs don't have the greatest support, it appears their local embassy doesn't think very highly of its women. Your local electrical store or guitar shop may be experienced in the Muff area.
Overall Rating
:
10
I play the kind of music Kyuss left off with back in '96.
Power-chords are to Muff, as wanky solos are to Steve Vai.
if it were stolen, id save up another weeks pay and buy another, as these things are as cheap as a mexican tele.
If you want 80's metal tone (as we all know we do... come on, you can't all be pansy smashing-pumpkins wanna-be's) get a peavey 5150, if you want some muff, your momma isnt too far away.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 10/18/2002
at 12:34pm
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
10
Plug-in, stomp on the mutha and go nuts.
Sound Quality
:
10
It's a fuzz? Get it? Not a metal distortion to rip-off "Sweating Bullets" with. Not a beautiful, crisp distortion your mother (and Steve Vai) would like. It rocks like rock should: messy and unrestrained.
Reliability
:
6
Can't rely on it as much as you can on a Boss pedal, it's the pedal's main draw back.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
No idea.
Overall Rating
:
10
Check out the review by that joker in Hot Lace (nice name! Copyright it quick before someone else does!). F'n hell! That's all the persuading you'll ever need to run as fast as you possibly can to anywhere that sells this pedal, get your last few pennies out and buy one! If you live in 1986, still wear spanex and use hairspray, I'm glad to say you'll hate this pedal!
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: US $50 used
Submitted 08/27/2002
at 09:28pm
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
10
simple. 3 knobs.
Sound Quality
:
7
teles and LPs> tubescreamer> stereo memory man> blackface bassman and silverface super reverb. It hums quite a lot when it's on and silent. But no one really wants silence when they have a pedal like the big muff. I think mine's a little noisier than most... some are dead silent and some scream.
Reliability
:
6
I feel I can depend on it, but it's pretty tinny, as are most EH effects.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
no idea. I've got a great pedal doc, though.
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
I wanted this pedal for sustain purposes, as I like overdriven distortion more than the fuzz distortion this provides. Therefore, I was a bit disappointed. I should have wised up originally and bought a good compressor. I still use it for chorus phrases, a few solos, but really I rarely use it. A good pedal nonetheless. I really like the tonal quality of the sustain, but I wish I could crank the sustain without the added distortion. For distortion purposes, I'm sticking with the tubescreamer.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: US $100
Submitted 07/24/2002
at 07:06am
by Anonymous
Email: serhatthebeast at hotmail<dot>com
Ease of Use
:
10
its very very very easy to use
Sound Quality
:
9
you can get a goddamn heavy tone with this box when u use it with bigger amps it becomes king very powerfulli lso have mesa v-twin big muff is way better then its distortion
but it has some fuzz in it i dont like that
Reliability
:
6
mine got a problem with the on/off switch something very small broke in there i got it fixed but it wast easy
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
i m in turkey theres no customer support here
Overall Rating
:
9
it is heavy its strong it is the king
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: US $30., I think
Submitted 06/18/2002
at 04:02pm
by Endokuken
Email: wardi<dot>donnelly at att<dot>net
Ease of Use
:
10
AAAAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHhhhhhhhhhhhhh The mighty MUFF.
I got this little thing in 1976, it was the VERY FIRST pedal I got when I got my first guitar and amp: A Fender Mustang and Fender Princeton. Also got my first Wa: Vox. And let me tell you, my dears, i was in HEAVEN.
At the time I had no idea Hendrix used it or anything, so naive was I, but didn't care...I finally decided I wanted to do 2 things: learn ELECTRIC guitar and ...... go to college.
Oh, It's as easy to use as a TV, but not as hard to master....
Sound Quality
:
10
I remember when I found my ULTIMATE SOUND: it was by putting an LPB-1 (Electro Harmonix Linear Power Booster) in front of the Muff, the VoxWah in front also (or after the MUFF if I wanted to do FRIPP)(70'S), and crank that little Princeton (15 watts?) into Star Spangled Banner-land.. it was liquid crystal skies swirling into the big sunset Church
Reliability
:
8
It's switch broke after two years, so I replaced it with a toggle, works fine ever since .
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never even thought of it.
Overall Rating
:
10
Yes; well I am happy to say that compared to all the pedals I've owned since then, it still compares favorably, and none really sound better, although now I equalize and compress slightly. It actually sounds like it has a compressiony character to it.
I love it, and Space Metal will never die!
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: US $875 used
Submitted 05/27/2002
at 08:45am
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
10
If you can't find a nice distortion/fuzz tone on this you should not be playing music to begin with.
Sound Quality
:
9
Excellent sound. Clean buzzing sound to muddy distortion.
Basses: 4 string Fender Jazz; 5 string Fender Jazz; 4 string Wal Mach II
Amps: 2 X Mesa 400+'s (dirty); 1 X Ashdown King Combo (clean)
Other FX: Boss CE-1, Voodoolabs Analog Chorus, Boss Flange, Morley A/B, dbx compressor
I like the sound of the Big Muff compared to other distortions/overdrives/fuzzes. I test equipment for a local family owned store so I get a lot of good equipment at cost. I prefer vintage equipment (but not entirely) because as they say, "they don't make 'em like they used to".
Reliability
:
9
This '70's original was "custom-made" for a certain famous guitar player, so it has all of the good stuff: metal parts, power chord instead of adaptor or battery power supply, and cool graphics. I believe in using equipment and not just buying it and leaving it on a shelf b/c it's "vintage" or a collectors item. I use this pedal to do shows and it has never failed.
Customer Support
:
8
EH has contacted me before to "trade" them this pedal for a bunch of other FX b/c of it's status, however, I politely turned them down. Sorry...I can't part with it. Other than that, they have a nice customer support department.
Overall Rating
:
10
I have a taste for everything ranging from classic blues ala Muddy Waters, to death metal in the Cannibal Corpse range (although I prefer the former to the latter). This Big Muff has a nice vintage fuzz effect as well as a variety of distorted sounds and I wouldn't trade it for any other pedal. I'm not mentioning the guitarist it was used by because it's NOT for sale.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: US $80+16 for switch
Submitted 05/23/2002
at 11:31am
by Nick K
Ease of Use
:
10
There are a nearly infinite number of ways to combine the volume, tone, and sustain knobs but yet it's still extremely easy to use. Amazing. Oh ,and this is the U.S.A. model I'm reviewing - Russia may have the best mail-order brides but I hear the USA gets top honors for Big Muffs.
Sound Quality
:
8
Let's start off by saying why you would not want this pedal - don't buy it if you play guitar with your shirt unbuttoned showing off your ripped, waxed chest while one foot is up on the monitor; don't buy it if you like to wag your cock around while playing guitar solos and you choreograph your stage moves; don't buy it if you're looking for a good palm-mute sound; don't buy it to emulate someone else! Define your own damn sound; don't buy it if you play hard, fast, hot, loud, and totally in your face heavy metal; and for christ's sake don't buy it if you name your band Hot Lace. Any Gear Expert would know that!
Buy it if you want a good, relatively inexpensive fuzz. It's noisy with the sustain up but that's what should be expected - go spend $300 on a fancy fuzz if you want otherwise. It sounds like crap in front of my solid state Fender Deluxe 90 amp, but with a tube-emulating Sansamp GT2 between the two of them it sounds really quite nice. I installed a true bypass switch in it because it does noticeably damage your clean tone - it was so easy to do, and cost $16 for the switch. The tone knob isn't as useful as say a graphic equaliser, but that'll run you $60 or so more. It also isn't as useless as some people might make it seem - it's just that if you turn the tone knob all the way up, you should try turning the sustain down and it gives you a much more usable tone. Distortion doesn't always have to be maxed out. Despite these flaws it still kicks ass.
Reliability
:
7
It looks strong, feels flimsy, but once you look on the inside it the circuitry seems relatively well-protected.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
My warranty is no longer valid cause I worked on it, if it breaks it's my own damn fault.
Overall Rating
:
9
I play indie, punk, spacerock and stoner rock. I like the Big Muff, and I can't wait to plug my acoustic Woody pickup into it. Who says playing guitar is masturbatory? To tell the complete truth I haven't compared this to any other fuzz pedals though so maybe something else out there is much better - who knows. It's better than a Boss DS-1 though in my opinion.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: #45
Submitted 05/22/2002
at 07:58am
by Gareth G
Ease of Use
:
10
Easy as pi! three knobs to control it all, a button to stamp on to use the effect and activate it!
Sound Quality
:
8
This pedal is very powerful, the distortion is amazing! with the right amp you could knock down buildings. you have to ajust the thing to 'your' sound and then your away! if your looking for a SOFT LIGHT fuzz then you'll have to play around, if not don't buy the big muff.
Reliability
:
10
Very dependable i've had it for three years and NOT ONCE has there been ANY problem with it, the batties last as long as you can, i change them about twice a year! - thats f'ing good!
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
n/a
Overall Rating
:
10
If you want ball smashing distortion to light fizzy wasp sounds then this is you muff! if not go some place else! 10 out of 10 EVERYTIME!
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: N/A used
Submitted 04/27/2002
at 12:31pm
by BS, Slovakia
Ease of Use
:
10
Three knobs, one footswitch on/off which I changed to true bypass(it's really very easy) and another on/off switch between the input and output jacks for complete disconnection of the batteries.
Sound Quality
:
10
I wouldn't write my comment if I hadn't found here someone describe the sound quality with 1 point. Is that possible? That good guy has something else not a Big Muff. I've got mine 28 years (incredible how the years fly) bought used and the only thing about the sound what I want to say that it has "classic" top-quality sound. Surely not suitable for every style, but if you want a tight, expressive, saturated tone with definition there it is. It has almost no audible noise when switched on and I think that's because it is supplied with high quality DC adaptor (the last battery was in about twenty years ago). I use it in front of my pedal board, follows EH Soul Preacher Compressor, Ibanez Phase Tone, MXR 10 band Graphic Equalizer and Vox wah wah (all old stuff). The amp is Line 6 Pod Pro.
Reliability
:
10
Never had a problem.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
No.
Overall Rating
:
10
I play ... I play ... I play... Difficult question. Some 37 years. I used to play hard rock for the money, but now I play only for myself and do some home recording. The guitars are hardtail 73 Fender Strat, Fender Lead II with Seymour Duncans and Squier Stagemaster Deluxe HH. But back to Big Muff. I think it is a perfect pedal (after I have installed true bypass) in the sense of a benchmark. I admit that it might not be the right choice for every style but don't expect point 1 sound. That's simply not true.
Product: Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi
Price Paid: US $250 used
Submitted 04/24/2002
at 12:09am
by Alvaro Salinas
Ease of Use
:
10
very easy of use, you can't go wrong with this pedal, mine is an original triangle knob bigmuff and you really can't go wrong, and yes it does the smashing pumpkins thing PERFECTLY (with the right guitar&). i can get a bassy crunchy sound and ear-bleeding high gain sound of it, very flexible and the range of the tone control is perfect!
Sound Quality
:
10
the sound quality is pure crunchy sustain analog heaven, if you like powerchords you'll love this pedal. it's perfect for stone-age rockers and people that like more organic effects. i use a peavy raptor modified with better pickups and a humbucker, modified bridge to get a perfect tuning, with a ds-2, EH deluxe electric mistress, Home Made Tremolo,Home Made Uni-vibe. it somewhat noisy, but that is part of his charm. using a marshall amp that has that "technology" called "valvestate" gives me that crunchy smashing pumpkins thing, but i can't get fat enought since it doesn'have a pair of Kt84 power tubes and isn't maxed out!. i can get quiet, soma, today quite perfect!!!!
Reliability
:
10
it has survived more than 30 years so i can depend of it, i had a russian bigmuff (2 of them) , and they were too big and very unreliable compared with this one, i have another too , it's home made and sounds similar to the original one so i have a backup
Customer Support
:
10
i've dealed with them once, when i needed info about the volume drop problem of my electric mistress, NO COMPLAINS, perfect customer support. they even mailed me the schematic!!!
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
i like noisy but fat vintage sounding distortions and guitars, i really enjoy making psichedelic retro sounds with this pedal, it's almost a dream come true, but i really want a maestro fuzz-tone now, it matches perfectly my sound requirements for the stuff i play so if you want a real crunchy fat sound, get it!!
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