Marshall BB-2 Bluesbreaker II
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Product: Marshall BB-2 Bluesbreaker II
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 06/19/2009
at 07:56am
by Frazer7
Ease of Use
:
8
The manual is a bit basic but straightforeward enough.After plugging in and a bit of experimenting i soon got the tone i was after.
Sound Quality
:
8
There are two modes on this pedal, blues and boost.THe blues mode played through my amp on clean really gives me an AC/DC style crunch and is perfect for my sound.The boost mode though not as effective as a Tube Screamer, still gives a good edge to your soloing.Dial in a bit of extra gain and some volume from your amp and your guitar will be squealing and popping with the best.I am running it through a Line6 Spider jam 75 at the moment ,until i can afford a decent valve amp.My guitar is an ESP LTD EC 100qm.
Reliability
:
9
I have not gigged this yet but will.The thing is built like a tank and will stand up to most knocks(i've dropped it twice).
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Have not had to deal with the company as of yet,so cannot commment.
Overall Rating
:
9
I play 70's style hard rock and metal,and have been playing on and off for ten years.As well as the ESP LTD i own a Yamaha Pacifica 112v.If this pedal was stolen i would get another one,for this price you can't go wrong
Product: Marshall BB-2 Bluesbreaker II
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 11/09/2008
at 02:49pm
by Jason Hobbs
Email: jashobbsie at yahoo<dot>ca
Ease of Use
:
10
I never got a manual with this pedal, I bought it used. It is pretty easy to use this pedal if you have an ear for getting the sound you like. If you can't get the sound you like, then this pedal is probably not for you. very straight forward pedal.
Sound Quality
:
9
This is a very good sounding pedal. I use it through my marshall tsl 100 half stack(t75's). I put it through the clean channel with the amps master volume cranked at 10. You can get some plex-ish sounds with this pedal. Good imatated sounds. If you want a plexi sound buy a plexi, or better yet make your own plexi with the "metro amp plexi kit". The effects i use with this are:
Guitar...tuner...marshall bb2....boss fb1...boss dd7 delay(effects loop)
soon to be added brent mason hot wired pedal by brian wampler
& rc booster by exotic pedals
this pedal is not noisy, even at loud levels, you do get a pop low noise when you didengage the pedal or engage it. i think of jimmy page guitar sound when i use this. i used it friday night at a gig for something different and new...i loved it and so did my band mates. if you like plexi tones or that sort of sound, try one.
Reliability
:
10
very reliable, built very tough, steel casing, no worries here.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
never had to deal with marshall...i own alot of marshall stuff.
Overall Rating
:
9
I play blues, rock, bit of jazzy stuff, nothing too heavy.I have been playin 23 years, and i;m 33 years old. i don't like the boost on this pedal, i think it sucks, but i never bought it for that. i never use it.
Product: Marshall BB-2 Bluesbreaker II
Price Paid: USD 50.00
Submitted 04/11/2008
at 06:35pm
by Brian
Email: Brian_madary at yahoo<dot>com
Ease of Use
:
10
Well I found this to be easy to use. The knobs are kinda close together But Other that Very easy to use, If your using the boost channel you have 1 knob that will function. That is level. On the Blues channel you will have the functions of drive tone and level.
Sound Quality
:
9
I bought this pedal for one reason, That is to use the boost channel, I play a Gretsch 5120 and a Frnder Blues Deluxe. At the level I can play at my APT I cannot get the drive out of the amp i need, so I got this, For this purpose alone it was well worth the money. It does not change my tone it makes it sound like I have it cranked all the way and it sounds awsome. I did try alot of pedals before this one I.E. All the Boss, and Tubescreamers, and they just didn't work for me. This pedal did, and I bought it without even trying the Blues channel. I got home and did use the blues channel. While it's not the best on this channel for me, It did give me That Marshall Bluesdriver sound, witch isn't bad, I am sure if I wanted to make it sound like I have 2 differant amps I could use it, But for me the boost channel is what it is about. I will say this, If you have a solid state or crappy tube amp using the boost channel will sound like crap. it does what it says, it boost your natural tone into overdrive. For what I bought this for I am giving it a 9 noting deserves a 10. that would be perfection and to me perfection is not needing a pedal.
Reliability
:
9
Well it is a Marshall and I am sure if something went wrong I could exchange it for another one.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
I have never needed to call cust support so I wouldn't know
Overall Rating
:
10
I play a strange mix of jumpblues,rockabilly and roadhouse country. I have been playing for a few years and believe in something alot of people have forgotten about TONE. I love my tone and I love what this pedal does for me. If you are looking for a distortion pedal to give you that Meatl tone look elsewhere. This pedal is great for classic rock and blues. Right up my alley. The only thing I hate about this pedal is calling my friends and telling them I bought a marshall pedal. HAHA! but after they hear it they cry with envy. I can't campare this to other pedals because I don't know of any other pedal that does what this did for me. Once again I wish it had a little bowl because everybody has cried when they heard this trough my set up. Once again everybody is differant this may not work for you like it did for me.
Product: Marshall BB-2 Bluesbreaker II
Price Paid: USD 25 USED
Submitted 04/10/2008
at 11:07am
by gus
Email: doomgus at gmail<dot>com
Ease of Use
:
8
It is easy to use, but not to get a good sound out of it! This requires a little work... I bought it from a friend so there was no manual.
It has two modes, boost and blues, and three controls, drive, tone and volume, with the first two working only with blues mode.
Sound Quality
:
5
I've used this pedal with a Gibson SG '61 reissue, and three amps: a solid state marshall mg 30dfx, a solid state marhall 30 watt cd and a tube fender twin reverb combo. The marshalls I mentioned are crappy amps, so I won't judge the sound out of them (it is very bad indeed)!
With the fender twin reverb so...
In the boost mode, with the clean channel of the amp, you can get a mediocre I could say crunch sound, but with a little work it gets better. It can even sound like the retarded twin sound-bother of the sound of Rory Gallagher in Bad Penny!!! When I used the overdrive channel of the amp, with the boost mode on, it had a boost indeed in the gain. It can sound bright, with some sparcle, but not always. It can sound very muddy is some times too. That is not bad at any occasion, because it sounded like early cream, or blue cheer, so I liked it!
The blues mode is a disaster. The balance of the volume between the two modes is terrible, the volume for blues mode is LOW, very low compared to the volume of boost. So you can't use both modes in the same song I suppose. The sound is terrible, I think it reminds me the sound of black metal bands from poland, in their demos... Holy crap!
Reliability
:
10
It is a very reliable pedal, metallic cover and all, so no back up is needed (who uses a back for a pedal anyway???!!!!).
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Don't know, never contacted with them.
Overall Rating
:
6
I play blues/rock, and it's a good match... I 've been playing for 10 years, and I use this pedal with a Gibson SG '61 reissue. The review made with a tube fender twin reverb combo, but my amp is a solid state marshall mg 30dfx, and the sound is crap, either with the pedal on or not. If it was stolen I think I 'd buy another overdrive pedal, or nothing at all... I don't use pedals often.
With my crappy solid state marshall it helps really, and makes the sound a bit better, I can't even hear this amp without this pedal! So my opinion is that this pedal is quite an option for someone who owns a crappy amp, and doesn't have the money to buy a decent amp. The pedal is cheap, so the value for money is good.
My favourite thing about this pedal is that I can get a cruch sound out of an amp that didn't have this feature (crap marshall solid state's!!!)
BUT I would never use it in my tube Laney VC30-212 combo...
Product: Marshall BB-2 Bluesbreaker II
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 02/29/2008
at 07:21am
by Ed
Ease of Use
:
10
4 knobs which all are easy.
Sound Quality
:
2
BAD sound quality! It adds a tad of distortion, but it destroys your tone, man! Please go try a tubescreamer instead of this one, as you will regret buying this pedal the moment you fire it up with a band. Your guitar will sound like a piece of crap..
Reliability
:
8
Very heavy and sturdy built, although it looks a little cheap (and it is)
Customer Support
:
1
I don't think Marshall knows what Customer Support means.
Overall Rating
:
2
This pedal gets in the way. I liked the tone in the beginning, but when I tried it alongside other pedals, it really fell through. I'm sure this pedal could serve you if you like playing easy classic rock riffs like AC/DC or that kind - but then you're playing a lot of tones and playing them with your band, your tone will destroy the whole musical image of your band. I'm sorry..
Product: Marshall BB-2 Bluesbreaker II
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 02/11/2008
at 03:35pm
by Bill
Ease of Use
:
9
Very easy to use. 4 knobs. 2 settings for distortion- "Boost," which acts as simple overdrive, pushing the guitar's signal into the amp rather than creating its own artificial distortion, and "Blues" which emulates a distorted tube amp.
Tone knob, Level, and drive are all pretty self explanatory.
Sound Quality
:
9
I use a variety of guitars into this- Fender single coils (Tele and Strat), but most often use a Les Paul or Gibson 335.
There is some slight noise on high level settings, but nothing unreasonable. I primarily use this pedal through a Vox AC30, Blackheart 5W tube head, or a custom built 60W tubs amp.
I think there are a lot of people with misconceptions of what this pedal is supposed to be. In my opinion, it's best to consider this a "modelling" distortion pedal. On "blues" setting, it sounds very much like a driven Marshall Plexi (I.E. Marshall Bluesbreaker...hence the name). You're not going to tweak that into sounding like something else- just won't happen. I'f you're trying to find your favorite artist's sound, you won't, unless they record on a Plexi. But if you're looking to emulated the plexi sound, this pedal absolutely nails it.
On the "boost" setting, however, this is really just a signal booster. So if you're using a solid state amp on clean tones, you're pretty much gouign to get a louder solid-state sound. With a tube amp, the boost will push the power tubes to saturation, so you'll get a cruchier soudn otu of your amp, but it won't be an artificially created sound- it will be YOUR amp's sound.
I know several people who bought this pedal thinking it would act more like a tubescreamer. It doesn't. It simply is what it is- a way to boost your signal or a way to make your amp sound like a 1960s Marshall Plexi. For that, it's FANTASTIC.
Reliability
:
10
I've gigged with it and used it for 3-4 years regularly. No problems at all.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never had to use them.
Overall Rating
:
7
I play a lot of classic rock- from Zep to AC/DC, as well as a lot of Britis indie music. Been playing for about 10 years. I own a couple tubescreamers and a boatload of random effects pedals.
I would definitely buy another one if this was lost or stolen. It's sound is great if the plexi sound is what you're going for. That being said, it's not a versatile pedal, so I won't give this a 10. It's not my primary overdrive or distortion pedal (that would be my tubescreamer).
Product: Marshall BB-2 Bluesbreaker II
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 12/24/2007
at 10:20am
by CE
Ease of Use
:
9
Fine. 4 knobs and a button to step on; ordinary stompbox.
Sound Quality
:
5
This pedal frustrates me. I can't get the right sound out of it. On the blues setting, the drive is always thin and weak or too muddy. The tone isn't too responsive either. Wherever it is, it sounds quite scratchy.. if that's the right word to describe it. No power etc.
I tried having my amp on clean and using the boost to push it into overdrive and using that for my rhythm playing. But, as someone else described it on here perfectly, i found it very 'shrill' - although it was marginally better than the blues.
Reliability
:
9
Fine. Doesn't seem to falter or anything.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
7
I think that you can't ever go for a cheap stompbox with a drive pedal; if you want a great sound, then you have to pay up a bit more than this. This is more suited to a teenage garage band practice.
Product: Marshall BB-2 Bluesbreaker II
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 07/26/2007
at 02:41pm
by Rasmus Kanstrup
Ease of Use
:
8
I've had this piece for a couple of years. It's a stock one. It's pretty easy to use and it's pretty easy to get the most out of it(believe me i've tried every possible setting, and nothing sounds horrible). Easy to use and good sounds are fairly easy to produce, not perfect but close.
Sound Quality
:
6
I've gotten past trying to sound like anyone in particular, but i suppose it's good at getting those early 'zeppelinish' tones, not at all the same level of quality, but again it's getting there.
The overdrive is rather open sounding imo, not at all a bad sounding pedal by any means, i quite like but still it won't be producing quilty overdrive like that of a good tube amp, then again i wouldn't expect it to. Unfortunately this unit suffers from lack of definition. This both with my Les Paul and Tele. The tone knob isn't very responsive and the quality of the drive decreases as you turn the drive knob eastwards. Unacceptable.
Another point that makes me wonder if the guys at marshall really know what the heck theyre doing. TRUE BYPASS?! in a drive unit?! you must be kidding me. The unit makes quite an audible 'Pop' when switched on/off.
Furthermore it has a tendensey of getting rather noisy even with drive at 12 o' clock. Sounds are ok, not bad not great. The boost on the other hand can be horrible, shrill and thin, very uinspirering.
Reliability
:
9
Has never failed me, and with its record so far won't for a long time. Everything on the casing is very solid, it's metal. Though something could allways fail, never gig without backup.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never dealt with them.
Overall Rating
:
9
I play rock and blues. Fine match, though don't expect to use it for shredding. I've been playing for around four-five years(i think). I have an LP and an american Telecaster as mentioned earlier on. I play through a rig consisting of a guitar-> Dunlop Crybaby fasel-> BB2-> TS9DX -> Emma Reezafratzitz(stupid name but the best distortion money can buy)-> Boss DD3-> Fender Blues Jr.-> Homemade 2x12 cab made to matchless specs.
I deffinetely like it better than my POS TS9DX, but i wouldn't buy it again, i would probably buy a Carl Martin drive unit, but for now it's an allright solution def. good value for the money, by far better than boss units i've previously owned.
Product: Marshall BB-2 Bluesbreaker II
Price Paid: USD 35 USED
Submitted 05/04/2007
at 11:40am
by TheRaygun
Ease of Use
:
10
Extremely easy to use, 3 effect knobs and 1 function knob.
Sound Quality
:
8
I'm using this with a Vox AC30 and an old Acoustic Control amp. I was looking for a higher gain pedal to get some really good distortion out of my AC30, and this has fit the bill perfectly. I prefer the 'Blues' setting rather than the 'Boost.' The boost is a little shrill in my opinion. It's useable, but it's not really what I was looking for. The drive on the pedal is very focused, and really gives the Vox a Marshall sort of tone. I keep the gain right around 9 o'clock, which gives me a great crunch and some decent sustain on single notes. I don't really dig the gain over noon, it's more than I use and gets a little out of control. The pedal can be pretty bassy on the neck pickup, but loves the bridge. I'm giving this an 8, because while it's nearly pefect for my needs, it has some short comings.
Reliability
:
9
Built like a tank.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
8
I play all sorts of music, and I use the BB-2 for mid-distortion type stuff. Compared to the Boss Blues Driver, this has much more of a mid-hump, though focused in just the right frequencies. Gives you a great crunch and does a great job of giving you that classic Marshall sound.
Product: Marshall BB-2 Bluesbreaker II
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 04/23/2007
at 09:47pm
by mark
Email: mlmguitar<at>yahoo dot com
Ease of Use
:
9
I dont use the blues dist. mode i only the use the boost function mainly to get that extra chunk out of my marshall valvestate overdrive channels since i like the natural sound of a distorted amplifier other than that it's your basic od/dist pedal w/drive,tone and vol which i dont go past 6 it just clutters up the overall sound making alittle too muddy.
Sound Quality
:
9
I use a les paul w/active pickups(EMGS) running through a AVT 150 watt marshall which sounds pretty beef up on its own using the OD2 channel.I also crank up the amp gain no more than 6 with that combination with the pedal i get a super overdriven sound with clarity which add some tightness chugging on the low E/heavier notes and it can get kind of noisy i just turn the pedal off during pauses when im not playing.
Reliability
:
9
I've play numerous gigs with this pedal never broke down every now and then the screws get loose from constant plugging in and out it just a matter of tighten them back or put some tape around it which works just as well sometimes the tape can get loose at times.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
9
I play rock and metal if it was stolen i would try out some diffrent type of boost pedals to see if theres anything better if not i'll just hold on to this one or hopefully one day they'll make a marshall valvestate with even more heavier type of gain so i would never need a pedal lets hope.
Product: Marshall BB-2 Bluesbreaker II
Price Paid: 190
Submitted 03/29/2007
at 12:05am
by Bruno Albernaz
Ease of Use
:
10
It has 4 knobs: Mode(Boost and Blues), Drive, Tone and Volume, it's pretty ease to configure the pedal, just turn the knobs and see what happens!
Sound Quality
:
10
I was a little worried about the way it would sound: what a mistake! The pedal is awesome, I can get from bluesy tones from hard rock crunch sounds, it can go from Eric Clapton to Van Halen very easily, and that's not all, the Boost mode is pretty good too, it adds a lot of gain in the signal, very good to use on tube amplifiers. I Use a Yamaha Pacifica(Strat like), a Meteoro Thor Plus and a Jim Dunlop Cry Baby GCB95, it sounds perfect with my equipment.
Reliability
:
10
I totally depend on it beacause it's my main distortion unit, and I'm happy with that, and it's very well-built, built like a tank, it's kind of heavy, very good.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
10
I play a lot of styles of music, from jazz to heavy rock, I'm a professional musician for 10 years and I was looking for an overdrive pedal that could give me extra gain, and I found it on this unit, I'm very satisfied with its tone.
Product: Marshall BB-2 Bluesbreaker II
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 12/20/2006
at 08:45am
by MINT
Ease of Use
:
8
The usage of this unit is very easy and self-explanatory. Actually I didn't buy this pedal because of it's Drive-Sound. I was only interested in the boost mode. In this mode there is only one (!) poti to deal with ... that's what I call simple! I got good results after a few seconds. But take care! When the volume-poti is cranked up to levels beyond 2 o'clock, a crunched amp will tend to feedback easily!!!
Sound Quality
:
8
I compared the boost of the BB2 with other boosts (like the Daniel D by Reussenzehn etc.) and now I think that one gets a lot of value for a relatively small amount of money. If you know how to work with your guitar's volume poti and your technique-level is post-beginner, you will get nice boost effects with the BB2. Ideal for harder rocking parts or striking sololines. I use this unit with Les Pauls, Strats and a Telecaster and can use all guitars without changing the setting of the BB2 ... surprising, ha?
Reliability
:
5
It looks very stable and trustworthy. But the base plate is the very weak part of the pedal! I bought a Warwick stageboard with velcro fastener to fix the pedals on the board. A few days after I arranged my pedals on the board, the BB2 fell off the board. The rubber material of the base plate showed reactivity with the glue of the velcro and began to resolve into a sticky, kind of liquid material!!! Uaarghh!!! Therefore I can only give 5 points here.
Customer Support
:
9
I contacted the german Marshall distributor via mail and they answered immediately, apologized and sent me a new base plate. Very friendly! Good service!
Overall Rating
:
8
I use this pedal in the boost modus only, mainly to boost sololines or hard rocking bridges. The last 2 years I've been playing rock/pop etc. although I've already played a lot of different styles (crossover -> jazz) during the last 22 years *uff*. This pedal meets all of my demands with a very interessting price-quality ratio. I would actually prefer a valve driven booster for a bit more warmth and dynamics but as longs as this pedal survives our touring, I don't consider buying a new / another booster.
Product: Marshall BB-2 Bluesbreaker II
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 12/15/2006
at 11:56pm
by Joseph Mazzotta
Email: zuperbal2000<at>yahoo dot com
Ease of Use
:
10
Incredibly esay to use. Four knobs: Boost/Blues, drive, Tone, Volume. Manual offers some suggestions and they are pretty good starting points. However, your ears must be your guide. Once you dial your tone in you probably will not mess with it too much.
Sound Quality
:
10
Very good boost and Blues sounds are possible with this pedal - I actually belive it is a bit better than my original Tube Screamer I bought many years ago (and still have). No Noise with my setup which is: Fender Princeton Reverb from 1964 - a tone monster in its' own right! I am playing three guitars through it: 2006 Les Paul Standard with Burstbuckers, 1981 Dean Elite with Super Distortion pickups (WOW X 3), and a 2006 Squier Telecaster Blonde with original pickups.
The pedal has true bypass -excellent. When you crank the drive past 3 o'clock -watch out! You will fall in love and want to play and play and play.......
Reliability
:
10
Built out of some serious heavy metal with solid construction - no cheap plastic on this one. This pedal will be around long after I'm pushing up flowers!!
I don't gig any more but I know I could depend on this 100% if I did.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Marshall made - no need to call them at this time.
Overall Rating
:
10
Compared to other distortions like the Bad Monkey this pedal will blow it away. Same for the Tube Screamer. I have been playing since I was 15 and I am now 53 - you do the math. I have a sense that until you play for awhile you really do not get a feel for the "right" tone. Me, I play old rock classics like Badfinger, Stones, Skynrd, Chuck Berry, and am starting to get seriously into the basic Blues sounds - music that comes from the soul.
This pedal drives my Fender Princeton into pure heaven. For those of you starting out, do yourself a favor LISTEN carefully to what the great music makers sound like. Billy Gibbons, Jimi Hendrix, George Harrison, Chuck Berry, Johnny Johnson, Robin Trower, Mick Ronson and so on. Do these guys play music that is noise? Don't think so.
Try one out for yourself. Like I said before - LISTEN!
Product: Marshall BB-2 Bluesbreaker II
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 10/26/2006
at 09:26am
by Weapon X
Ease of Use
:
8
The pedal is pretty straight forward to use, and for anybody that's used to operating various guitar effects pedals then they could use this one in their sleep. It has 4 robust large chrome knobs, with the first being a 2-click option between 'boost' or 'blues'. The blues option is the overdrive part of the pedal, and the next 3 knobs operate the amount of drive preferred, next the tone, and finally the overall volume when the pedal is in operation. When in 'boost' mode then both the tone and drive are totally bi-passed, and all you then have to play with is the volume. There's a small manual provided with it, but just looking at the knobs basically is self-explanitory.
As for ease of use, no problem in well-lit conditions, but if you needed to reset the pedal during a live performance on a darkened stage, then you'd struggle to really assess the correct position required. Each knob has a very fine black half-stripe on it, and there are NO markings on the surround underneath them (with the excpetion of the first one, boost/blues). Not very practical for musicians that require different settings from this pedal for various songs. It's more practical to use this pedal where you have just 'one' preffered setting that you need, and then to simply stomp it on or off.
Sound Quality
:
8
The sound quality of the drive part of this unit I personally didn't like. It gave a very basic bluesy distortion, and I'm a hard rock player. But the reason I bought this pedal is that I tried out the exact same one that a friend of mine had, and found the boost section to be exactly what I needed. I'm using a JCM800 Marshall amp, and even when the gain is cranked up to full, in small club settings where you need a sensibly low volume on stage, then the amp didn't have enough drive. I knew that I needed to use an effect to warm the valves up further and create a greater drive, yet other pedals that I had tried ended up masking the sound too much with their own characteristics. Yet the bi-pass facilities of the Bluesbreaker mean that when the pedal is in boost mode then the tone of the amp is not altered in the slightest. And the whole reason I fell in love with the JCM800 was because of it's huge tone. I now set the Bluesbreaker permanently on boost mode, and leave it in operation for an entire gig. I only play rhythm guitar and only have one basic sound that I use, and that's a big full-bodied classic early 80's crunch rock sound. I can now achieve that sound at low volume levels via the Bluesbreaker pedal. I don't use it in an FX loop, and instead just link the pedal directly between my guitar and my amp. I still have the gain set on full, and yet the final sound is never too fizzy, compressed, or overly-processed in any way. It sounds totally natural as if I was playing through the amp with the master volume turned up to deafening levels. The pedal doesn't sound noisy in the slightest, although of course the entire guitar does become a lot more active sounding with this amount of gain. I'm using Mighty Mite Motherbucker pick-ups on a good quality Les Paul copy, and the bridge pick-up has a 21.5k output. So my whole sound is very organic, with a strong pick-up output and a big Marshall tone, yet I'm able to control it so I can keep that big gain sound at a sensible volume with the Bluesbreaker in operation.
Reliability
:
10
You couldn't wish for a more sturdy design. It's a big solid metal pedal that looks almost indestructible. It's heavy duty chasis and solid chrome knobs make it incredibly road-worthy, and I so far I've had no problems with this unit at all (and honestly can never see me having any problems with it in the future either). I never feel the need to take a back-up, and always feel very confident with it when on stage.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never needed any customer support with this unit. There's not much that can go wrong with, nor could I even envisage anything going wrong with it.
Overall Rating
:
8
For the heavy rock crunch-rhythm sound that I need, then the Bluesbreaker does the job for me. But only because of my own personal set-up and limited requirements. The fact that I have my amp's gain cranked up to full, plus I'm using a very high output pick-up, then the boost mode on this unit is perfect for my own purposes. But as a standard distortion unit then it doesn't seem to pack a hell of a lot of punch for a player that that loves heavy rock. Yet the pedal is named Bluesbreaker, and for a blues player then this could be a great unit to drive a valve amp with.
Product: Marshall BB-2 Bluesbreaker II
Price Paid: USD 35.00 USED
Submitted 07/12/2006
at 01:33am
by EQTweak
Ease of Use
:
7
Drive, tone, volume knobs + mode selector knob ("Boost" or "Blues"). Footswitch. LED power indicator + 9V variable amp DC input. The variable amp power supply is great because you can use any 9V adapter that fits.
Unfortunately, the tone knob only works in Blues mode. Bummer.
BEWARE: If the pedal is on and you switch from Blues mode to Boost mode, your signal output may jump significantly louder. You can destroy eardrums that way if someone's head is near the amp. BE CAREFUL. You should always turn down the volume knob BEFORE switching from Blues to Boost.
Sound Quality
:
9
S/S/H hollowbody strat > EQ > Bluesbreaker II > EQ > Epiphone Valve Jr. Combo
I use this setup for practice and recording at home, and it friggin' ROCKS. Put the Valve Jr. volume at about 2 o'clock and ease up the volume of the Bluesbreaker II to the desired level, and I can sit for hours playing everything from the dirtiest low-down Chicago blues to Hendrix to '70s rock to psychedelic surf (although that sounds better with more effects) to Link Wray to Radiohead to Sonic Youth to whatever. Not the soul-crushing Metallica Thing-That-Should-Not-Be, or Sepultura or Cannibal Corpse or whatever kind of deal -- but you already knew that.
The pedal introduces some noise, but it's insignificant, and it has genuine bypass so when it's off it's really off. The pedal has a somewhat bright Boost tone which you can't control because the tone knob only works in Blues mode (!?!?). At first I thought the pedal was whimpy because in Blues mode I turned everything up all the way and didn't get a screeching ultra-distorted massive harmonic sh*t-fit the way I do with my ProCo Rat. However, this pedal has some great sustain, and I can tear up with the feedback and tremolo. It really does make my Valve Jr. sound a bit like a Marshall!
My opinion about overdrive pedals: these pedals are meant to overdrive the POWER tube(s) on your amp, NOT the preamp tube(s) -- although they can do that too. Preamp tube distortion is often sold as the "tube sound." But it isn't! It's POWER TUBE DISTORTION that produces all the classic distorted guitar sounds. So if you aren't turning your all-tube 100-watt mega-amp up past 1 on the master because it's too loud, you aren't getting power tube saturation. That's why I use a 5-watt amp and crank it up all the way. It's still massive loud, but it's also sweet and saturated. Your overdrive pedal clips the input to the power tube(s) as a means of exciting the rich dynamics inherent in power tube saturation, and it boosts the signal level. The result is a sound that is almost clean, but still highly distorted. A liquid bell. Transfixing.
Reliability
:
10
Metal case and controls. Seems extremely sturdy. I busk with it as my only effect pedal and it has never let me down.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
9
Playing for 24 years, many of that in bands. I play all kinds of music from punk to jazz. I would descibe my preferred style as indy pop psychedelic raga country blues surf -- Hendrix, Link Wray, The Mermen, Jefferson Airplane, Sonic Youth, Country Joe and the Fish, Grateful Dead, Kaleidoscope, early Floyd, Spacemen 3, Chrome, Velvet Underground, etc. I make music that makes people think you've broken your guitar and/or amplifier. The Bluesbreaker II has been great for this (LOL!). HOWEVER keep in mind that I use an EQ before and an EQ after the BBII, so I have complete control over the frequency response of my tone. If it were lost/stolen I'd probably try a different pedal but that's just me being curious about trying new stuff.
Product: Marshall BB-2 Bluesbreaker II
Price Paid: #45 (pounds)
Submitted 07/04/2006
at 07:40am
by Jono
Email: ledzepthree at hotmail<dot>com
Ease of Use
:
9
Plug it in, set it to clean boost, drop the tone control a bit if you play a cheap made in China strat like me - sounds great. You could tweak it but it would just sound different - not necessarily better. I tend not to use the 'blues' mode. Not that it's bad -just don't need it.
Sound Quality
:
10
I just love it with my cheap strat. I'm predominantly a Les Paul player which I plug straight into a JCM2000 combo with uprated tubes and GH12-30 speakers. Don't need anymore than that.
Bought the cheap strat on a whim, rewired the tone control so it works on the bridge, stuck in some decent pots and a paper in oil cap because it sounded ice picky on the clean channel and - disaster. Sounded worse. Thought about buying a Fender amp (never considered that before...) Tried it with my modded TS 7 - too boxy sounding. Tried it with my Roger Mayer Voodoo thingy - too wussy. Dug around in my box of junk and found this old Marshall pedal I hadn't used for years - I loan it to my bass player so he can get a dirty sound on Heartbreaker - instant result. It soups up the clean channel a treat for clean Hendrix/SRV - hit the bad channel and this thing whoops. Hot, smooth, bright, sweet, hollow, woody, sustain, gain, legato, controlled feedback. Luxury. OK there's a bit of fizz if you go nuts but it's a Marshall - you need that to cut through a band. It certainly isn't transparent in clean boost mode but what it adds is great - very musical and quite like, well, a hot-rodded, cranked Marshall. Geee....
Reliability
:
10
Had it for 5 years. Used it for a while, chucked in the bottom of my gear box, dug it out 2 years later and the battery was still OK and it worked fine. Loaned it to my bass player who kicked it round the stage for a while. Still works fine.
Customer Support
:
10
I used to have JCM800 that was old and a bit unreliable and I live quite near Marshall. I'd take it in, they'd fix it up, check it through, same day and charge me almost nothing.
Plus I got to chat with Jim Marshall who is a legend, he signed some posters for me to auction and hung out as long as I wanted. His knowledge of and enthusiasm for Jimi is endless which makes him cool in my book.
Overall Rating
:
10
I play a lot of Zeppelin with my Les Paul and I don't use this pedal -I run straight into the amp. I suppose I could if I wanted to heat it up even more but the Page sound isn't about gain particularly.
For giggles I play Hendrixy stuff on my POS strat and this pedal makes it sound like the best strat ever. Well OK it doesn't but it makes it sound about a zillion times better than it actually is.
Also it's cheap, dosn't suck tone and has a wide range of adjustabilty. I've paid a lot more for pedals and got an awful lot less. I'm not a total Marshall freak - there have been days when I would have traded my amp in for anything else - but this pedal does it totally for me.
Product: Marshall BB-2 Bluesbreaker II
Price Paid: ? (35) used
Submitted 06/11/2006
at 01:45pm
by chocopopZ
Ease of Use
:
10
Very easy to get a good sound, both for the Boost or Blues modes, for single-coils or humbuckers..
Sound Quality
:
10
I've tried it with Strat US and LP with 498/490 pickups on a Marshall VS100H + 4x12 and on a Vox AC30. On both amps and with both guitars, I obtained awesome results: a rich, creamy and gutsy distortion sound for the Blues, better than everything I have heard before.
My favorite killer setting for Strat US: Drive 1 o'clock, Tone 11 o'clock, Volume 11 o'clock, to feed the clean channel.
Oh yeah, I forgot: it works very well in a chain with other ODs or a wha.
Reliability
:
10
I depend on it.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never tried.
Overall Rating
:
10
Much better than the Shredmaster (which eats all high-end frequencies). Much better than the DS1, Big Muff US and Double Muff, waaaay too harsh and fake...
The Boost mode is incredibly musical. It not just adds volume, but also this little "sparkle", or "touch" needed to put the amp just on fire. On this, it is definitely better than my old vintage TS-9.
Simply said, I have sold all the mentionned disto boxes, to only keep the BB2, the MXR Dime and MT2. The BB2 being from far my favorite. I play pop, rock, hard rock and metal.
Why? The harmonics, the musicality, the respect of the instrument, the heat.. WELL DONE MARSHALL.
My best buy from the last 10 years (just before the POD XT Live). I did not expect so much quality from this little box. I love it more than the OD1 and OD2 on the Marshall. Yes, a fantastic value for a few bucks.
Product: Marshall BB-2 Bluesbreaker II
Price Paid: trade
Submitted 06/02/2006
at 01:41pm
by Dan F.
Ease of Use
:
6
Two modes, Boost and Blues. Boost disengages the tone and gain controls, while Blues engages them. Massive difference in volume between the two modes. That can be good or bad depending on what you're looking for. For me, it doesn't make that big of a diff just yet. Traded my old MXR Distortion+ for this pedal and haven't played a gig with it yet, just through my son's practice amp. Next Friday will be the true test, I'll post another review after that.
Sound Quality
:
6
I first tested all the Marshall pedals through a Marshall practice amp at the store. The Bluesbreaker seemed to fit what I needed the most. I wasn't blown away by it, but thought it had potential. Brought it home and tried it through my son's Behringer GM108 which isn't a great amp by any means, but it allowed me to play with the pedal a bit more. I haven't tried it through any of my practice amps or any of my stage amps yet, and I'm chomping at the bit to do so. It sounded pretty "ehhhh.." through my boy's amp, but, again, I see potential. If this thing is supposed to mimic a JTM45 combo, it must be a JTM45 turned to ten with tubes about ready to explode, because there's actually a LOT of gain with this pedal. No problem, I spent some time and dialed in a fairly adequate sound in Blues mode. I'm excited to try the Boost mode with my stage rig (various geetars through a '65 Bandmaster head, Peavey 4x10 cab and various other effects) and see how it sounds, because I kind of have begun to like the Boost mode's sound, which is gnarly and ratty, I can't wait to slam the front end of the Bandmaster with it. Don't let anyone tell you it's a clean boost with no tonal change, this thing has it's own voice. It does color your sound, but not in a bad way. As far as it's "passive bypass" abilities, I haven't noticed any tonal change in the signal path, I think it's got a good thing going on that point. I do have an old Marshall Shredmaster pedal which I absolutely love, it's my favorite pedal, so it's not fair to compare the BB-2 to the Shredmaster, whoch is such a versatile, wonderful-sounding stomp box.
Sooooo....overall, the BB-2 isn't too bad a pedal. I didn't feel my heart race at any time with it just yet, I'll let you know in a little over a week how it sounded bashing an old tube amp in the face.
Reliability
:
9
It's a hell of a lot more solid than some of the plastic gizmos on the market today, it probably will be tough as nails.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
6
I'm still playing, nobody seems to be able to get me to quit, don't try, ladies, I'll just divorce ya(had to learn that the hard way, huh, woman?). I mainly play what's considered to be classic stuff these days, but I listen to everything. That said, I prefer old-school tones: AC/DC-style overdrive, maybe a bit crunchier; just good old distorted tube amp tones, basically. My Shredmaster can give you the gamut, but the Blusbreaker seems to be designed to start with more gain than the Shred. Either way you slice it, I WILL dial this sucker in. In a year or so, I could(hopefully) post a drooling report. As for now, I know that this isn't a pedal that is a "woody staight out of the box." I love dirt boxes, I currently own my Shred as well as a Tube Screamer, DS-1(el poopo) and Dano T-Bone(yurg). I traded my old Dist. + for this, and I really liked the MXR. I've also owned an old Univox Superfuzz and I had a TS808 back when they were brand new, I can still remember looking at it in an old Schmitt's Music Center back in '80-'81 and thinking "Tube Screamer, that sounds cool, I gotta get that!" May the muse of crunch bless you all on your quest for the coolest, snarkiest dirt tones! Turn it up loud and make 'em pay!!!
Product: Marshall BB-2 Bluesbreaker II
Price Paid: 500 (Dkr(about 60 bucks))
Submitted 02/23/2006
at 01:32pm
by G#2Absence
Ease of Use
:
10
Ok this baby of mine, The Marshall BluesBreakerII. When I took it out of it's box there was a small piece of paper that you can't really call a manual. But hey it was there. In this manual it didn't really say anything you can't figure out yourself, ex. how to change battery, suggestions on how to align the buttons etc.
I can tell you that information is literally useless! This thng is so simpel to use that you could get a good sound from it you were deaf, dumb and blind (yeah i know Pinball wizard;) ).
The suggestions to settings weren't very helpfull either as they are just three of a thousand, but hey they do sound good.
Deffinitly a ten'er
Sound Quality
:
10
Currentley i play this through a marshall mg15dfx with a boss turbo distortion unit and an Epi Les Paul(very wierd setup).
but i've also tried it through tons of other marshalls all of them were valve driven; i played it trough fender amps and the likes, with countless different guitars. Per example the B.B King Lucielle(gibsons) and a "true" les paul, and for one reason or another this pedal does something special to them all. It really, REALLY creates the illusion of a pure valve driven marshall Blues Breaker, it makes my poor little epiphone feel as loved as a Gibson. This has the best sound in the world! Also it is very versitale, it doesn't just do blues i can go from pop to heavy(classic heavy, maybe not slipknot).
If you gain the amp and fire this unit up you cant tell if its pedal meant to play heavy.
I mean you can go from U2 on the boos t channel(just the volume knob on this one, creates the illusion of overheated valves; very cool indeed!) to B.B king on a clean amp and blues channel on the pedal to AC/DC with the drive all the way up and a neck pickup!
Best pedal ive tried! (and it's also very cheap)
Reliability
:
10
This pedal is built like i tank! what else can i say. ill die before it! No Gig without it!
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Havent have to deal with them and i doubt i ever will.
Overall Rating
:
10
Well this thing can do anything as i said preveously. I play alot of Led Zeppelin Ac/Dc Cream and other late 60's 70's bands. This does it all, especially Cream, This is where it really shines, after all it is a blues pedal and if it couldn't play blues inspired music what good is it right? Been playing for little over two years now and i've had this thing for about a year. If it was stolen i would chase the fucker who stole it down and hit him with it, then go out and by another one to pair up with my first, that's how much i love it;)...couldn't really think of anything i hate bout it thiugh i wish it had an external swithch to alter between the two modes... but i guess that would end up kinna messy as the volume doesnt work alike.
I keep the settings as following: Blues mode; Drive 8; Tone 8; volume 7.
these may seem high out of ten but i tend to alter on the tone on my guitar. It also makes my guitar come a little more inote life you know?
Well Thats it!
Product: Marshall BB-2 Bluesbreaker II
Price Paid: 49 (# sterling)
Submitted 02/02/2006
at 11:04pm
by Gazza
Ease of Use
:
8
Very easy - only downside is that it can be difficult to see the (black on silver) marks on the controls.
Sound Quality
:
7
Put this up against more expensive pedals and this doesn't quite sound up to it, but when you bear in mind the cost this is excellent value for money. I tend to use the blues rather than the boost mode and this gives a fairly decent warm creamy overdriven sound when used with my American Telecaster through a Marshall Valvestate.
Reliability
:
10
I have had this 18 months or so with no problems. It hsa been gigged but not without a backup.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never dealt with the company.
Overall Rating
:
8
Suits my style of music which is blues and soft rock. If lost I would probably get something a little more upmarket.
Product: Marshall BB-2 Bluesbreaker II
Price Paid: 45 (pounds)
Submitted 01/17/2006
at 12:40pm
by mike willoughby
Ease of Use
:
2
Difficult/impossible under stage lighting to see settings on the chrome knobs. So this seriously effects it's tweakability/useability onstage.
Controls work predictably/simply enough, though I've found it impossible to get a satisfing sound from this unit.
Sound Quality
:
1
Blues setting is harsh and trebly, far too much gain, with a nasty fizzy top end like an overdriven tranny amp.Gives you a headache. not nice. Certainly light years away from what I would expect from a blues-based unit i.e. a subtle, three-dimensional warm crunch, (available effortlessly from my Session Award JD-10 stomp box.yum yum.)
Boost setting is dissapointing, as it's not clean: it adds a nasty fizzle on the top end of the signal, even at moderate settings on your guitar.
I've played this through various amps using my Pacifica 112 with Swineshead pickups, all with the same underwhelming, un-musical results. Would never gig with it, let alone record. I've also used it on the 'boost' setting for harmonicas live onstage for about a dozen gigs, but it adds distortion.
Reliability
:
3
I don't trust Marshall pedals. Had a chrous and it bust after nine months gigging (sounded like it had squirrels inside!)
The bad sound quality of this pedal makes me instintively mis-trust its reliability, despite it's flashy appearance.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
No experience of them.
Overall Rating
:
2
This pedal has been a huge dissapointment. No roundness or fullness or musicality to be had: It's all fizzy and harsh.
I've struggled to find a use for it's harsh tranny-ness but I admit defeat and it's got relegated to using in schools workshops, to show kids the rudiments of using a stomp-box (and I mean rudiments: any kid who got beyong basics I'd show 'em an Award-Session JD-10. Now THAT's tone!)
Maybe I'll have to start a 80's hair-metal band so I can use it......
Product: Marshall BB-2 Bluesbreaker II
Price Paid: US $55 used
Submitted 01/08/2006
at 06:01am
by Anonymous
Email: jim43<at>poczta dot onet dot pl
Ease of Use
:
10
well , boost/blues switch, on/off volume, gain & tone doesn'y make it too complicated ;]
Sound Quality
:
10
I'm using Marshall Valvestate 65R & Epihpone LP 100 / custome made "Presto Lang" guitar - fender style guitar .
On both sound great ! boost mode is clean but has this "blues sound" you're propabely lookin' for . On fender guitar it sound very similiar to SRV "sound". Blues mode is distorted blues sound .
Reliability
:
7
Not have a single problem & this one, thought had some & Guv'nor - I had to take out on/off switch and connect it with rest of a circuits with wires - but it solve the bypass problem & not working at all problem ... ;/
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never have dealt with them.
Overall Rating
:
10
I play SRV music, love texas blues .
From time to time like to play some Gary Moore as well - simple thing i just turn on that baby on my overdriven channel with overdrive to max and it ... just explodes .. ;];] (then it's noisy - but you're not suppose to do that, right ?:))
Product: Marshall BB-2 Bluesbreaker II
Price Paid: US $30.00 used
Submitted 01/03/2006
at 08:07am
by Keith Applebaum
Email: keithats<at>charter dot net
Ease of Use
:
7
Easy to use - basic overdrive distortion pedal - 3 knobs. Knobs could have been better designed however - tiny dots indicate settings which are hard to see from above, and they block the on/of led light at certain angles.
Sound Quality
:
8
As a front end 1st stage overdrive pedal, it does the job of providing really good sounding overdrive crunch of the Marshall variety which is a bit on the brittle side. There is a good range of tones and distortion available and one can dial in nice bluesy tones as well as over-the-top early metal tones. I use it in front of a vintage Vox Cambridge Reverb, and a 1960 Ampeg Reverberocket. If your amp doesn't have o.d. or channel switching it provides that. I do not use the "boost" setting, but some might find it useful. The distortion is smooth and has nice overtones, and backing off guitar volume gives excellent old-tube-amp-cranked tone.
Reliability
:
9
Have been using it regularly without a backup. Metal case is heavy duty. Never had any problems.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never dealt with Marshall directly. They do have an ear for good tone in my opinion based on what I've used in the past.
Overall Rating
:
8
This is of course a great pedal for Rock & Blues, but it is also good for adding some crunch to country licks too. I've been playing for around 40 yrs and have owned a myriad of equipment. The O.D. tones from this pedal are as good as any channel-switching amp i have ever owned. If this pedal were around in the late '70's it would have saved a lot of vintage amps from being hot-rodded. If it were lost or stolen, I'd try other pedals just because there are so many out there, but i highly recommend this pedal and would not exclude it from consideration. It does the job it was designed to do for a good price.
Product: Marshall BB-2 Bluesbreaker II
Price Paid: (#27)
Submitted 12/08/2005
at 11:51am
by marmaduke67
Ease of Use
:
8
Four controls, switchable boost/blues (overdrive) knob, drive, tone (anti-clockwise bass, clockwise treble) and volume (level). Manual has some useful examples of settings and is easy to understand. Nice and easy to dial in your own useable sounds though. Only problem is the black on silver markings on the control knobs which can be a little difficult to see.
Sound Quality
:
7
I use a variety of guitars with the Bluesbreaker II, including a Vox Teardrop copy, an Epiphone Firebird, an early 70's Flying v copy. The guitars with humbuckers I think sound better with this pedal, giving a more creamy sound. The pedal is supposed to emulate that breaking-up tube sound of Clapton's from the "Beano" album, which I think it does a fair imitation of. Sounds better with a tube amp, but sounds passable with solid state amps too. I use it with a KMD Proamp (tube), and a new Hi-watt solid state amp, it sounds good with both, but the Proamp wins out really. The boost mode is good for pushing slighty distorted tube amp into a nice overdrive.
Reliability
:
8
Really solid steel case, I would quite happily gig it without a back up. Looks like it would take a good kicking.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never dealt with the maker.
Overall Rating
:
8
I play mostly late 60's, early 70's style rock, Zeppelin, Yardbirds, Stooges, Hendrix etc, plus some new garage type stuff (White Sripes etc.). This is quite a good pedal for getting those kinds of sounds. It isn't an over the top gain pedal, so it isn't going to suit all you Korn fans out there. I own a few other noise pedals, Fulltone Soul Bender, Russian Big Muff, Graphic Fuzz, and this compares favourably in it's own little way. I wish the tone control had a bit more range on the top end, and maybe just a touch more gain. Also when the drive is turned down, you have to turn up the volume to compensate, which is bit of a shame.
Product: Marshall BB-2 Bluesbreaker II
Price Paid: US $69.00
Submitted 10/04/2005
at 07:18am
by Carvel
Ease of Use
:
No Opinion
This is a follow-up to a post I did about 3.5 years ago (search for Carvel.) I owned this pedal then and later sold it when I needed the money. I just recently sat down with this pedal against a TS-9 reissue and the following comments are based on this new comparison. What I was looking for was somthing that could give me a very subtle breakup that was almost not noticeable. Like spinkling a hint of breakup on my tone without losing the original signal.
Sound Quality
:
9
This isn't a TS-9 copy although the circuits I suspect are similar. It clearly has more of the british voicing than the TS-9 but they are very close. I would have bought this pedal again for two reasons (it sounds good and I didn't want to be a just another TS-9 player) but I went with the TS-9 because of one issue: when you roll the gain off on the BB-2, it eliminates the signal altogether. On the TS-9, you can roll the gain all the way back and you still have your signal with very subtle breakup. Overall, I would say the TS-9 is smoother too.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
9
Great pedal. If you are looking for a good blues pedal with a britsh voicing, I think this thing is worth every penny (also look at the GV-2, much more like a marshall amp and more in your face.) If you want something smooth with minimal breakup at the lowest setting, I think the TS-9 or a good copy is worth looking into.
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