|
The
Voodoo Vibe is the crowning achievement in Roger
Mayer's long history of guitar effect building.
As expected, the Voodoo Vibe gracefully tackles
all your standard tremelo, vibrato, and chorus
sounds but throws in a few unexpected tonal
twists which end up catapulting this unit into
the stratosphere of modulation devices. After
three weeks of solid testing at the Geek Testing
Facility, we had a hard time letting go of this
one.
First off, this thing is built like a tank.
The rugged aluminum housing should withstand
anything that mere mortals could ever throw
at it. The quality of construction both inside
and out is impeccable. Controls are thoughtfully
laid out with plenty of room for stomping without
interfering with the Voodoo Vibes numerous settings.
Controls are well marked and the beautiful clean
lines of the silkscreened artwork is a joy to
look at. With 7 knobs to fiddle with, the range
of tonal control over the Voodoo Vibe seems
practically endless. You've got a single knob
that clicks between the three modulation modes
of Tremelo, Vibrato, and Chorus. Another knob
switches between 3 sets of rate ranges for both
sine and triangle waveforms with each of those
six ranges being dialed in by a separate fine
speed control knob. The intensity and output
knobs controls the amount of effect and the
overall output respectively. This is the point
where most modulation boxes stop and this is
where the Voodoo Vibe starts getting interesting!
The next two knobs separate the Mayer unit from
all the other zillions of boxes out there. The
Symmetry knob basically controls the modulation
so that the effect sounds as if it is speeding
up at one end or the other of its sweep range.
The Bias Knob acts a a filter tuner and is used
to dial in sweet spots to achieve different
tonal colors. Subtle tweaks with both these
ingenious additions yields and incredible amount
of tonal colors and modulation rhythms to the
Voodoo Vibe and is what pushed this stompbox
over the top in terms of sheer manipulation.
Even with these unfamiliar controls, the Guitar
Geek staff was happily calling up all manner
of wacky sounds within minutes. Everything from
detuned wobbliness and helicopter choppiness
to seasick bends are well within the grasp of
the VooDoo Vibe. The tweakability of the this
box is absolutely mindblowing and countless
hours pass in the pursuit of yet another cool
sound. After leaving some of the more demented
sounds behind us we steered the VooDoo Vibe
into the recognizable realm of traditional tremelo,
chorus, and vibrato sounds. This is where the
VooDoo Vibe rises to the top of the heap and
all it's competitors take a distant second seat.
The VooDoo's Chorus ended up impressing us the
most. Not only were the sounds unbelievably
rich and organic, but they also had a depth
of character that just isn't found anywhere
else. The effect blends in with your guitar
tone with almost no coloration whatsoever. It's
rare when a chorus effect actually becomes part
of your sound rather than resting on top of
your signal with an annoying metallic sheen.
This pure analog delight here!
Next up was the Vibrato. This highly misunderstood
effect has been overshadowed by the ever popular
tremelo for years and has even had it's good
name misrepresented on a number of popular amplifiers.
If anything can set the story straight on the
vibrato effect it's the VooDoo vibe. This box
captures the classic detuned vibrato bubbliness
in such a grand fashion that I can certainly
see a few other manufacturers coming out with
their own takes on this in the new few years.
Once again subtle tweaks to the Symmetry and
Bias knobs yielded drastic results here. Whether
you want subtle shimmers of pulsating waves
or a completely dizzy detuning this box will
deliver.
The Voodoo's Tremelo nailed down all the expected
Fender and Vox sounds but what really perked
our ears was the addition of some new variations
to this classic effect. Those of you tired of
standard pulse of the traditional tremelo will
certainly warm up to the Voodoo Vibes new sonic
treats. With a minimum of effort we were creating
strange echo-like blips, mysterious volume swells,
and strange off-kilter rhythmic stutterings
that would normally only be possible if we were
playing through two separate tremelo pedals
at once. Not only were these variations on a
familiar theme a lot of fun to play along to,
they also inspired a lot of great riff and song
ideas. The only complaint here was that the
Tremelo portion of the Voodoo seemed to be a
little undernourished in the volume department
in comparison the the other two effects.
Before
you go out shopping for your next stompbox be
forewarned! You're not going to find a better
sounding chorus, vibrato, or tremelo box than
the Voodoo Vibe. Best of all it's also ANALOG!
Another huge bonus is that the Voodoo Vibe is
dead quiet! Those of you who may wince at the
Voodoo Vibes $369.00 price tag may want to start
saving especially after adding up the similar
cost of buying 3 different sub par chorus, vibrato,
or tremelo pedals.
|