Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Product Review: MXR Custom Badass '78 Distortion


Does the world really need another distortion pedal? According to MXR, the answer is definitely "Yes!"

The company recently introduced the horribly named Custom Badass '78 Distortion. When I think of 1978 [a little hard to remember, I admit] I think of the distorted tones I was listening to on vinyl at the time: Van Halen "I", Aerosmith "Live Bootleg", Ted Nugent "Double Live Gonzo", AC/DC "Powerage", and The Who "Who Are You". Could this little red box recapture those tones from yesteryear?

The pedal has controls for Output, Tone, and Distortion [gain] plus an extra circuit that you can engage using the Crunch button which is basically a midrange boost that moves the tonality a little closer to a classic Tube Screamer. Build quality looks to be very good.

So how does it sound? Overall, I'd say it is a decent sounding pedal that is somewhat similar to a MXR Distortion+ on steroids or the Boss DS-1, but with more tonal options and higher fidelity. My favorite settings are with the Distortion control below 2 o'clock and with the Crunch circuit engaged. The pedal has a lot of gain on tap and it sounds very full and rich at most settings. In fact, it reminds me a lot of the Danelectro Cool Cat Fuzz in that respect, but to my ears it only makes a passing attempt at capturing the tones I listened to back in '78. IMO those tones were thinner and less compressed than what the Custom Badass '78 Distortion is serving up - although the Crunch circuit does help it sound less dark.

The distortion pedal landscape is full of some really nice choices so MXR is going into a very, very crowded marketplace. However, this is a quality unit at a very competitive price point of only $80. That's a good bang for the buck and with their marketing muscle and mainstream distribution through Guitar Center and Musicians' Friend, they may well ship a lot of units.

The bottom line: This is a pedal worth checking out based on it's tonal flexibility, build quality and attractive price. But if you really wanted '78 tones I would grab a Distortion+ or any of the vintage pedals from that era.

1 comment:

  1. Good review. I just picked up one of these pedals. With my HSS Strat, it sounded pretty weak until I got past 3 o'clock on the Distortion knob. That was initially disappointing. I ran it first through an Orange Crush solid state amp, and it sounded dry and sterile. Then I plugged it into my Blackstar HT-5 with a Les Paul with P-90s. Holy crap, what a difference. Suddenly the Distortion knob had a usable range, and the guitar's tone jumped out of the pedal. Inspiring.

    The pedal is really icepicky with the Tone above 12 o'clock. I keep it between 10 and noon. But I've only had the pedal for a couple of days, so I have a lot more to do with it yet.

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