Home › Forums › Review Your EHX Gear › Bass Blogger Review
- This topic has 13 replies, 6 voices, and was last updated 15 years, 3 months ago by efe_gallagher.
-
AuthorPosts
-
October 31, 2008 at 5:04 pm #77234McHavenModerator
This is taken from my initial review from Talkbass’s effects forum. This was written before I had a chance to run the blogger through my rig, and now I no longer have the blogger. I’ll put my impressions on sound at the bottom.
So, I go to check the mail today and in the package compartment is a feisty little box, hopping all around. I figured this had to be the Bass Blogger.
When I brought it inside and opened the box, the Blogger leaped out of the box and began searching for a keyboard to blog at.
Unfortunately the first one it found happened to be the keyboard of a 1970s Baldwin Fun Machine. The blogger was confused to say the least.
I calmly collected the confused Blogger and led it to my computer, where it immediately sat down and began blogging.
Eventually, tired out from blogging, the Blogger passed out and allowed me to start writing this thread.
So, I haven’t actually had the chance to hear the blogger yet. I have rehearsal later tonight and I’ll do it there.
I’ll add in a real review when I get a chance, but here are my initial impressions.
Appearance The Blogger looks pretty cool. Its the same size, shape, etc as all the other XO pedals.
Controls: The Blogger has 3 knobs, and 1 switch. The knobs are Volume, Tone, and Drive. The switch changes from Fuzz and Drive. According to the EHX manual the knobs have the following functions:
Drive Knob: In both Drive and Fuzz modes, turning the drive knob clockwise will increase the amount of distortion or fuzz
Tone Knob: The tone knob rotates from left to right. As the knob is rotated the filter changes from dark to bright through a linear frequency range.This tone knob was designed to react with certain frequencies that are geared for bass and made to apply to both the fuzz and drive designs
Volume Knob: In the fuzz mode, this is a master volume control after the gain stages. In the drive mode, the volume is inactive and remains at unity gain for optimal performance.
The blogger has wet and dry outputs and mono input.
One possible problem: The pedal itself is labeled above the power jack with “Do not use daisy-chained power”. The manual also suggests to not use the Blogger with anything but the battery, or with a dedicated power supply. Typical 9V center negative 200ma stuff.
I may try daisy chaining just to see if it really works, but I am scared of possibly blowing my brand new pedal. I may just run on battery for tonight.
I’ll try and make some clips as soon as I can, as well as actually hear the pedal. I have no cables and no amp at my house, so I’ve just been sitting here looking at it. It’s been fun to look at at least.
So, I’ve rehearsed and gigged with the Blogger now. At first I was a little underwhelmed with it. When I was practicing around before rehearsal started, it seemed to lack any and all balls. However, once you get the amp volume up, the balls were very pronounced.The Fuzz circuit seems to be the Muff circuit, since I was able to dial in the exact same tones on the Blogger and my Muff. The OD has a nice edge, but I think I may not be too big a fan of OD since my favorite setting is having the drive and tone cranked. The Tone knob really changes this pedal’s sound, the filter it goes through is huge, so you can get a lot of different OD sounds.
It sounds great as an OD, preferably at high volumes
I also found, you cannot daisy chain the pedal. If you put it on a daisy chain, it will not power on.
If you want to hear the fuzz side of the blogger, you can check out my band’s myspace (linked in my sig). I turn on the blogger near the end of the track “Not so Distant Future”
October 31, 2008 at 5:13 pm #86620electro-melxModeratordid you try it on guitar at all? I’d be interested to hear what it was like…especially the OD setting.
October 31, 2008 at 5:20 pm #86622McHavenModeratorQuote:did you try it on guitar at all? I’d be interested to hear what it was like…especially the OD setting.I think I may have fooled around with it once or twice, but I don’t remember much, which means it probably didn’t blow me away. Sorry.
October 31, 2008 at 5:25 pm #86627electro-melxModeratorQuote:Quote:did you try it on guitar at all? I’d be interested to hear what it was like…especially the OD setting.I think I may have fooled around with it once or twice, but I don’t remember much, which means it probably didn’t blow me away. Sorry.
no, problem…..I was just curious because you said the fuzz sounded like a muff, if it sounded like a muff on guitar it would be like having a muff, with an extra OD setting too.
December 22, 2008 at 8:24 am #89452efe_gallagherMemberHas anyone actually tested it properly? On YouTube there are no good videos of the Blogger on action =S
I tried it once and seemed mediocre, please prove me wrong…December 22, 2008 at 5:49 pm #89480julianModeratorQuote:This is taken from my initial review from Talkbass’s effects forum. This was written before I had a chance to run the blogger through my rig, and now I no longer have the blogger. I’ll put my impressions on sound at the bottom.So, I go to check the mail today and in the package compartment is a feisty little box, hopping all around. I figured this had to be the Bass Blogger.
When I brought it inside and opened the box, the Blogger leaped out of the box and began searching for a keyboard to blog at.
Unfortunately the first one it found happened to be the keyboard of a 1970s Baldwin Fun Machine. The blogger was confused to say the least.
I calmly collected the confused Blogger and led it to my computer, where it immediately sat down and began blogging.
Eventually, tired out from blogging, the Blogger passed out and allowed me to start writing this thread.
So, I haven’t actually had the chance to hear the blogger yet. I have rehearsal later tonight and I’ll do it there.
I’ll add in a real review when I get a chance, but here are my initial impressions.
Appearance The Blogger looks pretty cool. Its the same size, shape, etc as all the other XO pedals.
Controls: The Blogger has 3 knobs, and 1 switch. The knobs are Volume, Tone, and Drive. The switch changes from Fuzz and Drive. According to the EHX manual the knobs have the following functions:
Drive Knob: In both Drive and Fuzz modes, turning the drive knob clockwise will increase the amount of distortion or fuzz
Tone Knob: The tone knob rotates from left to right. As the knob is rotated the filter changes from dark to bright through a linear frequency range.This tone knob was designed to react with certain frequencies that are geared for bass and made to apply to both the fuzz and drive designs
Volume Knob: In the fuzz mode, this is a master volume control after the gain stages. In the drive mode, the volume is inactive and remains at unity gain for optimal performance.
The blogger has wet and dry outputs and mono input.
One possible problem: The pedal itself is labeled above the power jack with “Do not use daisy-chained power”. The manual also suggests to not use the Blogger with anything but the battery, or with a dedicated power supply. Typical 9V center negative 200ma stuff.
I may try daisy chaining just to see if it really works, but I am scared of possibly blowing my brand new pedal. I may just run on battery for tonight.
I’ll try and make some clips as soon as I can, as well as actually hear the pedal. I have no cables and no amp at my house, so I’ve just been sitting here looking at it. It’s been fun to look at at least.
So, I’ve rehearsed and gigged with the Blogger now. At first I was a little underwhelmed with it. When I was practicing around before rehearsal started, it seemed to lack any and all balls. However, once you get the amp volume up, the balls were very pronounced.The Fuzz circuit seems to be the Muff circuit, since I was able to dial in the exact same tones on the Blogger and my Muff. The OD has a nice edge, but I think I may not be too big a fan of OD since my favorite setting is having the drive and tone cranked. The Tone knob really changes this pedal’s sound, the filter it goes through is huge, so you can get a lot of different OD sounds.
It sounds great as an OD, preferably at high volumes
I also found, you cannot daisy chain the pedal. If you put it on a daisy chain, it will not power on.
If you want to hear the fuzz side of the blogger, you can check out my band’s myspace (linked in my sig). I turn on the blogger near the end of the track “Not so Distant Future”
Next Sunday A.D.
There was a guy named Joel
not to different from you or meDecember 22, 2008 at 7:13 pm #89487GoldengloveMemberJulian, you’re planning to use the bass muff on bass or guitar?
December 22, 2008 at 7:14 pm #89488julianModeratorwhen I get one, mostly on guitar
but also bass when I play bassDecember 22, 2008 at 8:28 pm #88329McHavenModeratorQuote:Next Sunday A.D.
There was a guy named Joel
not to different from you or mewhat?
December 22, 2008 at 9:10 pm #89507julianModeratorThe theme song from MST3k
starts out
“In the not to distant future”
December 23, 2008 at 2:12 pm #89545GoldengloveMemberQuote:when I get one, mostly on guitar
but also bass when I play bassIt’s basically a NYC muff with more bass, or does it sound more different?
December 23, 2008 at 5:31 pm #89563julianModeratorIt’s more of a Russian, with normal, bass boost, and clean modes. Clean mode mixes in your clean signal.
March 2, 2009 at 1:16 am #94117Dan HalenParticipantI just got this pedal and have played it several times over the weekend. Like most of the XO pedals I found it to very sensitive in terms of the wide array of tones you can get between the Volume, Tone and Distortion knobs. I was very pleased with the tones I got from my bass through the pedal. Then this morning I realized my Russian Muff wasn’t working and I had a rehearsal playing guitar for a funk band. So I brought the blogger and tried the drive mode on guitar and got some awesome tones as well. Very cool pedal.
September 8, 2009 at 11:12 pm #101299efe_gallagherMemberQuote:I just got this pedal and have played it several times over the weekend. Like most of the XO pedals I found it to very sensitive in terms of the wide array of tones you can get between the Volume, Tone and Distortion knobs. I was very pleased with the tones I got from my bass through the pedal. Then this morning I realized my Russian Muff wasn’t working and I had a rehearsal playing guitar for a funk band. So I brought the blogger and tried the drive mode on guitar and got some awesome tones as well. Very cool pedal.What about the OD on bass?
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.