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Distortion (music)

Distortion and overdrive are forms of audio signal processing used to alter the sound of amplified electric musical instruments, usually by increasing their gain, producing a "fuzzy", "growling", or "gritty" tone. Distortion is most commonly used with the electric guitar, but may also be used with other electric instruments such as electric bass, electric piano, synthesizer and Hammond organ. Guitarists playing electric blues originally obtained an overdriven sound by turning up their vacuum tube-powered guitar amplifiers to high volumes, which caused the signal to distort. While overdriven tube amps are still used to obtain overdrive, especially in genres like blues and rockabilly, a number of other ways to produce distortion have been developed since the 1960s, such as distortion effect pedals. The growling tone of a distorted electric guitar is a key part of many genres, including blues and many rock music genres, notably hard rock, punk rock, hardcore punk, acid rock, and heavy metal music, while the use of distorted bass has been essential in a genre of hip hop music and alternative hip hop known as "SoundCloud rap".[1]

The DS-1 was the first ever distortion guitar effect pedal manufactured by Boss
An auditory example of the distortion effect with the clean signal shown first.

The effects alter the instrument sound by clipping the signal (pushing it past its maximum, which shears off the peaks and troughs of the signal waves), adding sustain and harmonic and inharmonic overtones and leading to a compressed sound that is often described as "warm" and "dirty", depending on the type and intensity of distortion used. The terms distortion and overdrive are often used interchangeably; where a distinction is made, distortion is a more extreme version of the effect than overdrive.[2] Fuzz is a particular form of extreme distortion originally created by guitarists using faulty equipment (such as a misaligned valve (tube); see below), which has been emulated since the 1960s by a number of "fuzzbox" effects pedals.

Distortion, overdrive, and fuzz can be produced by effects pedals, rackmounts, pre-amplifiers, power amplifiers (a potentially speaker-blowing approach), speakers and (since the 2000s) by digital amplifier modeling devices and audio software.[3][4] These effects are used with electric guitars, electric basses (fuzz bass), electronic keyboards, and more rarely as a special effect with vocals. While distortion is often created intentionally as a musical effect, musicians and sound engineers sometimes take steps to avoid distortion, particularly when using PA systems to amplify vocals or when playing back prerecorded music.

History edit

 
The guitar solo on Chuck Berry's 1955 single "Maybellene" features "warm" overtone distortion produced by an inexpensive valve (tube) amplifier.

Early uses of amplified distortion edit

The first guitar amplifiers were relatively low-fidelity, and would often produce distortion when their volume (gain) was increased beyond their design limit or if they sustained minor damage.[5] From 1935 onward, Western swing guitarist Bob Dunn began experimenting with a distorted or "dirty" tone.[6] Later, around 1945, Western swing guitarist and member of the Bob Wills band, Junior Barnard, began experimenting with a rudimentary humbucker pick-up and a small amplifier to obtain his signature "low-down and dirty" bluesy sound which allowed for more "fluid and funky" chords.[6] Many electric blues guitarists, including Chicago bluesmen such as Elmore James and Buddy Guy, experimented in order to get a guitar sound that paralleled the rawness of blues singers such as Muddy Waters and Howlin' Wolf,[7] replacing often their originals with the powerful Valco "Chicagoan" pick-ups, originally created for lap-steel, to obtain a louder and fatter tone. In early rock music, Goree Carter's "Rock Awhile" (1949) featured an over-driven electric guitar style similar to that of Chuck Berry several years later,[8] as well as Joe Hill Louis' "Boogie in the Park" (1950).[9][10]

In the early 1950s, guitar distortion sounds started to evolve based on sounds created earlier in the decade by accidental damage to amps, such as in the popular early recording of the 1951 Ike Turner and the Kings of Rhythm song "Rocket 88", where guitarist Willie Kizart used a vacuum tube amplifier that had a speaker cone slightly damaged in transport.[11][12][13] Electric guitarists began intentionally "doctoring" amplifiers and speakers in order to emulate this form of distortion.[14]

Electric blues guitarist Willie Johnson of Howlin' Wolf′s band began deliberately increasing gain beyond its intended levels to produce "warm" distorted sounds.[5] Guitar Slim also experimented with distorted overtones, which can be heard in his hit electric blues song "The Things That I Used to Do" (1953).[15] Chuck Berry's 1955 classic "Maybellene" features a guitar solo with warm overtones created by his small valve amplifier.[16] Pat Hare produced heavily distorted power chords on his electric guitar for records such as James Cotton's "Cotton Crop Blues" (1954) as well as his own "I'm Gonna Murder My Baby" (1954), creating "a grittier, nastier, more ferocious electric guitar sound,"[17] accomplished by turning the volume knob on his amplifier "all the way to the right until the speaker was screaming."[18]

In 1956, guitarist Paul Burlison of the Johnny Burnette Trio deliberately dislodged a vacuum tube in his amplifier to record "The Train Kept A-Rollin" after a reviewer raved about the sound Burlison's damaged amplifier produced during a live performance. According to other sources Burlison's amp had a partially broken loudspeaker cone. Pop-oriented producers were horrified by that eerie "two-tone" sound, quite clean on trebles but strongly distorted on basses, but Burnette insisted on releasing the sessions, arguing that "that guitar sounds like a nice horn section".[19]

In the late 1950s, Guitarist Link Wray began intentionally manipulating his amplifiers' vacuum tubes to create a "noisy" and "dirty" sound for his solos after a similarly accidental discovery. Wray also poked holes in his speaker cones with pencils to further distort his tone, used electronic echo chambers (then usually employed by singers), the recent powerful and "fat" Gibson humbucker pickups, and controlled "feedback" (Larsen effect). The resultant sound can be heard on his highly influential 1958 instrumental, "Rumble" and Rawhide.[20]

1960s: fuzz, distortion, and introduction of commercial devices edit

In 1961, Grady Martin scored a hit with a fuzzy tone caused by a faulty preamplifier that distorted his guitar playing on the Marty Robbins song "Don't Worry". Later that year Martin recorded an instrumental tune under his own name, using the same faulty preamp. The song, on the Decca label, was called "The Fuzz." Martin is generally credited as the discoverer of the "fuzz effect."[21] The recording engineer from Martin's sessions, Glenn Snoddy, partnered with fellow WSM radio engineer Revis V. Hobbs to design and build a stand-alone device that would intentionally create the fuzzy effect. The two engineers sold their circuit to Gibson, who introduced it as the Maestro FZ-1 Fuzz-Tone in 1962, one of the first commercially-successful mass-produced guitar pedals.[22][23][24]

 
Big Muff fuzzboxes: a NYC re-issue (L) and a Russian Sovtek version (R)

Shortly thereafter, the American instrumental rock band The Ventures asked their friend, session musician and electronics enthusiast Orville "Red" Rhodes for help recreating the Grady Martin "fuzz" sound.[21] Rhodes offered The Ventures a fuzzbox he had made, which they used to record "2000 Pound Bee" in 1962.[25]

In 1964, a fuzzy and somewhat distorted sound gained widespread popularity after guitarist Dave Davies of The Kinks used a razor blade to slash his speaker cones for the band's single "You Really Got Me".[26]

In May 1965 Keith Richards used a Maestro FZ-1 Fuzz-Tone to record "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction".[27] The song's success greatly boosted sales of the device, and all available stock sold out by the end of 1965.[28] Other early fuzzboxes include the Mosrite FuzzRITE and Arbiter Group Fuzz Face used by Jimi Hendrix,[29] the Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi used by Hendrix and Carlos Santana,[30] and the Vox Tone Bender used by Paul McCartney to play fuzz bass on "Think for Yourself" and other Beatles recordings.[31]

In 1966, Jim Marshall of the British company Marshall Amplification began modifying the electronic circuitry of his amplifiers so as to achieve a "brighter, louder" sound and fuller distortion capabilities.[32][33] Also in 1966, Syd Barrett of Pink Floyd created the song Interstellar Overdrive, a song made entirely in electric distortion. It was released a year later in modified form on their debut album The Piper at the Gates of Dawn.

In the late 1960s and early 1970s hard rock bands such as Deep Purple, Led Zeppelin and Black Sabbath forged what would eventually become the heavy metal sound through a combined use of high volumes and heavy distortion.[34]

Theory and circuits edit

 
Waveform plot showing the different types of clipping. Valve overdrive is a form of soft limiting, while transistor clipping or extremely overdriven valves resemble hard clipping.

The word distortion refers to any modification of wave form of a signal, but in music it is used to refer to nonlinear distortion (excluding filters) and particularly to the introduction of new frequencies by memoryless nonlinearities.[35] In music the different forms of linear distortion have specific names describing them. The simplest of these is a distortion process known as "volume adjustment", which involves distorting the amplitude of a sound wave in a proportional (or 'linear') way in order to increase or decrease the volume of the sound without affecting the tone quality. In the context of music, the most common source of (nonlinear) distortion is clipping in amplifier circuits and is most commonly known as overdrive.[36]

Clipping is a non-linear process that produces frequencies not originally present in the audio signal. These frequencies can be harmonic overtones, meaning they are whole number multiples of one of the signal's original frequencies, or "inharmonic", resulting from general intermodulation distortion.[37][38][39] The same nonlinear device will produce both types of distortion, depending on the input signal. Intermodulation occurs whenever the input frequencies are not already harmonically related. For instance, playing a power chord through distortion results in intermodulation that produces new subharmonics.

"Soft clipping" gradually flattens the peaks of a signal which creates a number of higher harmonics which share a harmonic relationship with the original tone. "Hard clipping" flattens peaks abruptly, resulting in higher power in higher harmonics.[40] As clipping increases, a tone input progressively begins to resemble a square wave which has odd number harmonics. This is generally described as sounding "harsh".

Distortion and overdrive circuits each 'clip' the signal before it reaches the main amplifier (clean boost circuits do not necessarily create 'clipping') as well as boost signals to levels that cause distortion to occur at the main amplifier's front end stage (by exceeding the ordinary input signal amplitude, thus overdriving the amplifier) Note : product names may not accurately reflect type of circuit involved - see above.[41]

A fuzz box alters an audio signal until it is nearly a square wave and adds complex overtones by way of a frequency multiplier.[42]

Valve overdrive edit

 
Triode valve

Vacuum tube or "valve" distortion is achieved by "overdriving" the valves in an amplifier.[43] In layman's terms, overdriving is pushing the tubes beyond their normal rated maximum. Valve amplifiers—particularly those using class-A triodes—tend to produce asymmetric soft clipping that creates both even and odd harmonics. The increase in even harmonics is considered to create "warm"-sounding overdrive effects.[40][44]

A basic triode valve (tube) contains a cathode, a plate and a grid. When a positive voltage is applied to the plate, a current of negatively charged electrons flows to it from the heated cathode through the grid. This increases the voltage of the audio signal, amplifying its volume. The grid regulates the extent to which plate voltage is increased. A small negative voltage applied to the grid causes a large decrease in plate voltage.[45]

Valve amplification is more or less linear—meaning the parameters (amplitude, frequency, phase) of the amplified signal are proportional to the input signal—so long as the voltage of the input signal does not exceed the valve's "linear region of operation". The linear region falls between

  1. The saturation region: the voltages at which plate current stops responding to positive increases in grid voltage and
  2. The cutoff region: the voltages at which the charge of the grid is too negative for electrons to flow to the plate. If a valve is biased within the linear region and the input signal's voltage exceeds this region, overdrive and non-linear clipping will occur.[43][46]

Multiple stages of valve gain/clipping can be "cascaded" to produce a thicker and more complex distortion sound. In layperson's terms, a musician will plug a fuzz pedal into a tube amp that is being "cranked" to a clipping "overdriven" condition; as such, the musician will get the distortion from the fuzz which is then distorted further by the amp. During the 1990s, some Seattle grunge guitarists chained together as many as four fuzz pedals to create a thick "wall of sound" of distortion.

In some modern valve effects, the "dirty" or "gritty" tone is actually achieved not by high voltage, but by running the circuit at voltages that are too low for the circuit components, resulting in greater non-linearity and distortion. These designs are referred to as "starved plate" configurations, and result in an "amp death" sound.[citation needed]

Solid-state distortion edit

Solid-state amplifiers incorporating transistors and/or op amps can be made to produce hard clipping. When symmetrical, this adds additional high-amplitude odd harmonics, creating a "dirty" or "gritty" tone.[40] When asymmetrical, it produces both even and odd harmonics. Electronically, this is usually achieved by either amplifying the signal to a point where it is clipped by the DC voltage limitation of the power supply rail, or by clipping the signal with diodes.[citation needed] Many solid-state distortion devices attempt to emulate the sound of overdriven vacuum valves using additional solid-state circuitry. Some amplifiers (notably the Marshall JCM 900) utilize hybrid designs that employ both valve and solid-state components.[citation needed]

Approaches edit

Guitar distortion can be produced by many components of the guitar's signal path, including effects pedals, the pre-amplifier, power amplifier, and speakers. Many players use a combination of these to obtain their "signature" tone.

Pre-amplifier distortion edit

The pre-amplifier section of a guitar amplifier serves to amplify a weak instrument signal to a level that can drive the power amplifier. It often also contains circuitry to shape the tone of the instrument, including equalization and gain controls. Often multiple cascading gain/clipping stages are employed to generate distortion. Because the first component in a valve amplifier is a valve gain stage, the output level of the preceding elements of the signal chain has a strong influence on the distortion created by that stage. The output level of the guitar's pickups, the setting of the guitar's volume knob, how hard the strings are plucked, and the use of volume-boosting effects pedals can drive this stage harder and create more distortion.

During the 1980s and 1990s, most valve amps featured a "master volume" control, an adjustable attenuator between the preamp section and the power amp. When the preamp volume is set high to generate high distortion levels, the master volume lowered, keeping the output volume at manageable levels.

Overdrive/distortion pedals edit

 
The Ibanez TS9 Tube Screamer is a popular overdrive pedal
 
The Boss BD-2 Blues Driver

Demo of a Big Muff

Analog overdrive/distortion pedals work on similar principles to preamplifier distortion. Because most effects pedals are designed to operate from battery voltages, using vacuum tubes to generate distortion and overdrive is impractical; instead, most pedals use solid-state transistors, op-amps and diodes. Classic examples of overdrive/distortion pedals include the Boss OD series (overdrives), the Ibanez Tube Screamer (an overdrive), the Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi (a fuzz box) and the Pro Co RAT (a distortion). Typically, "overdrive" pedals are designed to produce sounds associated with classic rock or blues, with "distortion" pedals producing the "high gain, scooped mids" sounds associated with heavy metal; fuzz boxes are designed to emulate the distinctive sound of the earliest overdrive pedals such as the Big Muff and the Fuzz Face.[citation needed]

Most overdrive/distortion pedals can be used in two ways: a pedal can be used as a "boost" with an already overdriven amplifier to drive it further into saturation and "color" the tone, or it can be used with a completely clean amplifier to generate the whole overdrive/distortion effect. With care—and with appropriately chosen pedals—it is possible to "stack" multiple overdrive/distortion pedals together, allowing one pedal to act as a 'boost' for another.[47]

Fuzz boxes and other heavy distortions can produce unwanted dissonances when playing chords. To get around this, guitar players (and keyboard players) using these effects may restrict their playing to single notes and simple "power chords" (root, fifth, and octave). Indeed, with the most extreme fuzz pedals, players may choose to play mostly single notes, because the fuzz can make even single notes sound very thick and heavy. Heavy distortion also tends to limit the player's control of dynamics (loudness and softness)—similar to the limitations imposed on a Hammond organ player (Hammond organ does not produce louder or softer sounds depending on how hard or soft the performer plays the keys; however, the performer can still control the volume with drawbars and the expression pedal). Heavy metal music has evolved around these restrictions, using complex rhythms and timing for expression and excitement. Lighter distortions and overdrives can be used with triadic chords and seventh chords; as well, lighter overdrive allows more control of dynamics.[citation needed]

Power amplifier distortion edit

 
A pair of 6L6GC power valves, often used in American-made amplifiers

Power valves (tubes) can be overdriven in the same way that pre-amplifier valves can, but because these valves are designed to output more power, the distortion and character they add to the guitar's tone is unique. During the 1960s to early 1970s, distortion was primarily created by overdriving the power valves. Because they have become accustomed to this sound [dubious ], many guitar players [who?] favour this type of distortion, and thus set their amps to maximum levels in order to drive the power section hard. Many valve-based amplifiers in common use have a push-pull output configuration in their power section, with matched pairs of tubes driving the output transformer. Power amplifier distortion is normally entirely symmetric, generating predominantly odd-order harmonics.

Because driving the power valves this hard also means maximum volume, which can be difficult to manage in a small recording or rehearsal space, many solutions have emerged that in some way divert some of this power valve output from the speakers, and allow the player to generate power valve distortion without excessive volume. These include built-in or separate power attenuators and power-supply-based power attenuation, such as a VVR, or Variable Voltage Regulator to drop the voltage on the valves' plates, to increase distortion whilst lowering volume. Guitarists such as Eddie Van Halen have been known to use variacs before VVR technology was invented.[specify] Lower-power valve amps (such as a quarter-watt or less)[citation needed], speaker isolation cabinets, and low-efficiency guitar speakers are also used to tame the volume.

Power-valve distortion can also be produced in a dedicated rackmount valve power amp. A modular rackmount setup often involves a rackmount preamp, a rackmount valve power amp, and a rackmount dummy load to attenuate the output to desired volume levels. Some effects pedals internally produce power-valve distortion, including an optional dummy load for use as a power-valve distortion pedal. Such effects units can use a preamp valve such as the 12AX7 in a power-valve circuit configuration (as in the Stephenson's Stage Hog), or use a conventional power valve, such as the EL84 (as in the H&K Crunch Master compact tabletop unit). However, because these are usually placed before the pre-amplifier in the signal chain, they contribute to the overall tone in a different way. Power amplifier distortion may damage speakers.

A Direct Inject signal can capture the power-tube distortion sound without the direct coloration of a guitar speaker and microphone. This DI signal can be blended with a miked guitar speaker, with the DI providing a more present, immediate, bright sound, and the miked guitar speaker providing a colored, remote, darker sound. The DI signal can be obtained from a DI jack on the guitar amp, or from the Line Out jack of a power attenuator.

Output transformer distortion edit

The output transformer sits between the power valves and the speaker, serving to match impedance. When a transformer's ferromagnetic core becomes electromagnetically saturated a loss of inductance takes place, since the back E.M.F. is reliant on a change in flux in the core. As the core reaches saturation, the flux levels off and cannot increase any further. With no change in flux there is no back E.M.F. and hence no reflected impedance. The transformer and valve combination then generate large 3rd order harmonics. So long as the core does not go into saturation, the valves will clip naturally as they drop the available voltage across them. In single ended systems the output harmonics will be largely even ordered due to the valve's relatively non linear characteristics at large signal swings. This is only true however if the magnetic core does NOT saturate.[48]

Power supply "sag" edit

Early valve amplifiers used unregulated power supplies. This was due to the high cost associated with high-quality high-voltage power supplies. The typical anode (plate) supply was simply a rectifier, an inductor and a capacitor. When the valve amplifier was operated at high volume, the power supply voltage would dip, reducing power output and causing signal attenuation and compression. This dipping effect is known as "sag", and is sought-after by some electric guitarists.[49] Sag only occurs in class-AB amplifiers. This is because, technically, sag results from more current being drawn from the power supply, causing a greater voltage drop over the rectifier valve. Class AB amplifiers draw the most power at both the maximum and minimum point of the signal, putting more stress on the power supply than class A, which only draws maximum power at the peak of the signal.

As this effect is more pronounced with higher input signals, the harder "attack" of a note will be compressed more heavily than the lower-voltage "decay", making the latter seem louder and thereby improving sustain. Additionally, because the level of compression is affected by input volume, the player can control it via their playing intensity: playing harder results in more compression or "sag". In contrast, modern amplifiers often use high-quality, well-regulated power supplies.

Speaker distortion edit

Guitar loudspeakers are designed differently from high fidelity stereo speakers or public address system speakers. While hi-fi and public address speakers are designed to reproduce the sound with as little distortion as possible, guitar speakers are usually designed so that they will shape or color the tone of the guitar, either by enhancing some frequencies or attenuating unwanted frequencies.[50]

When the power delivered to a guitar speaker approaches its maximum rated power, the speaker's performance degrades, causing the speaker to "break up", adding further distortion and colouration to the signal. Some speakers are designed to have much clean headroom, while others are designed to break up early to deliver grit and growl.

Amp modeling for distortion emulation edit

 
A Line 6 modeling amplifier shown from above. Note the various amplifier and speaker emulations selectable via the rotary knob on the left.

Guitar amp modeling devices and software can reproduce various guitar-specific distortion qualities that are associated with a range of popular "stomp box" pedals and amplifiers. Amp modeling devices typically use digital signal processing to recreate the sound of plugging into analogue pedals and overdriven valve amplifiers. The most sophisticated devices allow the user to customize the simulated results of using different preamp, power-tube, speaker distortion, speaker cabinet, and microphone placement combinations. For example, a guitarist using a small amp modeling pedal could simulate the sound of plugging their electric guitar into a heavy vintage valve amplifier and a stack of 8 X 10" speaker cabinets.

Voicing with equalization edit

Guitar distortion is obtained and shaped at various points in the signal processing chain, including multiple stages of preamp distortion, power valve distortion, output and power transformer distortion, and guitar speaker distortion. Much of the distortion character or voicing is controlled by the frequency response before and after each distortion stage. This dependency of distortion voicing on frequency response can be heard in the effect that a wah pedal has on the subsequent distortion stage, or by using tone controls built into the guitar, the preamp or an EQ pedal to favor the bass or treble components of the guitar pickup signal prior to the first distortion stage. Some guitarists place an equalizer pedal after the distortion effect, to emphasize or de-emphasize different frequencies in the distorted signal.

Increasing the bass and treble while reducing or eliminating the centre midrange (750 Hz) results in what is popularly known as a "scooped" sound (since the midrange frequencies are "scooped" out). Conversely, decreasing the bass while increasing the midrange and treble creates a punchy, harsher sound. Rolling off all of the treble produces a dark, heavy sound.

Avoiding distortion edit

 
Electronic audio compression devices, such as this DBX 566, are used by audio engineers to prevent signal peaks from causing unwanted distortion.

While musicians intentionally create or add distortion to electric instrument signals or vocals to create a musical effect, there are some musical styles and musical applications where as little distortion as possible is sought. When DJs are playing recorded music in a nightclub, they typically seek to reproduce the recordings with little or no distortion. In many musical styles, including pop music, country music and even genres where the electric guitars are almost always distorted, such as heavy metal, punk and hard rock, sound engineers usually take a number of steps to ensure that the vocals sounding through the sound reinforcement system are undistorted (the exception is the rare cases where distortion is purposely added to vocals in a song as a special effect).

Sound engineers prevent unwanted, unintended distortion and clipping using a number of methods. They may reduce the gain on microphone preamplifiers on the audio console; use attenuation "pads" (a button on audio console channel strips, DI unit and some bass amplifiers); and use electronic audio compressor effects and limiters to prevent sudden volume peaks from vocal mics from causing unwanted distortion.

Though some bass guitar players in metal and punk bands intentionally use fuzz bass to distort their bass sound, in other genres of music, such as pop, big band jazz and traditional country music, bass players typically seek an undistorted bass sound. To obtain a clear, undistorted bass sound, professional bass players in these genres use high-powered amplifiers with a lot of "headroom" and they may also use audio compressors to prevent sudden volume peaks from causing distortion. In many cases, musicians playing stage pianos or synthesizers use keyboard amplifiers that are designed to reproduce the audio signal with as little distortion as possible. The exceptions with keyboards are the Hammond organ as used in blues and the Fender Rhodes as used in rock music; with these instruments and genres, keyboardists often purposely overdrive a tube amplifier to get a natural overdrive sound. Another example of instrument amplification where as little distortion as possible is sought is with acoustic instrument amplifiers, designed for musicians playing instruments such as the mandolin or fiddle in a folk or bluegrass style.

See also edit

References edit

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  36. ^ Davis, Gary; Davis, Gary D.; Jones, Ralph (1989). The Sound Reinforcement Handbook. Hal Leonard. pp. 201–102. ISBN 0-88188-900-8.
  37. ^ Case, Alexander U. (2007). Sound FX: Unlocking the Creative Potential of Recording Studio Effects. Elsevier. p. 96. ISBN 9780240520322.
  38. ^ Davis, Gary; Davis, Gary D.; Jones, Ralph (1989). The Sound Reinforcement Handbook. Hal Leonard. p. 112. ISBN 0-88188-900-8.
  39. ^ Newell, Philip (2007). Recording Studio Design. Focal Press. p. 464. ISBN 9780240520865.
  40. ^ a b c Dailey, Denton J. (2011). Electronics for Guitarists. Springer. p. 141. ISBN 9781441995360.
  41. ^ Dailey, Denton J. (2011). Electronics for Guitarists. Springer. pp. 141–144. ISBN 9781441995360.
  42. ^ Holmes, Thom (2006). The Routledge Guide to Music Technology. CRC Press. p. 177. ISBN 0-415-97324-4.
  43. ^ a b Boehnlein, John (1998). The High Performance Marshall Handbook: A Guide to Great Marshall Amplifier Sounds. Guitar History Series. Vol. 6. Bold Strummer Ltd. p. 37. ISBN 0-933224-80-X.
  44. ^ Blencowe, Merlin. (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-12-28. Retrieved 2008-05-24.
  45. ^ Zottola, Tino (1996). Vacuum Tube Guitar and Bass Amplifier Theory. Bold Strummer. pp. 5–7. ISBN 0-933224-96-6.
  46. ^ Zottola, Tino (1996). Vacuum Tube Guitar and Bass Amplifier Theory. Bold Strummer. pp. 9–11. ISBN 0-933224-96-6.
  47. ^ "A Beginner's Guide to Stacking Drive Pedals | Reverb". reverb.com. 16 June 2016. Retrieved 2016-07-18.
  48. ^ transformer design.
  49. ^ Aiken, Randall. . Archived from the original on 2008-06-23. Retrieved 2008-06-25.
  50. ^ "Choosing Guitar-amp Speakers | Sound On Sound". www.soundonsound.com. Retrieved 2016-07-18.

External links edit

  • A Musical Distortion Primer (R.G. Keen) Article on the physics of distortion and electronic techniques
  • Distortion 101 (Jon Blackstone) Article on the physics of distortion, with interactive demonstrations
  • An archived version of a website on overdriven guitar amplifier and effects, covering: tone settings, distortion voicing, simulation and modeling, processors, speakers, power-supply modifications, switching and signal routing gear, software and recording, and DIY projects.
  • AX84 Cooperative, non-profit website offering free schematics and plans for building guitar amps.
  • Fuzz Central Many schematics and DIY fuzz pedal projects
  • Tons of Tones 2011-08-31 at the Wayback Machine Technical website with information on multiFX pedals

distortion, music, fuzzbox, redirects, here, other, uses, fuzzbox, disambiguation, this, article, about, distortion, music, distortion, general, distortion, distortion, overdrive, forms, audio, signal, processing, used, alter, sound, amplified, electric, music. Fuzzbox redirects here For other uses see Fuzzbox disambiguation This article is about distortion in music For distortion in general see Distortion Distortion and overdrive are forms of audio signal processing used to alter the sound of amplified electric musical instruments usually by increasing their gain producing a fuzzy growling or gritty tone Distortion is most commonly used with the electric guitar but may also be used with other electric instruments such as electric bass electric piano synthesizer and Hammond organ Guitarists playing electric blues originally obtained an overdriven sound by turning up their vacuum tube powered guitar amplifiers to high volumes which caused the signal to distort While overdriven tube amps are still used to obtain overdrive especially in genres like blues and rockabilly a number of other ways to produce distortion have been developed since the 1960s such as distortion effect pedals The growling tone of a distorted electric guitar is a key part of many genres including blues and many rock music genres notably hard rock punk rock hardcore punk acid rock and heavy metal music while the use of distorted bass has been essential in a genre of hip hop music and alternative hip hop known as SoundCloud rap 1 The DS 1 was the first ever distortion guitar effect pedal manufactured by Boss source source An auditory example of the distortion effect with the clean signal shown first The effects alter the instrument sound by clipping the signal pushing it past its maximum which shears off the peaks and troughs of the signal waves adding sustain and harmonic and inharmonic overtones and leading to a compressed sound that is often described as warm and dirty depending on the type and intensity of distortion used The terms distortion and overdrive are often used interchangeably where a distinction is made distortion is a more extreme version of the effect than overdrive 2 Fuzz is a particular form of extreme distortion originally created by guitarists using faulty equipment such as a misaligned valve tube see below which has been emulated since the 1960s by a number of fuzzbox effects pedals Distortion overdrive and fuzz can be produced by effects pedals rackmounts pre amplifiers power amplifiers a potentially speaker blowing approach speakers and since the 2000s by digital amplifier modeling devices and audio software 3 4 These effects are used with electric guitars electric basses fuzz bass electronic keyboards and more rarely as a special effect with vocals While distortion is often created intentionally as a musical effect musicians and sound engineers sometimes take steps to avoid distortion particularly when using PA systems to amplify vocals or when playing back prerecorded music Contents 1 History 1 1 Early uses of amplified distortion 1 2 1960s fuzz distortion and introduction of commercial devices 2 Theory and circuits 2 1 Valve overdrive 2 2 Solid state distortion 3 Approaches 3 1 Pre amplifier distortion 3 2 Overdrive distortion pedals 3 3 Power amplifier distortion 3 4 Output transformer distortion 3 5 Power supply sag 3 6 Speaker distortion 3 7 Amp modeling for distortion emulation 4 Voicing with equalization 5 Avoiding distortion 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory edit nbsp The guitar solo on Chuck Berry s 1955 single Maybellene features warm overtone distortion produced by an inexpensive valve tube amplifier Early uses of amplified distortion edit The first guitar amplifiers were relatively low fidelity and would often produce distortion when their volume gain was increased beyond their design limit or if they sustained minor damage 5 From 1935 onward Western swing guitarist Bob Dunn began experimenting with a distorted or dirty tone 6 Later around 1945 Western swing guitarist and member of the Bob Wills band Junior Barnard began experimenting with a rudimentary humbucker pick up and a small amplifier to obtain his signature low down and dirty bluesy sound which allowed for more fluid and funky chords 6 Many electric blues guitarists including Chicago bluesmen such as Elmore James and Buddy Guy experimented in order to get a guitar sound that paralleled the rawness of blues singers such as Muddy Waters and Howlin Wolf 7 replacing often their originals with the powerful Valco Chicagoan pick ups originally created for lap steel to obtain a louder and fatter tone In early rock music Goree Carter s Rock Awhile 1949 featured an over driven electric guitar style similar to that of Chuck Berry several years later 8 as well as Joe Hill Louis Boogie in the Park 1950 9 10 In the early 1950s guitar distortion sounds started to evolve based on sounds created earlier in the decade by accidental damage to amps such as in the popular early recording of the 1951 Ike Turner and the Kings of Rhythm song Rocket 88 where guitarist Willie Kizart used a vacuum tube amplifier that had a speaker cone slightly damaged in transport 11 12 13 Electric guitarists began intentionally doctoring amplifiers and speakers in order to emulate this form of distortion 14 Electric blues guitarist Willie Johnson of Howlin Wolf s band began deliberately increasing gain beyond its intended levels to produce warm distorted sounds 5 Guitar Slim also experimented with distorted overtones which can be heard in his hit electric blues song The Things That I Used to Do 1953 15 Chuck Berry s 1955 classic Maybellene features a guitar solo with warm overtones created by his small valve amplifier 16 Pat Hare produced heavily distorted power chords on his electric guitar for records such as James Cotton s Cotton Crop Blues 1954 as well as his own I m Gonna Murder My Baby 1954 creating a grittier nastier more ferocious electric guitar sound 17 accomplished by turning the volume knob on his amplifier all the way to the right until the speaker was screaming 18 In 1956 guitarist Paul Burlison of the Johnny Burnette Trio deliberately dislodged a vacuum tube in his amplifier to record The Train Kept A Rollin after a reviewer raved about the sound Burlison s damaged amplifier produced during a live performance According to other sources Burlison s amp had a partially broken loudspeaker cone Pop oriented producers were horrified by that eerie two tone sound quite clean on trebles but strongly distorted on basses but Burnette insisted on releasing the sessions arguing that that guitar sounds like a nice horn section 19 In the late 1950s Guitarist Link Wray began intentionally manipulating his amplifiers vacuum tubes to create a noisy and dirty sound for his solos after a similarly accidental discovery Wray also poked holes in his speaker cones with pencils to further distort his tone used electronic echo chambers then usually employed by singers the recent powerful and fat Gibson humbucker pickups and controlled feedback Larsen effect The resultant sound can be heard on his highly influential 1958 instrumental Rumble and Rawhide 20 1960s fuzz distortion and introduction of commercial devices edit See also Maestro FZ 1 Fuzz Tone and Boss Corporation In 1961 Grady Martin scored a hit with a fuzzy tone caused by a faulty preamplifier that distorted his guitar playing on the Marty Robbins song Don t Worry Later that year Martin recorded an instrumental tune under his own name using the same faulty preamp The song on the Decca label was called The Fuzz Martin is generally credited as the discoverer of the fuzz effect 21 The recording engineer from Martin s sessions Glenn Snoddy partnered with fellow WSM radio engineer Revis V Hobbs to design and build a stand alone device that would intentionally create the fuzzy effect The two engineers sold their circuit to Gibson who introduced it as the Maestro FZ 1 Fuzz Tone in 1962 one of the first commercially successful mass produced guitar pedals 22 23 24 nbsp Big Muff fuzzboxes a NYC re issue L and a Russian Sovtek version R Shortly thereafter the American instrumental rock band The Ventures asked their friend session musician and electronics enthusiast Orville Red Rhodes for help recreating the Grady Martin fuzz sound 21 Rhodes offered The Ventures a fuzzbox he had made which they used to record 2000 Pound Bee in 1962 25 In 1964 a fuzzy and somewhat distorted sound gained widespread popularity after guitarist Dave Davies of The Kinks used a razor blade to slash his speaker cones for the band s single You Really Got Me 26 In May 1965 Keith Richards used a Maestro FZ 1 Fuzz Tone to record I Can t Get No Satisfaction 27 The song s success greatly boosted sales of the device and all available stock sold out by the end of 1965 28 Other early fuzzboxes include the Mosrite FuzzRITE and Arbiter Group Fuzz Face used by Jimi Hendrix 29 the Electro Harmonix Big Muff Pi used by Hendrix and Carlos Santana 30 and the Vox Tone Bender used by Paul McCartney to play fuzz bass on Think for Yourself and other Beatles recordings 31 In 1966 Jim Marshall of the British company Marshall Amplification began modifying the electronic circuitry of his amplifiers so as to achieve a brighter louder sound and fuller distortion capabilities 32 33 Also in 1966 Syd Barrett of Pink Floyd created the song Interstellar Overdrive a song made entirely in electric distortion It was released a year later in modified form on their debut album The Piper at the Gates of Dawn In the late 1960s and early 1970s hard rock bands such as Deep Purple Led Zeppelin and Black Sabbath forged what would eventually become the heavy metal sound through a combined use of high volumes and heavy distortion 34 Theory and circuits edit nbsp Waveform plot showing the different types of clipping Valve overdrive is a form of soft limiting while transistor clipping or extremely overdriven valves resemble hard clipping The word distortion refers to any modification of wave form of a signal but in music it is used to refer to nonlinear distortion excluding filters and particularly to the introduction of new frequencies by memoryless nonlinearities 35 In music the different forms of linear distortion have specific names describing them The simplest of these is a distortion process known as volume adjustment which involves distorting the amplitude of a sound wave in a proportional or linear way in order to increase or decrease the volume of the sound without affecting the tone quality In the context of music the most common source of nonlinear distortion is clipping in amplifier circuits and is most commonly known as overdrive 36 Clipping is a non linear process that produces frequencies not originally present in the audio signal These frequencies can be harmonic overtones meaning they are whole number multiples of one of the signal s original frequencies or inharmonic resulting from general intermodulation distortion 37 38 39 The same nonlinear device will produce both types of distortion depending on the input signal Intermodulation occurs whenever the input frequencies are not already harmonically related For instance playing a power chord through distortion results in intermodulation that produces new subharmonics Soft clipping gradually flattens the peaks of a signal which creates a number of higher harmonics which share a harmonic relationship with the original tone Hard clipping flattens peaks abruptly resulting in higher power in higher harmonics 40 As clipping increases a tone input progressively begins to resemble a square wave which has odd number harmonics This is generally described as sounding harsh Distortion and overdrive circuits each clip the signal before it reaches the main amplifier clean boost circuits do not necessarily create clipping as well as boost signals to levels that cause distortion to occur at the main amplifier s front end stage by exceeding the ordinary input signal amplitude thus overdriving the amplifier Note product names may not accurately reflect type of circuit involved see above 41 A fuzz box alters an audio signal until it is nearly a square wave and adds complex overtones by way of a frequency multiplier 42 Valve overdrive edit nbsp Triode valve Vacuum tube or valve distortion is achieved by overdriving the valves in an amplifier 43 In layman s terms overdriving is pushing the tubes beyond their normal rated maximum Valve amplifiers particularly those using class A triodes tend to produce asymmetric soft clipping that creates both even and odd harmonics The increase in even harmonics is considered to create warm sounding overdrive effects 40 44 A basic triode valve tube contains a cathode a plate and a grid When a positive voltage is applied to the plate a current of negatively charged electrons flows to it from the heated cathode through the grid This increases the voltage of the audio signal amplifying its volume The grid regulates the extent to which plate voltage is increased A small negative voltage applied to the grid causes a large decrease in plate voltage 45 Valve amplification is more or less linear meaning the parameters amplitude frequency phase of the amplified signal are proportional to the input signal so long as the voltage of the input signal does not exceed the valve s linear region of operation The linear region falls between The saturation region the voltages at which plate current stops responding to positive increases in grid voltage and The cutoff region the voltages at which the charge of the grid is too negative for electrons to flow to the plate If a valve is biased within the linear region and the input signal s voltage exceeds this region overdrive and non linear clipping will occur 43 46 Multiple stages of valve gain clipping can be cascaded to produce a thicker and more complex distortion sound In layperson s terms a musician will plug a fuzz pedal into a tube amp that is being cranked to a clipping overdriven condition as such the musician will get the distortion from the fuzz which is then distorted further by the amp During the 1990s some Seattle grunge guitarists chained together as many as four fuzz pedals to create a thick wall of sound of distortion In some modern valve effects the dirty or gritty tone is actually achieved not by high voltage but by running the circuit at voltages that are too low for the circuit components resulting in greater non linearity and distortion These designs are referred to as starved plate configurations and result in an amp death sound citation needed Solid state distortion edit Solid state amplifiers incorporating transistors and or op amps can be made to produce hard clipping When symmetrical this adds additional high amplitude odd harmonics creating a dirty or gritty tone 40 When asymmetrical it produces both even and odd harmonics Electronically this is usually achieved by either amplifying the signal to a point where it is clipped by the DC voltage limitation of the power supply rail or by clipping the signal with diodes citation needed Many solid state distortion devices attempt to emulate the sound of overdriven vacuum valves using additional solid state circuitry Some amplifiers notably the Marshall JCM 900 utilize hybrid designs that employ both valve and solid state components citation needed Approaches editGuitar distortion can be produced by many components of the guitar s signal path including effects pedals the pre amplifier power amplifier and speakers Many players use a combination of these to obtain their signature tone Pre amplifier distortion edit The pre amplifier section of a guitar amplifier serves to amplify a weak instrument signal to a level that can drive the power amplifier It often also contains circuitry to shape the tone of the instrument including equalization and gain controls Often multiple cascading gain clipping stages are employed to generate distortion Because the first component in a valve amplifier is a valve gain stage the output level of the preceding elements of the signal chain has a strong influence on the distortion created by that stage The output level of the guitar s pickups the setting of the guitar s volume knob how hard the strings are plucked and the use of volume boosting effects pedals can drive this stage harder and create more distortion During the 1980s and 1990s most valve amps featured a master volume control an adjustable attenuator between the preamp section and the power amp When the preamp volume is set high to generate high distortion levels the master volume lowered keeping the output volume at manageable levels Overdrive distortion pedals edit nbsp The Ibanez TS9 Tube Screamer is a popular overdrive pedal nbsp The Boss BD 2 Blues Driver Demo of a Big Muff Analog overdrive distortion pedals work on similar principles to preamplifier distortion Because most effects pedals are designed to operate from battery voltages using vacuum tubes to generate distortion and overdrive is impractical instead most pedals use solid state transistors op amps and diodes Classic examples of overdrive distortion pedals include the Boss OD series overdrives the Ibanez Tube Screamer an overdrive the Electro Harmonix Big Muff Pi a fuzz box and the Pro Co RAT a distortion Typically overdrive pedals are designed to produce sounds associated with classic rock or blues with distortion pedals producing the high gain scooped mids sounds associated with heavy metal fuzz boxes are designed to emulate the distinctive sound of the earliest overdrive pedals such as the Big Muff and the Fuzz Face citation needed Most overdrive distortion pedals can be used in two ways a pedal can be used as a boost with an already overdriven amplifier to drive it further into saturation and color the tone or it can be used with a completely clean amplifier to generate the whole overdrive distortion effect With care and with appropriately chosen pedals it is possible to stack multiple overdrive distortion pedals together allowing one pedal to act as a boost for another 47 Fuzz boxes and other heavy distortions can produce unwanted dissonances when playing chords To get around this guitar players and keyboard players using these effects may restrict their playing to single notes and simple power chords root fifth and octave Indeed with the most extreme fuzz pedals players may choose to play mostly single notes because the fuzz can make even single notes sound very thick and heavy Heavy distortion also tends to limit the player s control of dynamics loudness and softness similar to the limitations imposed on a Hammond organ player Hammond organ does not produce louder or softer sounds depending on how hard or soft the performer plays the keys however the performer can still control the volume with drawbars and the expression pedal Heavy metal music has evolved around these restrictions using complex rhythms and timing for expression and excitement Lighter distortions and overdrives can be used with triadic chords and seventh chords as well lighter overdrive allows more control of dynamics citation needed Power amplifier distortion edit nbsp A pair of 6L6GC power valves often used in American made amplifiers Power valves tubes can be overdriven in the same way that pre amplifier valves can but because these valves are designed to output more power the distortion and character they add to the guitar s tone is unique During the 1960s to early 1970s distortion was primarily created by overdriving the power valves Because they have become accustomed to this sound dubious discuss many guitar players who favour this type of distortion and thus set their amps to maximum levels in order to drive the power section hard Many valve based amplifiers in common use have a push pull output configuration in their power section with matched pairs of tubes driving the output transformer Power amplifier distortion is normally entirely symmetric generating predominantly odd order harmonics Because driving the power valves this hard also means maximum volume which can be difficult to manage in a small recording or rehearsal space many solutions have emerged that in some way divert some of this power valve output from the speakers and allow the player to generate power valve distortion without excessive volume These include built in or separate power attenuators and power supply based power attenuation such as a VVR or Variable Voltage Regulator to drop the voltage on the valves plates to increase distortion whilst lowering volume Guitarists such as Eddie Van Halen have been known to use variacs before VVR technology was invented specify Lower power valve amps such as a quarter watt or less citation needed speaker isolation cabinets and low efficiency guitar speakers are also used to tame the volume Power valve distortion can also be produced in a dedicated rackmount valve power amp A modular rackmount setup often involves a rackmount preamp a rackmount valve power amp and a rackmount dummy load to attenuate the output to desired volume levels Some effects pedals internally produce power valve distortion including an optional dummy load for use as a power valve distortion pedal Such effects units can use a preamp valve such as the 12AX7 in a power valve circuit configuration as in the Stephenson s Stage Hog or use a conventional power valve such as the EL84 as in the H amp K Crunch Master compact tabletop unit However because these are usually placed before the pre amplifier in the signal chain they contribute to the overall tone in a different way Power amplifier distortion may damage speakers A Direct Inject signal can capture the power tube distortion sound without the direct coloration of a guitar speaker and microphone This DI signal can be blended with a miked guitar speaker with the DI providing a more present immediate bright sound and the miked guitar speaker providing a colored remote darker sound The DI signal can be obtained from a DI jack on the guitar amp or from the Line Out jack of a power attenuator Output transformer distortion edit The output transformer sits between the power valves and the speaker serving to match impedance When a transformer s ferromagnetic core becomes electromagnetically saturated a loss of inductance takes place since the back E M F is reliant on a change in flux in the core As the core reaches saturation the flux levels off and cannot increase any further With no change in flux there is no back E M F and hence no reflected impedance The transformer and valve combination then generate large 3rd order harmonics So long as the core does not go into saturation the valves will clip naturally as they drop the available voltage across them In single ended systems the output harmonics will be largely even ordered due to the valve s relatively non linear characteristics at large signal swings This is only true however if the magnetic core does NOT saturate 48 Power supply sag edit Early valve amplifiers used unregulated power supplies This was due to the high cost associated with high quality high voltage power supplies The typical anode plate supply was simply a rectifier an inductor and a capacitor When the valve amplifier was operated at high volume the power supply voltage would dip reducing power output and causing signal attenuation and compression This dipping effect is known as sag and is sought after by some electric guitarists 49 Sag only occurs in class AB amplifiers This is because technically sag results from more current being drawn from the power supply causing a greater voltage drop over the rectifier valve Class AB amplifiers draw the most power at both the maximum and minimum point of the signal putting more stress on the power supply than class A which only draws maximum power at the peak of the signal As this effect is more pronounced with higher input signals the harder attack of a note will be compressed more heavily than the lower voltage decay making the latter seem louder and thereby improving sustain Additionally because the level of compression is affected by input volume the player can control it via their playing intensity playing harder results in more compression or sag In contrast modern amplifiers often use high quality well regulated power supplies Speaker distortion edit Guitar loudspeakers are designed differently from high fidelity stereo speakers or public address system speakers While hi fi and public address speakers are designed to reproduce the sound with as little distortion as possible guitar speakers are usually designed so that they will shape or color the tone of the guitar either by enhancing some frequencies or attenuating unwanted frequencies 50 When the power delivered to a guitar speaker approaches its maximum rated power the speaker s performance degrades causing the speaker to break up adding further distortion and colouration to the signal Some speakers are designed to have much clean headroom while others are designed to break up early to deliver grit and growl Amp modeling for distortion emulation edit nbsp A Line 6 modeling amplifier shown from above Note the various amplifier and speaker emulations selectable via the rotary knob on the left Guitar amp modeling devices and software can reproduce various guitar specific distortion qualities that are associated with a range of popular stomp box pedals and amplifiers Amp modeling devices typically use digital signal processing to recreate the sound of plugging into analogue pedals and overdriven valve amplifiers The most sophisticated devices allow the user to customize the simulated results of using different preamp power tube speaker distortion speaker cabinet and microphone placement combinations For example a guitarist using a small amp modeling pedal could simulate the sound of plugging their electric guitar into a heavy vintage valve amplifier and a stack of 8 X 10 speaker cabinets Voicing with equalization editGuitar distortion is obtained and shaped at various points in the signal processing chain including multiple stages of preamp distortion power valve distortion output and power transformer distortion and guitar speaker distortion Much of the distortion character or voicing is controlled by the frequency response before and after each distortion stage This dependency of distortion voicing on frequency response can be heard in the effect that a wah pedal has on the subsequent distortion stage or by using tone controls built into the guitar the preamp or an EQ pedal to favor the bass or treble components of the guitar pickup signal prior to the first distortion stage Some guitarists place an equalizer pedal after the distortion effect to emphasize or de emphasize different frequencies in the distorted signal Increasing the bass and treble while reducing or eliminating the centre midrange 750 Hz results in what is popularly known as a scooped sound since the midrange frequencies are scooped out Conversely decreasing the bass while increasing the midrange and treble creates a punchy harsher sound Rolling off all of the treble produces a dark heavy sound Avoiding distortion edit nbsp Electronic audio compression devices such as this DBX 566 are used by audio engineers to prevent signal peaks from causing unwanted distortion While musicians intentionally create or add distortion to electric instrument signals or vocals to create a musical effect there are some musical styles and musical applications where as little distortion as possible is sought When DJs are playing recorded music in a nightclub they typically seek to reproduce the recordings with little or no distortion In many musical styles including pop music country music and even genres where the electric guitars are almost always distorted such as heavy metal punk and hard rock sound engineers usually take a number of steps to ensure that the vocals sounding through the sound reinforcement system are undistorted the exception is the rare cases where distortion is purposely added to vocals in a song as a special effect Sound engineers prevent unwanted unintended distortion and clipping using a number of methods They may reduce the gain on microphone preamplifiers on the audio console use attenuation pads a button on audio console channel strips DI unit and some bass amplifiers and use electronic audio compressor effects and limiters to prevent sudden volume peaks from vocal mics from causing unwanted distortion Though some bass guitar players in metal and punk bands intentionally use fuzz bass to distort their bass sound in other genres of music such as pop big band jazz and traditional country music bass players typically seek an undistorted bass sound To obtain a clear undistorted bass sound professional bass players in these genres use high powered amplifiers with a lot of headroom and they may also use audio compressors to prevent sudden volume peaks from causing distortion In many cases musicians playing stage pianos or synthesizers use keyboard amplifiers that are designed to reproduce the audio signal with as little distortion as possible The exceptions with keyboards are the Hammond organ as used in blues and the Fender Rhodes as used in rock music with these instruments and genres keyboardists often purposely overdrive a tube amplifier to get a natural overdrive sound Another example of instrument amplification where as little distortion as possible is sought is with acoustic instrument amplifiers designed for musicians playing instruments such as the mandolin or fiddle in a folk or bluegrass style See also editDistortion meter Guitar pedalboard Tube sound Valve soundReferences edit Turner David 1 June 2017 Look at Me The Noisy Blown Out SoundCloud Revolution Redefining rap Rolling Stone Archived from the original on 13 July 2018 Boost Overdrive Distortion amp Fuzz Pedals What s the Difference inSync 2018 01 10 Retrieved 2022 02 01 Ross Michael 1998 Getting Great Guitar Sounds Hal Leonard p 39 ISBN 9780793591404 Aikin Jim 2004 Power Tools for Synthesizer Programming The Ultimate Reference for Sound Design Hal Leonard p 171 ISBN 978 1 61774 508 9 a b Dave Rubin 2007 Inside the Blues 1942 to 1982 Hal Leonard p 61 ISBN 9781423416661 a b McGovern Charles 2004 Chapter 1 The Music The Electric Guitar in the American Century In Millard Andre ed The Electric Guitar A History of an American Icon Johns Hopkins University Press pp 30 31 ISBN 978 0 8018 7862 6 Retrieved 2023 12 23 Campbell Michael Brody James 2007 Rock and Roll An Introduction Cengage Learning pp 80 81 ISBN 978 0 534 64295 2 Robert Palmer Church of the Sonic Guitar pp 13 38 in Anthony DeCurtis Present Tense Duke University Press 1992 p 19 ISBN 0 8223 1265 4 DeCurtis Anthony 1992 Present Tense Rock amp Roll and Culture 4 print ed Durham N C Duke University Press ISBN 0822312654 His first venture the Phillips label issued only one known release and it was one of the loudest most overdriven and distorted guitar stomps ever recorded Boogie in the Park by Memphis one man band Joe Hill Louis who cranked his guitar while sitting and banging at a rudimentary drum kit Miller Jim 1980 The Rolling Stone illustrated history of rock amp roll New York Rolling Stone ISBN 0394513223 Retrieved 5 July 2012 Black country bluesmen made raw heavily amplified boogie records of their own especially in Memphis where guitarists like Joe Hill Louis Willie Johnson with the early Howlin Wolf band and Pat Hare with Little Junior Parker played driving rhythms and scorching distorted solos that might be counted the distant ancestors of heavy metal Shepard John 2003 Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World Performance and Production Vol II Continuum International p 286 ISBN 9780826463227 How Sam Phillips Invented the Sound of Rock and Roll popularmechanics com 15 August 2016 Retrieved 29 April 2017 Halberstadt Alex 29 October 2001 Sam Phillips the Sun king salon com Retrieved 29 April 2017 Denise Sullivan You Really Got Me Allmusic Retrieved 2008 05 24 Aswell Tom 2010 Louisiana Rocks The True Genesis of Rock amp Roll Gretna Louisiana Pelican Publishing Company pp 61 5 ISBN 978 1589806771 Collis John 2002 Chuck Berry The Biography Aurum p 38 ISBN 9781854108739 Robert Palmer Church of the Sonic Guitar pp 13 38 in Anthony DeCurtis Present Tense Duke University Press 1992 pp 24 27 ISBN 0 8223 1265 4 Koda Cub Pat Hare Allmusic Retrieved January 25 2010 Dahl Bill The Train Kept A Rollin Allmusic Retrieved 2008 05 24 Hicks Michael 2000 Sixties Rock Garage Psychedelic and Other Satisfactions University of Illinois Press p 17 ISBN 0 252 06915 3 a b How Grady Martin Discovered the First Fuzz Effect Archived from the original on 2010 11 29 Retrieved 2009 04 09 Hicks Michael 2000 Sixties Rock Garage Psychedelic and Other Satisfactions University of Illinois Press p 18 ISBN 0 252 06915 3 While most of the documentation on early fuzz boxes has been discarded or lost the earliest such devices appear to have been introduced in 1962 The best known from that year was the Maestro Fuzztone FZ 1 Dregni Michael December 2013 Maesto Fuzz Tone Vintage Guitar PO Box 7301 Bismarck ND 58507 Vintage Guitar Inc Retrieved November 30 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint location link Hicks Michael 2000 Sixties Rock Garage Psychedelic and Other Satisfactions University of Illinois Press p 18 ISBN 0 252 06915 3 While most of the documentation on early fuzz boxes has been discarded or lost the earliest such devices appear to have been introduced in 1962 The best known from that year was the Maestro Fuzztone FZ 1 Halterman Del 2009 Walk Don t Run The Story of the Ventures Lulu p 81 ISBN 978 0 557 04051 3 Walser 1993 p 9 Bosso Joe 2006 No Stone Unturned Guitar Legends The Rolling Stones Future plc p 12 Sold on Song I Can t Get No Satisfaction BBC Retrieved 2008 03 09 Shapiro Harry Glebbeek Caesar 1995 Jimi Hendrix Electric Gypsy Macmillan p 686 ISBN 9780312130626 Hunter Dave 2004 Guitar Effects Pedals The Practical Handbook Hal Leonard p 150 ISBN 9781617747021 Babiuk Andy 2002 Beatles Gear Hal Leonard p 173 ISBN 0 87930 731 5 A J Millard 2004 The Electric Guitar A History of an American Icon JHU Press p 136 ISBN 9780801878626 Doyle Michael 1993 The History of Marshall The Illustrated Story of The Sound of Rock Hal Leonard Corporation pp 28 33 ISBN 0 7935 2509 8 Walser Robert 1993 Running with the Devil Power Gender and Madness in Heavy Metal Music Wesleyan University Press p 10 ISBN 0 8195 6260 2 White Glenn D Louie Gary J 2005 The Audio Dictionary Third ed University of Washington Press p 114 ISBN 9780295984988 Davis Gary Davis Gary D Jones Ralph 1989 The Sound Reinforcement Handbook Hal Leonard pp 201 102 ISBN 0 88188 900 8 Case Alexander U 2007 Sound FX Unlocking the Creative Potential of Recording Studio Effects Elsevier p 96 ISBN 9780240520322 Davis Gary Davis Gary D Jones Ralph 1989 The Sound Reinforcement Handbook Hal Leonard p 112 ISBN 0 88188 900 8 Newell Philip 2007 Recording Studio Design Focal Press p 464 ISBN 9780240520865 a b c Dailey Denton J 2011 Electronics for Guitarists Springer p 141 ISBN 9781441995360 Dailey Denton J 2011 Electronics for Guitarists Springer pp 141 144 ISBN 9781441995360 Holmes Thom 2006 The Routledge Guide to Music Technology CRC Press p 177 ISBN 0 415 97324 4 a b Boehnlein John 1998 The High Performance Marshall Handbook A Guide to Great Marshall Amplifier Sounds Guitar History Series Vol 6 Bold Strummer Ltd p 37 ISBN 0 933224 80 X Blencowe Merlin Understanding the Common Cathode Triode Gain Stage PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2013 12 28 Retrieved 2008 05 24 Zottola Tino 1996 Vacuum Tube Guitar and Bass Amplifier Theory Bold Strummer pp 5 7 ISBN 0 933224 96 6 Zottola Tino 1996 Vacuum Tube Guitar and Bass Amplifier Theory Bold Strummer pp 9 11 ISBN 0 933224 96 6 A Beginner s Guide to Stacking Drive Pedals Reverb reverb com 16 June 2016 Retrieved 2016 07 18 transformer design Aiken Randall What is sag Archived from the original on 2008 06 23 Retrieved 2008 06 25 Choosing Guitar amp Speakers Sound On Sound www soundonsound com Retrieved 2016 07 18 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Distortion audio effects A Musical Distortion Primer R G Keen Article on the physics of distortion and electronic techniques Distortion 101 Jon Blackstone Article on the physics of distortion with interactive demonstrations Amptone com An archived version of a website on overdriven guitar amplifier and effects covering tone settings distortion voicing simulation and modeling processors speakers power supply modifications switching and signal routing gear software and recording and DIY projects AX84 Cooperative non profit website offering free schematics and plans for building guitar amps Fuzz Central Many schematics and DIY fuzz pedal projects Tons of Tones Archived 2011 08 31 at the Wayback Machine Technical website with information on multiFX pedals Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Distortion music amp oldid 1212299409, 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