The demo I heard sounds amazing, but was focused on clean tones. With fuzz or distortion will it do the jet flying over your head sound?
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Any Mutron Biphase II users here?
Collapse
X
-
I had the Mutron II back in the 80s and it was noisy and broke fairly quickly. If you were going for the Biphase sound/effect many modern pedals could achieve the same effect more cleanly, quieter, and with more flexibility in sound shaping. I have to get on my H90 soapbox and state you could easily get the same effect out of the Eventide with the ability to put the phasers in series or parallel. You could also try different phaser types like an MXR 90 or Small Stone. If you bought the Mutron you are paying collector's pricing, typically $500–$800 for an out-of-warranty pedal that has seen decades of use. Important to note you would need the Eventide H90 to achieve this, the Eventide H9 will only do one effect at a time.
With some fuzz or distortion yes you would get the jet whooshing sound with the phase set just right. However I think that would be easier to achieve with a single phase or flange.Last edited by Securb; 09-03-2024, 06:57 AM.
- Likes 1
-
I'm looking at the new production Mutron Biphase II, but also considering the new Biphase III, The demos for both sound incredible, but foxus on clean tones, whereas I also want the extremely slow rate over the head jet sound of a phaser with dirt for distorted metal and hard rock chord progressions and riffs.
I had a new Mutron Octave Divider that sounded fantastic and was very well built.
Comment
Comment