blueman335
Mojo's Minions
What make/model of fuzz did Erik Brann of Iron Butterfly use? He got some great tones with it, live and in the studio. Germanium or silicone?
What make/model of fuzz did Erik Brann of Iron Butterfly use? He got some great tones with it, live and in the studio. Germanium or silicone?
If you're talking Inna Gadda Da Vida, I don't really think the recording quality due to the time period and budget constraints really tell what type of fuzz was used. To me, the song is more about feel and attitude vs gear. Just play loud and hard. Take any amp that wasn't meant to sound overdriven, and overdrive it by whatever means possible. You probably already have better gear than they did recording the song - it's a pretty lo-fi and harsh tone. If you already have a standard Fuzz face, you should be able to get there.
They were the first band I saw live, in Atlanta in 1968. I remember very little of it, but they put on a good show. In listening to their albums these days, he had a great style, used different scales than most other rock players. One of the best psychedelic guitarists. Reminds me a little of early Alice Cooper's Glen Buxton around the time of the Easy Action album.
I just got a live Iron Butterfly CD, from the Fillmore East in 1968. When the fuzz was off, Erik's tone was very clean, probably cleaner than he wanted for some songs. But when he turned it on, he had such rich tones with a lot of sustain; same as on the studio albums. Those aren't the usual fuzz tones. Some of that was his unique playing style, but I think the Mossrite fuzz was also a part of the early Iron Butterfly sound.
That's a pretty awesome first show to ever see (mine wasNruce Springsteen, and like you, I unfortunately don't remember much of it either). I'd say Iron Butterfly get overlooked way too often for how they paved the way for hard rock and heavy metal - they rocked way harder than a lot of "hard rock" bands in the following decades.
I listened to the YouTube demo Lampy linked - I do have to admit it sounded very close. That fuzz in particular just sounded awesome on its own, let alone for copping an IB fuzz tone (most often with PGS demos, a lot of it has to do with Andy being a GREAT player). I think you found your answer.


Hi everyone on this page! So sorry, I'm YEARS behind any kind of "current answer" on the Big Question of Erik Braunn's "fuzz box," but I just found this page with so many suppositions and questions, and fwiw, have a definitive answer for you. Some of you may find it surprising, some disappointing, and maybe some not. I was a huge Iron Butterfly/Erik Braunn fan after they came out with "In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida," which I purchased solely on the basis of the front cover photo featuring that backline of Vox Super-Beatle amps (w a couple of Marshalls) across the stage. Had never heard 'em, nor OF 'em, but being a huge Vox fan (from The Beatles, of course, still AM... have 6 Vox amps now), that was enough to listen. Of course, I LOVED the record. Not too long after, I was able to buy my own Super-Beatle amp (which I still have, and it's still pretty clean, too, even after much dragging around to shows for many years!) and eventually a Mosrite "Ventures model" guitar. My band played "In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida" for a couple of years, and I saw Butterfly perform it, as well, many times. Very simple: plugging straight into the amp's Brilliant channel, or bridging Brilliant and Normal channels, and using the distinctive internal Vox Super-Beatle distortion IS the sound of Erik B. and Iron Butterfly. It's less the guitar, too, than just the amp. I got basically the same sound with the guitar I used before the Mosrite, too. I guess I had a Vox wah-wah and a couple other irrelevant things, but THAT was the definitive, super-raspy Butterfly distortion. Turn off the distortion and you get the clean, clear sound someone had remarked on as well. (Listening thru headphones, I believe you can actually hear EB clicking the footswitch [on left side], picked up by his amp mic!) I could fire it up right now and it would sound the same. Long time coming, but that's the answer. I hope it reaches SOMEONE! Please let me know, eh?
Cheers!