There is a lot to love here, and some not so much. And some really/seriously....
First of all, let me say that there seems to be some sort of "stealth" board factor. Like, there is a board, but I can't see it. That's cool!
Lovepedal Bonetender - rare and cool and in the right spot!
Fuzz 50 - not really familiar, 2nd Lovepedal Fuzz. Is this necessary?
Lovepedal Pickle Vibe - could only be cooler if it was purple! Interesting position, but like Phase, opinions opinions on positions vary.
VFE Pale Horse - Most excellent TS9 alternative!
Tuner is there. Fine.
The Beardsman Bi-chorus. Interesting...another Lovepedal.
The JMP 11 is also very cool, but unfortunately, we have entered the fanboy zone.
I'm just gonna ask this ONE question: Joyop Blue Rain OD. Is that really necessary. I think you know the answer. Then again, if you did, it wouldn't be there, would it? Lose it period!
Lovepedal EchoSo - Lovepedal fanboy intervention time. There are a ton of other companies out there. The Pickle stays, as does the JMP 11. Yes, we all know that Lovepedal is a good, if not great company. But seriously....And I see now why it is "Pedals Akimbo." You are hoping no one will notice. Throw a couple of obvious non-love pedals on the back, sideways to get noticed, maybe a crappy little Joyo in the mix.
We aren't gonna do this cold turkey man. I'll get you through it. Here is the deal. You get to KEEP: The JMP11, The Pickle Vibe, and One Fuzz. (Personally, I dig the Bonetender with the starve!) I'll EVEN allow you to keep either the bi-chorus or the Echo. But not both! Think about maybe an Echoplex pedal. It even looks a lot like the Lovepedal Echo...
And now we are bumping into another problem. The Marvel Drive and Super Six. In case of "Clean" backline??? And three other guitar players without an OD pedal? You have more channels of dirt on this than Mikemurry's DSL40!!!!! Seriously man, Fuzz, Horse, JMP, and ONE other - that's it. Except the Joyo because that goes no matter what.. Just no. If you are too broke from the Lovepedal investment...maybe you just don't need ONE more OD.
Seriously - where do you walk off a plane and need 7 different flavors of dirt? Fuzz, Tumnus, VFE, JMP 11 - Done! And who needs 7 Lovepedals? If we are going with 7 of them, well then, let's go all the way!!!!
And by the way...I'm not counting the Emerald Prince or the Boost on the JMP.
So....While I generally don't even acknowledge defenses of ones board
dumb@$$ery....the excessiveness of the OD's and the Lovepedals intrigues me.
I'm gonna allow you to admit you have a problem, and explain how this calamity of brand and type happened.
First of all, I do acknowledge that I'm a Lovepedal fanboy. I like them, and I have for years. But I refuse to admit that's a problem.
Two fuzzes so I don't need to redial for two entirely different uses:
Fuzz 50 is Fuzzface-ish, with stellar cleanup from full psychedelic to iconic Jimi-style semicleans with a twist of the guitar's volume.
It offers such a broad spectrum within that distinctive texture that it generally stays on throughout a tune or jam.
The Bonetender, however, is set more extremely as a once-in-a-while special, starved-fuzz madness on demand.
That's why it's in the front row for quick easy on/off, with the Fuzz 50 in back since it doesn't need convenient access.
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I love vibe before drives - old school Trower tone. Pickle Vibe is small but epic - sounds fab.
Beardsman is two choruses in series, with separate speed controls. Extra depth & complexity and a far less repetitive sweep.
Running chorus downstream from fuzz and the Pale Horse (love that pedal) so I can do 80s style drive-into-chorus when I want to.
But most drives are after; I generally prefer chorus into dirt. Gives a more organic whorl - like running it into a cooking amp in the old days.
Echophonic is a nice simple vintagey echo, quite warm for a digital unit. Has a modulation knob for a bit of old school drift.
It also does the runaway effect, albeit smoothly. Once in a while I'll put my Garland Cosmo in that slot for wilder distorted runaways.
I have plenty more delay pedals. But the Echophonic has clarity & sweet tone, and it isn't finicky at all.
Even when set high, the repeats never swamp the original sound. To my ear it has real advantages over the Dunlop.
(Still wish I'd never sold both my tape Echoplexes, but that's another story... They wouldn't be on pedalboards anyway.)
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I just use the Emerald Prince as an always-on sweetener, not a boost. Good thing, too, since its controls are inside on trimpots.
Pale Green is always on too, but isn't there for audible squeezing, just as a final EQ and for a subtle bit of cranked-amp feel.
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As for having more drives onboard than necessary, I have to concede that. Yet it isn't quite as excessive as it looks.
Basically the drives in service are the Pale Horse and JMP Eleven. Pale Horse delivers trademark liquid TS mids.
COT half of the JMP adds crisp loose drive - but not extra volume; usually it's engaged for several songs at a time.
Neither of those is set for large amounts of gain. And they stack beautifully.
The JMP's drive side is Marshall-flavored and set hot & bright, serving as lead channel for solos and feedback.
But the Blue Rain only gets kicked on momentarily with the echo for pick drags. Strategically placed so I can hit both buttons at once.
Actually the thing sounds pretty darn good on its own (or as an afterburner with other drives) but I don't use it that way.
Footprint is tiny enough that it's worth the space for just one specific use.
As for the Marvel Drive and Super Six (another Lovepedal), I probably should've said "in case of sketchy backline."
Here's the story: I use my own amp whenever possible, set for crunchy grit and backing off the guitar for cleans.
I play quite a bit just on that core tone, no ODs engaged. Get perfectly usable core tone from typical backline amps too.
But occasionally you're surprised with something totally unfamiliar and without time to find its sweet spot.
One time in 2015 the surprise was a solid state Hiwatt combo. No soundcheck; ninety seconds to plug in and go.
Dead clean was it was set for. Going with that - a known quantity - seemed better than experimenting during a performance.
I needed to concentrate on playing; we'd only had two rehearsals together before the show.
Anyway, wound up playing nearly the whole set with an OD808 on.
Afterward, I resolved to be ready if it happened again.
The Marvel and Super provide nice core tones, at controllable volume, through just about any clean amp.
Both are responsive enough that I can still roll back at the guitar for cleanup, the way I'm used to.
They're hardly ever used so I don't consider them active units - more like reserves, a sonic spare tire.
And aside from questionable backlines, if one of the main drives - or one of the other players - has trouble, they'll be ready.
(BTW, aesthetically speaking, sideways pedals bother me too. These two are mounted sideways-and-opposed so I can hit both at once, switching between them with a single tap. Pic doesn't show it but the Marvel is a taller box; metal cap on the Super Six button levels them.)