Hiwatt Filter Fuzz MKII Black Pedal

£74.99

Next up on the JustPedals smorgasbord, is tasty Fuzz Pedals from Hiwatt, delivered to any location in the UK. Their Chef has a lot to offer here with the Hiwatt Filter Fuzz MKII Black Pedal. It is in stock, it is NEW, its delivered in a nice box and it is delivered fresh to any location in the UK at a great price.. Just Read more Fuzz Pedals details below.


Description

The JustPedals team think the Hiwatt Filter Fuzz MKII Black Pedal is a tasty New Fuzz Pedals option for your smorgasbord (pedalboard). Just Read More for images videos and latest prices from the Hiwatt brand and delivered by a UK retailer, with warranty & more.

Here’s what Hiwatt say about the Hiwatt Filter Fuzz MKII Black Pedal:

The Filter Fuzz is the Hiwatt Custom Shop’s tone-obsessed take on your favourite Classic ’60s Fuzz. Designed through collaboration of two Hiwatt Custom Shop heavyweights, the Filter Fuzz aims to offer old-school all-analogue sensibility with extended gain and frequency-range. A historical nod to the ’69 sounds produced on the album Grand Funk; this ‘free-love’ moment between a Musicraft Messenger guitar and a Heathkit Fuzz has been the tone-chasing inspiration for our filter section.

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Brand

Hiwatt

Category

Fuzz Pedals

Fuzz pedals produce a thick, saturated and often unruly form of distortion with a character all of its own. From smooth vintage sustain to gated, spluttering and synth-like textures, fuzz is one of the most expressive and distinctive effects in guitar history.

Players use fuzz for psychedelic rock, garage, stoner rock, doom, indie, shoegaze and experimental sounds. It can feel more like an instrument than a normal drive pedal, responding strongly to guitar volume, pickup choice and playing dynamics.

Tags

Fuzz

Fuzz pedals create thick saturated distortion with a raw and highly expressive character that differs significantly from standard overdrive or distortion pedals. Vintage-inspired fuzz circuits remain hugely influential in psychedelic rock, doom, garage, shoegaze and experimental music.

Different fuzz designs respond very differently to pickups, guitar volume and playing dynamics, allowing players to move between smooth sustain, gated textures and aggressive spluttering tones.