MXR Distortion + explained

The MXR Distortion + ("Distortion Plus") is a distortion pedal originally designed in the 1970s by MXR Innovations.

The pedal uses a single op-amp and a pair of germanium diodes to ground (parallel-push) for clipping in a very simple configuration with only Output and Distortion controls, no tone control; the pedal uses no discrete transistors. Turning up the Distortion control increases the amount of distortion and at the same time boosts the treble in the signal.[1]

The pedal's crunchy heavy metal sound was featured by Randy Rhoads in his work with Ozzy Osbourne.[2] Jerry Garcia of the Grateful Dead used this pedal exclusively for distortion in the late 1970s.[2] Bob Mould of Hüsker Dü also used the Distortion +.[3] Dave Murray of Iron Maiden has used Distortion + since the early 1980s.[4] Steve Wynn (musician) used it on the first couple Dream Syndicate albums. Thom Yorke of Radiohead has included the Distortion + for many of his signature distortion sounds. Rowland S. Howard (The Birthday Party/These Immortal Souls/Crime & the City Solution/Solo albums) also used this pedal across his career. Guitarist Slash has talked about using the Distortion + in his early guitar days to help define his tone.[5]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: ElectroSmash - MXR Distortion + Circuit Analysis.. www.electrosmash.com. 2020-01-17.
  2. Web site: Gill . Chris . Out of the Box: Guitar World Celebrates the Time-Honored History of MXR Effect Pedals . Guitar World . Future plc . 2018-07-31.
  3. Web site: Cochran . Kevin . Gear Blog: Bob Mould . Austin City Limits . KLRU-TV, Austin PBS . 2018-08-01.
  4. Web site: Bosso . Joe . Iron Maiden: Out of Thin Air . Premier Guitar . Premier Guitar Magazine . 2018-07-31 . 2.
  5. Marc Maron. Episode 952: Slash . WTF With Marc Maron . 20 September 2018 . 19 July 2022.