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Who would use a phaser on bass, you might ask? Well, when I think of bass guitar with a phaser effect, Anthony Jackson’s amazing performance on the O’Jays’ “For the Love of Money” always comes to mind. The swirling phaser combined with his super-funky muted picking absolutely defines that great track. Roger Waters also used phaser with great results on several Pink Floyd tracks, such as “Have a Cigar” from Wish You Were Here. In the past, bassists often had to rely on pedals designed for our guitarist friends, but thanks to the folks at Aguilar, there’s a new phaser option designed just for low-enders called the Grape Phaser.
Power to the Purple
The 4-stage analog Grape Phaser is a fairly simple pedal with just two dials: rate and color. It’s a solid, high-quality stompbox with a sturdy bypass switch and nice rubber control knobs. The pedal’s rate knob can take the speed of the modulation from a long and luxurious slow sweep all the way up to super-fast alien helicopter sounds. The color control feeds a portion of the signal back through the phase-shifting circuit. The Grape runs on 9V DC from your favorite universal power supply, but accepts a battery, too. The battery is accessed through a clever metal drawer that’s conveniently released with one Phillips screw. The pedal also features what Aguilar calls “gig-saver” bypass, which means if/when power to the pedal is lost, the signal is still passed through the bypassed pedal. I think that feature could really live up to its name! And, of course, the pedal is grape colored.
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