Dali
Well-known member
I should ask Robert next August but we got a 1974 interview where he said:Interesting. I was always under the impression that the Foxey Lady was the exact same revision as the Triangle muff, just packaged under a different name since Mike Matthews was having the pedals manufactured for Guild and EHX wasn't created yet, but looking at the BOM for the Muffin fuzz, the component values are drastically different between the Fox and the Triangle variants. That looks great btw! I'm planning to build a few fripp-inspired pedals soon, but I think yours is a bit less embarrasing (to Fripp) than the graphics for mine.
The best fuzz-box to use is a Burn's Buzz-around which they discontinued making in England about six years ago. I have two of them, but they're not at the moment attached to my pedal board. The more pedals you go through, the longer leads you need, and in turn the less volume you get. You lose gain along the way. To lessen that, the wah-wah and the fuzz are on the knock-off circuit. In other words, when I'm playing, all the time I'm going through the volume, but when I'm using either fuzz or wah-wah, I knock a different pedal which brings in a different circuit for the fuzz and the wah-wah. When I'm not using them I press a button and knock them out of the circuit so that the circuit shortens, and I keep up my gain. I also use a Watkins Kopy Kat echo unit. It's all right, but it's not particularly good. It suffices for what I want, which is not really a lot of echo effects but just a slight edge, because the sound on stage is very dead in a lot of halls I play in. It really doesn't matter what kind of fuzz box you use. It has more to do with the state of mind.
But if somebody wanted to obtain the same sound you got, wouldn't it be important to know what type of fuzz you were using?
No. I can get that same sound with every kind of fuzz box I've ever used. It's not a question of equipment.
SOURCE: https://www.elephant-talk.com/wiki/Interview_with_Robert_Fripp_in_Guitar_Player_(1974)