MXR Shin Juku Drive Pedal Review
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- čas přidán 25. 07. 2024
- Mitch Gallagher presents the MXR Custom Shop Shin Juku Drive. The MXR Custom Shop worked closely with celebrated Japanese amp guru Shin Suzuki to craft a pedal that captures the sound of one of the rarest and most sought-after amps out there (hint: it rhymes with "humble"). After we plugged into this pedal here at Sweetwater, the general consensus was that it was very responsive, with smooth-sounding drive, and lots of sustain.
Get the MXR Shin Juku Drive pedal here: www.sweetwater.com/store/detai... - Hudba
I stayed in Shinjuku one time. Should have done more research beforehand, turns out it's the biggest red light district in Japan. It was a family vacation.
Whoops!
This pedal is a true secret weapon. Not many people know about it, good! Keep it that way.
shushhhhh ...
They only made 2000 as well.
Maybe the all-around best demo of this pedal out there. Mitch really covers the range of the Shin-Zuku.
Awesome demo of the capabilities of the pedal! As much as I want a Dumbloid, getting one of these would be far more cost efficient (plus that rich green color is eye-catching!).
Heck, for the price of a dumbloid you're half to a Ceriatone Overdrive Special.
Hey Mitch how does this compare to the mxr GTod? Has this got more bottom end?
Sounds kinda like my Boogie Mark IIb which is a very good thing.
Wow, looking at it I didnt expect it to sound like that.
Mitch,the pedal is called the Shin Juku Drive.not Shin Suzuki Drive as you kept calling it.
Hi Phil, the Japanese amp guru, Shin Suzuki, was a collaborator on this pedal. I believe you'll find that when Mitch says Shin Suzuki he's referring to the person, and when he says Shin Juku, he's referring to the pedal.
Sounds flubby and muddy to me.
nah it sounds great, you just have convinced your ears that too much treble = good. This pedal is great because it has soft highs, defined lows, and thick mids. Not too much or too little of anything. Lots of guitar players these days play with way too much treble, not nearly enough mids or low end. The Dumble amp is so famous because it typically won't allow you to add to much treble. Nobody likes a "hornet nest" tone.
@@nicknickson3650 then you get buried in the mix
@@0megalul309 this pedal cuts through like butter, try it before you deny it
@@nicknickson3650 tried it with 3 different amps. Meh.