About This Listing

BSM Treble Booster OR 2004 s/n 2549 with box and manual made in Germany. 

The BSM OR model is based on the Orange Treble & Bass booster made in the late 60's in England, as used by David Gilmour in Pink Floyd. The OR model includes a tone control which allows an extraoridinary amount of versatility. When set to maximum, the unit produces a very glassy tone. When a middle setting is dialed in, the result is a punchy tone with a mids emphasis. When set to minimum, the unit produces a very bassy tone with a fat bottom end. When used with a good tube amp, the unit is capable of producing the tone which helped create epochal masterpieces such as "Umma Gumma"(1969), "Meddle" (1971) and "Dark Side of The Moon"(1973). Wishbone Ash"s Andy Powell and Ted Turner were also dedicated users of the original Orange Treble & Bass booster, which helped create the band's searing dual guitar harmonic rock style like on the famous album "Argus", which was voted in british polls as "Best Album of the Year" (1972) or "Live Dates" (1973). The long yearned for new edition, now issued under the name OR from BSM, includes the same germanium transistors as the original 1960's version.

Almost all British rock guitarists using single coil pickup guitars used some type of germanium booster from the late 60's to the mid 70's. By the end of the seventies, these boosters were replaced by a new circuit from Japan, the so called Tube Screamer and other similar overdrive circuits. These were based on the old boosters and therefore had a very similar frequency response. The germanium boosters on the other hand, sadly fell into oblivion despite their unique and inimitable sound. It is of interest to note that David Gilmour used the Orange Treble and Bass Booster to drive a new 100 watt Sound City stack, later replaced by a 100 watt Hiwatt stack. Andy Powell and Ted Turner used 100 watt Orange stacks.

The Treble and Bass Booster is inserted between guitar and amplifier, not into the FX loop. The magical tone is achieved by the interaction between guitar pickup, booster and amplifier. The unit is powered by a 9V battery with a current consumption of approx. 400 uA. The average output level is 9dBm, the maximum output voltage when the strings are struck really hard is 7V max. Note: The positive pole of the battery is ground.

Interview with Bernd C. Meiser ;
BSM is run by Bernd C. and Steffi Meiser in Germany.

How did BSM start?

I was about 13 years and went to an electronics school here in Germany. I read electronics magazines and in one was a DIY kit for a silicon Fuzz (FuzzFace style) and a treble Booster (Rangemaster clone). These where my very first stompboxes. I also learned to play guitar by myself.

I was editor in the German "Gitarre & Bass" magazine and wrote about historical stompboxes. When I wrote about the treble boosters, especially the Hornby Skewes Treble Booster, Ritchie Blackmore's booster), many guys contacted me to ask if I could build this booster for them. By accident, the schematics were not printed, because the column was too long and a few schematics were simply deleted. So, I began to build the first batch of commercial Boosters. This was in 2003.

I work alone since the beginning. Only my stickers for the boxes' surface come from a professional factory. This factory also creates the sticker's design.

BSMWhere do the name and logo come from?

BSM means Bernd + Steffi Meiser, Steffi is my wife

The logo was designed by the same designer, who also makes the stickers for the top of the pedals.

What sets BSM apart from other builders?

My philosophy, I'm a tone conservator.

In my historical copies I use the original transistors, not replacements.

My clients belongs to a niche market inside of classic rock.

How do you start on a new pedal?

My inspiration comes from existing sounds, where I think "wow, what a overwhelming sound". Then, I analyze this sound and begin my work to build prototypes.

I work on the prototypes when the orders are a little bit low, then I have time for development. Therefore, some prototypes take 3/4 years to develop. I cannot predict this.

How do you name your pedals?

Oh, my Boosters' names are most pragmatics:BSM RW-F

RW-F= Ron Wood-Faces
AP-WA= Andy Powell - Wishbone Ash
Albuquerque= Mick Ralph's extra fine '76s Albuquerque live sound
...
Or they describe the manufacturer:

HS= Hornby Skewes
RM= Range Master
...
Can you tell us something about the production process?

In my house I have two rooms for the building process. BSM is a one-man-shop.

The circuits are all hand made on Veroboards and point-to point hand wiring. I think, it sound better than when the circuit is built on PCB. Making of PCB is faster, but to my ear, it doesn't sound as good as Point-to-point.

The enclosures are Hammond clones that I finish with a strong plastic sticker (made by a different company).

How important is the look of your pedals?

Not really important.

Is parts selection important?

Yes, for my old-style replicas, NOS transistors - off course!

For the new stuff I only use known brands, parts that I tested in the past and which are good for the BSM sound.

BSM RPAWhich of your pedals makes you most proud?

The RPAlines. They produce Blackmore's hard Rainbow sound at any stock Marshall-style amp. The amp doesn't have to be modified for this. Fine thing...

Which of your pedals was your toughest build?

The "Siver Rocker". It has a lot of electronic parts in a small box.

Silver Rocker was a prototype for a long time and has only left the workbench for a month. One prototype is used by Eric Bell / Thin Lizzy.

Which of your pedals is the most popular?

The RPAand RPA Major. They produce really fine Ritchie Blackmore sounds.

Who uses your pedals and for which genres?

I think, for a good rock sound, you need only a good amp and in front of this only a fine Booster. Therefore, I build exclusive boosters (and sometimes the type of Fuzz machines that make a good sound).

Users include Ritchie Blackmore, Tony Iommi, Greg Koch, Roger McGuinn, Andy Powell and some other artists which don't want to read their name in public.

BSM AlbuquerqueWhat does the future of BSM look like?

Since a few years, I see BSM not as a booster factory, more as a "tone conservator". Over the years, my ears have heard some really fine sounds and these sounds I want to re-build. A good sound in 1976 is also a good sound today and it will still be in 20 years from now.

This is my goal for BSM, and the making of e.g. the Albuquerqueor RW-Fwas a result of this.

Are you working on any new products?

Yes, I'm actually working at the NY (= Neil Young) Booster. Neil has live an extra fine rocksound, and since a long time, I wanted to recreate this sound. Now the time is ready for this. I think this prototype will go in production this year.

Listed5 years ago
Condition
Brand
Model
  • Finest Treble Booster Model OR
Categories
Year
  • 2004
Made In
  • Germany

About the Seller

BEP Boutique Effect Pedals

ROTTERDAM, Netherlands
(2,205)
Joined Reverb:2014
Items Sold:3,150
BSM Treble Booster OR 2004 s/n 2549 tribute to the sound of David Gilmour, Pink Floyd period.
BSM Treble Booster OR 2004 s/n 2549 tribute to the sound of David Gilmour, Pink Floyd period.
$329.15

About This Listing

BSM Treble Booster OR 2004 s/n 2549 with box and manual made in Germany. 

The BSM OR model is based on the Orange Treble & Bass booster made in the late 60's in England, as used by David Gilmour in Pink Floyd. The OR model includes a tone control which allows an extraoridinary amount of versatility. When set to maximum, the unit produces a very glassy tone. When a middle setting is dialed in, the result is a punchy tone with a mids emphasis. When set to minimum, the unit produces a very bassy tone with a fat bottom end. When used with a good tube amp, the unit is capable of producing the tone which helped create epochal masterpieces such as "Umma Gumma"(1969), "Meddle" (1971) and "Dark Side of The Moon"(1973). Wishbone Ash"s Andy Powell and Ted Turner were also dedicated users of the original Orange Treble & Bass booster, which helped create the band's searing dual guitar harmonic rock style like on the famous album "Argus", which was voted in british polls as "Best Album of the Year" (1972) or "Live Dates" (1973). The long yearned for new edition, now issued under the name OR from BSM, includes the same germanium transistors as the original 1960's version.

Almost all British rock guitarists using single coil pickup guitars used some type of germanium booster from the late 60's to the mid 70's. By the end of the seventies, these boosters were replaced by a new circuit from Japan, the so called Tube Screamer and other similar overdrive circuits. These were based on the old boosters and therefore had a very similar frequency response. The germanium boosters on the other hand, sadly fell into oblivion despite their unique and inimitable sound. It is of interest to note that David Gilmour used the Orange Treble and Bass Booster to drive a new 100 watt Sound City stack, later replaced by a 100 watt Hiwatt stack. Andy Powell and Ted Turner used 100 watt Orange stacks.

The Treble and Bass Booster is inserted between guitar and amplifier, not into the FX loop. The magical tone is achieved by the interaction between guitar pickup, booster and amplifier. The unit is powered by a 9V battery with a current consumption of approx. 400 uA. The average output level is 9dBm, the maximum output voltage when the strings are struck really hard is 7V max. Note: The positive pole of the battery is ground.

Interview with Bernd C. Meiser ;
BSM is run by Bernd C. and Steffi Meiser in Germany.

How did BSM start?

I was about 13 years and went to an electronics school here in Germany. I read electronics magazines and in one was a DIY kit for a silicon Fuzz (FuzzFace style) and a treble Booster (Rangemaster clone). These where my very first stompboxes. I also learned to play guitar by myself.

I was editor in the German "Gitarre & Bass" magazine and wrote about historical stompboxes. When I wrote about the treble boosters, especially the Hornby Skewes Treble Booster, Ritchie Blackmore's booster), many guys contacted me to ask if I could build this booster for them. By accident, the schematics were not printed, because the column was too long and a few schematics were simply deleted. So, I began to build the first batch of commercial Boosters. This was in 2003.

I work alone since the beginning. Only my stickers for the boxes' surface come from a professional factory. This factory also creates the sticker's design.

BSMWhere do the name and logo come from?

BSM means Bernd + Steffi Meiser, Steffi is my wife

The logo was designed by the same designer, who also makes the stickers for the top of the pedals.

What sets BSM apart from other builders?

My philosophy, I'm a tone conservator.

In my historical copies I use the original transistors, not replacements.

My clients belongs to a niche market inside of classic rock.

How do you start on a new pedal?

My inspiration comes from existing sounds, where I think "wow, what a overwhelming sound". Then, I analyze this sound and begin my work to build prototypes.

I work on the prototypes when the orders are a little bit low, then I have time for development. Therefore, some prototypes take 3/4 years to develop. I cannot predict this.

How do you name your pedals?

Oh, my Boosters' names are most pragmatics:BSM RW-F

RW-F= Ron Wood-Faces
AP-WA= Andy Powell - Wishbone Ash
Albuquerque= Mick Ralph's extra fine '76s Albuquerque live sound
...
Or they describe the manufacturer:

HS= Hornby Skewes
RM= Range Master
...
Can you tell us something about the production process?

In my house I have two rooms for the building process. BSM is a one-man-shop.

The circuits are all hand made on Veroboards and point-to point hand wiring. I think, it sound better than when the circuit is built on PCB. Making of PCB is faster, but to my ear, it doesn't sound as good as Point-to-point.

The enclosures are Hammond clones that I finish with a strong plastic sticker (made by a different company).

How important is the look of your pedals?

Not really important.

Is parts selection important?

Yes, for my old-style replicas, NOS transistors - off course!

For the new stuff I only use known brands, parts that I tested in the past and which are good for the BSM sound.

BSM RPAWhich of your pedals makes you most proud?

The RPAlines. They produce Blackmore's hard Rainbow sound at any stock Marshall-style amp. The amp doesn't have to be modified for this. Fine thing...

Which of your pedals was your toughest build?

The "Siver Rocker". It has a lot of electronic parts in a small box.

Silver Rocker was a prototype for a long time and has only left the workbench for a month. One prototype is used by Eric Bell / Thin Lizzy.

Which of your pedals is the most popular?

The RPAand RPA Major. They produce really fine Ritchie Blackmore sounds.

Who uses your pedals and for which genres?

I think, for a good rock sound, you need only a good amp and in front of this only a fine Booster. Therefore, I build exclusive boosters (and sometimes the type of Fuzz machines that make a good sound).

Users include Ritchie Blackmore, Tony Iommi, Greg Koch, Roger McGuinn, Andy Powell and some other artists which don't want to read their name in public.

BSM AlbuquerqueWhat does the future of BSM look like?

Since a few years, I see BSM not as a booster factory, more as a "tone conservator". Over the years, my ears have heard some really fine sounds and these sounds I want to re-build. A good sound in 1976 is also a good sound today and it will still be in 20 years from now.

This is my goal for BSM, and the making of e.g. the Albuquerqueor RW-Fwas a result of this.

Are you working on any new products?

Yes, I'm actually working at the NY (= Neil Young) Booster. Neil has live an extra fine rocksound, and since a long time, I wanted to recreate this sound. Now the time is ready for this. I think this prototype will go in production this year.

Listed5 years ago
Condition
Brand
Model
  • Finest Treble Booster Model OR
Categories
Year
  • 2004
Made In
  • Germany

About the Seller

BEP Boutique Effect Pedals

ROTTERDAM, Netherlands
(2,205)
Joined Reverb:2014
Items Sold:3,150

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