Selling this absolute BEAST. It is aptly named, the octave fuzz on this is Evil. But it can be blended and taken out entirely! I’ve played this maybe three or four times, just doesn’t jive with my current play-at-home rig.
I’d say this is perfect for noise rock, stoner/doom, probably some shoegaze too. It’s very loud and very tweakable with accurate reproductions of the original circuits (Distortion+ & Blue Box Octave Fuzz) but with clipping and decibel mods.
I was really surprised how good it sounded at lower gain settings, but it really comes alive when things get gnarly.
Comes with box, bag and fold-out manual (it’s in a little rough shape as it was in my work bag for a few days)
Here’s the proper and detailed description from Reuss:
The Evil Twin Mk II is everything I have wanted to do, to improve the Reuss RSH-03 pedal, but sadly can't do because Rowland S. Howard is tragically not around to ask for approvalFor those not familiar to the concept, the RSH is a two-in-one pedal featuring accurate recreations of late Australian guitar genius Rowland S. Howard's 1970s MXR Distortion+ and Blue Box pedals. It was the pedal that started Reuss Musical Instruments back in 2012.
My first goal when designing the Evil Twin Mk II was to make the fuzz intensity of the blue box based octave fuzz adjustable. In the original pedal, and in the RSH pedals, it is always maxed out, and it has to be this way for the primitive circuit to divide down the frequency and generate the weird monophonic octave-down tone. With less fuzz intensity, the tracking would fail.
But in collaboration with my brilliant Danish engineering partner, I found a way. With the Evil Twin Mk II you can back down the fuzz and still have the octave-down tone, with all it's glitchy goodness. I am pretty sure we are the first ever to have succesfully done this modification to the blue box circuit.
Apart from adding this key-feature, we did not mess a lot with the old blue box, because I think it looses its primitive lo-fi charm, if you attempt to clean it up too much and improve tracking and gating etc. In other words, it still sounds sick. And evil.
I always got complaints about the effects of the Rowland S. Howard pedal being too weak in output level, and it is true that they are not very loud, because that's how the vintage circuits are designed. But we fixed the loudness issue in the Evil Twin Mk II by adding a recovery gain stage to both circuits, so now they are VERY loud.
We also added a tone control to each circuit. In the octave fuzz circuit it serves as substitute for the 'C11 mod' switch inside the RSH-03 pedal, covering the range between the dark and muffled sounding unmodded circuit and the bright 'C11' mod.
In the distortion circuit the tone control is a treble filter, bleeding off the high frequencies. Turned all the way up, the tone control has no effect (no filtering), making the tone similar to the original, tone control-less vintage distortion+ circuit.
The distortion section of the Evil Twin Mk II can be preset to six different clipping configurations via switches inside the pedal:
- Germanium diode clipping (RSH / Distortion+)
- Silicon diode clipping (DOD 250)
- MOSFET transistor clipping
- Ge/Si hybrid clipping (first generation Reuss Old Black Shoe / Wine & Roses clipping)
- Ge/MOSFET hybrid clipping (Evil Twin mk II default)
- No clipping (makes it a very loud clean boost)
One of the things I believe has contributed to the RSH pedal's continued succes through ten years, is that the two effects in the pedals stacks so incredibly well. It's like the octave fuzz circuit becomes much more alive in combination with the distortion - which adds interesting overtones to the artificial, synth-like octave-down tones.
This quality lives on in the Evil Twin Mk II. Only a little more care has to be taken when dialling it in, because both sections of the pedal has become louder and wilder. Due to the added recovery gain stage, the octave fuzz circuit can now push the input stage of the distortion circuit much harder, making more extreme effects possible.
This also means there can be more craziness going on. The RSH was a wild beast, and I have had many emails from confused customers who could not understand all the weird clicking noises and stuff going on when the pedal was idling with both effects on and the guitar wide open. Well, there's more of that now, because all those little noises can be amplified even more. A lot more, actually. The Evil Twin is not a nice pedal. It's a wild and crazy creative tool, that you have to learn to master. So be warned.
Having said that, the Evil Twin Mk II is far more than an experimentalist’s noise tool. Both sides offers a very wide range of sounds, and it can also be more subtle and mild than with the RSH-03, because of the possibility of diminishing the fuzz intensity of the octave fuzz, and from the many different clipping options of the distortion section. The pure germanium clipping of the RSH (and original distortion+ pedals) clips more than the default Ge/MOSFET clipping setting of the Evil Twin Mk II, making the RSH-03 fuzzier and harder to dial in for subtle crunch.
I ship the pedals with the octave fuzz set to the standard two octaves down. The ‘fat switch’ of the distortion is default set to ‘ON’, and The 6dB boost switch is off (this is intended for use when the pedal is set to pure germanium clipping, which has less loudness)
Evil Twin mk II features and specifications
- Two-in-one pedal based on the Reuss RSH-03, which features vintage correct 1970s circuits of Rowland S. Howard’s old Distortion+ and Blue Box pedals. In the Evil Twin Mk II these circuits are modified and expanded
- Both circuits features an added recovery gain stage at the output sections to make them louder. The original vintage circuits suffers from a weak output
- Both circuits features an added tone control
- Both circuits features an added output buffer (compared to a vintage pedal). This ensures a uniform, high quality output signal to pass on in your chain
- The fuzz intensity of the blue box circuit is adjustable
- The monophonic octave-down tone is selectable between one or two octaves down
- The distortion circuit can be preset to six different clipping options
- The tone of the distortion circuit sound is slightly coloured to emulate the sound of an aged vintage pedal
- Vintage new old stock germanium diodes
- Vintage new old stock 2SC1849 transistors in the octave fuzz section (same as in vintage 1970s pedals)
- Extremely high build quality. Assembled by hand in the European Union. The pedals features a hybrid SMD construction, where the critical parts are hand soldered ‘trough hole’ in the traditional way, and the passive parts are surface mount (resistors and small capacitors)
- Powder coated enclosure in matte black finish with a subtle metallic sparkle effect and real silk screen printed graphics
- High quality Neutrik jacks ('top mount')
- Expensive Alpha brand upgrade quality foot switches (good for at least 30000 stomps)
- Compact footprint: 11,9 x 9,4 cm (standard Hammond 1590BB size)
- Runs on a standard ’Boss-style’ 9V DC guitar pedal power supply or a 9V battery. The pedal accepts 9-18V, but no real advantage of running it higher than 9V
- Fully analog circuit with low power consumption, below 15 mA. The pedal can run a long time on a battery
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Listed | a month ago |
Condition | Mint (Used) Mint items are in essentially new original condition but have been opened or played.Learn more |
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