Tone Report Weekly Issue 106 | Page 60

WAMPLER PEDALS TUMNUS REVIEW BY DAVID A. EVANS STREET PRICE $179.97 It’s probably not unreasonable to say that in the world of boutique effects, we’re experiencing a modern-day gold rush. It’s as if pedal makers have struck a mother lode up in the sonic Yukon territory, and they’re hard at work mining, dredging, and assaying their finds. Wampler is the latest outfit to come down from the mountains, and it bears a small gold bar called the Tumnus, which has been sourced near the cascading waters of the Klondike. Although other miners have borne legendary, yet rarely seen bars from that same source, they have 60 GEAR REVIEW // demanded outrageous prices for their troubles. Wampler’s Tumnus, on the other hand, is 24 carats of pure, golden, overdriven tone, and is available for a very reasonable price. However, tone miners can be a skeptical lot, so they will have questions. “It just looks like those gold bricks with that funny-lookin’ centaur on ‘em. Yeah, I heard about ‘em down at the assayers. Say, what’s this Wampler outfit tryin’ to pull here?” Fear not, because the Wampler outfit has the average tone miner’s interests in mind. The Tumnus arguably improves upon the gold bar of legend Wampler Pedals Tumnus because it’s both cheaper and physically smaller than its tony predecessor. It’s as if an old-timey Wayne Szalinski not only kloned—ahem, cloned—the legendary pedal, but also shrank the price and the housing. Trust me, fool’s gold this ain’t. The Tumnus will add just a bit of a golden edge to the signal if that’s what’s needed, but it’ll also produce a wonderfully balanced distortion when pushed hard. Let’s be clear here: this isn’t going to have any sort of “insane” overdrive setting, nor will it be the pedal that ultrafuzz rockers must seek out.