AS GUITARISTS WHO LOVE TO EXPERIMENT with bizarre sounds, how could we pass up anything called a “modulated monophonic harmonizing PLL?” The phrase itself almost makes no sense, unless you’re one of the science nerds on The Big Bang Theory. But it portends secret labs and clandestine government agencies messing with the fabric of time and space, so count us in.
The phrase itself almost makes no sense, unless you’re one of the science nerds on The Big Bang Theory. But it portends secret labs and clandestine government agencies messing with the fabric of time and space, so count us in.
There actually is a boatload of science in the Data Corrupter ($225 street), and if you truly believe the mysteries of PLL—or phase locked loop—technology, it dates back to 1673 and some wacky Dutch physicist goofing around with pendulums. Fast forward a few hundred years to 1932, and you have the British deploying the PLL concept to both strengthen and stabilize telecommunication signals. A relatively quick trip of four decades later, RCA comes up with its CD 4046 CMOS Phase Locked Loop IC, which ends up sometime around the early 2000s in John Schumann’s PLL analog harmonizer—a rare and much-sought effects box for sonic alchemists and iconoclasts that can currently fetch prices of more than $2,000 for a used model—and, thanks to Schumann’s particular madness, a pre-war telecommunications circuit becomes a musical tool.
This story is from the January 2018 edition of Guitar Player.
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This story is from the January 2018 edition of Guitar Player.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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