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Marshall Shredmaster review

Ratings summary (2 reviews)
Overall satisfaction: 4 / 5
Sound quality: 4 / 5
Build quality: 4.5 / 5
Total rating: 4.2 / 5 4.2


17 March 2016

Review by Frankie Pags

Reviewer as a guitarist: Serious
Music style: play it all mostly

Production year: 1996

Overall review:

This is a fantastic pedal , one of the original marshall in a box pedals, that many others makers try to capture some come really close like the wampler sovereign, but there is some magic in the contour knob of the shredmaster . It really maintains the bass response like no other . Plugged this in on a whim and was blown away modded plexi tones similar to greenday american idiot . A great pedal from the 90s fetching upto 200 dollars on the used market . Some kind of marshall magic in this box that no other builder has captured, maybe the resistors and capacitors from the 90s . I have tried many boutique pedals on my search for the ultimate distortion pedal , one of the perks for working at a large music retailer happened upon this pedal on a whim and couldn’t be happier….. if u can find one grab it…

Sounds and features:

Sounds like a hot rodded plexi or modded jcm 800. Have played it through a fender tube amp and marshalls and it sounds great either way, single coils to humbuckers to p 90s all with great results

Quality and reliability:

Built like a tank mine is from 1996, twenty years old and still going strong minus some paint scratches.

My favorite Shredmaster settings:

Many settings from light blues to 80s metal shred ..from back in black to american idiot great for chords and leads.. may not work for todays modern metal not sure never tried , has enuff crunch for me..

My ratings for Shredmaster
Overall satisfaction: 5 / 5
Sound quality: 5 / 5
Build quality: 5 / 5
Rating:
5 / 5

17 March 2016

Review by Brendan FI

Reviewer as a guitarist: Serious

Overall review:

I bought this distortion pedal gently used somewhere in the mid-nineties, the price was next to nothing. I remember the pedal being advertised as some kind of over-the-top gain machine (“only way to get more gain is to put microphone in your chainsaw”), but in reality the distortion in this thing is kind of mild. Only the maximum gain settings give you hard rock kind of distortion and you can set the pedal have more old Metallica kind of no-midrange sound by tweaking the contour - knob. The guys from Radiohead (at least Jonny Greenwood) have mentioned using this pedal on their rigs several times, combined with the fact that these are not produced any more, means that these pedals have gone up in value radically. I am sure they used also other pedals or amp distortion too, it is not easy to get Creep-like distortion sound from just the Shredmaster.

Sounds and features:

Sound wise this is not a heavy metal pedal really - the name is kind of confusing and this is probably the reason why the pedal was not very popular back in the day. But this does not mean the pedal is bad, it is actually pretty versatile pedal for hard rock type sounds or even old-school metal like Iron Maiden. For lead playing the gain is just adequate, maybe some shredders feel there is not enough juice but you can always beef up the distortion by using overdriven amp. Using this pedal with amp which already has distorted sound is probably one the best ways to use this pedal.

The pedal has simple setup, along the usual volume, gain, treble and bass knobs, there is the contour - knob which controls the midrange frequencies. If you set it to zero, you can get really scooped-kind of tone which Dimebag from Pantera used all the time.

Quality and reliability:

Pedal has sturdy metal case, no problems using at gigs at all. The only build quality thing I have noticed over the years is that the pots scratch a bit nowadays, but it does not bother the usage too much.

My favorite Shredmaster settings:

Gain: 2 o´clock

Bass: 12 o´clock

Contour: 10 o´clock

Treble: 12 o´clock

Volume: 1 o´clock

My ratings for Shredmaster
Overall satisfaction: 3 / 5
Sound quality: 3 / 5
Build quality: 4 / 5
Rating:
3.3 / 5

Do you own a Marshall Shredmaster? Let the world know more about it »

This entry was posted in Effects & pedals and tagged Marshall, Marshall Shredmaster.

One thought on “Marshall Shredmaster”

  1. Ralph Snart says:
    November 24, 2016 at 6:20 pm

    Plug a Shredmaster into a 70’s Marshall head and it’s perfection!
    I have a ’77 50 watt JMP head. The Shred brings it to the modern age of gain and
    scooped mids, if need be. One of, if not my favorite distortion pedals of all time.

    Reply

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