JAM Pedals Ripple Phaser Pedal

£199.99

The Ripple weaves in and out of your guitar tone like a piranha slips through water. A real homage to two-stage phasing, the Jam Pedals Ripple is a classic, smooth phaser stompbox in its most stripped back form. By adding a bit of modulated movement to your signal, you can enhance your guitar tone and […]

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Description

The Ripple weaves in and out of your guitar tone like a piranha slips through water. A real homage to two-stage phasing, the Jam Pedals Ripple is a classic, smooth phaser stompbox in its most stripped back form.

By adding a bit of modulated movement to your signal, you can enhance your guitar tone and set it apart from the rest.

Plug it in and you’re away with a gliding effect that works extremely well with other layered textures. Crank the single dial and you’ve got a unique effect to use for one-off interludes and guitar lines.  

Here’s what Jam Pedals say about the Ripple:

The Ripple is an homage to 2-stage phasing. It offers a truly unique, deep “vibey” tone, that we are extremely proud of! Breathe new life into your funky percussive grooves, enhance arpeggiating parts with deep “vibey” modulation, or max it out to animate quirky passages.

The Ripple performs equally well before and after overdrive pedals. One may not encounter 2-stage phasing circuits so often these days, but we believe in its sincerity and straight-forwardness so much we are proud to include it as the JAM pedals offering in the genre.

ARTIST QUOTES

“I’ve been enjoying the Ripple a great deal. It’s got a really mellow phase tone that doesn’t overtake the sound of the guitar.” – James Sedwards

“Tasty phaser with a real nice wobble to it.” – Sean Ono Lennon

About the manufacturer

JAM

More info about this Product

Phaser Pedals

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Phaser

Phaser is a modulation effect that creates a smooth, swirling sound by splitting the signal and shifting the phase of one path before mixing it back with the original. As the phase shift is modulated, it produces moving peaks and dips in the frequency response, giving the effect its characteristic sweep.

It is commonly used to add movement and texture to guitars, keyboards, and other instruments, ranging from subtle and warm to deep and psychedelic. Phaser effects are strongly associated with classic funk, rock, and 1970s tones, but remain widely used in modern music for their fluid, musical character.