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TexasTowelie

(116,773 posts)
Sat May 26, 2018, 09:35 PM May 2018

Glenn Snoddy, inventor of fuzz pedal for guitarists, dies

MURFREESBORO, Tennessee (AP) — A recording engineer whose invention of a pedal that allowed guitarists to create a fuzzy, distorted sound most famously used by Keith Richards in the Rolling Stones' hit &quot I Can't Get No) Satisfaction" has died.

Glenn Snoddy was 96. His daughter Dianne Mayo said Saturday that Snoddy died Monday of congestive heart failure at his Murfreesboro, Tennessee, home.

Snoddy was helping record country artist Marty Robbins' song "Don't Worry" in 1961 when a malfunction caused the distortion in a guitar solo. When other musicians sought the same effect, Snoddy couldn't recreate it in the studio but invented a pedal where a guitarist could switch into the sound with a tap of the foot.

Richards' "Satisfaction" riff with the fuzz tone is one of the most recognizable ones in rock history.

http://www.wacotrib.com/news/ap_nation/headlines/glenn-snoddy-inventor-of-fuzz-pedal-for-guitarists-dies/article_9aa4b468-70a7-541d-8e82-a6364eaa35cc.html
(brief article)

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Glenn Snoddy, inventor of fuzz pedal for guitarists, dies (Original Post) TexasTowelie May 2018 OP
That changed everything redstateblues May 2018 #1
The original fuzz effect was just pushing speakers into distortion by sending them more gain than Nitram May 2018 #2
Cheap amps, actually. Specifically the Fender Champ kysrsoze May 2018 #3
Dave Davies Actually Poked A Pencil Through His Speaker So It Would Do That ProfessorGAC Jul 2018 #5
Did not get into fuzz until a few years later when I got one of these Russian jobs -- Hoyt May 2018 #4
I Had A Big Muff Pi ProfessorGAC Jul 2018 #6

Nitram

(24,604 posts)
2. The original fuzz effect was just pushing speakers into distortion by sending them more gain than
Sat May 26, 2018, 10:22 PM
May 2018

they could handle. Or just cheap guitars with cheap pickups. It was white boys trying to reproduce what they heard on Chicago blues recordings.

kysrsoze

(6,141 posts)
3. Cheap amps, actually. Specifically the Fender Champ
Sat May 26, 2018, 10:58 PM
May 2018

They would push the guitar’s signal too hard (particularly humbuckers) and turn the amp’s volume too loud, and the amp was unable to stay clean. It was a design flaw that created the distortion/overdrive and companies like Marshall started to build on that Fender circuit to create even more gain/distortion. I guess you could say fuzz and distortion are in the same realm. Not quite the same, but similar.

RIP, Snoddy. Ingenious invention.

ProfessorGAC

(69,879 posts)
5. Dave Davies Actually Poked A Pencil Through His Speaker So It Would Do That
Tue Jul 31, 2018, 06:05 PM
Jul 2018

Then Randall Smith came along and started hot rodding Fender Harvard amps. Those became the Mesa Boogie, once he started making them 60 watts and REALLY loud.

 

Hoyt

(54,770 posts)
4. Did not get into fuzz until a few years later when I got one of these Russian jobs --
Sun May 27, 2018, 12:38 AM
May 2018


Even used it with an acoustic tenor guitar for some snarly stuff through a Victoria Champ clone, among others.

ProfessorGAC

(69,879 posts)
6. I Had A Big Muff Pi
Tue Jul 31, 2018, 06:09 PM
Jul 2018

I bought it at the music store where i taught piano (owner was a great guy, sold me stuff at cost and let me take Moog stuff out of the store to use for gigs and then just bring it back.)

I ran an old Vox Jaguar organ through it so i could beef it up and get that Jon Lord sound. (Of course, it didn't sound exactly like a Hammond, but better than the cheesy 60's organ sound that didn't work so well doing Deep Purple.)

Never played my guitar though it though. Of course i didn't even learn to play guitar for about another 3 years.

The only distortion units i regular used was the Rockman and the Satchurator made by Vox. Gives that ultrasmooth full distortion sound that Satch uses. Used the latter for jam nights where i could get a tone i liked without having to bring my Marshall or Boogie.

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