-
MojoMojo is the kind pedal that gives a mild overdrive you will not get with built-in OD of a solid state amp.
-
I sometimes use it through a slightly dirty amp, sometimes a clean amp, and either
-
Might be a nice pairing with an ice-pick bright amp, but don't mistake it for a one-size-fits-all tool.
-
If you are buying this pedal to run into a small solid state amp in your practice room, you will be disappointed
-
Maximum gain level is a great "heavily over-driven clean amp" sound, with hints of fuzz.
-
It's not perfectly suited given my current gear (digital amp and budget guitar), but I don't regret buying this pedal at all
-
Nope, it's aggressively antisocial, and if you force-mate it with just the right pickup/amp--SD Hot
-
It's the "emergency toy" that save your life when in gig in an unknown place with unknown amps
-
I can wrangle out more heavenly saturated sounds from my high-gain patches on my Blackstart ID15 amp with this pedal although turning the gain up on the pedal on a clean, low-gain patch sounds bad
-
I think it would also be good as a blues pedal with the right amp.
-
Got this to add a little mojo to certain songs played through my 67 Harmony Guitar and Fender Acoustasonic amp
-
I can wrangle out more heavenly saturated sounds from my high-gain patches on my Blackstart ID15 amp with this pedal although turning the gain up on the pedal on a clean, low-gain patch sounds bad
-
I sometimes use it through a slightly dirty amp, sometimes a clean amp, and either
-
The MojoMojo is great driven straight into a clean amp, when stacked with other overdrives, or when sent into a dirty amp for a heavy tone
-
The MojoMojo is great driven straight into a clean amp, when stacked with other overdrives, or when sent into a dirty amp for a heavy tone
-
However, if your hope is simply to plug into the MojoMojo into a clean amp and expect classic rock tones, you may be a bit disappointed with it as a standalone overdrive pedal