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Guitar World
Guitar World
Entertainment
Matt Owen

EarthQuaker Devices’ new Zoar Dynamic Audio Grinder is the brand’s “most tweakable distortion device ever” and promises “dozens of mind-blowing sounds”

EarthQuaker Devices Zoar Dynamic Audio Grinder.

After focusing on its reverb pedal and chorus pedal collections with the Aurelius Tri-Voice chorus and Disaster Transport Delay, EarthQuaker Devices has now once again turned its attention to distortion pedals.

The result of this realignment is the Zoar Dynamic Audio Grinder – a streamlined yet “deceptively complex” high-gain stompbox that has been marketed as the brand’s “most tweakable  distortion device ever”.

Just how tweakable can a six-knob, one-footswitch pedal be, you ask? Well, as per EarthQuaker Devices’ own words, very: the secret ingredient is supposedly the Weight parameter, which dictates that amount of low-end that passes into the circuit.

With Weight at its disposal, the Zoar can, erm, soar from clean boost territory all the way to hi-fi fuzz. This parameter is joined by a standard three-band EQ and master Level and Gain controls, all of which are said to share an intricate relationship that drastically alters the Zoar’s sonic characteristic.

This is, of course, the basic operation of most other pedals, but EarthQuaker Devices insists the Zoar is an exception: “While this style of tone shaping seems simple on the surface, it is deceptively complex and highly interactive – yet surprisingly easy to instantly dial in dozens of mind blowing sounds.”

(Image credit: EarthQuaker Devices)
(Image credit: EarthQuaker Devices)

Another aspect that sets the Zoar apart from its competitors is its transistor-based construction. There are no op-amps or diodes here, just transistors that vow to deliver a greater amp-like touch sensitivity.

Other appointments include silent relay-based switching with Flexi-Switch Technology (which lets you momentarily engage the effect by pressing down the footswitch), an all-analog signal path and operation tolerance of up to 18V.

With that in mind, the Zoar (unsurprisingly) behaves differently when powered at 18V, offering wider clean tones and punchier dirty sounds with better note clarification.

All of this, according to EQD, adds up to a distortion pedal that “lets you dial in and control every nuance of your tone from jangly on-the-verge of break up to blowing-the-walls-out heavy saturation”.

The Zoar is available now for $129.

Visit EarthQuaker Devices to find out more.

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