ProAudioStar is holding a Black Friday sale and you can save 20% off select new items with the code BF20
Of interest here is the DOD Rubberneck at $99.99
ProAudioStar is holding a Black Friday sale and you can save 20% off select new items with the code BF20
Of interest here is the DOD Rubberneck at $99.99
Prymaxe is having a Black Friday sale, with many items auto-discounted with 30% off. You can also get 26% off new items that are not on sale with the code BF26
Of interest here is the DigiTech Obscura for $76.85 and the DOD Carcosa for $62.60
The sale ends November 26
Dark World™ is the first fully digital offering from Chase Bliss Audio; a unique dual channel reverb that we made with a little help from our friends. Cooper FX is responsible for the “Dark” channel; a collaborative effort influenced partly by their Generation Loss and Outward designs. Keeley Electronics crafted the “World” channel, which houses three absolutely gorgeous Hall, Plate, and Spring algorithms. Put together, the channels can be routed in 33 distinct ways, creating a stunning palette of reverb ranging from subtle, tasteful, and lush all the way to broken video cassette, glitch shimmer, and infinite freeze. Add all this to the dense digital control and full MIDI, dip-switch, and preset implementation Chase Bliss is known for, and you have yourself a very fun, powerful, and player-friendly reverb pedal in a small package.
The Dark World is priced at $349, but you can get 15% off with the code DARKFRIDAY
For more info, visit Chase Bliss Audio.
Limited to 1500 units worldwide, Black Ash is a fuzz/overdrive that takes some cues from the vintage “three-knob Bender.” It uses a highly curated cache of rare and irreplaceable components including paper-in-oil capacitors and NOS half-watt carbon composition resistors from EQD President Jamie Stillman’s personal stash to light a fire under this classic fuzz/drive with an explosive-yet-detailed treble response, a sturdy midrange, and subterranean bass extension.
For more info, visit Earthquaker Devices