WAY HUGE RING WORM
Rating:
BY CHARLES SAUFLEY
Buy If...
you’re looking for genuinely out-there
sounds or you want to tick off
blues-rockin’ tone purists.
Let’s get something straight right off the bat: Ring modulators are not for the faint
of heart. Some of the first musical applications of ring modulation were undertaken
by mad-scientist synth pioneers Don Buchla
and Robert Moog, who—needless to say—
were quite comfortable with unorthodox
musical expressions.
It’s hard to not think about Moog or
his musical legacy when you play the new
Way Huge Ring Worm ring modulator. The
twisted harmonic output is unmistakably
synth like. It rarely does exactly what you
expect, and at times it can feel like the musical equivalent of wrestling a greased pig. But
if you’re interested in more than the same
old buttery-perfect blues-rock tone and
traditional technique, or if you make music
that walks on the wild side, the Ring Worm
can expand your vocabulary drastically.
remind you of the metallic voice heard
in a thousand B-movie sci-fi comput-
ers—most famously Dr. Who’s arch
nemeses, the Daleks, who would scream
“Exterminate!” in a ring-modulated rage
before zapping some pitiful human. Ring
modulators achieve their characteristic
metalloid voice by multiplying a funda-
mental and modulated signal. The sum is
a waveform made up of both perfect and
irregular harmonic intervals, and the sonic
result can be robotic, random, and evoca-
tive of everything from chimes to a deep-
space nightmare.
The Ring Worm has five controls for
steering the harmonic mayhem back to the
playpen—or wildly out of control. Blend
mixes the dry and modulated signals. Freq
selects the frequency of the carrier wave.
Width controls how deeply the LFO affects
the frequency (at minimum, the LFO is
basically off). And Rate governs the speed
at which the LFO oscillates. A 5-position
Mode knob selects waveforms, including
sine and square waves, a
random waveform gen-
erator, and step-down or
descending waves. In theo-
ry, it’s sort of like a tremolo.
In practice, however, it’s a
different beast.
Skip If...
you are a blues-rockin’ tone purist.
Way Huge Electronics
Street $149
jimdunlop.com
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mobile device to hear audio
clips of this pedal at
premierguitar.com/nov2011.
Radio Tardis
If you’re not a synth-music devotee, ring
modulator sounds may be most likely to
Space Invader
With its orange enclo-
sure and purple graphics
that suggest a mild state
of psychosis, the Ring
Worm doesn’t really invite
caution. So I began my
experiments with little or
no dry signal to hear the
essence of the effect. With
Rate, Width, and Freq at
noon the soft, undulating
sine wave has the springy,
oscillating qualities of
a flying-saucer engine.
Crank Freq another quar-
ter turn, and the high end
(and the more menacing aspects of the
impending saucer landing) are empha-
sized. The same settings on the step-down
waveform sound like a drunk robot or
a primitive, overworked computer, but
when you twist Rate you’ll nail the sound
of a dot-engorged Pac Man in pursuit of
blinking ghosts. If you’re more likely to
feed your quarters to the Galaga machine
at the arcade, the descending wave, a Freq
setting that favors the high end, and a
Rate set to three-quarters full will have
you seeing space bugs dive-bombing for
the kill.
The Verdict
Patience is of the essence when you use
the Ring Worm. If you don’t take the
time to explore how the pedal relates to
other effects, tone settings, and dry-to-wet
blends are likely to let this thing collect
dust. But even in fairly run-of-the-mill
heavy rock and indie-pop settings, the
Ring Worm can add color that’ll change
the landscape of an entire tune.