Review of the Laney Black Country Customs Billy Corgan Supergrace Loudpedal]

Review of the Laney Black Country Customs Billy Corgan Supergrace Loudpedal]

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What is it?

Billy Corgan’s Big Muff-drenched wall of sound in the Smashing Pumpkins helped define a generation, a sound countless players have tried to mimic, but never quite matched. Back in the early days of the Pumpkins, he was known for running everything from a KT88-modded Marshall to Mega Boogies and the occasional Orange, turning up the volume and fuzz for those iconic grunge riffs. Fast forward to today, and Corgan’s live rig is a high-gain fortress built around Grace heads, crafted by Brian Carstens, and a Laney Supergroup reissue for those glassier, lighter tones.

If you’ve ever dreamed of recreating Corgan’s current setup, you’d better have deep pockets; it’ll cost you about as much as a small apartment. Even if you somehow snagged all his amps, good luck playing through them anywhere short of a stadium. Luckily, Laney has come to the rescue for us mere mortals with the new Laney Supergrace Loudpedal.

Don’t let its small stomp appearance fool you, the Loudpedal isn’t just another amp-in-a-box overdrive pedal. It’s a full-blown, all-analog 60-watt amplifier, squeezed into a stompbox format. You can drop it straight onto your board and go from bedroom jams to stage volume, no head or cab needed, though it’ll happily drive a cab if you want it to.

(Image credit: Future)

As the name suggests, the Supergrace is split into two distinct sections. One side is based on Laney’s Supergroup, which offers both Clean and Dimed modes, while the other delivers the high-gain saturation of a Grace head. Onboard, you get a flexible three-band EQ shared between both sides of the pedal, plus Gain and Volume controls for each section, and a global tone knob for further dialing in your high-end. There’s also an on-board Reverb, which is based on Laney’s award-winning Secret Path pedal – and handily, the Reverb can be activated/deactivated via footswitch.

Inside, it’s all analog signal path, so there’s no digital modeling here

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