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Home > Pedal Reviews > Pedal Review: Seymour Duncan Shapeshifter

Pedal Review: Seymour Duncan Shapeshifter

October 11th, 2009

Review by Johnny Matthews

Welcome to my first real gear review. I’m just learning the whole critiquing process, so hang in there with me as I get better at it. Also in future reviews, I hope to add audio samples in with the review as well.

I recently got the Seymour Duncan Shape Shifter Tremolo pedal via Dave Weiner of Steve Vai and Riff Of the Week fame. I had been playing a Boss TR-2 Tremolo on my pedalboard for a while but was always wanting easier control over the tempo.

Construction:

The Shape Shifter is a slightly larger pedal at 5.5 inches wide and 5 inches tall, but has a  sturdy metal construction that feels like it will last. The knobs are chickenhead style knobs and have a very smooth feel to them.

Seymour Duncan Shape ShifterIt runs off standard 9v power, my one-spot power supply is powering it with no problems.

The buttons are probably my only problem with this pedal. They have a louder than average click to them so while this is not usually a big deal on a on/off button, on a tempo button where you will need to click it several times in a row, its noticeable, if you are in-between songs.

Features:

The Shape Shifter is a mono pedal, with  4 knobs, 1 switch and 2 buttons and 2 LEDs.

The knobs are:

Tremolo Depth:

how far the signal is dropped on each pulse

Wave Shape:

This controls how the wave is balanced. Is the peak in the middle or does it peak early and fall off, or build slowly and then drop off fast. There are some interesting sounds to be had here.

Wave Type:

This knob lets you mix between Sine Wave, Saw Wave and Square wave for a variety of sounds from smooth to chop.

Speed:

This knob has 2 modes set by the switch (either in ratio or rate mode) Rate mode is a simple slow to fast as you turn the knob. If you tap the tempo in rate mode, you get 2 pulses per tap. In ratio mode the knob is split into 4 zones 1:1, 2:1, 3:1, 4:1 where you can get x amount of pulses per 1 tempo click. So if you are tapping quarter notes in your song, 1:1 gives you one pulse per beat, 2:1 gives you eighth note pulses, 3:1 gives you triplet pulses and 4:1 gives you sixteenth note pulses.

The left button is you on/off and features “true hardwire bypass” if that is your thing. The right button is the tap tempo button.

The red LED is your on/off indicator and the right yellow LED pulses with the settings.

Sound:

This pedal really sounds great. You can dial in a wide variety of tones and with the tap tempo feature make it fit very easily into whatever you are playing. The notes on the pedal say its audio path is 100% analog, but the timing is digital.  So far I have mostly used it set on sine wave, 2:1 to the tempo of the song I’m playing around 30% depth and it adds that little something extra.

Price:

MSRP for this pedal is $225 and at the time of this article it was selling for $158.97 on a popular music retailer’s web site.

Conclusion:

Pros:

Lots of control over tremolo settings, tap tempo, sturdy construction.

Cons:

Louder than average button clicks.

The Pedalboard Planner Take:

This pedal’s pros outweigh its cons by a long shot. The pedal sounds great and has found it’s spot on my pedalboard. What is your experience with the shapeshifter? Feel free to comment below!

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  1. John
    November 1st, 2009 at 22:54 | #1

    I’ve had the shape shifter on my board for a little over 2 months. I enjoy the control of this pedal…from sine-wave mellow to square wave chop. The tap-tempo is what sold me. Set the rate at 4:1 (16th) and the square wave with some distortion behind it…then controlled with a volume pedal after the Shape Shifter…awesome rhythmic effects. And yes, the buttons are loud.

  2. gustavo
    February 16th, 2010 at 08:52 | #2

    i just bought it and i absolutely love this pedal! it sounds really great in the tap tempo or in vintage or “ampwise” style.

    although i dont know if it is true bypass…

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