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Hear the oldest guitar effects pedal demo ever from 1962

 Maestro FZ-1 Fuzz-Tone pedal
Maestro FZ-1 Fuzz-Tone pedal

Imagine a world before YouTube effects pedal demos? It's hard, we know. Gibson Electonic's 1962 showcase for the FZ-1 fuzz, and arguably the world's first pedal, came on a vinyl record and showed off its 'tuba sounds' amongst other capabilities. It's surely the first-ever distributed pedal demo. Talk about trailblazing! 

And there are multiple audio examples on the record you can hear above to prove just how versatile this fuzz pedal was. Bear with it because after the spoken word introduction we get brass tones, full-on fuzztone, and the "sweet and sentimental" simulations of a cello and alto sax (they're reaching a bit with the former but it is 1962).

What's clear is they're marketing this thing like a synth with specific applications, two years before Bob Moog and Herb Deutsch started to change the course of music history.

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Those brass sound demos were enough to get enough people talking for Keith Richards to catch wind of this new pedal technology; he used the FZ-1 for temporary sax tones on the Rolling Stones' demo for (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction, ended up keeping it in and starting a chain reaction for fuzz tones that's still dirtying up music today.

But the first fuzz tone on record wasn't actually Keef or the FZ-1; it was Nashville session man and rockabilly cult hero Grady Martin with a faulty recording console in 1961. During a recording session for Marty Robbins on the song Don't Worry, Martin was using his baritone guitar through the studio's console with tube amplifiers in. The transformer for the preamps was faulty and during Martin's recording with it caused a fuzz sound for his baritone guitar track.