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All-Natural Compression
From the Workbench at Berserker Electronics:
Meet the Sasquash - Smooth Compression Without the Usual Compromises
A lot of compressor pedals can feel like an effect you have to tolerate. They flatten your pick attack, dull the dynamics, and leave everything sounding a little too controlled. Useful, maybe, but not always inspiring.
Sasquash is my take on a compressor for players who do not usually like compressors. It is built to feel natural under the fingers, easy to dial in, and musical enough to leave on all the time without making your guitar feel smaller, softer, or boxed in.
At its core, Sasquash begins with a heavily modified Ross Compressor foundation, but it has been reworked to behave in a much smoother and more balanced way. The goal was not maximum squash. The goal was to keep the good part of compression: more sustain, better consistency, and a little extra polish, while preserving pick attack, touch sensitivity, and the feel of your amp.
The controls are designed to be intuitive and useful:
Sasquash also includes a built-in frequency-dependent clean blend, tuned directly into the circuit. Instead of mixing back a full-range clean signal and fighting the phasey or disconnected feel that can come with typical blend controls, it restores the right parts of your original signal in a way that stays cohesive and natural. The result is a compressor that keeps your attack intact, avoids the usual parallel-compression weirdness, and feels more like your guitar, only better behaved.
It excels as a subtle always-on sweetener, adding sustain and evening things out without announcing itself. But it can also be pushed into stronger, more obvious compression when the part calls for it. And unlike many Ross-style compressors, Sasquash plays especially well in front of gain pedals, keeping things lively and articulate instead of turning to mush.
Sasquash is not about squeezing the life out of your tone. It is about keeping the feel, keeping the attack, and adding just enough control to make everything play better.
— James Millican
Builder, Berserker Electronics