“An excellent fuzz with wide-ranging tonal variation and performance tricks that set it apart from the crowd”: Beetronics Abelha Tropical Fuzz review

It’s designed for Brazilian tropicália music, but this fuzzbox from Beetronics could create a buzz in any musical genre

Beetronics Abelha Tropical Fuzz
(Image: © Future / Phil Barker)

Guitar World Verdict

We can confirm that the Abhela does indeed sound as good as it looks. Beetronics’ new pedal is an excellent fuzz for your ’board with wide-ranging tonal variation and performance tricks that set it apart from the crowd.

Pros

  • +

    Looks brilliant.

  • +

    Range of fuzz sounds.

  • +

    Footswitching options.

  • +

    Different vibe from Tropical mode.

Cons

  • -

    Expensive and not exactly pedalboard-friendly.

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Beetronics’ latest offering is described as a ‘Tropical Fuzz’, tropical in this instance relating to tropicália – a type of music from Brazil that merges Brazilian and African rhythms with British and American psychedelic rock and pop, and features lots of fuzz guitar. 

Beetronics says that the Abelha, which incidentally is the Portuguese word for bee, reimagines the classic vibe of the music but infuses it with a forward-thinking twist. 

A large fuzz pedal, it’s a proper work of art with an intricately engraved top surface and a large red jewelled bypass LED, as well as a ring of six smaller multicoloured LEDs that light up in different colour combinations to signify various operating states. Let’s hope it sounds as good as it looks…

A toggle switch calls up three flavours of fuzz – Polen (Portuguese for pollen), Nectar and Honey – with the sound being dialled in with knobs to turn up the output volume and the fuzz, plus high and low EQ knobs that are very effective in getting the fuzz flavour just right to suit your rig. Polen is gated, sputtery fuzz; quirky but not unplayable.

Beetronics Abelha Tropical Fuzz

(Image credit: Future / Phil Barker)

Nectar is classic creamy fuzz with a nice fat midrange, while Honey has a more scooped tonality and top-end clarity. Both could pass for overdrive with the Buzz knob at lower levels, but turned up to the max you get full-on fuzzy goodness that you can roll back with guitar volume.

Further variation is available via Tropical mode, which is a high-pass filter that cuts out a whole load of lower frequencies leaving you with something really quite gnarly. You can keep it as your main fuzz tone if you want buzzy, bright and edgy, but you may just like it dropped in for a passage or a single note. A hold on the footswitch will momentarily switch between the two modes.

The footswitch, in fact, has several actions to facilitate all sorts of operation: a single tap is standard latching bypass, while a double tap selects between Normal and Tropical modes when the effect is engaged. If the effect is disengaged, a hold on the switch will momentarily turn it on, whichever mode it is switched to.

Specs

Beetronics Abelha Tropical Fuzz

(Image credit: Beetronics)
  • PRICE: $289 / £299
  • ORIGIN: USA
  • TYPE: Fuzz pedal 
  • FEATURES: True bypass
  • CONTROLS: Loud, Buzz, Hi, Lo, Flavor toggle (Polen/Nectar/Honey), Bypass footswitch
  • CONNECTIONS: Standard input, standard output
  • POWER: 9V DC adaptor (not supplied) 60 mA
  • DIMENSIONS:  83 (w) x 180 (d) x 65mm (h)
  • CONTACT: Beetronics FX
Trevor Curwen

Trevor Curwen has played guitar for several decades – he's also mimed it on the UK's Top of the Pops. Much of his working life, though, has been spent behind the mixing desk, during which time he has built up a solid collection of the guitars, amps and pedals needed to cover just about any studio session. He writes pedal reviews for Guitarist and has contributed to Total Guitar, MusicRadar and Future Music among others.