Boss Ce-2 Analysis Apr 2026
The subject line arrived on a Tuesday, buried between a phishing alert and a reminder about the office fridge.
The SN 1200xx was the clincher. He traced the serial number. It was manufactured in March 1981, shipped to a music store in Hollywood, and purchased by the plaintiff’s guitarist on April 12th. The album was recorded in June.
Leo stared at it. He was a forensic audio analyst for a copyright enforcement firm, not a vintage pedal historian. But his boss, a woman named Kara who ran their small team like a ship’s captain, had a strict rule: you don’t question the subject line. You just write the story the data tells.
He was holding it.
He hit send. Subject: Re: Boss CE-2 Analysis.
Leo’s job was to prove or disprove the chain of custody. Was the chorus on that album from a Boss CE-2, as the plaintiff claimed, or was it a studio trick—a Roland JC-120 amp’s built-in chorus, or even a later digital emulation?
He attached the spectrograms, the BBD chip analysis, and the scanned engineer’s note. Then, as a personal touch—something Kara had taught him—he added a single line at the bottom: boss ce-2 analysis
He cross-referenced with the album’s master tape log from 1981, digitized last year from a storage locker in New Jersey. The engineer’s notes, scrawled in pencil, read: “GTR solo – Boss CE-2 (SN 1200xx), 9V battery dying, gives it that warble. Keep.”
The evidence was a single audio file: “Exhibit_7_CE-2.wav.” It was a thirty-second guitar riff, clean and crisp at first, then blooming into something watery and lush. A chorus effect. The legal case was a multi-million dollar dispute between two legacy rock bands over who “owned” the sound of a landmark album from 1981. One side claimed the other had digitally recreated their guitarist’s “unique analog warmth” for a reunion tour, infringing on a newly filed “sound signature” patent.
Boss CE-2 Analysis.
That night, Leo went home and plugged his own battered Telecaster into a small practice amp. On the floor, between the tuner and the overdrive, was a faded green pedal. A Boss CE-2. He’d found it at a flea market for twenty dollars. The battery inside was from 1998.
Leo isolated the left channel. He looked for the telltale clock noise—a faint, high-frequency whine around 15-16 kHz, the ghost of the BBD’s sampling rate. There it was. A faint, shimmering line that no digital chorus ever replicated because digital was too clean. He then checked the modulation curve. The CE-2’s LFO wasn’t a perfect sine wave; it had a slight, lazy asymmetry, a drift toward the negative voltage as the old capacitors struggled to keep up. On the spectrogram, it looked like a crooked smile.
Leo wrote his report. He didn’t use poetic language. He wrote: “The audio artifact labeled Exhibit_7 exhibits subharmonic clock noise at 15.4 kHz, a non-linear modulation asymmetry of 0.7 degrees, and a voltage sag envelope consistent with a Boss CE-2 operating on a partially depleted 9V alkaline battery. Probability of false positive: 0.3%.” The subject line arrived on a Tuesday, buried
