Archive for Effects and Digital Modeling
Digidesign Eleven Rack
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Released yesterday is cool new guitar tool that is aimed to cover a lot of ground from a pre amp for live playing to a great studio tool. From Digidesign comes the new Eleven Rack. It’s a hardware preamp/interface using the already popular digital technology found in their Eleven guitar plug in that is in use in quite a few studios.
From Digidesign: “Eleven™ Rack is a revolutionary new guitar recording and effects processing system designed to eliminate the challenges guitarists have faced in the studio and on stage. Say goodbye to the lackluster guitar amp “models” of yesteryear: Eleven Rack utilizes a unique tone cloning design and one-of-a-kind, custom-designed True-Z input to re-create the experience of playing through a full guitar rig. By combining studio-standard Pro Tools® software with a DSP-accelerated high-resolution interface, Eleven Rack puts professional recording into the hands of every guitar player. Whether you’re tracking in the studio or playing on stage, Eleven Rack delivers fresh, mind-blowing, hyper-realistic guitar amp and effects tones that will inspire your best performances.”
I’ve got one that should arrive today and I’ll demo it this weekend and give a review here shortly.
More info can be found here Eleven Rack.
TC Electronic: Pete Thorn Interview and Nova System Demo
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If you hang around any of the guitar forums chances are you get read or hear some great gear demo’s by Pete Thorn who happens to be the guitar player for Chris Cornell, one heck of a versatile player, and overall one of the nicest pro players around. Pete has been an avid user of the TC Electronic’s G System but he also had a need for a smaller travel rig and turned to the Nova System. I personally had a G System and found it to be a very cool piece. The quality of the sounds were very good and it was one of the easiest to navigate and set up multi-fx units I’ve ever used not to mention it was built like tank.
“I still use my G-System in my main rig, but now I’ve had a really small pedalboard built that’s based around my Nova System. It slips right into a roadcase with my Suhr Badger 30 head. It’s a perfect rig when I need portability and great tones!” Peter Thorn says.
Pete has done an interview and some very cool demo’s for TC Electric that can be found in this link: Read the full story and watch the interview with Peter Thorn
Be sure to hang around the forums and talk to Pete. He’s always been very available and a great contributor to the guitar community.
Line 6 M13: An end to a board full of analog pedals?
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On some of the guitar forums I frequent this idea has been and continues to be discussed quite a bit since the Line 6 M13 came out. It’s not like the all in one digital multi-fx unit on the floor idea is a new one but I think Line 6 has a unique approach to this area that would fit certain player’s style.
Some purists argue that, on the all important tone side, the digital modeling simply cannot sound as good as the analog. Others bring up that the size of the unit doesn’t really help with the conservation of the much coveted pedal board real estate. Some like the effects models but hate the drives. Others say some of the drives are very usable and like the unit pretty much as a whole. Some think the whole thing doesn’t come close to living up to their board full of analog goodness. As with anything, a lot of this is subjective but its fun talk about so I’ll throw in my $.02.
First let me say I’m a computer artist by trade so I’m not allergic to the digital world and I actually love technology and see it as just another tool in the box. That said, when it comes to guitar gear, I have to admit I’m a bit of an analog purist. Not a hard core analog snob but that’s where I tend to lean when I taste test gear. Back in the 90’s I had a few pieces of Line 6 gear, some were keepers some went on their merry way. The ones I used the most in my band at the time were the green DL4 and the blue MM4. I thought those pedals worked great for what I was using them for and to be honest at that time I hadn’t really been exposed to too much of the world small pedal builders so my pallet was bit limited but they sounded good to me. Fast forward to about six months ago……and the passing of the recent years where the internet brought small builders to people like myself who hadn’t heard of them, I had a board with some very nice analog pedals. I had spent a good bit of time finding the right order and wiring them up with a cabling kit from Lava Cables, which are great by the way, in a way that was as painless as possible to switch pedals out. My board was sounding really good but being a player that likes to experiment on my off time I found at times I wish I had the ability to change the order or have two of something but that’s just the limitations of that set up. Then Line 6 came out with the M13 and remembering I liked the DL4 and MM4 it piqued my interest. Over the years I’ve figured out you don’t jump in right at first on the latest greatest, especially when it involves software, so I sat back and waited to hear what other people were saying about the M13. The reviews were actually pretty good so I bought it from a place that gave me a trial period. After about a month of going back and forth I took quite a few analog pedals off my board. Actually right now all I have on my board is a M13, a Digitech Hardwire CS2, and a Holy Fire pedal from Creation Audio Labs.
So by me saying this it would probably be safe to assume “for me” the M13 really did sound as good as my board full of analog pedals. NOPE! That wouldn’t be totally true. I’d have to say it was a surprise that M13 didnt color my by passed tone, which is important to me and many digital effects fail at that. The functionality of having the ability to have different scenes of pedal layouts in any order I want, tap tempo on multiple effects at once, continuous control over some pedals parameters all at once, on the fly pedal changing in the scenes, and a cool looper…… all that tipped the scales for me. Yes there is a tonal difference I heard when comparing the modeled pedals to analog ones but for me I had to compromise that for functionality because that is important to me too. Also the tonal compromise wasn’t huge either. Well if the M13 worked for me that well, why do I use the “outboard” drives? Because I’m still an analog lover and love the way they sound. I do use some of the drives in the M13 also but I liked these drive pedals more.
Will I not buy anymore analog pedals? Heck no! I still love them and will play them. Actually, I’m going to learn to start modding pedals here shortly so I still have a great love for those little boxes and pull for the small time builders who put their love and artistry to work in them.
Honestly, if you aren’t a player who likes to have a very wide range of options when it comes to effects and their order then I think you could be very happy and get a better tone with a few analog pedals. But if you are a player like me who likes to not be as locked in when experimenting and wants to reduce tap dancing then I think the M13 is a great piece of gear.
I didn’t go into all the functionality of the M13 here but that wasn’t the main focus of review. For all that fun stuff check out the Line 6 site and some of the forums I have listed here.


